i O r1h Aic14lau Daily Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS x AT-LARGE Letter to a Southfield Businessman I - - -~ Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail Ly NEIL SHISTER NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 .e Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE NISSENI Students for McCarthy and Kennedy: The Campaign for The System' THE APPARENT success of Eugene McCarthy's play for student support should prompt a more accurate analysis of the political attitudes of students and youth in America. In the past few years, every news- paper and magazine of note in the coun- try has run at least one "youth have re- jected the system" article. This inunda- tion of journalistic verbiage has heralded the hippies as only the most bizarre faction of a, generation of young people who have become completely alienated from society. Activist students have given up on the democratic electoral system, the reports cry. Youth is leading a sexual revolution against traditional morality; students are protesting at Oakland, Washington, and Howard University; students are demanding "student power." Whether in praise or in despair, every organ of the national media has verified this "new mood" of students. And some of the genuine rebels them- selves have begun to believe their own press notices. They talk confidently of re- structuring the universities and society, of radicalizing their fellow students, of pressuring the military-industrial com- plex through draft resistance and com- munity organization-all as if they had widespread support. THEN ALONG comes Senator McCarthy.. Now McCarthy is not a radical and would never claim to be one. He is a fine Stevensonian liberal in the best tradi- tion. He opposes the war on both ra- tional and conscientious grounds, yes. But what about after (and if) the war ends? Would President McCarthy then sit down and "fundamentally restructure society?" It is difficult to think so. Yet McCarthy has wooed (and won) this same generation of radical students who have "given up on society." He en- tered the Presidential race, he declares, to convince students that the democratic system still functions, that grievances can still be redressed and policies still changed through traditional political means. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48104. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press. Collegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mal). In this work of persuasion he has been remarkably successful. Students in large numbers have shaved beards to work for McCarthy in New Hampshire and now in Massachusetts and Wisconsin. Stu- dents are rallying around the McCarthy banner, even around the Kennedy ban- ner now. How have the liberal senators been able to arouse all those radical young people? The answer isn't hard to discern. The media men have been barking up the wrong tree. Students, as Senator Mc- Carthy knows (and the New York Times, Newsweek, et. al. don't) aren't for the most part very radical. Some of them are liberals who oppose the war, like Mc- Carthy and Kennedy themselves. Some of them are conservative. Some are apathetic. But very few are interested in a "fundamental restructuring" of uni- versities or societies. PROTESTS THERE have been, but they have been characterized by an un- dogmatic, ad hoc indignation over par- ticular issues rather than thoroughgoing radicalism. Those journalists who would exploit every isolated sit-in and demon- stration because it's "good copy" should understand the lesson of the McCarthy campaign: many students still believe in "the system." The radicalism of students is largely a figment of the mass media imagination. -URBAN LEHNER No Cmment COL. PAUL AKST, Selective Service director here, today was awaiting an apology from Columbia University after being hit in the face with a lemon meringue pie at the close of his talk to 200 students on "The Student and the New Draft." Akst had just finished speaking to the students in the auditorium of the uni- versity's Earl Hall yesterday when a youth got up from a front-row seat, hurled the pie, and fled. This happened amid the confusion caused by some stu- dent trying to eject hecklers from the rear of the auditorium. Akst left the university immediately for another speaking engagement. "An apology will probably be for- warded to Col. Akst," a university spokes- man said. --The New York Post, March 21, 1968 MY VISITS to The Daily these days are quite infrequent. There is a tra- dition of sorts that once one's tenure of office is over one does not return to the scene of his crimes, but rather leaves the building, slinking out with the remnants of three-and-a-half years work stuffed into a folder, to come back only to col- lect pay checks and look for mail. Yesterday morning I was in the Sen- ior Editors office, drinking a clandestine cup of coffee and killing a few minutes before an eleven o'clock, talking with a few of the present Senior Editors. The mail came in, and the mail comes in to the Senior office with a flurry of cere- mony. It comes in huge piles, one of letters and one of magazines and one of other newspapers. People attack the mail pile, they do not merely thumb through it for there is much excitement in seeing such a mass of correspondence. One of the letters was full of vengeance The person who opened it shouted with glee "We've got a hate letter." Those of you who have never publicly written can- not