Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, December 13, 1972 Wednesday, December 13 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY My dear faculty- and fellow students "Most of these kids come from all black high schools... they get books for their libraries when the wh ite schools a re f in ished with them." (Continued from Page 7) tically referred to as separate but equal. It was to be a place of higher education for blacks, and to this day virtually no whites attend the school. Like all other institutions of the separate but equal era, South- ern lived up to only half of the label. It was separate, all right, but certainly not equal. Money was simply not put into the black school system, and the education offered there suffered as a con- sequence. Southern today fits right into this classic mold. Its students are largely lower and middle- class blacks from the nearby Louisiana and Mississitmi area. According to Etta Hearne, an attorney closely connected with the university, Southern students are no strangers to to inferior education. "Most of these kids come from all black high schools," Hearne comments. "The only time the schools get books for their li- braries is when the white schools get finished with them." The neighborhood around the school is consistent with this pic- ture of the poor southerner. The homes are run-down and in des- perate need of painting. While the appearance of the campus it- self is relatively pleasant, one can not escape the depression creeping around its edges. LSU, the white institution in ILouisiana, is also located in the caiptal city of Baton Rouge, but there the similarity ends. For LSU is the type of picturesque southern campus Robert E. Lee would have been proud to attend. Its plantation-like setting, and relatively wealthy student body contrast sharply with anything one is likely to see at Southern. LSU students who don't live in the many plush fraternities and sororities that surround the cam- pus, reside in a garish apartment complex called Tigerland. The congregation of two-floor apart- ment buildings, decorated in the all too common ugly modern style of arcihtecture, is built on streets named after famous LSU athletes. Each of the apartments are laid out around courtyards with built-in swimming pools while a number of shiny new cars crowd the parking lots. The education at LSU, while not on a par with northern state institutions, it is the best to be had in Louisiana. Through a series of constitutional guaran- tees more money is spent per pupil than in any of the black schools. Educators at LSU con- cede that comparing the school to Southern is like talking about day and night. A degree from LSU is also a virtual necessity for any white politician in Louisiana, and when they reach the statehouse, the politicians don't forget the old alma mater. The coup de grace of the sepa- rate but equal system, however can be seen in the governing structure of the two schools. While Southern is controled by the elected State Board of Edu- cation, LSU is run by a Board of Regents appointed by the governor. In an attempt to correct these inequities, the NAACP, along with a number of liberal white organizations has been calling for a merger of the two systems. "The only way blacks are go- ing to get the same money for education as whites, argues Baton Rouge, Nov. 16 Murphy Bell, "is when they go to the same schools." Bell is a black attorney in Baton Rouge who has argued before the state legislature on the question of unequal funding. "Like childbirth," Bell con- Opposition to the merger na- turally exists in parts of the white community, but perhaps unexpectedly, in the black com- munity as well. Young blacks, in particular, are vehemently op- posed to any kind of merger. "When two unequals merge, one of them gets submerged," says Johnson. "In this case that means blacks." Merger in a sense then repre- sents a step backward for South- ern students. They see Southern, the largest black university in America, as an ideal place for developing a strong black con- sciousness. Their fight against Netterville is in large part based on his failure to work towards that end. The dilemma then is an ob- vious one. As an all black uni- versity, Southern will never get the funds it needs to be a truly effective educational institution. Separate but equal has never and probably will never exist. tinues, "the process will be pain- ful and difficult, but it is abso- lutely necessary." But if it merges with LSU, it will be forced to sacrifice some of its "blackness" for educa- tional opportunity. The choice is a difficult one and the black community is di- vided on the question, largely along generational lines. To older blacks, merger means equality. To their children, it means sur- render. With such fundamental question left unresolved, it seems likely that Governor Edwards can ex- pect trouble at Southern no mat- ter when he decides to reopen the school. The new generation of south- ern blacks is simply not willing to tolerate the inferior conditions that exist at all black schools. Neither are they willing to stand by and let whites or "black pup- pets" control their education. Like Thursday morning, the conclusion to the story of south- ern black education may not be written for some time to come. By MARK DILLEN IN A FEW DAYS, I, like many of you who read this, will be participating in that dubious ad- venture known as final examina- tions. Bravo. Some of us, shar- ing that transient identity of stu- denthood, will be on the receiv- ing' end: we'll exist with precious little sleep, spend hours memor- izing tomes we'll undoubtedly soon forget exist (but those tri- via we figure might give us an edge when it comes to grading, stay indoors all day and, in gen- eral, do just about all that one would reasonably suppose neces- sary to completely ruin our health. Others, who I also hope are now reading, will play the more sinister role: the faculty. Some, having maintained straight-faced sobriety during the preceeding months of instruction (presumably because of the seri- ous nature of their calling), sud- denly become terribly engaging, with a stream of bon mots that must speak of their satisfaction at having taught us so much. I scribble something