I The Crew of the USS Pueblo Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Letters to the Editor 1 : w : Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. th 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. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: NEAL BRUSS Tune To Investigate ANSWERING one form of hypocrisy with another will not solve the problems posed by yesterday's disclo- sure that University athletes and coaches are apparently violating Big Ten rules. Incrimination is not the answer. Instead, the conference must take a mature look at the role of colle- giate athletics. Five local businessmen have admit- ted giving discounts and free merchan- dise to varsity athletes upon presenta-' tion of their 'M' Club cards with the prior knowledge of University coaches. An investigation, yet to be completed, reveals that several universities have fostered atheltic double standards: letting the rules say one thing while they do something quite different. AT ISSUE is whether the Big Ten will follow the lead of the National Col- legiate Athletic Associationa(NCAA) and allow an increase in financial aid to athletes or whether it will return to its policy of the early 50's. Before 1957, the Big Ten offered athletic scholar- ships only on the basis of need, not on athletic ability. The infamous University of Illinois slush fund case of 1966 sets an omi- nous precedent. The firing of the Illini coaches appears to have been a purge to clear the conscience of the confer- ence. After the Illinois blood-letting, four Big Ten committees were established to examine conference regulations. Recommendations have lagged, how- ever, and no effective change has yet taken place. Big Ten investigators said yesterday they will move in and take appropriate action against any violators at the University. Conference rules now permit athletic tenders but prohibit any aid over and beyond the tender-an intermediate position 'between present NCAA and old Big Ten rules. But conference athletes and coaches who feel they are disadvantaged be- cause of the present rules still make exceptions when they feel the case warrants it. Investigators, unfortunately, focus r~nly on the coaches and players who have been uncovered in a double standard. TO. DEMAND a full investigation of tho entire conference before judg- ing University athletes and coaches is not to acquiesce with the cynics who said of the Illinois coaches, "All they did wrong was get caught." Rules are rules, and violators should be judged. But this by itself is to facile, too su- perficial a solution. Pointing to iso- lated individuals as scapegoats is dis- honest and unrealistic. There is an unspoken code in the athletic world, as in every closely- affiliated organization, which decrees that those who are caught should suf- fer in silence, holding secret the confi- dence of those who may also be guilty. This may be honorable. But it is not honorable for those whose secretsare kept sacred to let their associates suffer for a confer- ence-wide double standard. The merit of any rule is its relative justice. Any dictum that is enforced in an archaic, lord-over-peon fashion, is an ugly distortion of justice. The Big Ten must first decide if the discount practice at this University is an exception. It must also conduct an extensive and realistic investigation into ath- letics at each university and bring that information before the confer- ence. J)OUBLE STANDARDS do a good job of hiding all our everyday sins P nd vices. People say one thing and Oo another. Nothing could be more nor- mal. But when the two-sided character of someone else is exposed, people quickly arm themselves with the vir- tue of vigilantes and hiss violently that the violators must pay. When the Big Ten has re-evaluated the role of collegiate athletics and its rules, it can judge the University. --CLARK NORTON Sports Editor -HOWARD KOHN Reflections on a 'Cause Celebre' Should a Censorship Trial Be about People or Principles? The Four Defendants in the Cinema Guild Trial Disagreed To the Editor: WANT to take strong exception to the highly sensational, mis- leading, and grossly distorted story in The Daily of Thursday, Feb. 8, concerning the CIA on our Campus. I can of course address myself only to that part of your fable that purports to deal with the area centers. Through a series of innuendos you convey the impression that by definition Anybody who works for the CIA is an agent, i.e. by im- plication a spy. Therefore anybody who has any contacts-however innocuous, legitimate,- or above board-with anyone in the CIA is asocating with agents. This is nothing but character assassina- tion through guilt by association. In fact, CIA has a research di- vision which is engaged in pain- staking scholarly research on the economic, social, and political problems of many areas. Much of this research is published under the official imprint of the CIA and is openly available in our li- brary and is listed in the card catalogue. These publications are produced by professionally trained people, some of them former academics, who in their individual capacities as economists, sociologists, political scientists, etc. participate in the scholarly activities of their profes- sional associations, and present papers at research conferences, and at scholarly meetings. On these occasions, academics have personal contacts with people in their disciplines who have earned their professional respect, and some of these individuals may be working for CIA. These individuals have absolutely no con- nection with the covert or foreign intelligence activities of the CIA. NOW as to the luncheon held in the spring of 1966 purportedly attended by the "leaders of the area study programs," the actual facts are as follows. Four China special- ists from the research office of CIA visited the major centers of Chinese Studies in the country to inform themselves of the range and quality of university research on China. There was nothing secret or mysterious about this. One of our faculty colleagues set up the lunch and sent around a mimeographed note to faculty connected with the China program. To the best of my knowledge nobody declined