Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 'Where Oiions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prev6ail"'' s Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. Th4 must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1963 NIGHT EDITOR: MALINDA BERRY "Come On, Come On - Don't Be A Coward" DELTA MERGER: Regents, Legislature Hold Key to Progress Educational Break down Leads to Stagnation IN THE Atlantic Monthly, a respected- Har- and credit hours. Unfortunately, both have only vard historian asks rhetorically, "Are the the most incidental relationship to knowledge Colleges Killing Education?" and absolutely no relationship to outlook. A well-known author, condemning the entire- The University, with its top-heavy bureauc- ty of formal education as it exists today, de- racy, has become self-perpetuating to such an Glares that students who want to learn and extent that it functions in an atmosphere of teachers who want to teach have no choice extreme apathy. However absurd it may seem, but to withdraw from academia into "The Com- the pedantic scholar, lost in his field of spe- munity of Scholars." cialization, exists in a partnership of unconcern A former college president, speaking in Ann with the anti-intellectual. Arbor, warns: "Within the educational system Both groups rest in great numbers on this there is s'evere discontent, a realization that campus. Both hurt the campus and the society the system in the American college is not work- in which they live, for neither understands that ing as. it should." society, neither can improve it. Across the country there is a growing feeling, still weakly articulated, that something is SOCIETY is falling apart because its members wrong. The university is rapidly falling under lack personal values, personal standards. influences which are at cross-purposes to the Morality equals hypocrisy. Underneath, vicious historically proclaimed aims of education. It undercurrents are at work. Corruption is wide- is increasingly blind to the deep problems below spread. Economic, religious, racial and nation- the surface of society. It is increasingly unable al hatreds lie ever ready to erupt into blood- to relate these problems to the educational ex- shed. The have-nots are extremely. bitter about perience. their fate; they will not remain dormant. Those who have received society's greatest LAST YEAR on this campus, 15 concerned material rewards become deluded by their af- students met with 15,members of the fac- fluence. If they are at all concerned, they still ulty and administration to discuss university remain serene in the belief that nothing will reform. Vice-President Roger Heyns was at happen until they are gone. They prefer to be that meeting. He couldn't understand what apathetic and/or unaware - refusing to ac- was wrong. What specific complaints did the knowledge the dangers, the injustice in the students have? world. As long as they are secure they worship Heyns missed the point. The whole structure the status quo. of education is rotten. The University (indeed, But the status quo is no good. If it cannot nearly all universities) has become functionally be changed rationally it will be changed vio- unable to perform its most important task - lently. This is why the critical mind is so neces- the fostering of the critical mind. An institu- sary. tion which shirks this responsibility is mean- ingless. EDUCATION must provide an awareness and The University's problems range far beyond an understanding of" the world. The stu- specifics. A speaker ban, an administrative dent must have perspective. In Mills' term, he morass, the tacit approval of discrimination, needs a "sociological imagination," an ability are only symptoms of a grave sickness which to relate problems in all their forms, and then pervades the atmosphere, creating a heavy mist to deal with them. which very few students attempt to dispel. The University can no longer create such a These few possess the critical mind, but they student, for the simple reason that it is in- do so in spite of, independently of this envir- terested in quantitative, rather than qualita- onment. tive results. The mass culture has laid its in- evitable claim to the institutions of learning. +0 FEW STUDENTS are here for an educa- The University has become mired in that tion. So few care to go beneath the surface culture. It has lost all sense of purpose. In a of the world in which they live. Students don't businesslike fashion, it is producing physicists, want knowledge, they merely want a degree. engineers, businessmen and historians, but it Such is the path to success. The degree and is no longer producing men. its emoluments are delivered in terms of grades -H. NEIL BERKSON Toward 'Actual Freedom By GAIL EVANS THIS FRIDAY the Regents will have the opportunity to move in the direction of expanded edu- cational opportunities for Michi- gan students. Delta College Board of Trustees will ask for official University approval for negotia- tions toward an eventual mergeir of the two campuses. The University has only so many ways to meet the challenge of the deluge of students. The full- year calendar, and, now, perhaps, an additional branch campus are steps in the right direction. The preliminary meetings of University officials and Delta negotiators last Friday indicate that the administration favors discussion of the affiliation with Delta. * * * ASSUMING that the Regents will approve further talks, the Legislature holds the key cards. No formal arrangement can be made by either Delta or the Uni- versity unless the Legislature is willing to approve the merger and