Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDI ED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ROGER RAPOPORT: Where Opinions Are Free, Bricks Fly ...... .... ................ ... ............r.+*a+.:",:":v,:::..v.vvr...Sw..*'v: vv".: x sv.:".^vo": r "-v::.r::.^." .. ., ,. . ....... . ... ...........:x...... }...... x.W ". .....r..,...... 4: ....r....- w.. ,......, x,., ,w -?'{!"..:... Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth 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. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: MARK LEVIN The Travel Tax Trauma DURING THE past two weeks the world press has reported how at least 70 - and possibly several hundred-prisoners at Arkansas' Cummins Prison Farm were brutally murdered over the years by sadistic guards. The story broke when a new reform superintendent forced the exhumation of the skeletons of three prison- ers (two of them decapitated) from a cow pasture. Further diggings are expected to reveal more skeltons of prisoners who had been officially listed as "missing" or victims of "sunstroke." Predictably the Arkansas legislature convened to discuss the matter and took fast action. It passed a resolution deploring the sensationalized "world press coverage" of the scandal. THIS IS NOT the first time that the press has become a whipping boy for finding skeletons hidden in someone's closet. For the truth is almost always some- one's enemy. Many countries get around the liability of baving newspapers print too much truth by having censors, thus preventing anyone from reading too much fact. But some countries feel it's good to have a free press around-because it will print the truth about everyone and thus keep us all a little more honest. The problem is that maintaining a free press is much tougher than maintaining a censored one. For a free press demands a great deal from the newspaper and the reader. Printing stories that embarrass a lot of people poses problems. First, it alienates advertisers who finance the paper. Second, it alienates officials who reporters "have to work with." Third, editors and reporters have to live in the same town with people they are exposing. Finally, if you do enough muckraking you can alienate so many readers that you may wind up with few friends. So if you do your job and report everything that should be known, yo.u're likely to wind up with a deficit, lots of enemies, harassed reporters, and broken windows. MOST PAPERS SOLVE the problem with an expe- dient solution-they understaff. Not only does it save money but it keeps the reporters so busy they don't have time to work on in-depth exposes. Consider the Ann Arbor News, which has nine city staff reporters with only one full-time and one half-time reporter covering University activities. What mortal could possibly dig out all the stories that should be printed? (University press releases and the' unedited copy provided by Daily reporters who serve as wire service stringers fill many columns.) The normal small-town paper doesn't have time to disclose much conflict-of-interest, secret defense de- partment reports on discrimination, classified counter- insurgency projects in Thailand, dubious bidding for University projects, and confidential reports from city officials complaining about pressure builders "who want favors." So as a result, a college daily with a young staff of part-time, underpaid reporters has been left the muck- raking job. The Daily does it not because it ,revels in making enemies but because it feels that a free press is worthless unless it is used to try to keep everyone honest. This poses problems, for while everyone pays lip- service to the concept of a free press, most people don't really want one. The sad truth is that people want a free press only as long as it doesn't hurt them or their friends. The library director enjoys reading about the latest troubles at Willow Run and Willow Run people get a kick out of finding out about troubles in the library. The English department is grateful for a scoop on the resignation of the vice-president for students, and the vice-president for students is glad to know ahead of time who the new English department chairman is. EVERYONE IS ALWAYS begging us to leave stories out about themselves. The library director tells us that printing a certain story will "only bring down the state legislature to investigate-and they don't understand." The English faculty asks us to wait "until the appoint- ment is official." The only moral way to handle such requests is to simply ignore all of them equally. The Daily applies a simple standard: Is a story new, different, and right, IN THE BEST journalistic tradition, Sports Editor Clark Norton and reporter Howard Kohn wrote a story Friday which pointed out that local merchants have