Seventy-Fifth Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICMUGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS LAST GLANCES the Most Dangerous Animal r**********WHY NOT? Humanisl Educatio By Jeffrey Goodin ~in e Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MiCH. ruth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, 16 APRIL 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: W. REXFORD BENOIT Rewriting History Won't Improve the Honors Program "AFTER EIGHT YEARS of full fledged operation, the Honors Program, the University's attempt to challenge its gift- ed students, can be judged a success." Or so the Honors Council seems to think. Since editorials have appeared in these columns challenging this view, the Coun- cil could at least try using a little better propaganda if it doesn't want to try ini- tiating a somewhat better program. For example, responding to charges that its selection standards give rela- tively little weight to such intangible factors as creativity, personality and the capability not only to absorb but to use knowledge, an Honors Council official recently told The Daily, "Admission is based on many factors, among which are the College Board SAT score and the high school record." The Honors program booklet, on the other hand, issued before the editorials, says flatly, "About 10 to 15 per cent of the entering LS&A freshmen are select- ed for the Honors Program on the basis if high school performance and (SAT) test scores.". In other words, in responding to its cri- tics, the Honors Council is operating on the theory that when history is not on your side, you should rewrite it. AN EQUALLY outstanding example of the divergence between history and the way the Honors Council attempts to record it is that, according to one of its administrators, it has been a "success" at "molding a community of scholars" through Honors housing. Perplexingly enough, Honors housing residents, and even many Honors Coun- cil officials admit readily that the only advantage students have found in Hon- ors housing is its relative quiet com- pared to the residence halls. One might conclude that the proper appellation for such a program would be a "community of silence," but the Honors Program, never loathe to use its imag- inative and wholly original approach to the writing of history, has decided on its own creative and wholly ingenious name for it instead. Before history succumbs entirely to the caresses of the Honors Council, let it be recorded that the "community of schol- ars" which the Honors Council feels it has had such success in creating is such a "community" that the Council has abandoned the usual elections for seats on the Honors Student Steering Commit- tee and replaced this procedure with peti- tioning, because, as one member said, "Nobody knows anybody else, really." INDEED, those who chose the new steer- ing committee members were those who were already on the committee. Evi- dently - one is reluctant to suggest the obvious interpretation of their action- they knew so few others in their bur- geoning "community of scholars" that they could only pick each other first and then fill whatever seats remained with the few applicants who managed to meet their-own placid views. It is indeed true that the literary col- lege steering committee is selected by pe- t1r, rflgal Dily( R Acting Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOOnMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH WARREN............. Personnel Director THOMAS WEINBERG.............Sports Editor LAUREN BAHR:........ Assnotate Managing Editor SCOTT BLECH ............ Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT HIPPLER.......Associate Editorial Director GAIL BLUMBERG............... Magazine Editor LLOYD GRAFF ..... .....Associate Sports Editor JAMES KESON.. .......... Chief Photographer NIGHT EDITORS: W. Rexford Bennit, David Block, John Bryant, Michael Juliar, Leonard Pratt. SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Carney, James LaSovage, Gilbert Samberg, James Tindall, Charles Vetzner,. Bud Wilkinson. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Bruce Bigelow, Sue Collins, Michael Dean, John Meredith. Peter Sara- sol'n, Barbara Seyfried, Bruce Wasserstein. Acting Business Staff CY WELLMAN, Business Manager ALAN GLrIE0KMAN.............Advertising Manager JOYCE FEIN BERG............... Finance Manager JUDITH FIELD S............Personnel Manager SUSAN CRAWFORD.......Associate Business Manager JUNIOR MANAGERS: Ann Jean Berger, Harry Bloch, Madeline Gonsky, Jeffrey Leeds, Gail Levin, Susan Perlstadt, vic Ptasnik, Jean Rothb asn, Jill Tozer. titioning. Perhaps, the Honors apologia might run, the Honors program is no different in this respect than the literary college. Ironically ,this seems equally true of the entire program. The Honors Council calls its program. "the largest and most comprehensive in the country." It arrives at this remarkable conclu- sion because.it has a large number of spe- cial College Honors courses (owing to dis- tribution requirements, most honors stu- dents cannot take them) and honors sec- tions (which most students find are as overcrowded as other sections and are so little different in nature or scope that they are, indeed, at times indistinguish- able from them). And it follows that the program still maintains that it need not attract good students through serious recruiting be- cause it can develop them in its pro- gram, "the largest and most comprehen- sive in the country." Although some dif- fer with this modest view and although some vague first steps are