: cr~e litn t Academic Aims and Economic Policy y S-veny-Fifth Year, ;. EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTH)RITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS . mions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 :L- rials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: JEFFREY GOODMAN Civil Rights: It's Time For a New Approach THE THEORY of nonviolent demonstra- tion to achieve Negro civil rights is bankrupt. Negro protest must be moved out of the streets. s Martin Luther King parlayed "peaceful resistance into the first major, success- ful push for Negro recognition, but the doctrine is without impact now that this recognition has been established. The theory of nonviolent resistance, an extra- ordinary tool once, isr no longer neede. Its continued development has, in fact, become very dangerous. Peaceful demonstration is no longer getting clear,, quick results. Frustrations have mounted and de nonstrations have become mote and more riotous in an at- tempt to keep past successes from be- coming present failures. The naked mob violence In numerous NTorthern cities is the final fruit of this misplaced faith In the use of "peaceful demonstrations" to gain the Negroes' ends. No one can con- done this violence, which is a form of col- letive insanity. Continued cries of "race" in our cities' streets will achieve only re- versals in Negro fortunes. NEGRO LEADERS, having relied on demonstration for so long, are blind to the need for new couvses of action. M ern Negro ambiti'ons can be fulfilled only with sound political organization. Harlemn is an, excel ent example of the explosiveness and ultimate failure of trying to fulfill these ambitions without such organization. Mob violence there, much of it in the name of civil rights, set that community back years in its de- velopment of a. viable relationship with the rest of the city. It has solidified re- sistance on all sides to experiments and" changes in the lines of political and busi- ness leadership and communication. Tie streets are no place to establish the des- perately needed cordial and informative relationships between Negro and white leaders. The Negro ca only lose himself there, beating his head against a white brick wall. A CIVIL RIGHTS BIL L is evidence of, the growing realization that discrimi- nation can and must be removed. Negro voting rights and educational and em- ployment opportunities are protected by law. Many colleges and businesses are scouring the country for qualified Ne- .groes. The time has come, therefore, THE UNIVERSITY of Georgia has start- ed to sponsor a series of scholarships administrated through the National Merit Scholarship Program. The program is much like that at Michigan State, one, which brought more "merit scholars" to that institution than attend any oth- 'er university in the country. The Uni- versity of Georgia has now proudly pro- claimed that it has the second largest number of merit scholars in the nation. If the .number of merit scholars at a university is an accurate gauge of the quality of undergraduate education at* that university (people at State have frequently implied that it emphatically is), then one wonders, .with the addition of Georgia as second in status, what end of the list Michigan State officials are looking at. -R. JOHNSTON H. NEIL BERKSON, Edit'r KENNETH WINTER EDWARD HERSTEIN Managing Editor Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN ............... Personnel Director MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY.......... Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial Director LOUISE LIND ........ Assistant &ditorial Director in Charge of the Magazine BILL BULLARD.....................Sports Editor TOM ROWLAND..............Associate Sports Editor GARY WINER..............Associate Sports Editor CHARLES TOWLE........ Contributing Sports Editor Business Staff JONATHON R. WHITE, Business Manager JAY GAMPEL ........... Associate Business Manager JUDY GOLDSTEIN...............Finance Manager BARBARA JOHNSTON......Personnel Manager SYDNEY PAUKER...............Advertising Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ................ Systems Manager I'TNIOR MANAGERS: Bonnie Cowan, Sue Crawford, Joyce Feinberg, Judy Fields, Judy Grohne, Sue Sucher, Pat Termini, Cy Wellman. when the Negro can successfully move the expression of his complaints and am- bitions from the streets into business and industry, schools, courts and politics. Negro votes, for example, already are powerful. They have been instrumental in bringing about much of what has been accomplished in the Negro's favor. The mayor of Atlanta, Ivan Allen, knows that Negro voters put him in office and he acts accordingly. President Johnson, too, had one eye on Negro voters when he pushed the civil rights bill tlrough Congress. TILL, THE NEGRO has hardly begun to realize his political potential. There is very little political awareness within the Negro community. This awareness can be developed only by responsible lead- ership and hard work at the grass roots. It is politically elementary that Negro representatives in positions of influence would be far more useful than loud dem- onstrations outside. Inferior schools, slums and employment discrimination need rational, clear and cooperative thinking at all levels of leadership and administration. f There' is no lack of Negro leadership for such action. Strong, well-led civil rights organizations are abundant. But they need to redirect their thinking, re- shape their approach. THE NEGRO must be careful not to confuse the Tammany bossism' of Rep. Adam Clayton Powell with such a new ap- proach. Powell's consolidation of his Ne- gro constituency has mainly obstructed those white leaders in New York and Washington who are genuinely interested in defining and seeking solutions for the related problems of big-city Negro slums, education and opportunity. It is to be hoped that Negro leadership will recognize the positions of potential power which they have so laboriously reached. Not to take advantage of the op- portunities being offered, to rest content with mobs and Powell, would be a serious default on the Negroes' part. THESE NEW OUTLOOKS and ap- proaches will naturally mean the Ne- gro's assumption of the responsibility for his own destiny. They will mean the end of much of the drama and showmanship th.t have thus far characterized the Ne- gro revolt. They will mean the end of the Negro revolution and the beginning of the true integration of the Negro into American society. What is to come will be harder and longer and often more frustrating to both Negro and white than anything yet en- countered in the long history of the Amer- ican Negro. Illusions on both sides must be dispell- ed. In this country's free enterprise sys- tem nobody owes anybody a living, even though the stern dictum of "survival of the fittest" has been tempered by a pa- ternal federal government. Continuing to yell "race" at every turn is not going to solve the Negroes' problems. It may be as hard for the Negro to accept himself as it has been for the white politicians and employers to forget their prejudice. GOOD FAITH on all sides is called for now more than anything else. Sensible Negro and white leaders must realize that their problems are common, and that solutions will not be found until both sides are able to recognize and believe in the good faith of the other. The Negro, if he will cease to rely on nonviolent resistance, demonstration and direct action, can now step into a real participation in American society., -ROBERT JOHNSTON CatchingU HE NEWS from Viet Nam recently contained a seemingly dour prediction from "high U.S. military sources." They estimate that the latest shakeup in the South Vietnamese regime has set back the war effort there "at least two months." But after long thought, this news turns out not to be bad at all. It is common EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a weekly series by University faculty members and administra- tors. Each Tuesday a different member of the staff will examine an issue of higher education or specific University problem. By STANFORD C. ERICKSEN LITTLE CAN BEbSAID in favor of inefficiency but, as a teach- er, I resist economic efficiency as an alternative. The University of Michigan is surrounded by effi- cient industrial plants, but the production of automobiles is not an appropriate model for the pro- duction of educated alumni. Be- ware of "instructional costs per credit hour as a critical cri- terion for educational decision making. Dollar talk should be farther down the agenda. and we should face these compromising and restricting pressures only after the primary academic aims have been clearly stated. I sense the need for stronger appreciation in the academic community of why high-cost instructional diversity must be given distinct priority, over matters of economic effi- ciency in teaching. The task of the teacher is es- sentially one of mediating between a particular body of knowledge and the learning processes in a group of individually different students. -The instructor can use a variety of means to help stu- dents acquire the facts, proce- dures, concepts, attitudes and values that define the objectives of his course: lectures, seminars, laboratories, field trips, special projects, term, papers, examina- tions and i dependent study. Ideally, the decision as to the best instructional arrangement is one that the professor makes because he believes that a particular mode of presentation is best adapted to 1) the nature of the subject mat- ter to be learned, and 2) the men- tal and motivational resources hat