A Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITIED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS' OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS .. . 'here Opiniona re Free, 420 MAYN4RD ST., ANN ARBOR, MIcIi. 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. TURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: STEPHEN WILDSTROM More Money for the 'U': Romney Better Believe It UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATORS, hav- ing submitted their capital outlay and general fund budget requests to Lan- sing, must now sit tight with their fingers crossed and hope that the Governor and the State Legislature improve over the disastrous performance of last July. Students and faculty also have good cause for concern. The inadequacy of last year's state allotment has forced a sharp tuition increase on only one month's notice and a severe cutback in faculty salary increases. The fiscal 1967-68 state appropriation of $59 million for the general fund budget and $9 million for the completion of constructi'on already begun" was arrived at after a long, harried legislative session which resulted in the passage of a state income tax. Almost the entire session was devoted to the controversial taxation is- sue and both Gov. George Romney and his Republican cohorts in the Legislature paid little attention to the actual needs of the state's colleges and universities. Once the state income tax was enacted. Romney left the state to continue his unannounced Presidential campaign and passed his already inadequate budget re- quest into the hands of an arch-con- servative legislature which proceeded to do additional trimming. THE UNIVERSITY initially requested over $73 million for the general fund budget. The Governor alloted the Uni- versity $62.4 million, the sum University administrators said would be sufficient only to maintain existing University pro- grams and services. A legislative con- ference committee finally decided, after three of its members went fishing for the weekend, to appropriate $59.1 million. As one Legislative observer put it, "If Romney had been here we might have made it a fight, but he left the state just as the fight was going to begin. He could have helped higher education tremen- dously by staying just a few more days." Romney and the Legislature now have no tax troubles to worry about. The state budget bureau originally predicted rev- enues below expectations from the new income tax. However, Prof. Harvey Bra- zer, chairman of the University's Econom- ics Department, using newer statistics, has projected a large budget surplus of over $50 million. Money for new construction, although of prime importance in the long run, is only of secondary importance now. By the time the next fiscal year begins in July, the University's court test of Public Act 124 should have been settled and the Univesrity will once again be able to bid for the limited amount of capital outlay funds. Some legislators have threatened the University with other devices for controlling University expansion if PA 124 is declared uncon- stitutional, but it is hoped they will fol- low the mandate of the court. THE CRUX of the matter, assuming suf- ficient revenue is available is whether Romney values a politically attractive budget surplus more than adequately financed higher education. How he will act in the year he is seeking the Republi- can Presidential nomination is anybody's guess. The certainity is that whatever his request may be the Republican leglis- lature will certainly cut it. All the per- suading, cajoling, politicking, and logroll- ing possible couldn't give this Legislature a progressive outlook. '"The University cannot stand another year like this one," says Vice-President for Acadmic Affairs Allan Smith. Gov. Romney had better believe him or take the responsibility for the subsequent de- cline of the University. -MARK LEVIN - r .. " F - , i r n .R 4 .;: aus; , .. : .._ Y - ' - -.,y ,, fi fig .: ; " ; j ~ ,? .i.. , r .,' . ; :Sr t;, .- .. d , .t q IIl f~ '4 + , ,.y 1 _ y + . " Y 1 1 P,1 to '' " , . ", l , L ; "We've Got To A void .Anything That Might Seem Sofl' WIPER _ T004#,lR ggM~tNG'POLI4ZE VJILL lr1 WILL SOL\/ riE \,/AK THE' SLUM PRBE '9, .1 r..M r t SIN A 5" KV 1 soo, I AAAAJ 'V , k,4y Gh.caf" SLUePORTr IT IS A TIME of painful choices for a growing segment of the Ameri- can people. The reality of a massive 'land war in Asia, "a war of attrition" as U.S. military leaders describe it, is beginning to have an impact on the American conscience. Yet that same reality has not been realized in Washington's policy. The spokesmen-Johnson, Rusk, McNamara, Dirksen-now talk in terms of the yellow peril, of defend- ing Hawaii and the California coast, of "Asian communism." And as the endless dialogue continues, the voice of dissent be- comes louder. It takes the form of Monday's 1,000 draft resisters, of sit- ins at Brooklyn College, Chicago, and Oakland, of a class boycott at Madison, Wis. Today, the streams of anger and frustration converge in Washington to "confront the war-makers." While many plan to march and have their numbers counted, others plan civil disobedience, culminating in a sit-in at the Pentagon. The threat of civil disobedience has set Washington's military gears grinding as army paratroopers and guards are transferred to the Pentagon grounds. The possibility suddenly arises that "confronting the warmakers" could become more physical than allegorical. Whatever the outcome, it, seems certain that the week's demon- strations have marked a turning point in the resistance's militancy. Looming in the future are court challenges of the