now being taken to change it such steps are, alas, only vague first steps. RECRUITMENT, a comprehensive pro- gram, and purposeful selection stand- ards are the essentials of an honors pro- gram-and they are a totality, a three- legged stool. Without recruitment, one cannot expect good students; without good students, one cannot expect a good program; without a good program one cannot develop good students; and so it goes. The above makes clear that the University's program, ignoring such a three-leggec1 stool, is sitting on the ground -with its head in the sand. To whom should the award for this outstandingly abysmal record be given? The Honors Council, it should be point- ed out, hardly bears the full responsibil- ity for the program's difficulties. The Honors Council official is in general a discontented and hard-working man, aware of his students' problems, though he is often defensive about or blind to the program's defects. University departments, on the other hand, have actively thwarted improve- ments in teaching personnel in Honors courses through a policy of massive re- sistance and intransigent refusal. In keeping with its usual complacent men- tality and, indeed, with its very nature, the University has not provided much in the way of scholarship or recruiting funds. The record suggests, however, that when the proper stimulus is applied, theG Honors Council, and perhaps the otherr areas in the University which are ob- structing its advances, will at least at- tempt something, even if it be only the rewriting of history. The task, then, is to see if these groups can be encouraged not to rewrite history, but to attempt to al- ter its present miserable course. AS A FIRST STEP (and-it should be stressed-other steps can be taken later if this first step produces nothing) anyone interested in the fate of the Honors Program should do the following: " Write a note including your Honors or non-Honors status, year ,and field of concentration (or, if faculty, your depart- ment). Explain your feelings on the pro- gram's selection standards, its nature and scope, and its recruitment practices. En- close a copy of this editorial if you wish. * Send it - NOW - to Prof. Otto G. Graf, Chairman Honors Council, The University of Michigan 1223 Angell Hall Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104t In sending such letters, the writers should remember that Prof. Graf not only bears some measure of responsibility for the program, but also that he will cer- tainly not be reluctant to show the let- ters to others who share this responsibil-I ity. .The letters should provide a stimulus to the program for necessary internal re- forms and a valuable bargaining point for By STEVEN HALLER Contributing Editor, 1964-65 THERE COMES a time in every Daily senior editor's career when he is ousted from his posi- tion to make way for someone new, leaving behind him only that which he has been able to set forth in writing during his stay on the paper. Last of these con- tributions is the "Last Glance" editorial, so-called because in it (theoretically) the writer takes one last glance at the environ- ment about him and comes up with some special words of wis- dom or concern which he has been saving for years for just such an opportunity. Since most Daily people have become pretty University-oriented by this time, their contributions are in this vein: how to get more out of one's stay here, what it all means, and so on. Quite often these profundities take the form of some manner of discussion of "man's inhumanity to man," in- cluding administrators, faculty, and innocent bystanders alike. And yet "man's inhumanity to man" is too well-known. The newspapers are full of trouble- spots, murder, and so on; and while there is merit for discussion of these subjects by those more concerned with homo sapiens than any other species, I prefer to spend some time discussing what is of greater importance to me: man's inhumanity to the other species with which he shares his environment. FOR ME, a "last glance" around this troubled world reveals that as bad as Homo sapiens may make it for his fellow man, there are countless other species whose existence is being imperiled by man to a far more devastating de- gree. 1000 less Vietnamese soldiers (preferably Viet Cong, if you in- sist on getting political about it) is still only 1000 less Homo sapiens, a dominant species then; but only 25 less Arabian oryxes leaves exactly none-a vanished species, never to be seen again. If this seems like a calloused attitude, remember that it is man who is mainly responsible for the gradual eradication of the oryx (as he was of the passenger pigeon, the dodo and many others); by hunting them down in high-powered jeeps against which even the fleetness of the antelope is not enough, the saving of the remaining oryxes becomes of para- mount importance to naturalists of every country-on both sides of the Iron Curtain. As it now stands, many species we take for granted are on the way out, due primarily in each case to the efforts of man's callous attitude toward other species than himself. Doomed to extinction un- less something can be done are the kiwi, the whooping crane, the nene goose (symbol of Hawaii), the Komodo dragon lizard (the world's largest lizard), the leopard, the orangutan, the polar bear, the cheetah, the koala, the walrus, the giant panda and the bald eagle. OF THESE (and the list is by no means- complete), the bald eagle, our nation's symbol, is worthy of being singled out for special mention. This noble bird is vanishing because its ability to reproduce