Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ;'I.M :th4".LMV. Y5:".V ". . . . N. . . .f n1. tVV.15'lf "". . . . .:. ..r.. .Y .. " ' .:": h.rt : tt....:.". ' ............".....v....' ...^. .. J:r.,1. ,..... ..r : .r r.r..Ya.,..r' ......5 : ..". .f. . . . ..,r". .... . .N.r. . ................,..... e OpinionseAre Free r-tb WT Prevail 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. JESDAY, MAY 24, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN SCHNEPP ACE Graduate School Survey May Have Missed the Point THE AMERICAN Council of Education passed judgment in a scholarly opinion survey over the weekend on the Univer- sity's relative merit as a graduate insti- tution. University administrators remained relatively silent as Rackham School of Graduate Studies Dean Stephen H. Spurr was out of town and Max W. Crosman, assistant to the dean, would say only that reactions to the report can be merely pre- mature ones. Obviously digestion of the study, its results and implications, will probably not be completed for several weeks. T RE ARE, however, a few observa- tions to be offered at this time as an aid to the University community in its absorption of a survey which can be viewed with both satisfaction and con- cern. While the University appeared among the "distinguished" in three of five cate- gories-humanities, social sciences, and biological sciences-it was toward the bot- tom of each list. Ivy League schools were rated consistently above it and in the so- cial science areas "Big Ten" rival Wiscon- sin out-ranked the University. Should the University be pleased or concerned with these findings? Logan Wilson, president of the council, points out that "universities can live on their reputations much more successfully and for longer periods than can most business firms." This, of course, aids the established institutions, though it may injure the less prominent ones that are "making rapid strides" but may find their reputations lagging. Though the Univer- sity may be somewhat loathe to admit it, ours is not yet a reputation which can match the longstanding ones of Harvard, Yale, or Princeton. With this thought in mind, results of the survey seem slightly less ominous. THAT THE UNIVERSITY of Wisconsin was rated above Michigan in social sci- ences cannot perhaps be so easily passed over. It may very well be that the Uni- versity here does not have the strengths it would like in its social science depart- ments. Conceivably we do not measure up to Wisconsin, the Ivy League, or Berkeley. Wilson indicated that the survey is in- tended to help "effect improvement" by attempting to "appraise existing strengths and weaknesses." The survey in this sense may have done the University a favor by emphasizing for us departments in need of more and better faculty, smaller class- es, additional courses, etc. But here again the situation is not so grim as the coun- cil's study might seem to indicate. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning. FIRST, EXAMINERS of the survey find- ings must remember that question- naires were completed two years ago and that the time taken to compile and corre- late the opinions has not been time spent idly at the University. The political sci- ence department here, for example, has already recognized its personnel shortage and will be adding four new professors in the fall. In addition, efforts are being made to increase the number of graduate courses offered, particularly during the summer as the number of students climbs steadily. Second, the council's report found the University to be among the 10 leaders in 20 of the 29 departmental disciplines stud- ied. Though we may be ranked low, we rank low among the best with more than 90 excellent universities ranking even lower. Third, and perhaps most importantly, we rank beneath Wisconsin and the Ivy League schools only as far as graduate departments in the social sciences are concerned. And here at the University the departments themselves often play a rela- tively small part in graduate education. The Mental Health Research Institute, the Center for Research on Conflict Reso- lution, the Institute for Social Research, the Population Research Center, and the Institute for Science and Technology to name just a few are often primary cen- ters of graduate education. It seems doubtful that any of the other universi- ties could even begin to match the facili- ties for study and individual research offered by Michigan's institutes. POSSIBLY THE GREATEST obstacle to acceptance of the survey is the fact that the University did not gain "distin- guished" ratings in the categories of phys- ical science and engineering. To those who would begin to frown upon the Uni- versity as a scientific and technological graduate school, one must suggest a tour of the North Campus laboratories and re- search facilities which two years ago, when questionnaires were first sent out, were still in the embryo stage. The increasing development of North Campus is positive evidence that the council's brand new report is already two years old. Since other universities are undoubtedly expanding with the same ra- pidity, the survey may be completely ir- relevant as it now stands within another year. WHILE THE COUNCIL'S survey may very well be a "survey of informed opinion," it is not really a "testimony of expert witnesses." Unless those who an- swered the questionnaires have visited the University, noting institutes and marking half-finished buildings, they cannot possibly be fully aware of the University's distinction. -MEREDITH