appreciate the delight in getting a hate letter, for it meansrnot only that you are being read but, more importantly, playing on somebody's gut-strings with sufficient intensity to -force a reply. It sort of legitimizes your work and makes you feel good to know that somewhere in the world lurks a reader who despises you and yet continues to read. Yet this letter was so sick that it prompted me to want to reply. Being away from The Daily one forgets what it was like to immediately jump back into print in rebuttal, yet I do so now be- cause of the quality of this letter and the type of mind it betrays and what it portends for the future. THE LETTER was in the form of three clippings from The Daily, over which were written brief notes in a good hand, using a blue-ink-filled fountain pen. All of the clips appeared in last week's papers. Over a No Comment Editorial, which reported that a Republican legislator had blasted the University as "a citadel of radicalism".and a place where Michigan citizens "can no longer dare send their sons for fear of the infectious philoso- phies of de facto treason and their daughters for fear of pregnancy" our correspondent noted "You don't have the guts to comment." I shall reply, correspondent. Philoso- phies of de facto treason probably re- present this country's best chance at any kind of salvaging of soul and for every daughter who becomes pregnant there must be a hundred others who have become so frightened of any act of sex by the conventions of a repressive cul- ture that it will take their eventual hus- bands years to get themto enjoy physical love. So sir, I have "the guts to reply." Less irreverently than you might think. His second comment was over a story that was headlined "Napalm Use in War Increases, Reaches Unparalleled Volume." Our erudite, learned adversary replies in the language of the true rational man, saying "You yellow bellied cowards- why don't you also tell about the thou- sands of South Vietnam innocent peas- ants who were slaughtered by your friends the Viet Cong. All this true (sic). No, that you would not do. South- field Michigan Business Man." WELL, SIR. I can best answer you by referring to a letter that appeared Sunday in the New York Times signed by 25 Vietnamese- students at various universities in the U.S. and Canada. It said "(If) there are limits to what Amer- ican power can do to Vietnam. Unleash- ing on a small country the most de- structive firepower ever known to man- kind.the United States has brought our nation to the brink of annihilation. The words of the American commander that "to save Ben Tre it became necessary to destroy it," plainly reflect the moral, political and military bankruptcy of American policy in Vietnam. Both self- interest and moral responsibility, then, make it imperative that the people and Government of the United States take the lead in ending this conflict." Now sir, I do not know if you read The Times. It is hardly an intellectual journal, yet from the quality of your comments I feel safe in thinking that it is unlikely you read it. I suggest you begin. But you call us yellow bellied cowards, and I must make issue with this state- ment. On the contrary, those opposing the war-especially those who are willing to reinforce their moral opposition by refusing to be accomplices in any fashion to the heinousness of what this country is doing in Vietnam, even if this means leaving the country or going to prison in refusing military service-are hardly cowards. Just the opposite, sir. It is the act of ultimate courage to say 'no' to a system, to transcend the cultural and social constraints which urge asquies- cence and seek a higher rationale for being, on which has no " place for the jingoistic chants of particularism but instead demands a genuine commitment to humanity while there is still time. I hope you can understand this. His last comment is -one which I can- not answer. Nor can anybody. It simply reveals what is happening to the mind of our Southfield Business Man. Last Thursday The Daily ran on page one a picture of the five students who won the Quiz Bowl Competition sponsored by UAC. One of the members of the team was Don Silverman, a senior who wears a beard. In the picture Silverman's eyes are closed, he is blinking. The picture is not especially flattering. Mr. Southfield Businessman has circled Silverman's pic- ture and written as a caption "My, My, aren't I just too handsome." GOOD LUCK, there, Mr.. Southfield Businessman. I mean it sincerely, for you are in a bad way. But the tragedy is that you are not alone, that much of this country not only is sick but is taking pride in its sickness. Now this will be hard for you to grasp, but I like you more than I hate you. I hate your ig- norance and prejudice, but I must like you or I wouldn't spend this much time trying to enlighten you. For until you are free, Mr. Southfield Businessman, nobody can be free, I can- not be free, and thus I must like you, perhaps even love you, mustn't I? 4 4 Letters to the Editor Pool Room To the Editor: IN FOUR YEARS as a student at our illustrious university I have witnessed a variety of changes, some good, some bad- almost all of them labeled "pro- gressive." The changes objection- able to me I have accepted without much comment, but the latest "progressive" change is too much for even my apathetic voice to re- main silent any longer. I refer to the recent decision to allow women into the Michigan Union pool hall. It was "progres- sive" enough when, after World War II, the old doorman had to put down his shotgun and watch the fair sex pass into the hallowed halls. At that time, however. Union officials at least realized that the university men had to have some sanctuary from the fe- male entourage, and preserved a small room on the second floor where virility could prevail. Now this room, too, has been integrated -the place will never be quite the same. In addition to torn felt, high-heel marks on the floor, and stench of perfumed air (which will surely cover the sweet aroma of the rum-soaked cigars), will be a noticeable change in the per- vading conversation. Instead of a husky voice shouting, "Oh damn, I scratched!" well be a sweet so- prano issuing, "Herbert, where does the ball go after it drops into the hole?" I do not quite understand why, sporting a progressive attitude such as this, we are the only Big Ten school without female cheer- leaders. Coach Elliot had better order a set of numbered girdles and bras along with the shoulder pads for next fall - rumor hasrit thatE a female wrestler is going to try out for tight end. BUT ALAS, it has been done. The pool hall is lost. Next fall will be the barbershop, and after that the men's restroom. Doorman, load your scattergun! We have not yet begun to fight! -Robert A. Miller,'69 McCarthy To the Editor: THERE ARE NOW two anti- Johnson candidates for the Democratic nomination for Pres- ident, Senators Gene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy, Many Ken- nedy boosters say that McCarthy's followers should switch allegiances and support Kennedy. Some even say that McCarthy should with- draw after the Wisconsin primary in order not to hurt Kennedy's chances for the nomination. The rationale behind this is that Mc- Carthy "can't win" the nomina- tion (He "couldn't win" in New Hampshire either). I believe that this rationale is wrong. McCarthy is certainly less of an underdog now than he was, and if his campaign continues successfuly, and, he attracts sup- porters (instead of competitors); he will go into the Chicago con- vention with an impressive string of primary victories. The conven- tion would then be faced with a choice between Johnson, who had been the target of much public dissatisfaction, and McCarthy, who had demonstrated much public support. As the Democrats want a winner, they may very well go for McCarthy in this situation. Another factor to consider is that although both McCarthy and Kennedy disagree with President Johnson strongly on issues, there is in addition a deep personal hos- tility between ithe Johnson forces and the Kennedy forces. Because of this, a convention battle be- tween Johnson and Kennedy would probably be much more bitter than would one between John- son and McCarthy. Even if this battle resulted in Kennedy's being nominated, it might cause enough /disaffection among Johnson Dem- ocrats to give the election to Rich- ard Nixon. In short, there is no reason for McCarthy to withdraw in favor MARY If1/ ~~ - ) - K n e as u7AJtN I.r@#Pqfl of Kennedy's chances All letters must be for becoming President are little, dabllettpaesanusthould if any, better than McCarthy's. double-spaced and should In addition, McCarthy would very longer than 300 words. Al likely be a better President, ters are subject to ed those over 300 words will --Donald W. Wyche erally be shortened. No un Associate Research ed letters will be printed. Mathematician yped, be no .1l let- iting; gen- sign- 4i __,.. ....:-.. ... .. :: .:.:.:.. «: . ::':4"i.y0'.>.: : v ,.x . }. p u rX..-v - '.S IvY.vi.\.x.DRilJt' J.*.'v.AgC.w..'. ~f . :U~ . i/x)0 ,Cb:,b +r ., ve".. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..'. . . . . . . . . ....:...,.::.m,..,...c. . . . . . ....,... ..:.....:::.*..*.o.. .......*e...*.*.. ..SSSv.w ,....>... . . . . Flivvers to Frea -outs: The Continuing, Story of SGC By MARCIA ABRAMSON "Student Government Coun- cil sets as its goal the promotion and preservation of the customs, tradtions and educational stan- dards of the University. By representing student opinion, the SGC hopes to assist in the promotion and formulation of University policy, recognizing that students are but one ele- ment of an academic commun- ity which contains administra- tors, faculty, alumni and civic interest as well." So spoke the first SGC presi- dent in 1954, in one of the many major episodes of the continuing story of student reaction to Uni- versity regulations. Although p o1itic a1 activism bloomed early in the 1930's, the concept of student control of con- duct regulations did not appear until after World War II. For example, male students in the thirties never opposed manda- tory tests at registration for ven- ereal disease. And coeds never pro- tested when women's closing was actually set back during World War II because too many women were staying out too late and were pronounced too weak to donate blood to the war effort. And the struggle to spirit women from general living areas into dorm- itory rooms has only recently minated with the ultimate, 24- caught student attention and ten- hour, closed door open-open. Both student government and University regulations b e g a n around the turn of the century and have been undergoing a seem- BOTH THE COMMITTEE and student government were relative- ly passive and cooperated quite well for a number of years. The first student Good Government Club was formed in 1898 to "study a n d investigate administrative problems." When