:YI lflzrgan BEaitj Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1967 EIGHTH SECTION Editorial ressu Freedom ri 0 S T U Maintained Entire Staff Hammers Out Unified Daily Strategy By MARK LEVIN Summer Supplemeut Editor N FEB. 20, 1967, 12 men walked into a small conference room in the Student Publications Building and voted 7-4 to reject the unanimous recommendation of The Daily Senior Editors for The Daily's 1967-68 editor. Three days later, the same 12 men walked into the same room and voted 7-4 to accept the once "unacceptable" nomi- nee, and with him the rest of the proposed new senior edi- torial staff. But before the dust had settled, 36 state legislators, hun- dreds of alumni, President Harlan Hatcher, the University Regents, the Detroit Free Press, a reporter for the New York Times and the entire Daily staff had become deeply involved in the crisis. The Daily has always aroused controversy, but the 1966- 67 school year had been nore controversial than most. The editor, Mark R. Killingsworth, '67, started off the winter semester with a bitter attack on President Hatcher, disclosing that Hatcher had been appointed in 1954 largely due to the efforts of one Regent, Roscoe Bonisteel of Ann Arbor, who had refused to consider anybody else. HEN THE executive editor, Bruce Wasserstein, '67, wrote a story quoting a close friend of Berkeley Chancellor Roger W. Heyns, a former University vice president, saying that Heyns was "seriously interested" in the University presi- dency. Presidential Selection Commission .Chairman, Regent Robert Briggs, accused The Daily of trying to promote Heyns and said the article was doing more harm than good. And the editorial director, Harvey Wasserman, '67, wrote an editorial advocating the legalization of marijuana, which seemed to offend the sensibilities of a number of prominent Michigan citizens. In November, 1966, The Daily leaked the text of a confi- c ential Defense Department document charging that the University is "known as one basically for 'rich white stu- dents, " The only reaction the University administration had to the story was that it should not have been printed in the first place. The Daily also printed editorials favorable to last fall's "student power" movement, and in August, 1966, all ten senior editors had signed a front-page editorial castigating the University for its compliance' with a House Un-American Activities Committee subpoena of three campus political groups' membership lists. ROGER RAPOPORT, '68-The Daily Senior Editors' nominee for Daily editor--himself probably symbolized what, to many members of the University community, was "wrong" with The Daily. Early in January he disclosed that the University admin- istration was con 'dering u sino over'$4.75 million in student tuition fees to pay for the new University theatre. He had Anxious Faces Mark Long Hours Before Board Decision D N T P U B L I C A T I 0 . .. ... P t ...... 'r i x: {;fit; sF' " : > h ... d