the in- vitation, but several people could not come because of conflicting commitments. We talked about our research activities, the problems of obtaining published materials on China, microfilming of bodies of materal and similar technical questions. No "broad hints" were thrown out. No mention was made of any "special graduate programs with each of the professors" and noth- ing was said about "money being provided to help these professors in their work." All these allega- tions are the figments of some- body's lively and very rich ima- gination. Unfortunately there are some people in our midst who are prone to detect a spy around every corner. Thus at least unwittingly they engage in McCarthyism. The final point I would like to make is that while The Daily can- not be blamed for the falsehoods conveyed by its informants, one would have the right to expect that information would be checked and double checked before it is pub- lished. -Alexander Eckstein Professor of Economics The CIA Lunch To the Editor: SINCE I AM one, of the people who spoke to The Daily re- porter about CIA contacts with the Center for Chinese Studies, I would like to set the record straight on what I said and did not say. Around the time that the MSU- CIA story broke in the press, some members of the Center received a memo from one of the Center staff inviting them to a luncheon with visiting and resident CIA personnel to discuss China re- search and "matters of mutual in- terest." Only four members of the Center accepted the invitation. During the luncheon the seating arrangement was such that each of us was engaged in one-to-one dialogue with a CIA representative most of the time. It was not a roundtable discussion. I therefore do not know what was discussed' with Profs. Hucker and Eckstein, and I heard only parts of what was discussed with the third mem- ber of the group. I can best relate what was discussed with me by my vis-a-vis. Our chat was mainly concerned with the problem of providing an adequate training in Chinese and other area studies for people the CIA had already recruited to their ranks. I was left with the distinct impressions that they were eager to have these people enter graduate programs of a scope such as we are able to provide, and that they would provide complete financing for these students during their graduate careers. THE DAILY to the contrary, I was not told that they wanted a "special graduate program" or that they would provide funds to co- operating professors. I am sorry that my remarks to the student reporter were misunderstood in this fashion, since it only confuses the issue. I would like to make it clear that this ,meeting was concerned with the research aspects of the CIA organization and not with cloak-and-dagger activities. How- ever, I am not convinced that it falls within the responsibility or the interest of the academic estab- lishment to cooperate with and advise the CIA on these matters. -Norma Diamond Prof. of Anthropology Dirty Play? To the Editor: ,D LIKE to welcome Clark Nor- ton and Howard Kohn to Ann Arbor. They've exposed the type of practice which, if not common knowledge, at least surprises no one. There's a measure of irony in the fact that a newspaper which prides itself in social awareness should so badly misjudge the bal- ance between the need to eliminate these practices and the damage done by this type of expose. -Darryl Anderson Law '70 M e The Central Intelligence Agency And the University Community- CENTRAL Intelligence Agency activity on campus represents an obvious dan- ger to the University community. Already, it appears, serious damage has been done to the University and its social research institutes. When a fellow researcher or 'foreign social scientist discusses his work with a University faculty member, he can never be sure that information will not be parsed to the CIA. A visitor from a country which may be "politically hostile" to the United States cannot be assured University personnel are not spying on his activities and re- pcrting them to the CIA. THE IIOST disturbing aspect of the matter is that no one outside the CIA knows whether anyone at the University is integrally working for the agency and what information they might be provid- ing. Even President Robben W. Fleming was unaware of the degree of CIA involve- ment in the University. Farvard and other reputable universi- ties have recognized the danger of CIA contacts to a free and open academic community, and these schools have banned any institutional involvement with that agency. Michigan State University obviously was not aware of the danger, for it was rocked by a. scandal that seriously dam- aged that university's reputation when Ramparts magazine disclosed that from 1955-59 MSU staffers were used by the CIA as a front to train secret police for former South Vietnamese dictator Ngo Dinh Diem. FURTHERMORE, CIA activity cannot be personnel to determine the consequences of their aid to the CIA, this will still not justify the submission of information to the agency. Such a decision is clearly a political matter. As an institution the University has no right to approve or con- done CIA activity. And when the University permits its employes to provide research information to the CIA, it is giving tacit approval to the purposes for which the information is being used. The next question which arises is whether we can trust the CIA to be prudent in their use of University person- nel and facilities. The MSU affair, Na- tional Student Association scandal and other recent disclosures are compelling evidence to the contrary. The inherent secrecy of any CIA activ- lty on campus is reason enough to ban such activity. And as for CIA infiltration of student government and radical stu- dent groups-as was attempted here-it is not only inexcusable but really some- what puzzling. The CIA was set up by Cc'ngress in 1947 because of the failure of our government to anticipate the bombing of Pearl Harbor. It was never in- tended to have an internal security func- tion. HERE are other more serious dangers inherent in allowing CIA activity on campus. As explained by an official of the Institute for Social Research, Univer- sity