EIKER Special To The Daily OAXACA, MEXICO-The visitor soon finds Mexico is not one, but many countries. The tourist-particularly if he comes here to Oaxaca (waw-HA- ca), an important market center for the region-usually sees one kind of Mexico: a country full of smiling Indians selling stunningly beautiful serapes, rebozas (shawls) and blankets for absurdly low prices along with the portal of the Hotel Marques del Valle; one of shouting Indians selling their limes, chile peppers, tomatoes and meat in the city's market. Buttbeyond that Mexico, the tourist's Mexico of peppers and scrapes, is another country. Two Oaxaquenas tell the story. THE FIRST IS Greogoria Bau- tista, 22, of Santo Domingo, a farm village of 300 near El Tule, five miles south of Oaxaca. She comes to Oaxaca with her hus- band and their two young chil- dren to sell the produce of their farm. Santo Domingo's farmers, most of them Zapotec Indians like Senora Bautista, grow a number of products, among them beans and corn, and live primarily in the adobe-wall, dirt-floor huts which dot Mexico's countryside. Her village boasts an elected mayor and a two-room school (its six teachers come in daily from Oaxaca)-but there are no doc- tors, nurses or health facilities, nor does Senora Bautista recall the presence of public health officials, a deficiency she says is a major problem for her. EDUCATIONAL opportunities for a young student from Santo Domingo are available, however. Almost all of the village's young people can - and do - continue their education in Oaxaca's sec- ondary schools, although none have gone on to a university. Senora Bautista herself has a ninth-grade education. But life is very difficult and very isolated intellectually. Senora Bautista has too much work to do to have time for reading; she has not heard of Presidents Kennedy and Johnson and, she adds, has little idea of what the United States is like. The isolation extends to domes- tic matters as well. Although Mex- ico has a social security and med- ical care system, Senora Bautista seems unaware that she can avail herself of its benefits. SENORA Bautista, in a sense, brings realism to the artificial im- pression the tourist gets of Oax- aca's market. Maria Luisa Mar- tinez gives something of the same insight into the life of Oaxaca's textile-sellers. Senora Martinez, 19, is married and has one 14-month-old son. She was born in Oaxaca and has lived there for most of her life, although she has twice traveled the more than 350 miles from Oaxaca to Mexico City. SHE SELLS Oaxaca textiles, primarily aprons and shirts, to tourists and travelers in the city's main square, on which the cafes of several hotels front. A factory, El Manteleria Oaxaquena, sells the aprons to her for eight pesos (one peso equals eight cents) and the shirts for 20 pesos. , She, in turn, acts as the factory's retail outlet, and keeps as her profit whatever she can get for the shirts and aprons beyond what she paid for them. Her asking prices are 10 and 25 pesos, respectively, but the tra- ditional haggling usually cuts the sale price well below that. Her average daily profit, she says, is "usually 10 pesos, sometimes 1', sometimes nothing." She works every day save Sunday from noon until 9 or 10 in the evening. AS A CITY dweller (Oaxaca's population is about 70,000) her opportunities in the way of edu- cational and sanitary facilities are fairly broad. She has a sixth-grade education and her husband (who works on a farm outside Oaxaca) has had four years of school. She would have liked to continue her educa- tion to the university level, but economic necessity and the prob- able lack of a scholarship meant she did not try to do so. Thanks to Mexico's social secur- ity program, in which her husband is enrolled, the Martinez family is assured of some medical care if illness occurs. But illness is still a great fear for Senora Martinez, and for her friends as well. A number of her friends' children have died; one of her own nieces died before she was seven months old, probably of colic or dysentry, ALTHOUGH SHE, like Senora Bautista, has little time to read, Senora Martinez has been able to read an occasional newspaper or magazine. Her idea of the United States, though, is about as vague as that of her country cousin. She would say with confidence only that the U.S. President is "el patron del mundo" (the boss of the world) and that he is very powerful, though more so in some areas and less in others. She has heard ofsPresident Ken- nedy and his assassination, al- though she does not know about President Johnson and, like Senora Bautista, is unaware of the U.S. intervention in the Dominican Republic. Like newspapers and magazines, government also has a greater presence in the city. On July 5 of this year Senora Martinez voted (one may vote at 18, and "It is a civic duty," she says very firmly) for Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, now Mexico's president. She does not now recall his name but she does know the same of Oaxaca's gover- nor, for whom she also voted. IF ONE CAN judge from these two conversations, the correspon- dent concludes that, the average poor Mexican-which means most Mexicans-must live assuming the present and the present condition will always be his lot. Both women were completely astonished and nonplussed when they were asked what improve- ments they would want to work for if they were president of Mexico, evidently the thought never occurred to either woman. Moreover, S e n o r a Martinez holds no great resentment against the country's