his students bring to the class-; room. It is true that teachers must necessarily compromise this peda- gogical principle in adjusting to the strong pressures of more stu- dents to teach, more material to cover, and greater demands out- side of class. These negative ef- fects can be seen when a discus- sion group becomes a small lec- ture class, a laboratory functions as a quiz section, and a large lecture room is the site for de- tailed laboratory demonstrations. Most of us realize that the vari- able patterns of college teaching represent interesting combina- tione of tradition, trial and error, logic, wishful thinking, empirical. justification, space limitation and simple inertia. S * * * - I HAVE EMPHASIZED that the dominant instructional principle should be to match the mode of teaching with the inherent re- quirements of the subject matter, and the characteristics of the stu- dents. This guideline should also apply in the use of the several automated media of instruction that are becoming. available. The professor, more than the budget officer, should be responsible for the final decision about instruc- tional television, audio-visual aids and, in the foreseeable future, the use of computer-based instruc- tional assistance. The capital in- vestment for the . purchase, the development, and the proper use of these technological additions is expensive and will require con- siderable "cooperation" from the budget makers. The. point is, the requests and the specifications should first be made by the fac- ulty. High schools and colleges all over the country are splashing out news releases about modern in- novations which, in effect, multi- ply the image and the voice of the teacher. Many of these mass- teach instructional procedures do show considerable engineering in- genuity. In time, they may "lower instructional costs" but, I fear, at a price we cannot afford in terms of sacrificing the quality of educational interaction between student and teacher. Until the in- dividual student, rather than the class, becomes the primary unit in the educational establishment, most of the inst ructional innova- tions and "experiments" are better illustrations of change than of significant improvements. *any of the classroom television monitors, teaching machines and audi-visual aids that once shined with promise are now gathering dust and rust. The novelty has worn off and those of us doing research on the educational process are beginning to feel the backlash against tech- nological innovation. This is un- fortunate. Automation is here to stay; our task is to use it a better way. We should be glad that tech- nological innovation has not yet made a gross impact on the Uni- versity. We have had time to plan and to benefit from the ex- perience of others. And this brings us to the interesting position of the Center for Research on Learn- ing and Teaching. On the one hand we want to protect the val- uable diversity of instructional arrangements that now exist on the campus, but we also must press for experimentation and change- including the greater use of auto- mation. I believe we can ac- complish the rapprochement by man"-teacher, department chair- man, or dean-and urge that the University resist any drift toward teaching the same things, the same way, to larger and larger blocks of students. The greater educational poten-' tial of automation derives from its major effects on the two key participants-the teacher, and the student:, The instructor becomes more discriminating 'about conditions that promote good learning as he selects and adapts his subject mat- ter for' live or automated presen- tation. Insofar as routine and stable information can be pro- gramed into video tape, slides or computers, the instructor has created the golden opportunity to become a modern Socrates. The teacher and student might now pursue their joint intellectual in- for which, pre-programed answers STANFORD C. ERICKSEN, professor of psy- chology and director of the Center for Re- search on Learning and Teaching, is an expert on human cognitive processes. He came from Vanderbilt University to head the center when it opened in 1962. Much of his work at the center involves experimentation with automat- ed teaching procedures such as programmed learning. port the student in his program of independent study. He should have access to a technologically sophis- ticated study carrel where he con- trols the information input, its s, quence and rate of presentation and with the freedom to re-view and to re-listen and to re-study the material via the visual image, the audio tape, t$e computer printout, or that still-valuable educational resource, the book. Ideally, the student should have complete flexibility for selecting and reviewing the substantive con- tent in terms of his own resources for progressing through