appropriate sufficient funds to transform the two-year commun- ity college into a four-year branch campus of the University. The need to move and move fast to expand educational facilities on every level is essential. The realization that college en- rollment will have to skyrocket in the next three years in order to meet the phenomenal increase in applications' seems to have met with renewed concern of Michigan educators in the past few weeks. The University expects a 37 per cent increase in' the number of applications in the next few years, and Michigan State University President John A. Hannah pre- dicted an overall 42.7 per cent in- crease in the number of Michigan high school graduates wishing to attend colleges. * * * THE MICHIGAN Coordinating Council for Public Higher Educa- tion has indicated that the state is already several years behind in developing a "master plan" for higher education which would be able to cope with the enrollment boom. Presently, each educational in- stitution in the state has.to figure out how it will meet the problem. Since early this year Delta Col- lege has been wooing University, MSU and the Legislature in the attempt to become a four-year in- stitution. The students have now prefer- enced merger with the University. Jan. 8 the Delta Board of Trus- tees voted 8-0 to begin negotia- tions with the University. DELTA'S desi. e to become a four-year colleg. seems to be mo- tivated by a real desire to better serve the educational needs of the Saginaw-Bay Ci y-Midland a r e a and to accept a $1 million gift of- fered by a private donor contin- gent upon Delta's becoming a four-year college. Presently, Delta has 1,510 stu- dents enrolled in a two-course program: vocational and junior college. The modernistic campus, built from the ground up, opened its doors to the tri-county area two years ago. Its plant facilities are superior for a community col- lege; however its library suffers from the newness of the campus. Certainly, the University would have no more trouble assimilating Delta as a branch campus than the Flint campus. Flint College, which offers jun- ior and senior level courses, is op- erated like a separate school on the Ann Arbor campus with a dean in charge of its operations. Students seeking admission to the Flint campus apply through the regulartUniversity hadmissions of- fice, but specify the desire to at- tend the Flint branch. * * * AT DELTA, indications are that the proposed branch campus would have more autonomy. Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher said that ar- rangements would have to be made to delegate powers by the Regents. to a new Delta Board of Trustees. An alternate proposal would be to operate Delta like the Flint campus. Certainly, the University and Delta both can only gain from the proposed merger. In order to offer the state the maximum of superior educational opportunities, the University must make sure that its branch campus maintains aca- demic standards commensurate with those of the Ann Arbor cam- pus. However, this must be coupled with the need to provide a college education for an increased num- ber of students, who may not all wish to attend the big residefitial university. RESLICING THE ACADEMIC PIE: Expansion Plans Need Thought N OW THAT the University's observance of the, centennial of Abraham Lincoln's Eman- cipation Proclamation is over, it is fitting that we ask what in the world we were celebrating. Man will have his ceremonies; they are often sincerely meant, and this particular ceremony came exceptionally close to being honest in admission of the horrible failure of Negro emancipation in many areas of the United States today. All of the speakers emphasized that the struggle is still going on; all stressed that the Negro is rarely a free citizen in our society, but for all their words there was something faintly incongruous in the dignified formality of speeches, in applause for words, in the ob- servance itself which was a commemoration of words 100 years old. AMONG THOSE words are these: ". ... the Executive Government of the-United States, including the military and naval authority thereof, will recognize and maintain the free- dom of such persons, and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or any of them, in any efforts they may make for their actual free- dom." The key words here are "actual freedom." Even Abraham Lincoln knew as he wrote that the words and the accomplishment were two distinctly different things, and that the free- dom which he proclaimed could not in itself .mean actual freedom. Further, he was aware that such "actual freedom" lay somewhere dimly in the future, and thus he pledged the Federal authority of the United States of Amer- ica to uphold the struggle for Negro rights beyond the force of words. Thus the action of Federal troops in Little Rock and in Oxford are grounded in a pro- vision now a century old. But Federal action, undertaken only in times of extremely blatant crises, does not deal with the crises less blat- ant but equally severe - the small crises of the Editorial Staff MICHAEL OLINICK, Editor JUDITH OPPENHEIM MICHAEL HARRAH Editorial Director City Editor CAROLINE DOW .................. Personnel Director JUDITH BLEER.. ............Associate City Editor FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .*. Assoc. Editorial Director CYNTHIA NEU . .. .. ............ Co-Magazine Editor HARRY PERLSTADT............Co-Magazine Editor TOM WEBBER .........................Sports Editor DAVE ANDREWS............Associate Sports Editor JAN WINKLEMAN.............Associate Sports Editor unpublicized individual. These are left to the direct action of other individuals; the few who are willing to commit part of their own lives in acknowledgement of the fact that words are meaningless unless they are realized in the lives of human beings. T HE OBSERVANCE of the centennial like- wise remained outside of the meaning it wished tocommunicate in its necessary isola- tion of a moment of time in commemoration of another moment of time. Neither moment is discrete because both depend upon decades, perhaps centuries of continuity if one is to understand their significance and their valid- ity. All of the speakers recognized this fact, and have dedicated their own lives in many ways as part of this continuity in individual action. The point is that the real observance of the centennial of the Emancipation is to be found elsewhere than on the speaker's platforms of the University, and that that observance is contradictory, cruel and courageous, bitter and full of hope. It exists in the records left behind of Matt Parker and Emmett Till, in the Black Muslims and in Rev. Martin Luther King, in sit-ins, boycotts, and voter registration projects. It ex- ists in integrated neighborhoods where indi- viduals of different races are learning to live together without mutual suspicion, and in lynchings, beatings, and burning of homes and churches. It exists in a culture of music, liter- ature, and drama that is spreading everywhere through this country, and it exists not so far away under the Welensky regime in South Africa. THE NEGATIVE commemoration, still fight- ing and fighting often successfully, is more powerful than Lincoln's words by far. It lives on blood and hate and ignorance, and over- rules words with no trouble at all. tut the posi- tive commemoration is also stronger than words, and because it reaches forward rather than back, and because it is right, it will ulti- mately be the victor. Because history moves forward, no action which is valid needs justification in terms of the past. Had Lincoln never issued his Emanci- pation Proclamation, a world evolving toward unity would still demand the social and politi- cal equality of the races. There are enough deeply rooted rational conflicts among men without having to make them up, and the fur- ther men advance in the complex effort to secure peace and justice, the more evident it becomes that we need to admit as many people as possible to the honest social and political dialogue, whatever their race. By HARRY PERLSTADT Co-Magazine Editor THE UNIVERSITY must expand to accommodate the growing number of qualified applicants. The real question is not where these high quality students will come from - Michigan or out-of- state - but how the University is going to grow. Three possibilities for expansion present themselves. The first, and most unacceptable, is to continue to increase the present monolithic Ann Arbor campus without struc- tural changes. This would only in- crease the already over-crowded over-loaded situation. The other two alternatives are more promising. On the one hand, the University may enlarge its present branches throughout the state and continue to absorb Jun- ior colleges. This implies that more Michigan students would at- tend the University. It is doubt- ful if these branches could attract a large number of out-of-state students, and they therefore would not have as cosmopolitan an at- mosphere as Ann Arbor. * * * ONE WAY to draw students to the branches is to have them spe- cialize in certain areas - say one campus has the performing arts. But then this would sap the strength of the respective depart- ments at the other branches and at Ann Arbor. The other possibility is the "small residential college". It does not necessarily guarantee an in- creased number of in-state stu- dents in the University as the branch plan does. It is merely a way of increasing the present Ann Arbor campus without really in- creasing the monolithic structure. This tidy bit of double-think is easily explained. By setting up several small colleges in Ann Ar- bor, each with 2,000 students, the overall size of the University is augmented. But the size of any administrative or teaching unit will be decreased, for with fewer students in each college the pro- fessors will face smaller classes and the administrators run small- er kingdoms. The small residential college, then, will alleviate these problems. The dean of one of the colleges will have a more manageable number of professors and students to handle and will be able to do a more effective and personal job. The professors will have smaller classes and be able to have more informal contacts with their stu- dents. But drawbacks to this plan ex- ist. It will be more frustrating for a student in college A who wishes to take a course from a great pro- fessor who happens to be in col- lege B. He is so near, yet separat- ed by the reels of red tape in- volved in double registering in both colleges. This assumed that college A and college B will both be liberal arts colleges. Now suppose that college A were the School of Natural Sci- ences and college B the School of Social Sciences. A freshman would have to enter one of these two areas, in effect, decide on a gen- eral major area before entering. And then the faculty would have to decide in which college they belong. Will the present psycholo- gy department find half its mem- bers in the Natural Science college and the other half in the Social Science college? Undernthe small residential col- lege plan, students and some fac- ulty members will live together in dormitories. If the colleges are functional as above, then physi- cists will live with physicists and psychologists