has become endangered by pesticides in its diet. In fact, pesticides have been used with such reckless disregard for friend and foe alike (even man has suc- cumbed upon occasion), that in many areas certain species have been wiped out or almost totally eradicated, with the survivors ex- posed to mutagenic and sterilizing effects that make authorized gas usage in Viet Nam jungles seem of somewhat less than world- shaking importance by compari- son. In this state, senseless slaughter of wildlife is sanctioned by the Legislature, which has allowed the bounty laws to go unchecked for ages. Under these laws, foxes, bob- cats and coyotes provide a total income of $250,000 from the State, most of which goes to Upper Peninsula bounty hunters. Despite seemingly increasing support for repeal of the laws-which con- servation officials contend are too ineffective to have any useful pur- pose (except butchery, apparently a favorite hobby of many folks up North), the laws continue to re- main as a blot upon the record for Michigan. On all fronts-in Africa, where poaching is cutting down the num- ber of aesthetically and economic- ally important species alike; in Michigan, where outmoded bounty laws prevail; in the nation as a whole, where misuse of pesticides is reducing field and forest land to scarred, ugly patches of brown -it is all too apparent that many species are as good as extinct right now. In fact, Homo sapiens (along withrassorted parasites of his) is rather unique in his stead- ily increasing number. There is a special exhibit at the great ape house of the Bronx Zoo which never fails to arouse in- terest-and, perhaps, feelings of guilt. Those who come, drawn by a sign referring to "the most dangerous animal in the world" are shocked to find not a wild beast but a mirror, under which is the legend: "You are looking at the most dangerous animal in the world. It alone, of all the animals that ever lived, can exterminate (and has) entire species of ani- mals." It is especially sobering to realize that this one species alone now has the capacity to wipe out every form of life on earth, him- self included. NOW IS the time for everyone to stop and take one "last glance" around him at the numerous spe- cies of animals represented in his zoos, in circuses, on his trophy- MOST FACULTY, I think, have a great deal of trouble understanding just why students complain about the education they're getting here-about the lack of unifying, externally relevant concepts and theories. Faculty perceive rightly that what they are teaching is quite sufficient for getting a job and getting ahead in society. The student, on the other hand, can't really verbalize his per- ception that this will not quite do; by and large he is just unconvinc- ingly unhappy. He is also vaguely afraid of leaving, which is perhaps why he makes such a show of being anxious to leave: he knows some- how there should have been something more to getting educated than he found (college is made out to be The Opportunity, The Place where questions are answered and identities solidified), yet the possibility that he was even partially responsible for missing all that is too discomforting. He must therefore remove himself from this reminder of his inadequacy; he must criticize the institution-but basically he is apprehensive. If one views the situation deterministically, however, the student need not blame himself. Indeed, he is being prepared adequately for his career, and indeed, it is precisely this that makes his education so inadequate for what he must be as a person. CONCEPTS AND THEORIES about society and the individual, a sense of where one fits, especially a feeling for how one would like to fit or not fit and for what the availability of opportunities to be this way means about the system-these are essentially luxuries for the graduate. Instead, the requirements are that one have a skill, that he be able to perform well and not annoy others; he must be open-minded (i.e., aware that, since there are many different interests to be accommodated, he should not have principles and ideals which rule out any of the compromises men have already made); his personal needs must be sufficiently underdeveloped that the competent per- formance of his task-whatever it may be-makes him feel secure. This is all that is necessary, and it is pretty much all education gives. There is little distinction in this from department to department. First, what is taught by and large does not go beyond the scope of the discipline or the course; material is fragmented, internally relevant and consistent but with little relevance to other disciplines and approaches, other phenomena and concerns. This makes for better skill at handling topics in isolation, but, since there are no syntheses, it does not make for a sense of what men and societies are about. an 1 room walls, and in the wild man's callous attitude for th other species remains unchan it may be the last glance yo ever see of many of them. PRIVATE RIGHTS: The Case for Discrimination By MERLE JACOB THE TRAGEDY of Trigon is not that a fraternity has openly and honestly tried to uphold its convictions and been defeated but that 21 fraternity presidents do not understand the distinction be- tween discrimination by public and private organizations. Webster's International Dic- tionary defines the word "dis- crimination" as a "mark of dis- tinction, the faculty of nicely dis- tinguishing, the perception of a difference." Everyone discrimi- nates in every phase of his life, or, to put it in nicer words, people distinguish between