rich-despite con- siderable economic discrimination (the cafe's waiter would not allow an interview with her along the portal, even at an unused section of tables)-and says one's suc- cesses and hardships "depend more or less on what you do, on your own efforts." EACH WOMAN, however, said she felt education and health were most important to have- and to improve-for their chil- dren. Senora Martinez was espe- cially emphatic about education, touching since at their ages both she and Senora Bautista were they Americans would probably be attending universities them- selves. What should her interviewer do for Mexico if he were President of the U.S.? "Help us," says Sen- ora Martinez simply, * * * SUCH, AS Abraham Lincoln put it, are the "short, simple an- nals of the poor." True, at a time when Americans speak of a Negro senator by the year 2000, Mexico elected her first (there have been others since) full-blooded Indian president, Benito Juarez, over 100 years ago. Mexico's revolution of 1910-1920 has made her the model for the rest of Latin America. And it is also true that these two interviews cannot claim to represent definitive sociological truths, in-depth statistically-vali- dated studies or careful, repre- sentative samples of Mexican life. But these modest and at times stark storiesĀ°are often moving and eloquent. SENORA BAUTISTA and her husband must eke out a precarious living on a small plot of land, try to sell it in a hot, noisy, filthy market, try to raise their children in a mud hut with none of the health or sanitary facilities an American would find essential and -beyond all this-try to enjoy life. Senora Martinez, while her city has more in the way of facilities, must try to help raise a family on average daily earnings of about 80 cents. That figure leaves little doubt about the diet of her family or of other families like hers; it suggests that the seeming "lazi- ness" one observes is in fact the result of' malnutrition; it helps explain why poor Mexican fami- lies like hers must live in con- stant fear of illness. Both families are very poor. Both must live in cultural and intellectual isolation enforced by the stern requirements of making enough to stay alive. BUT THESE women-who are really girls, or would be were it not for their poverty-and their families area moving reminder of Herodotus' ancient saying: A hard land does not breed a soft people. The tourist, who sees nothing but the facade in Oaxaca's market and its square, will probably do nothing on his return save-per- haps - marvel at how low the prices are and how colorful it all is. HIS FELLOW Norteamericano, however, the one who managed to penetrate in some way these superficialities, will probably re- turn with a somewhat different feeling. Though its final manifestations will be very complex, its initial cause is very simple-like Senora Martinez' comment: "Help us." . I4 Where Have the Buffalo Gone? By LIZ WISSMAN N OW IS THEnTIME for all good men to come to the aid of their State. Yes, loyal students. the Water Wonderland is a much beleaguered spot these days. From throughout the nation there de- scends a rain of calumny and threat against the very symbol of our Statehood-the automobile. And there can be no real doubt that Michigan is the house that Henry Ford built. One need only move a few feet in any direction to see the sprouting factory chim- neys, the web of winding highway systems, or the A-1 Used Car lots. But a cloud of doom now hangs over this home-on-the-range, and we must act to save this, our vanishing frontier. The herds of cars still roam the trails in plenty, but the sunset bleeting of the horns has a new and terrified note. LEADING the charge against our native wildlife is Roaring Ralph Nader-the latter day in- carnation of William Cody. And what is he fussing, so violently, about? Why, merely the fact that automobiles are "unsafe." Come now, Mr. Nader, is the average Buffalo "safe?" People once said that the Kiwi was not a safe bird, and look where that dear little feathered friend is today. But a single hunter, bagging only a stray Pontiac or a Stude- baker too senile to keep up with the pack is nothing to raise alarm. This Nader fellow, however, has gone farther-turning what was commendable private sport into the new national pasttime. The population of the United States has become defect-crazed, search- ing the streets with the narrowed gaze of a John Birchite at a gathering of the A.C.L.U. As this panic grows, is it any wonder that most cars are afraid to come out of their driveways in the morning? When we hear the cries of a wounded Corvair- when we look upon the pallor of Detroit and the panic that is Dearborn-how can we turn our backs? LET US SUGGEST, then, a course of action to save our state wildlife. Perhaps, we shall not be able to convince the Congress to set aside-say-all of the Pacific West Coast as a national game preserve. But if this is not -pos- sible, let us at least take courage from the noble example set by R. J. Reynolds and the tobacco states. Yes, friends, now is the time to rally round the Big Three and GovernordGeorge Rambler Romney-to demand that each,- and every automobile shall be printed with the words: "Caution. Automobile driving may be hazardous to your health." We have the cause of conserva- tion and civil rights upon our side. "East Is East, And West Is West-And, Man, We Have Problems With Both Of Them" VIETNAMvINATO 77K ~~ Ā£* - ~~I ji * i V i9 ~ s~sea y LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Drugs vs. Man's Inherent Capaobilities