i - 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 AT-LARGE Thus Spoke The Fish on Women Ly NEIL SHISTER F ;. _ :- f 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. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: MARK LEVIN i The Rape of Privacy: Sharing Student Records WEDNESDAY'S DISCLOSURE that the Office of the Registrar at Wayn'e State University in Detroit has released confidential transcript information to the FBI is indeed disheartening. Yet simple expression of displeasure has, whenever such news is discovered, failed to ac- complish anything. The current issue at Wayne is but another in a series of disclosures by var- ious college administrations that they have opened their files to assorted gov- ernment agencies. And, each time, apol- ogies are made and disclaimers of inten- ion are expressed. This time, Wayne's Dean of student affairs and former director of student organizations at this University, Dun- can Sells, said that the Wayne registrar's action "was not right." The last time a similar incident happened at Wayne, in the fall of 1966, Dean of Academic Af- fairs James McCormick severely intoned, "I'm very sure it should not have hap- pened." And last year, in Ann Arbor, after student and faculty names were relased to the House Un-American Activities Committee, a number of administrators piped platitudes similar to those heard at Wayne State. BUT, AFTER ALL these "mishaps," stu- dents and faculty don't know whether will ever happen again, either at Wayne or at the University. Administrations steadfastly refuse to affirm a definite policy on the release of students' personal information. No prom- ises are coming; only occasional state- ments expressing sorrow and regret. More assurance than "we're sorry" is needed; definite safeguards must be drawn. The principle of a student's personal affairs remaining private is clear and reasonable. It is against every precept of academic freedom to hold an individual publicly liable for personal organization- al affiliations; it is contrary to the basic rights of privacy that personal biograph- ical information be openly disclosed for the information of other agencies. BUT EXTRACTING adequate guaran- tees from intransigent administrat- ors is close to impossible. So how do stu- dents keep their private informattion private? One solution is a declaration of prin- ciple from the Regents. They should make their stand unequivocal and pos- itive on the preservation of privacy. They should reaffirm the statement of the American Civil Liberties Union fol- lowing the HUAC subpoenas here and at Berkeley. But presuming the stubborness of the Regents, students must again turn to in- dividual action. They certainly have power to keep personal information pri- vate. Would the University cease to fun- ction without a neat little pile of regis- trationnaires and organization member- ship lists? -DAN OKRENT THE FISH is back in town, here with a guy called Fine Phil who won the bo-daddy surfing championship last summer on the Chicago River and has evidently put Marty on to Nietzsche. Marty himself looks pretty good, although he's lost some weight. But it's understandable when he tells of spending three months in somebody's broom closet before realizing it was morning and living largely off Frosted Flakes during his sojourn in The Haight, where he was "the neighborhood cobbler." Anyway, the Fish is sitting around talking about his old girl friend Ann who used to go here and now is work- ing somewhere in New York. The Fish is wondering how she is and then out of the cold he says it all reminds him of what Nietzsche says and how all girls should read some Nietzsche so that they could come down out of their trees. NOW THE FISH, although at one time studying medicine, is not much of an intellectual. His most im- pressive feat, he claims, is having one Sunday read the entire New York Times. "When I am reading a book, pretty soon I am itching a lot so I get up to have a cup of coffee and one thing leads to another and soon I am no longer even remembering that I was just reading a book," is the way he puts it. So to hear The Fish casually bring Nietzsche into a conversation about girls is very surprising. "The Nietzsche says, Inexperienced girls flatter them- selves with the notion that it is within their power to make a man happy; later they learn that it means hold- ing a man in low esteem to assume that only a girl is needed to make him happy.' " WE ARE AWED. The Fish continues. "Now look how rinky-dink the whole social scene is up here. No kidding, you pull these young virgins in from the top .1 per cent of their high school senior class and suddenly they are deluged with people wanting to date them and after a while