the committee ordered the GGC to cancel a lec- ture series and return to its stated purpose, the students submitted meekly. One already-scheduled speaker was allowed: William Jen- nings Bryan. In the liberal gesture of 1926, Students were admitted to the com- mittee with little fanfare. Six stu- dents were officially appointed by the President of the University and included the presidents of stu- dent government, the Union and the League, and the managing editor of The Daily. Dean of Stu- dents Joseph Bursley was proud to note in 1934 that "at no time since voting power was given to the students has the committee vote ever been divided along facul- ty-student lines." Also in 1934 the committee re- ferred a plan for increased stu- dent participation in governing the University to the Student Council and suggested open meet- ings be held to determine student views. The Council held surveys, polls and an open forum - and all of them revealed unwavering student apathy. Bursley noted with wry amuse- ment that a request for revising student government could be ex- pected regularly every two or three years, but that student government had yet to seem very effective or sity and students appears to have changed with the names. By 1939 the state Legislature had launched waves of protest, provoked by stu- dent behavior at the dissoluteUni- versity. IN 1939 THE CSA admitted that it was quite "interested" in stu- dent activists and decided to recognize the Socialist Club, Na- tional Student League and the Vanguard because "there is safety in numbers" and "a recognized group is more easily controlled." Only NSL remained vociferous, but this "vocal minority" forced the CSA to consider changing admis- sions standards to require per- sonal character descriptions for outstaters because the NSL mem- bers came largely from Brooklyn, the Bronx and Bayonne, N.J. Perhaps what can be called a major climax in student activism came in 1940, when President Ruthven expelled 13 students, claiming that "Michigan welcomes" only those students who are con- vinced that democracy is the ideal form of government for a civilized people." The students included the vice president of the student Sen- ate, a psychology teaching assist- ant, a Hopwood Award winner, six Jews, two Negroes and eight out of state students. Despite coverage by the Assoc- iated Press and Detroit papers, the Daily was prevented from pub- lishing the action for days. Pro- tests became nationwide, and The Daily finally referred to the in- cident in a letter to the editor supporting the University's action. The letter supposedly came from on Liberal Action organized to press for changes. Demands for action mounted in December of 1945, and, although the drive was (familiarly enough) cut off by im- pending vacation, a six-man com- mittee was set up to study and re-evaluate student government. Finally a large student legislature was created. Conduct regulations in 1947 specified absolutely no women in men's residences except for an occasional approved event and from 3 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. on Sun- day if there was a housemother. This meant only on the main floor, of course. SGC evolved through the usual study committee set up in 1954 and was preceded by /Joint Judi- ciary Council by three years. JJC was established through the same time-honored process. Some of SGC's first actions are incredibly familiar: a course evaluation booklet was planned and a study of driving regulations was begun. SGC endorsed its first prbtest in 1959 as the civil rights movement began to explode and students picketed a shop which refused equal service to Negro patrons. Director of University housing John Feldkamp was SGC presi- dent. The John Barton Wolgamut Society to promote the arts was established, too. MAJOR CHANGES in conduct rules have come very recently. Student judiciaries did not replace staff as disciplinary agents in the dormitories until 1953. As late as 1954, private apartment parties were technically taboo. The advent of coed University housing created more problems for discipline. Women's hours and other visitation rules have melted away under increasing pressure, al- though even as late as last year, Markley Hall reinstituted a "purity patrol" to keep order in the notori- ous lounges. The shreik of an irate housemother, "Every couple must have three feet on the floor" -still echoes in the corridor. The history of student govern- ment reads something like the script of a soap opera: no matter how long you observe it, it never seems to change. Recent University history continues all the patterns. Proponents of the upcoming con- stitutional convention promise many things, including a new ad- dition to the many names for stu- dent government: this time, stu- dent government Union. Judging from past history, it seems most predictable that with- in a few years, a new crisis will arise, soothed by yet a new com- mittee and followed by yet an- other kind of student government. SGC HAS implemented some changes, mostly in the area of con- duct regulations, where student interest is fairly high. But not many rules remain to be overturn- ed in a triumphant surge of stu- dent power. And not many stu- dents bother to vote in SOC elec- tions or get involved in con-con. Nevertheless the hard core of stu- dent leaders is calling for "radical restructuring of the educational process." But, as in the past, one key question remains: does anyone really care? * I