Nf, EDITOR'S NOTE: The au- thors of this letter are all stu- dents of phenomena associated with psychedelic drugs. Allan Y. Cohen has completed require- ments for a PhD. and is a teach ing fellow in social relations at Harvard University. R o b e r t Dreyfuss has a B.A. from Boston University and has been study- ing Eastern psychology. Fred- erick Chapman will receive an A.B. from Harvard in June and will do graduate work on a Ful- bright teaching fellowship to India. -C.W. To the Editor: THE USE of drugs-from mari- juana and amphetamines to LSD, DMT and peyote-is now a major controversy. Psychedelic or "con- sciousness expanding" drugs can provide experiences so impressive and profound that more and more people are looking to them as the most immediate and effective way to deepen personal insight and expand awareness. That these experiences are im- pressive is a well-established fact with us; we have actively followed drug research from its earliest roots and are thoroughly familiar with the enchantments of almost every facet of psychedelic indul- gence. Searching for lasting posi- Here the statements of Avatar Meher Baba are pertinent. Baba is a nonsectarian spiritual Master -now living in India-who is ac- knowledged East and West as the authority on higher states of con- sciousness. (For one, U.S. psy- chedelic spokesman Dr. Richard Alpert recognizes Baba's mastery in this field.) WHEN CONSULTED about psy- chedelics, Baba replied: "The ex- periences which drugs induce are as far removed from Reality as is a mirage from water. No matter how much you pursue the mirage, you will never quench your thirst, and the search for Truth through drugs must end in disillusionment. Many people in India smoke hashish and gunja-they see color forms and lights and its makes them elated. But this elevation is only temporary. It gives only ex- periences of illusion, and serves to take one further away from real- ity. The feeling of having had a glimpse of higher states of con- sciousnessmay only lull one into a false security. Although LSD is not a physic- ally addicting drug, one can be- come attached to the experiences arising from its use, and one gets tempted to use it in increased doses, again and agin, in the hope of deeper and deeper experiences. But this can only lead to mad- Daily Reviews To the Editor: THE AVERAGE film critic finds himself in a miserable position. Firstly he has a poor cross-section of films to review-not one God- dard in the past year and who has heard of Ozu?-secondly he must review everything that comes along, the trite Hollywood love story and the "work of art." This miserable position tends to miser- able criticism, to slickness and trite writing. The Daily film critic is a fine example. From a college newspaper we demand sophistication and analy- sis-a distinction to be made be- tween film reporting and film criticism. We demand a criticism that dispenses with the conven tions, a wild, long-haired work of destruction, the critic to become creator. There are critics in abun- dance who are creative-Jonas Mekas in Film Culture, Andrew Sarris in Cahiers du Cinema in English or better still the early criticism of Andre Bazin or Alexandre Astruc. SATURDAY'S REVIEWS of "Judith" and "The Circus" prompt this letter. The Judith review may be dismissed as slick writing and with surprise that the critic has only just realised the "morality" content of Western (How relevant +n +a Wih1,t- Chaplin" (a phrase in the tone of the piece if not in the writing) tells us no more than, says, that a typical Velasquez painting is a portrait. THE CRITIC should note that this film is part of a season-"The American Film Director." Even though the films being shown only appear in the "second best fifty American films"-no Murnau, no Von Stroheim, no Hitchcock-they must be critised in terms of Amer- ican film "culture." And there is much to be said in this respect. Above all film reporting is not film criticism. -Andrew Lugg, Grad The llunt To the Editor: IT WAS with utmost horror that I read the advertisement for "The Hunt" in recent issues of the Michigan Daily and the article about this new craze in the May 13, 1966 issue of Time Magazine. Sadness pervades one with the realization that valuable energies are wasted on a sadistic past time, instead of being channelled into constructive actions which need everyone's attention, i.e. efforts to achieve a peaceful solution for Viet Nam, involvement in dpmes- tic affairs to achieve social and economic equality for the present- 1v dimarvasnA gtnr losm ito organizations t h r o u g h which people . can become acquainted with others. That we must engage in such sadistic activities as "simu- lating a kill by physical touch with the instrument of destruc- tion," to achieve the above named purposes, reverts us to barbaric days. Op art and camp have their limits! -Barbara Rose B.A. '59, M.S.W. '64 A Request, To the Editor: WILL BEGIN this letter by first identifying myself and then explain my reason for writ- ing. My name is Lyle Barber (104251). I ram 25 years old and I have been in prison for the past six years. MY PURPOSE for writing is to invite correspondence from some- one who might have something in common with me in spite of my prior conduct. For a few years now I have been studying quite constantly and seriously the physi- cal sciences; chemistry, physics, electronics and"related subjects. I have also devoted some time to the study of philosophy. I would be interested in cor- responding with someone who shares with me a more than casual