they start to believe that maybe they really are Aphrodites even though nobody asked them to go to the Senior Prom. "This wouldn't be bad except that all these Joung girls seem never to grow up, or at least many of them never do. They're so busy keeping themselves booked three weeks in advance and wondering who they are going to bless with their mere presence on the week- end that they never start to' think about the difference between one of Nietzesche's 'inexperienced girls' and a real woman." THE FISH IS REALLY rolling at this point, probably because has has been trying to get a date with somebody for next Saturday night and it being already the Sunday, before, he is having trouble, since no girls like to wait until the last minute. "The kiss of death seems to be when they join a sorority and get locked into the fraternity Saturday nite band-party circuit where the only conversation they have to make is, 'hi, howrya, smile.' A rookie can go weeks saying the same words to different Weejun wearers and believe it is within her power to make a man happy." (The Fish has memorized the Nietzsche quotation and sometimes says it without giving proper credit.) "If it were just the freshmen who were rookies it wouldn't be so tragic. But the older girls, the ones that are really-up tight because they are having trouble exer- cising their power to make a man happy, they still have the minds of the young ones, they have little to say that they couldn't have said their first day on campus. "Man, it's incredible how hung-up some of these birds are. They spend all their time talking about how they don't want to be just wives and mothers but do sople- thing with their lives, yet they've spent most of their lives trying to get in a position where they can be wives and mothers, hopefully in suburbia, to a bright doctor-lawyer who will look good at the country club dance. "THEY GO STALE at 20. Their life is a predictable pattern that they know is hum-drumming along yet they are either too scared or too stupid to break out and do something. The sex hang-up is the most dramatic one, but there are all kinds of social fears that end up re- stricting them and making them anxious and unhappy. "For every liberated woman there are a hundred 'in- experienced girls' who talk about becoming one and don't have a prayer in the world of making it. Because becoming a woman means knowing something about life, and it seems that not too many of our bright young All- American college co-eds know much. "They study hard, almost compulsively without any understanding why they are doing it except for their need to be 'high achievers' but they don't know much. It is almost as if they consciously try to avoid having the kind of experiences that teach them what being a woman is all about." THE FISH WAS TIRED now. Looking around the room he could see he had made some kind of point be- cause everybody was nodding their head in agreement. "It all goes back to Nietzsche and people being strong enough to free themselves." He was throwing on his jacket, leaving, when he turned around and asked "We got a chance to beat State?" 0 r Letters: Solving IHA-East Quad's Dissolving GA's Dead Referendum GRADUATE ASSEMBLY decided Wed- nesday night to- hold a draft refer- endum for the purpose of demonstrating to the Dean of the Graduate School what graduate students think of the draft. The question remains, however, whether the referendum would be in any way meaningful or justified. The purpose of such a referendum in- itially seems vague. If, as its sponsors claim, it is to inform the Dean of gradu- ate student opinion regarding the draft, the question remains: what is he to do with the information? A referendum on the foreign language requirements of the graduate school would presumably be much more to his interest as well as to the interest of the graduate stu- dent himself. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and collegiate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St , Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. The time for directing such referenda to the President or General Hershey is past, as the draft laws were revised and adopted earlier this summer. WITH THE JUSTIFICATIONS that S havebeen given for the referendum it is difficult to see how sufficient in- terest would be aroused in suport of it. Last year's, referendum over the con- crete issue of ranking drew only about thirty per cent of the student body A referendum of graduate students with a small turnout would serve only to dis- credit and embarass GA. No student government body on this campus can afford that. There seems little point in a draft referendum at the present time. The draft is a dead campus issue for arous- ing any