this in- formation processing system. * * * INSOFAR as the classrooms in this University are dominated by a questioning attitude toward edu- cational orthodoxy and by search- ing and speculations at the lead- ing edge of knowledge, we are coming closer to eliminating the unfortunate and inappropriate duality between teaching and re- search. Automated instruction can be a valuable means of giving the university professor the freedom he needs to perform his unique educational role of combining, in a natural and uncontrived way, his special competence for the pro- duiction and analysis of new knowledge with his primary re- sponsibility to extend this under- standing to his students. The lockstep chaining of the bright and individually different students into a faster moving pro- duction line having uniform and standard exposure represents the contemporary version of a familiar and persistent threat to the es- sential function of a university in a democratic society. Automation in education, as in society, is a powerful resource that can be used to maintain and enhance the stim- ulating instructional diversity that can be offered by a research oriented faculty. As a corollary we cangive greater release to the distinctive talents of the individual student to acquire knowledge; the kind of knowledge that' does not lade away against the fast moving pace of science, art and scholar- ship. NEXT WEEK: Theodore New- comb. ) including the teacher as a direct participant in the instructional uses of automation. Teachers have a tremendous influence in the lives of students; educational technol- ogy should be used to strengthen, not weaken, this relationship. * * * . IN OUR TENTATIVE probes for improving the quality of instruc- tion, we should not be tempted by the production-line meaning of efficiency. Learning and thinking students, in contrast to memoriz- ing students, cannot be poured into the same mold-kingsize or otherwise. My main point is to emphasize that teachers and stu- dents must use technology to maximize the primary educational, aims in the university- to pro-{ mote diversity of thinking and individual freedom for the, pur- suit of new knowledge. Easier said than done, but I would urge each student to "write to his congress" are not yet available; their dia- logue can involve the meaning and the value judgments about, for example, the utilization of knowl- edge by society. The teacher can achieve the kind of educational environment which gives full and functional meaning to academic freedom-the most treasured con- cept in academia. Automation should be equally attractive to the student. The mo- tivation, the aspirations, values, attitudes, and the general intel- ligence and special aptitudes he brings to' class are the most im- portant factors controlling the shape and height of his particulad curve of learning. Students differ from on another on all these di- mensions, a basic fact of educa- tional life that we too}often ignore and neglect. I must maintain, therefore, that the final and pro- per use of automation is to sup- quiry about. problems and issues f DETROIT PRIMARY: Homeowner 's Ordinance Will Test White Backlash' By JOHN KENNY. Assistant Managing Editor TODAY'S PRIMARY election in' Detroit is important to that city as well as the rest of the na- tion for it will test the pervasive- ness of "white backlash." One of the nine propositions on the Detroit primary ballot is the, Homeowner's Rights Ordinance, a subtlely - worded document at- tempting "to define certain rights of Detroit residents and residen- tial property owners." Although the ordinance uses only phrases like 'right to choose his own friends and associates" and "congenial surroundings," the howeowner's document is an at- tempt to permit discrimination in rental or sale of residential prop- erty to minority groups-especial- ly Negroes. * * * THE ORDINANCE itself con- tains three sections. The first lists "certain rights" of the Detroit homeowner. The second section :eals with fines for failing to comply with the ordinance. The final part would repeal conflict- ing ordinances. Based on a so-called Bill of Rights drafted by the National As- sociation of Real Estate Brokers, the ordinance was originally pro- posed to Detroit's CommonCoun- cil on July 18, 1963. The home- owners group (the Greater Detroit Homeowners Council), headed by council candidate Thomas J. Poin- lexter, presented the ordinance by initiatory petition with 44,000 signatures in opposition to an open-occupancy ordinance then before council. The open-occupancy ordinance was later defeated by. council; the ordinance presented by the home- owners group was not acted upon However, local law requires that initiated legislation not passed by council be presented to the voters at the next general election. * * * IN FEBRUARY, 1964, however. Circuit