things, ob- jects, ideals and people-and then act accordingly. The person who claims he never discrimninates is either the biggest fool in the world or the biggest liar. The Executive Committee of Interfraternity Council claims that Trigon, in its attempt to integrate religion with a social fraternity, White Paper, THE MOST disingenuous part of the White Paper (on Viet Nam) is that in which it dis- cusses the origins of the present war. It pictures the war as an attack frqm the North, launched in desperation because the "eco- nomic miracle" in the South un- der Diem had destroyed Commu- nist hopes of a peaceful takeover from within. Even the strategic hamlets are described as "designed to improve the peasant's livelihood' 'and we are asked to believe that for the first time in history a guerrilla war spread not because the people were discontented but because their lot was improving! The true story is a story of lost opportunities. The Commu- nist countries acquiesced in the failure to hold elections. Diem had a chance to make his part of the country a democratic show- case. The year 1956 was a bad one in the North. But Diem on the other side of the 17th Parallel was busy erect- ing a dictatorship of his own. In 1956 he abolished elections even for the village councils. In 1957 his mobs smashed the press of the one legal opposition party, the Democratic Bloc, when it dared criticize the government. That was the beginning of a campaign to wipe out every form of opposi- tion. IT WAS THIS campaign and has violated IFC's Article X on nondiscrimination. However, Tri- gon was founded as-and still is -not a social group but a religious organization with social aspects. Its entire purpose is to develop men along religious and ethical lines within the fraternal frame- work, .and it makes religion an integral, part of its regular ac- tivities. It holds Vesper services in the house, conducts regular church services at area churches and sponsors community work projects to help organizations like the Salvation Army and UNICEF. TRIGON'S VIOLATION is of the Regents Bylaw which states that the University "shall not dis- criminate againstyany person be- cause of race, religion, color, creed, national origin or ancestry" and that the University will "work for" the elimination of discrimi- nation "in University-recognized organizations." Both President Hatcher and his predecessor at one time spoke against applica- tion of this kind of ruling to fra- ternities-according to President Alexander Ruthven, "No individ- ual has an inherent right to membership in any particular or- ganization"-but it has neverthe- less become the basis of judicial procedures established by both IFC and SGC. But does Trigon discriminate? Twenty-one fraternities thought so, but 20 did not. Clearly the is- sues are not cut and dried. Trigon has a clause in its con- stitution which requires members to take a religious oath. This clause involves only members. In choosing members, Trigon has never eliminated a prospective member because of religion or creed. As a matter of record, it has several members who are not of the Christian faith. Men going through rush know of Trigon's religious basis, and they them- selves choose whether or not they want to become members. Some eliminate Trigon immedi- ately because its oath would go against their religious beliefs, while others eliminate Trigon, as they might any other house, be- cause they don't like the men, the house or its activities. Thus Tri- gon's oath can act as a barrier for some men. HOWEVER, both the rushees and Trigon recognize that their mutual discrimination is both right and proper. As private in- dividuals and as a private club, both have the Constitutional right to discriminate in their private affairs. Both realize that the fra- ternity system is based on dis- crimination, or the act of distin- guishing differences in people and choosing those people who are most like you to be your friends. Institutions such as the Uni sity, Howard Johnson's M Lodge, the A&P, department st+ and other commercial stores, the other hand, are impersonal tites whose main purpose is mutual friendship but public s ice or profit-making. As iml sonal institutions open to the p lic, they have no right to criminate against people for reason. The University cannot criminate against any prospec student because of race or relig neither can a restaurant refus serve any person just because is Negro or Oriental. IN TRYING to ensure so equality and justice, civil ri zealots run the danger of fringing upon the private right the individual. Recently, com. sions investigating discrimina have attacked fraternities other private clubs and have t to get them to abolish their clusive nature. Ann Arbor, many other cities, has tried to through a law which would re late all sales and rentals of hov These investigations and1 have definitely invaded the vate rights of the individual.' federal government has recogn the distinction between public private discrimination and made the Civil Rights Bill a only to institutions which si the public, not to fraternities o Mrs. Murphy's boarding hous to small businesses in which workers come into intimatec tact with a singletor family ow The important distinction whether the unit exists prima to serve the public or primaril carry out activities cente around personal friendship. In July, 1964, Congress pa an amendment to the Civil Ri Act which in effect guaran private clubs such as fraterni sororities and the Elks, the r to discriminate in- their mem ship. The act further proh any civil rights commission f investigating the