personnel may be placing themselves and their colleagues in considerable dan- ger if they attend conferences in coun- tries whose security police have reason to believe they or their associates are collaborating with the CIA. The demand of the Student Govern- By RON LANDSMAN Last of a Two Part Series COURT CASES are riot all briefs and motions and legal documents. All the legalistic trap- pings are just a cover for the people involved. Legal precedents in court cases are made by people who choose to spend a few years and thousands of dollars to press their point. Others don't, and the choice they make depends on a piethora of personal and psycho- logical factors. One feeling which affected all of the defendants in the Cinema Guild case was the absurdity of the situation they were in. Couits being what they are, it wasn't un- common for the defendants to have to wait for other cases be- fore and after theirs - and it wasn't uncommon for them to see a rape case heard before theirs and an armed robbery right after. And what were they doing there? Over a year ago their organiza- tion chose to show a movie some thought objectionable - and now they were going through dull and irrelevant court proceedings which could land them in jail. It just didn't make much sense. Two of them at least-Ellen Frank, '68, and Hugh Cohen of the engineering English depart- ment-were seriously opposed in principle to censorship. To them it was worth the fight. MARY BARKEY'S decision to plead guilty to a reduced charge was and is looked upon favor- ably by all the defendants. rhey often go to great pains to exla4n to "idealistic civil libertarians' that to oppose censorship and to be the object of an actual trial are two very, different things. Defendant Elliot Barden sad later, "When I heard what ,he did, I thought, 'Man, that was a great thing. Why didn't I?'" Cohen and Miss Frank, ihough still willing to carry the case further in court, looked on the final settlement as quite accept- able. There is, however, an intellec- tual gap between Barden and Miss Barkey on one hand and Miss Frank and Cohen on the other. Barden and Miss Barkey don't live in the same world that the others-including the lawyers -do. To them the court was un- real. They were friends and Cohen and Miss Frank were friends-and there were lines be- tween them. Miss Barkey and Barden were sitting on the floor outside the courtroom Wednesday. They had planted themselves there a half- hour earlier expecting the usual 45-minute wait before going into court. 'Miss Frank had dozed off while reading a book, seated across the hall from the pair. Cohen chatted with a Daily re- porter. ANOTHER DAILY reporter sat down next to Miss Barkey and asked her how she felt about it all. A conversation between her and Barden ensued: Miss Barkey: Well, I Ion't know... Barden: Hey, why don't you say "I'have no comment." Miss Barkey: That doesn't sound bad. How about "Miss Barkey was unavailable for The Sermon From the Mount actual physical fatigue it entailed just weren't worth it. There was also a problem of communication. Barden and Miss Barkey are cool kids-they don't live in the straight world-and they love it. But Miss Frank and Cohen do-or at least they are aware of it. Barden and Miss Barkey felt left out of the case-they had no control over what was happen- ing and they felt, though urob- ably incorrectly, that the lawyers didn't care enough about them, but more about the "principles" of the case. Elliot explained, "They're brob- ably the kind of guys who worn for jail reform." Whereas, he im- plies, what they really should be doing is eliminating jails. MISS FRANK and Cohen, on the other hand were much closer to the lawyers in mood and atti- tude. Cohen-a full grown adult and a faculty member - clearly thought in tei'ms that the lawyers understood and he could und'er- stand them. Miss Frank had known both lawyers all her life and was much more committed to the principles because of her upbringing and inclination. Further, Miss Frank and Cohen had helped prepare the case and had worked closely with the law- yers-they were a part of their defense, arranging for witnesses and similar tasks. The other two, though, were more or less left out-and had little control over what was going to happen to them - which could have been quite severe. What must be considered here -especially by those who see Miss Barkey as a sell-out-is that a test case involves people. It is most unpleasant to be the center of a court case, especially one with poor prospects. It takes time-time few people are willing to commit - and energy - that draws away from other things they might want to do. FINALLY, THE film itself de- serves some mention. Opinion is truly divided. Barden didn't like the movie himself, though Cohen and Miss Frank still stoutly de- fend it. Other forces backing Jack Smith's "Flaming Creatures" are not insignificant - besides Uni- versity Professors Robert Sklar of Even with that in mind, the question of intent remains uper- most. Cinema Guild advertised the movie the same way it ad- vertises every other movie it shows. There was no indication that the audience was in for a good stag film. And yet these four were arrested-not the own- ers of theatres which advertise their films "As Playboy says, 'The most erotic movie of the year.' " Clearly a distinction should be made-and it has been made the wrong way. This is my rifle. There are many like it but this one is mine. My rifle is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I master my life. My rifle, without me is useless. Without my rifle, I am $ useless. I must fire my rifle true. I must shoot straighter than my enemy who is trying to kill me. I must shoot him before he shoots me. I will... My rifle and myself know that what counts in this war is not the rounds we fire, the noise of our burst, nor the smoke we make. We know that it is the hits that count. We will My rifle is human, even as I, because it is my life. Thus, I will learn it as a brother. I will learn its weakness, its strength, its parts, is accessories, is sights, and its barrel. I will keep my rifle clean and ready, even as I am clean and ready. We will 1* U *