significant student interest. The war in Vietnam, the student role in de- cision-making and other hotly debated topics are not. With relevant issues around, why continue beating a dead horse? -GREG ZIEREN To the Editor: AS IF GUIDED by some mystic power, East Quadrangle Coun- cil has apparently managed to par- toally rejuvenate some of the con- flicts which have existed between it and the Inter-Quadrangle Coun- cil, now Inter-House Assembly, for the past half decade. The underlying reasons for these conflicts have varied from year to year with the gradual evolution of both the personalities and the issues involved. But irregardless of the underly- ing reasons, the fact remains that the executive officers of both EQC and IHA/IQC have spent count- less hours over irelevant proce- dural, political, and personal dif- ferences which are of no benefit to anyone except maybe for an Uni- versity Administration wh i c h gloats over the very thought of student government being splint- ered and chismatic. EAST QUAD has given two rea- sons for its present stance of with- holding IHA dues. The first is that they disagree with the apparent present IHA policy of not being completely in favor of the indi- vidual house governments being able to set their own policies over matters with which they are most intimately connected. The very absurdity of the stand wihch IHA has taken here suggests that in a discussion free of im- plied threats of "rule or ruin," a majority of house presidents would vote for their own right of self- determination. The second reason is the his- torical and by now quite mothy slogan that IHA is not doing as much as its financial support would justify. It would seem that if someone is willing to give up the obligation of paying for some- thing then he. should also be re- quired to give up the benefits which have inured to him because of those payments. So if our goal is to remove the effects of IHA and its midwives from this campus and East Quad in particular, we witness a shock- ing operation. First we remove Bursley and put its occupants into converted triples. Then we go back to the open- open policy of last year which was even more neanderthal than is that of this year. Then we go back through time and remove all in- fluence and voice which residence hall chief executive officers have had on SGC, SHA, Vice-President Cutler's Advisory Board, the Board of Governors, and private inter- pleaders with dormitory officials on behalf of individual house pres- idents and residents. The abovei sonly a small sample of what must be thrown out if IHA and its effects are removed from this campus. For only 50c per man the residents of the dor- mitory system are driving a good bargain from IHA. -Lee Hornberger, '69L (Past President, IQC) Parking Signs To the Editor: 1N CONVERSATION with Ann Arbor Police Lt. Zeck, I was advised that: 1) Ann Arbor police are gov- erned by University regulations ir- respective of whether parking lot signs are posted or whether they are posted correctly; 2) Where the regulation differs from the posted information, the regulation, not the sign, shall gov- ern; 3) Alterations to signs which may have been made by vandals, such as information obliterated either by paint or by masking tape, are to be ignored; 4) Where the intent of a sign is not clear, the lot user has the responsibility of obtaining cor- rect interpretation from the Uni- versity. THE UNIVERSITY-published Parking Guide states: 'The en- trances to all parking lots . . . are designated with signs indi- cating the type of lot and the effective hours of enforcement." This, in effect, countermands (2) above by implying that the signs shall be a statement of regula- tion. However, in view of the fact that altered signs do exist on the campus, altered by paint or mask- ing tape, and presumably by Uni- versity action, one wonders where a lot user can obtain the neces- sary information, required (3) and (4), since one can read the signs neither through the mask- ing tape nor under the paint. Your published reply in the columns of the Michigan Daily would be useful to its readers. -Ben Z. Rubin Vietnam View To the Editor: UNTIL A YEAR ago I supported our government's action in Vietnam. Until a few days ago I thought the stories about our gov- ernment's being largely influenced by the interests of foreign invest- ors was ridiculous. Now my views have changed. We are all familiar with Viet- nam controversies, but do we all seriously think about them? It wasn't too long ago that I was content to merely read Newsweek, watch the news, and leave it at that. I never weighed the issues-- they weren't important enough to think about-it was easiest to fol- low the general consensuse of opin- ion. But would you