practices of t clubs. The government rea the individual has a right to ch his own friends and that no dividual has an inherent righ membership in any private ganization. BY FORCING Trigon to cth its constitution. IFC is impin on the rights of the privatec which is regarded as an indivi before the law. If IFC has right to make Trigon accept one and everyone, then IFC the University would have right to make students live anyone, no matter what the dent wanted, in apartments, mitory rooms and all fratern and sororities. Ann Arbor w then have the right to tell private owners who they can I. If MORE IMPORTANT, even if the material of education does hese sometimes address itself to a wider view of the academic and even ged, if it sometimes relates the academic to the existing order of things, ou'll it is too much merely a reinforcement of that order-without Tegard to the value of the order and without a probing of its personal and social meaning. If education is ever to do more than perpetuate the given o der. it must explore all possibilities. This is the only way the student will ever begin to formulate those basic ideas about his desires and his environment upon which his whole individuality depends. (There is a minority within the faculty who are still students themselves-searching for a way and a reason to live, defensive and self-assertive because whatever they have found so far only creates tension between them and what is around them.- Nevertheless- they - ver- are more satisfied than -the majority, largely because they know ores much better what satisfaction means. And the correlation between on their being a bit socially unrespectable and their being the most en- valuable to students is by no means accidental.) not erv- FOR THE STUDENT, these conditions mean that the educational per- experience defines the basic parameters of his future for him. One pub- can choose his peculiar career,abut the current ethic, besides having dis- told him he, must prepare for a specified role in the first. place;. has any already narrowed the range of respectable choices and defined what dis- are respectable ways of behaving in those roles. One's education will iove give him, preparation for that role and help him define himself in e to terms of that role, but it. does precious little to help him define he himself as himself, prior to the other limitations. So there are almost no important decisions left. The student sees himself stepping into the all-too-eager arms of the outside world )cial one day, well-versed in its ways, well-prepared to do its tasks. Yet ghts in the course of 18 years of schooling, the weight of predigested in- answers has intimidated his natural need even to ask, much less to s of answer, basic questions about himself. He atrophies, he loses his mis- capacity to dream; indeed, he no longer has to. an Some have been fortunate enough to avoid the transformation, ied and luckily there is still room in society for a few to be just them- ex- selves-if they are brave. They are not the tragedies, however; they like are the hope. What is tragic is that for the many who have been put transformed and reduced, there is never complete peace. Even doing egu- one's job well is not perfectly satisfying if occasionally one chances to uses. think there might be better jobs. The uneasiness gnaws, yet one does laws not know what to do about it. pri- The ized and has ppiy >erve r to e or the con- ner. is arily y to ring ssed ghts tees ties, ight ber- ibits from hese lizes oose in- it to or - ange ging club, dual the any- or the with stu- dor - ities ould all and ALL OF THIS assumes, of course, that the kinds of roles which the majority of graduates will fill are not inherently or generally oi completely fulfilling. This is at best an extremely difficult assumption to support; one can ask people if they are happy, but one can never know if the answer given would have been the same had the process of growing up and deciding on a life's work been different. Ultimately it is a matter of faith, an ideological observation, a rather ethnocentric kind of speculation. Nevertheless, I believe it is true. SUPPORTING CAST: Sup.erb Per formances Help SavPora At the Campus Theatre "ZORBA THE GREEK," which opened last night, is -worth seeing inspite of its incoherent theme and awkward dialogue. Through superb acting by the supporting cast and with the help of excellent photography, the movie reintroduces us to some essential human qualities which come into play in a remote village on Crete, and which. tend to be obscured in a more civilized environment. The film is about a lustry old man with a healthy appetite for life's pleasure and an equal courage to accept its horrors. Anthony Quinn is Zorba. His appearance and mannerism do indeed convey power, passion and vitality, but at many important points he de- livers his lines clumsily. Alan Bates, as his friend, has moments of expressive acting but seems otherwise uncertain whether the role he has is comic or serious. The most remarkable character in "Zorba" is Lila Kedrova as the aging courtesan who clings to delusion about the present and the future in order to salvage the glory of her past. Graceful and gratesque simultaneously, she brings credibility to all her appearances. The other forceful moments are the scenes of death and cruelty in the village with the brutality magnified by the rapid return of everyone to their normal chores. The fact that sorrow is projected best in a film about a man with great capacity for joy, points to the failure of Quinn to substantiate the role of Zorba. ;4 a