been giving discounts to football players in violation of Big Ten rules. There seems to be little dispute about the issues in- volved. As soon as Athletic Director Fritz Crisler found out, he asked every store owner to stop the discounts and went on to launch an investigation into the entire busi- ness. But predictably, Michigan sports fans were up in arms. Local sportscasters lambasted the paper. In De- troit, toupeed Channel 2 commentator Van Patrick chided them as "would be Pulitzer Prize winners," (Actually, The Daily already has been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in local investigative reporting for last fall's series on military research.) Patrick went on to charge that Norton and Kohn were "purists . . . naive journalists who apparently had nothing better to do with their time than dig up things that have been going on for years." Patrick even joked with weatherman Jerry Hodak about the brick that went through The Daily's window Friday night (nar- rowly missing innocent girl reporters). All this comes from the same station that editorially laments the decline in morality, asks for full law" enforcement, and an end to corruption and graft. MUCH OF THIS is to be expected from the adults. But the depressing fact is that many students reflect an even more narrow-minded attitude. "Why couldn't you print it next year, after I gradu- ate," said one student. "I don't want the teams on pro- bation now." "The Daily really did it this time," said a sorority girl. "Why did you pick on your own school?" "What's the matter, don't you support the team.' Sure, Kohn and Norton are among the most ardent sports fans on campus, cheering over victory and an- guishing over defeat. And they were dismayed by what they found. But like all good reporters they are not on anyone's "team." A reporter's job requires applying the same journalistic standards to "good guys" and "bad guys" alike. Once again, a free press can work only when it is applied equally to everyone. All the paper did was print the story. The Daily didn't give any athletes discounts on subscriptions or write the Big Ten rules. But then The Daily's windows make a much better target for two halves of a brick (thrown in Friday night) than any local theatre or the Big Ten office in far-away Chicago. Someone has to take the blame. ASSUMING WE ALL live through this affair-and certainly there are more weighty campus issues than athletic rule infraction-we hope you're convinced that The Daily is serious enough about its job to print any legitimate story. As a newspaper reader I'm always much more con- cerned about the papers that find nothing to get their readers excited about; I always wonder what they are leaving out. The Daily doesn't ask for your love, but we do hope you understand that one permanent risk of a free press is that you may get caught by it. We think this risk is far outweighed by the advantages of having an honest interpretation of what is going on. ; . i' r. + t z "Lest Ye Be Free of Sin, Cast Ye Not the First Brick. ' (Correction boxes and Letters to the Editor are the antidote for mistakes, but most papers seldom err on major investigative pieces. For example, no one has accused the paper of any factual errors in Friday's sports discount story.) Besides, if everyone's request to hold stories was honored, you wouldn't have any reason to read this paper. You pay $8 a year for The Daily because you expect us to tell you ahead of everyone else that Robben Fleming is the new president, that Vice-Presidents Cut- ler, Niehuss and Stirton are leaving, etc. Generally, our readership seems sympathetic toward our exposes because the stories usually involve rela- tively few administrators on complicated issues like conflict-of-interest, bidding, discriminatory practices, and unclassified research. But it's relatively easy to take on conflict-of-interest, discrimination, and secrecy. What takes real courage is to question a sacred cow central to the lives of the average student-athletics. -U ''"IH VL 41 "RE L You WITA T HAT f-1AVY WA L LET, 'IR ? " FOR LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON, everything in this election year seems to be going wrong - and for an incum- bent seeking re-election, he has been doing just about the worst things to improve the situation. To fight Com- munism he has pursued an unpopular war in Vietnam, to fight stagnation of the cities he has cut already minimal Great Society funds, and to combat inflation he has tried to raise taxes. And now, to fight a balance-of- payments crisis far removed from pub- lie concern, President Johnson has added insult to American economic in- jury by asking Congress for govern- ment restrictions on travel outside the western hemisphere. The administration's proposed tra- vel tax would not prohibit