like to die-to- morrow-in Vietnam? Would you like to trade places with the Viet- namese? Do you like working one day of each five to kill people in Vietnam? Are you really afraid that the people of Asia will be able to overrun our country? Do you really not care that the President has enough power to back us into a war of these dimensions and cause so much death? I SUPPOSE it's not important that Congress never fully discussed the problem and that alternatives to the war were never seriously considered. Perhaps it doesn't mat- ter that campaign promises were insincerely proposed on the line to defend an action we had no voice in effecting. Of course we're not neo-nazis nor imperialists. Of course we don't put material possessions be- fore our lives. Right? I love my country and I love its people and I care that we do the right thing. Do you? -Gerald N. Rogan '68 ow WI The Rime of the Ancient Mariner 0 '1 ti ...Y-,........." f , 5rn~ss~ ry' r C r i l i ' l °, tw Y ^° 7aSC, ,1. si d! 7 _ I .4. 7. r~ o VILTNAWA 1N .'. . . .'.: . a.:.:.............,. ..........S ....rr..... .. . . . . . ......r. .r...r.r. ...r ...,...r... .. ..r Bishop Pike's Pique Over Vietnam .&I IVI By DAVID KNOKE FOR A BISHOP without a dio- cese to look after the Rt. Rev. James A. Pike hardly leads a pas- toral, contemplative life. Bishop Pike spent Wednesday in Ann Arbor during his fortnight tour of cities which will culminate in an appearance at the Oct. 21 anti-war rally in Washington, D.C. There he will greet the "peace torch" that has travelled from Hiroshima to the 'nation's capital. Always at the storm-center of controversy-whether over his un- orthodox beliefs about Episcopa- lian theology or his recent claim of talking to a dead son through a medium-Pike has become an articulate spokesman in the anti- war movement. "I take every opportunity to speak and share facts on how we got involved in the Vietnam in- vasiqn," the 57-year-old retired cleric says. "I also counsel individ- uals trying to decide about joining Johnson's war. For those who can't claim conscientious objection un- der current interpretations, I help decide whether or not to go to jail." PIKE, WHO IS not a pacifist (he memorized eye charts during World War II so he could pass the physical and become a secret agent), believes opposition to the individuals refusing to follow un- conscionable orders is valid," he added. "If they rule the individual is not responsible, then they say in effect there is no moral prin- ciple to social justice. "Then what are we fighting so desperately to give the South Viet- namese?" PIKE IS ALSO outspoken in his contention that America's church- es should involve themselves in opposition to the war. "If they're going to be interested in sin, they might as well be interested in big sin," he quips. He doubts if the leaders support- ing civil disobedience would ef- fectively make available . syna- gogues and churches across the country as sanctuaries for con- scientious objectors. "There is no legal guarantee of church sanctuary from arrest," Pike explains. "But there is a value in this stand because it will graphically portray the nature of the issue. "I also feel strongly that min- isterial exemptions should be abolished. This would increase the number of war objectors and con- front many ministerial students with the choice of picking up a gun or not." BUT IF THE troubled times I t.-..F a 1g Y clt F. ' , w F F1 r o-w w r" n' *."'% . 1 G '* *'r t ' ' a.~:4 - a+ t"'4' i+ ". t ,'.,L"f. T4 writers, clergymen and other pro- fessions in a statement pledging to raise funds to aid youths who resist the draft and the war. The statement calls on "all men of goodwill to join us in this con- frontation with immoral author- ity." PIKE TERMS American involve- ment in the Vietnam conflict "dis- honest" and says we should have learned a lesson from the beating the French took in 1954. ese. Ho believes in the domino theory just like our hawks. "But Johnson won't get the two million soldiers he would need," Pike declares. "Along with the big- ger military budget, he had better prepare a larger prison-building budget to hold all the boys who won't be going." PIKE BELIEVES so strongly in bringing his message to the public that he rose from a sick bed to tell a diag audience Wednesday that system and to refuse further co- operation. "Three test cases for the selec- tive objector are about ready to come before the Supreme Court," he elaborates. "I don't think add- ing 200 more cases is going to help the chances that the violators will be found innocent. "If you want to create a test case," says Pike, who was a lawyer before he entered the ministry, "one individual is enough. For that reason I recently objected when WW ice. w i