Judge Joseph Moynihan, Jr., declared the ordinance uncon- stitutional and prohibited its ap- pearance on the September pri- mary ballot. . At that time Judge Moynihan said, "The ordinance is patently unconstitutional and involves an issue of grave public interest,. the real intention of the proposed ordinance is to advance the cause of racial bigotry in the field of housing.", Thehomeowners council ap- pealed this decision to the State Supreme Court. On May 5 the court reversed Moynihan's deci- sion because "the injunctive power; of the judiciary may not be in- voked properly to restrain exercise of the right of initiative in this state." The court added, however, that its action "does not imply con- sideration of the constitutional validity" of the ordinance. In fact, every right enumerated by the or- dinance is guaranteed by the Unit- ed States Constitution and the new Michigan constitution. * * * PERHAPS the most ridiculous clause of the ordine nce is section' 1 (c) which guarantees a home- owner the right to maintain what he considers "congenial surround- ings for himself, his family and his tenants." The Detroit Free Press called this clause "clearly absurd." "Does this mean that if a neigh- bor paints his door red or plants bent grass rather than blue grass you have the right to force him to be more 'congenial'?" the Free Press questioned. "'The right to freedom from in- terference with (the homeowner's) property by public authority'," the Detroit News said, "irreconciably conflicts with all controls, such as zoning, which attempts to pro- tect neighborhoods from incom- patible commercial uses.' t , , THE DRIVE to defeat the ordi- nance' was the rallying point for many religious and civic groups in the city. The coordinated effort called Citizens for a United De-' troit, was heartily backed 'by Michigan's Episcopal Bishop Rich- ard Emerich. Members of the Roman Catholic Archbishop's Committee for Hu- man Relations, sponsored by De- troit's Catholic Ardhbishop John F. Dearden, canvassed 75 of the, city's Catholic parishes to explain the purposes of the ordinance. The group met constant harrass-} ment at these local meetings from members of a right-wing organi- zation which calls itself the Cath- olic Laymen's League. The league has been repudiated by spokes-, men for the archbishop. Religious leaders contend the right of a homeowner t6 refuse any prospective buyer or tenant "for his own reasons"-if those reasons are based solely on race- is plainly immoral. * * * IN SPITE OF thorough at- tempts at voter education, many experts believe the ordinance will be. approved by the voters: in to-. day's primary. This is not a real tragedy since the ordinance will undoubtedly be declared unconsti- tutional. The tragedy is that white bacdx lash and resentment of the Ne- gro's drive for complete equality may prove to be a terrifying, con- crete reality. The, O.rdinane An ordinance to define cer- tain rights of Detroit resident, and residential property own. ers, to state the public policy of the City of Detroit:in rela- tion thereto, and provide penal- ties for denial. thereof. It is hereby ordained by the people of the City of Detroit: SECTION 1: Each Detrol' resident and residential.prop- erty owner shall enjoy the fol- lowing rights, and it is the public policy of the City of De- troit to recognize, respect anC protect such rights: a) The right of privacy, the right to choose his own friends and associates, and to own, oc- cupy and enjoy his property ir any lawful fashion according tc, his own dictates; b) The right to freedom from interference with his property by public authorities attempt- ing to give special privileges to any group; c) The right to maintain what in his opinion are con- genial surroundings for himself his family and his tenants; d) The right to freedom of choice of persons with whom he will negotiate or contract with reference to such proper- ty, and to accept or reject any prospective buyer or tenant for his own reasons; e) The rightto employ real estate brokers or representatives of his choice and to authorize and require them to act in ac- ,ordance with his instructions. SECTION 2 deals with fines ind SECTION 3 with the repeal of conflicting ordinances. FOUR-YEAR REVIEW What Goldwater Really T hink~s About the UN "I fear that our involvement in. the United Nations may be lead- ing to an unconstitutional sur- render of American sovereignty." -"Conscience of a Conservative," 1960; "I believe in the United Na- tions." -Interview, Mutual Broad- casting System, June 21, --Speech in Phoenix, Decem- ber, 1961 "Well, Governor Rockefeller goes farther. He says that I ad- vocated getting out of the United Nations, and I can't recall ever having said that, and I wish he'd point out where I had if he has the information." -Meet the Press, January 5, 1964 AV