that seems vaguely profound at the moment and spend the rest of the holiday wondering, as the entire assemb- lage deserts (if you'll pardon the expression) the scene of the crime. Now such impressions may in fact be illusory (lack of sleep has been known to play such tricks) and even if not, it seems a par- ticularly inopportune time of the year to bring up the faults of a system which we realize is more than a bit dehumanizing here. After all, once wedeterminehthat a university is dehumanized, what can be done? Presumably, the bureaucracy and regulations exist from the number of young people wanting to receive an edu- cation here who have parents or some governmental benefactor willing to pay the cost. There is, as economics teaches, a trade off here: some non-educational un- pleasantness for the education (and certification) of a "good school. I repeat, I don't want to damp- U65AMC6Obt W AM en anyone's holiday cheer or op- pose exams outright, but rather offer some thoughts for the com- mitted (or soon to be commit- ted!) student and our erstwhile faculty. Faculty (it is only fit- ting) comes first:1 It is four years since I came under your ageis of educational supervision. These years, if not immediately and concretely pro- ductive, have at least been stim- ulating. A good portion of you are undeniably brilliant fellows (only once have I had a woman for a professor), and within that group are many of you who in - fact care and are able teachers. I salute you and consider myself fortunate to have discovered and attended many of these classes. Yet I only wonder why we have not become better acquainted. You often seem to run away right after class, just when I have questions to ask and problems to explore. Most of you are seldom in your office, or are there at the precise moment I'm supposed to be in one of your colleague's lec- tures. You don't usually live nearby, I seldom see you at any of the coffee hours, and I still confess to a feeling of some in- timidation at the prospect of call- ing the more well-known among you at home. I am surely sym- pathetic to your desire to leave the "job"-God knows I have often similar sentiments. It's just that I can't help rebelling at the thought that I must prove my- self worthy of talking to a man whom I and the State of Michi- gan have hired to aid in my learning. No, it is not an employ- er-employe advantage that I seek (for students it probably can't exist in fact anyway) but the freedom of exchange that must occur when people gather to fur- ther their knowledge. If I may intrude into the area of your own ethics, too often you seem as totally at the mercy of the "pow- ers that be" in your own depart- ment as I am of your power at graduating time. A couple of years ago, I would probably have called this intolerable, but now, having tolerated it quite well for SAMR VOU CAGE ,SW TA CAv; some time, I will simply ask for suggestions on how to remove its irritation. I make these statements in the spirit and with the knowledge that a rejoinder against myself and my fellow students is equal- ly deserving. Like Robben Flem- ing, I too am astonished at how much the campus mood has changed in the past five years, though I don't see it solely as a positive growth from arrogant activism to cooperation that he presumably does. Though our activism of those days may have been propelled by considerable shortsightedness, behind it was a concern almost totally absent in this year's student. I am not hashing out politics here, just awareness. Reform, even where it's needed, has become passe, and today's "Joe College" con- centrates on "giving the prof what he likes" irrespective of the educational value in doing so. The almighty grade point seems to have found a new host of ad- vocates as the economic drought makes dutifully fulfilling B.A. and M.A. requisites in any field no guarantee of employment. It seems this competition has forc- ed us to acquiesce to certain "facts of life" in the University -to adopt a more or less amoral stance appropros what is requir- ed for academic success. And this, is a shame, for a cri- tical outlook toward our Univer- sity is being lost. There is noth- ing intrinsically damaging in tak- ing tests, receiving grades, or competition in general-quite the opposite. But when people are propelled into greater competi- tion in an insecure time, the means continually threaten to subvert the ends. This may be a problem only an Institute for Social Research can handle, but as I prepare to rush off to the UGLI for another round, I must have faith that we, dear faculty and fellow students, can do more to humanize our en- vironment and increase our learning than our current experi- ence would indicate. AMP CALLt YLX'RS-F? The Knixc Knight's1 by E (with apologies to Gec A Knix ther was, ar That fro the tyme the To tricken out, he lov Untrouthe, dishonour, Ful wylie was he in hi And thereto hadde he as wel for cristendom With everie horror in Fro losses three he And caused soone a so Above alle nacions in He raysed the coste o: No Cristen man so aw Though eighte yeres t In making stryf of Cyties dyen, men upor Withouten j obbes, wer Reprecions of alle miu And evermore he cr And though that he w If wysdom true of tric Who nevere yet no vile He mayde it parfit cle This trickie, swarthie, * BOOTS Functional and Fashionable " Brevitt " Sandler s Goodrich * Olof Daughters . also HIKING BOOTS by * Raichle e Bass - .MEN'S BOOTS by e Bass * Raichle *Red Wing 5 at 5 VA BOVEN SHOES, INC. 17 NICKELS ARCADE / ,. t, 1 ---., j ..- 15 The White Aztec by Linda Parker Silverman they have dipped his body in blue and streaked white paint down his cheeks preparing him for sacrifice he is tied to a pole and the fire drops its plumes across his face covering the warrior with its feathers and beak as he falls into the throat of god the white face goes away at last the eyes go at last after staring at the earth where his feet had been at last the priests have found someone sweet to love who caught deer with yarn and let them go by dark for he would not make needles out of their bones or cradles out of their skin A LITTLE BIT OUT OF THE WAY, BUT A LOT LESS TO PAY Fihare fun, relaxing, a joy to anyone. 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