journies outside the country, but it would make them financially more difficult by: Levying a 5 per cent tax on air- ]ine tickets. Reducing duty free purchases from $100 to $1. O Clamping a graduate tax on all day-to-day spending over $7. BEHIND THE WHOLE CRISIS is the American balance-of-payments, the nebulous net account of transactions with foreign countries. Under the ideal economy, the country would spend a- broad just as much as it receives. Last year, however, the United States end- ed up with a multi-billion dollar def- icit, weakening, according to the Pres- idem, the strength of the American dollar and therefore "the entire free world economy." Travel alone accounts for $2 billion in the spending gap, but corporate spending and vast military expendit- ures (notably over $25 billion last year in Vietnam) aggravate the situation more. So Johnson's agonizing question in proposing the restrictions must be whether the taxes will accomplish enough economic good to outweigh the terrible psychological and political 'risks. These risks are certainly real: from Congress down, almost everyone feels bitter. NTOT LEAST AFFECTED are the na- tion's students, the mobile genera- If the government could convince the public that its medicine would save the world from economic crisis, citizens might be better prepared to swallow it. Economists, however, are not at all certain the travel taxes will help. "The tourist outflow is small com- pared to the corporation outflow," claims University economist Robert M. Stern. "The taxes are a very minor way of dealing with a major problem." A T THE MOMENT, the President's proposal is sitting in the House Ways and Means Committee, which started hearings on it last Monday. Most Committee sources expect it to report a travel tax bill to the House floor by the end of March. The only question is in what form. Rep. Charles Vanik (Dem.-O.), has suggested a compromise proposal, which would retain the 5 per cent air- Mie tax but exempt tourists from pay- ing taxes during the first 30 days of travel. This way, hopes Vanik, "we would get at the real culprits - the 'expatriate' rich Americans who live in Europe year after year, spending exorbitant amounts." The compromise would also seek cooperation of Candian authorities to Prevent Americans from flying to Eur- ope from Canadian cities, and thus avoiding the ticket tax. Preventing spending tax evasions woul be more difficult. No government machinery could monitor every dime a tourist spends in France, or even check exactly how much he takes from the country. "The graduated tax proposal will make criminals of all of us," says Tal- ismal i. UNTIL AND UNLESS the Congress passes travel restrictions, Presi- dent Johnson must depend on the American public conscience to help check dollar outflow ("If they could see their own country, it would help," implored LBJ). Congressional behavior is always hard to predict, but in the end the President is likely to get his way. Officials close to the Ways and Means Committee caution citizens not to ex- ,, A fn+ I-,mhil mns A Solution to the Middle East Agony By DAVID SALTMAN Collegiate Press Service JERUSALEM-In all the analyses of the Middle East spawned y the Six Day War, everyone has ignored a most critical question: what is the relationship between "Arab Socialism" and the "Israeli Co-operative Movement?" Israel's economy is largely so- cialist: 60 per cent of its industry and 80 per cent of its agriculture are run exclusively by 288 co- operatives called "kibbutzim." The kibbutzim are the most advanced socialist societies in the world. They use no money or physical rewards; everyone works accord- ing to his ability and is taken care of according to his needs. There is no private property. In short, the kibbutzim is the Marxist ideal, the summit of social organization and above all a system that works in the Middle East. Now recall that the Six Day War--from the Arab side-was a socialist war.. The Arabs fought to counter alleged Israeli aggres- sion, which they say has grown steadily since 1955. Many kibbutzim have Arabs working on them- Arabs who live there with their Israeli comrades. During and after the Six Day War, the Arabs deli- berately bombed Kibbutz water towers and power plants. So the Arab states are tiying to build socialism by condemning Is- rael-which has the most com- plete socialist units in the world. Arab leaders are in the unenviable position of supporting Arab so- cialism while condemning Israel! socialism and bombing socialist communities with Arab members. CURIOUSLY, the solution to this paradox also solves the prob- lem of a lasting peace in the Mid- east. First, some background. It is increasingly clear that the Six Day War was not really a war started by the Arabs and the Is- raelis, but rather by the United