with psychologists. But splitting into specialization both in and out of the classroom is incongruous with the idea of a liberally educated man. * * WHILE MAKING the classes smaller and the lower administra- tive units easier to manage, the small college system elevates the University administration even farther above the classroom. The Rackham Graduate school presently oversees graduate stu- dies in all literary college depart- ments, the engineering school, and the natural resources school, to name just a few. The right hand of Rackham does not know where. the left one is, let alone what it is doing. Rackham mostly pub- lishes announcements, grants de- grees, and acts as post-office for admissions. These administrative chores of Rackham are desirable to a point. It does the busy work for the de- partments and thereby permits them to concentrate on teaching. Under the small college system, this could free the individual schools from administrative te- dium. However the chaos in the upper echelon, which must now correlate several colleges may proveldisastrous. The graduate student remains safely within the bosom of his department, but the meandering, knowledge seeking undergraduate who takes courses in several colleges leaves a trail of havoc. The advocates of the small col- lege system claim that the plan is good because it brings faculty and students together. If the faculty or the students really desired this they should have gone to one of the many excellent small colleges in this country. PRESENTLY, two professors in the same department teach classes of about 100 students. The stu- dents in both classes are essen- tially the same group. One pro- fessor is able to hold open an in- timate debate with any student in the class over any matter cov- ered in the readings. The other can barely get a student to raise a hand to ask a question on the subject matter. The small residential college, above all, is just slicing the Ann Arbor campus another way. God only knows how the clever admin- istration will be able to confuse the legislators, the professors, the students and themselves over which college has which percent- age of out-of-state students, or physics majors, or drop-outs. The population explosion of 18 years ago is a fact and cannot be changed. Preparations to educate the increased numbers of Michi- gan and non-Michigan students must be made - and not behind the closed doors of the adminis- tration or the faculty senate. Closed door politics or quibbling over one or two percentage points or tuition increases will not bring the necessary solution. whimsey in Simplicity THERE were little bits of colored paper falling over Trueblood stage last night during the pre- miere performance of a week's run of "The Fantasticks," the off- Broadway sensation brought to Ann Arbor by the Professional Theatre Program. The confetti rose from the stage like whirls of dead leaves, or dropped in place of rain or snow, and cast and audience alike were swept up with them into a world of metaphors and music, an en- chanting evening of whimsey. A stage as broad as the imagina- tion held a story as fragile as glass in what proved to be an exercise in simplicity which upon occasion soared much higher than expected. * * * A CRYSTAL-CLEAR first act reflected the ensemble work of everyone in it, a concept strangely lacking in the second act, which seemed to drag a bit at the very moment the cynicism which should freshen the play comes wholly into command. Alice Can- non, possessing a voice of clear precision, portrayed The Girl with many moments of undeniable charm. Ty McConnell as The Boy was an exuberant foil for her, and his energy carried him admirably throughout the performance, al- though the intimacy of the New York theatre has tended to limit his vocal projection a bit. More than a few of Tom Jones' delight- ful lyrics were lost in his numbers, and occasionally in Miss Cannon's too, although she was not so con- sistently guilty. David Vaughan and Donald Babcock had some hilarious moments as the respec- tive fathers, and Don Stewart trod the difficult line between Narrator and the bandit, El Gallo, although of the two, the bandit came off stronger, resulting in good scenes and a less satisfactory continuity. Jay Hampton had a great time as The Actor, who does marvelous splicing on just about all of Shakespeare's famous scenes, and Don Pomes died dutifully at least twice, aiding and abetting Hamp- ton. James Cook's Mute came off superbly well, with no lines, and an economy of movement, but swirls of colored paper and bits of cloth that wove enchantment of a very special kind. THERE is a difficulty which is more than challenging with "The Fantasticks," due to the utter simplicity of plot and movement, and the ripeness of the images. Without complote concentration on the part of the players, and total belief in their creation, the play has a tendency to be a bit precious, particularly if the bite of the satire is played down, as it was last night. The play must never be really lit, except by its own incandescence, and without it the after-taste may be a bit saccharine. Be that as it may, even sugar may be a delightful change of pace in this day, and "The Fan- tasticks" will solve a real craving in Ann Arbor for most people for another whole week. -Jack G. O'Brien 'THE FANTASTICKS': ., ~4t~ FEIFFER r- 'SEF. 5UP6FIC1A4 PKACC OF I HATE MK~ t oOK5 - \I HAT 1L1 Z I LeUPERkCCM I q MK" 5M 6-CL \ SUP~EFfCfA!P RL tG I AtC SUPERF GIAu Ut~ pugrqL E ? CLAL I I-1" APP6~CITC. WWI M MK~FCI 5UPlVcS " \ :_ t our mo mq LuF- HAW6 I5 SUP69FIClAL. Ike AT BO1TMM- I CA V1K ,I' Iw,. v" 1111P r n 1A Jj J1,* '&5 I