selective service system, disruption of the war machinery, and peace candidates on the local or national level. And meanwhile, 10,000 miles across the PacificE. - EROBERT KLIVANS Editorial Director A WAR AT HOME AGAI NST c2 ens ~i '0D FENCES MAKE Coot> tEIGAc R U R THE SECOND TIME in four years over 100,000 Americans are marching on their capital for redress of grievances. But with that bald numerical reflection the similarity between the two protests ends. In 1963, on that sweltering August day when Martin Luther King had his dream, a Washington, D.C., shopkeeper said "I'm not going to work today. They're going to tear this town apart." Now in 1967, with the weather colder and damper and spirits correspondingly more pessimistic, blood may yet spill in the streets. In retrospect, the Civil Rights march of 1963 seems to most Americans to have been a legitimate, almost respectable tactic-some- thing this weekend's anti-war mobilization will never be. That dem- onstration was directed at a wavering Congress; this one at an ada- mant administration. That rallying of4 forces rode a wave of sub- stantial national sympathy; today's prompted the New York Times to editorialize yesterday that protestors will gain little by "violent ac- tions," as if this week's head-knockings at Brooklyn, Madison and Oakland were administered by demonstrators. But as the administration clings tenaciously to a reactionary, an- tiquated foreign policy the mood of dissent is growing angrier. The Student Non-Violent Co-ordinating Committee has successively re- placed John Lewis with Stokely Carmichael and H. Rap Brown. And many Northerners who once .shuddered when Bull Connor cut loose his police dogs now unashamedly applaud the new vogue for un scrupluous clubbings. And meanwhile, 10,000 miles across the Pacific .. -URBAN LEANER .1 Blackmail Fraternity Style i OUL PLAY WAS afoot at the Student Government Council meeting Thurs- ay night as Inter-Fraternity Council nnounced a move which could demolish opes for a large turnout at next month's GC elections. . In a progressive move, Council recently pproved an election schedule stipulating wo days for students to cast ballots to 11 six at-large seats. Hoping to make GC a more Tepresentative student gov- mment, the plan was devised to provide ore hours which would allow more stu- ents to vote and to mollify the dampen- ig effects of inclement weather. But IFC has placed an obstacle in ouncil's path. Myron Hartwig, occupy- ig IFC's ex-officio seat Thursday due the prolonged absence of President ruce Getzan, announced that IFC would ot provide any people to run the election ooths this semester. Such a move could ipple the entire election since in the ast IFC provided a substantial number f poll workers. In fact Hartwig, replying to a consti- ient's question, said that if elections ere held on two days, IFC wouldn't pro- de workers for either of them. )STENSIBILY, IFC withheld support for the elections because more people than rer would be needed to man the polls. owever, it was made clear that IFC ould probably provide its usual quota students if elections were returned to le day. Hartwig refused to say why. What the motivations of IFC might transcends speculation. One thing is cite clear - IFC is playing politics in i area where only the student body can se. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and llegiate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by rrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school sar, ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular immer session. second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 0 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Editorial Staff At the moment, elections are still scheduled for two days. SGC may run into a serious snag, however, if IFC con- tntines its its obstinate disregard of the needs of the students. Without IFC's support elections might conceivably be cancelled completely. Rather than allowing SGC to be black- mailed into compromising its position, the students themselves must rally to support their own cause. It may be up to the independents of the University to man the polls in November. If enough students were to volunteer, this week to run the election two things might happen. First, IFC might forsake its power play so as not to risk being left out of election activities entirely. Sec- ond, SGC would be able to move ahead confidently with the knowledge that the students whose support they are attempt- ing to obtain are, indeed, supporting them. THOUGH THE SUPPORT should come from the whole campus, it would be particularly effective for individual fra- ternities to answer SGC's call and-volun- teer their normal quotas of workers. This would not only be a testament to the accomplishments of SGC during the last few weeks, but it would reject the black- mail tactics IFC leaders who supposedly speak for the fraternity system have been wielding. It would be unfortunate if SGC were forced to compromise its integrity in order to maintain its own existence. The support SGC gets should not be subject to the whim of IFC. Hopefully, many students, whether or not they are fra- ternity members, will reject the childish behavior of IFC and volunteer to work the polls next month. N C -MARTIN HIRSCHIMAN N~o Comment THE LEGISLATURE has urged suspen- sion of the University of Wisconsin students involved in yesterday's protest. Chancellor Sewell said that 13 students, who were described as "leaders" of the "Dean, I Think You've Let The Dragon Out Of The Bag" ,z. -'yam f (( F ' ..- " R Yjo l iS fP67 "K c gs' rf f*rr! E cY" THE WAR ABROAD 4 U 1 f . -SI W-Pi x x x: >