States and the Soviet Union. Rob- ert Scheer discusses this in the November issue of Ramparts. He writes: "The Mideast contains between UAR's Nasser, Israel's Eshkol, Jordan's Hussein: One Region? of its birthright. This is the threat of Nasserism. ". . . In the post-Suez period, the main Anglo-American concern with Nasser resulted from his leap into the oil-rich Arabian south where, through the venicle of the Yemen war, he has become a direct threat to the feudal regime of Saudi Arabia, and the oil-i ich sheikdoms of that area. ".. neither the British nor the Americans have been worrying about ... moral and cultural is- sues (in the Yemen war). It is, rather, the presence of a Nasserite, anti-colonialist thrust in southern Arabia, where much of the oil is found, thatdisturbs the West." IT DISTURBS THE kibbutzniks that it disturbs the West. They seem to be the only Israelis who aren't so happy about the recent wvar. Being quite literate, and a~su socialist, they recognize Scheer's thesis that oil interests, coupled with a "frantically spiraling arms race," caused the June war, not the Arab "madmen." E~ven though problem in this area: again, the influence of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. In short, they know where it's at. So there are three questions to answer before we can see the road to peace: * Can we get rid of foreign in- fluence in the Middle East? " Do the Arabs and Israelis want peace? 0 What could be the basis for a lasting peace? As to the first-foreign influ- ence-that is mostly up to the Soviet Union and the United States . . . and their citizens. Do the Arabs and Israelis want peace? There have been some hopeful signs lately. Jerusalem Post special reporter Dan Bavly writes: "For the first time, the thought of coming to terms with an Israel Government willing to discuss the establishment of a Palestinian Autonomy (has become) a possi- ble alternative (forthe Arabs).. "The Palestine Arab at the end of 1967 is gradually readjusting "..____ r _r ._ L .. L . . . . 4U the Diplomatic Correspondent for The Observer of London. He writes: ". ..at present the majority of Palestinians would probably be ready, like most Egyptians, to ac- cept peaceful coexistence with Is- rael. In this respect there has been a real and fundamental shift in Arab opinion since the June war. If there ever was a serious idea of 'liquidating Israel' 4n the sense of physical extermination of the 2,250,000 I s r a e 11 Jews, it has been dropped. So has the idea of ending the separate existence of Israel as a state by war." So at least Israel's power is being acknowledged, andpatbest the Arabs are willing to co.- exist peacefully with the Jews. Now the third question: what could the basis be for a lasting peace? Stephens writes: "PresidenthNasser'ssmost re- spected adviser on foreign affairs envisages a settlement in two stages. In the first stage there could be a phased withdrawal of Israeli forces accompanied by steps tiation of 'recognized' borders and with it the other broader aspects of the Palestine question, the settle- ment of the refugee problem and the passage of ships flying the Israeli flag through the Suez Canal. . . .the Jordan Government is prepared to grant Israel extra- territorial control of the Wailing Wall and of the access to it-what would amount in effect to ceding part of the Old City of Jerusalem to Israel. In addition, Jordan would accept international super- vision of the Holy Places." Naturally, this will be nego- tiated. Israel will not under any circumstances give up the Golan Heights, on the border with Syria, and Jerusalem may be interna- tionalized. But there is surprising agreement between these Arab proposals and those finding wide acceptance in Israel. Many Is- raelis are quite willing to return, with the exception of the Golan Heights, the land captured !n June. The point is, though, that, contrary to popular belief, both sides want to negotiate. THE IMPORTANT question - the one which knits together Arab and Israeli socialisms-is the ques- tion of the future. There are various conceptions kicking around among the Arabs, ranging from minimal relations to a Middle East Federation with Israel as an autonomous Jewish member. But for some reason, no one has mentioned the strongest and most effective plan; one which not only, ejects the Great Powers but also capitalizes on the common aims of Israelis and Arabs. This is a socialist Mideast federation. A socialist federation invigorates Arab socialism by ending the ex- pensive feud over Palestine and encouraging Arab-Israeli trade. It also continues Israel's prospering kibbutz economy. It guarantees national autonomy for Israel and the Arab states, aind guarantees that later on-with a strong re- gional union-no one will worry abnt autonomy tno much anyway. 4 I I I