.:.;:NX. Seventy-Sev en Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHrGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ROGER RAPOPORT: The Winning Way of P. J. May Vic.: Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 ...,.. *N~*"~"' N. .SN. .NNN..4 ....N..Nfl.~',.N~,,.NNN.NN~,v.NNNNv.vANV.N.NNN~:.'.NM.N..NN..NN.N.N . v Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: W. REXFORD BENOIT SThe A &D Photo Lab: Picture of a Fire Trap )HOTOGRAVHY STUDENTS at the University pray to Smokey the Bear. hey are presently risking their lives in firetrap to work with outdated, over- sed, inaccessible, inaccurate equipment. The University is neglecting to main- in a competitive level of quality in hotography classes. Although very good aculty and technicians are available, the roper teaching tools are missing. 'IGHTEEN MONTHS AGO the Univer- sity Plant Department condemned the hotography classroom and laboratory as unsatisfactory for human occupancy nce occupants could be trapped in the rent of fire." The use of flammable hemicals in the laboratory and of flam- .able paints and solvents on the floor elow presents a real threat of fiery eath for photography students. Outdated cameras and enlargers pro- ibit students from learning and prac- sing the most recent developments in hotography. Machines for taking and eveloping color pictures have sat on usty shelves for two years. Everyday- studentscompete for the 8 alargers, 2 sinks, and 4 darkrooms-all orn from constant use. But at least four rnes this amount of equipment is needed r the 60 undergraduate and 1-2 graduate udents who crowd into the sixth floor wer of the Architecture and Design ldg. To reach their classes, students and aff scale 164 steps, thus discouraging udents from hauling materials to class ad from taking brief breaks during ng periods of lab work. The lack of an elevator inconveniences everyone who uses the photography rooms. The building's water pressure can hardly push fluid to the sixth floor labs, and the water that manages to get there is too warm for photography work. Elec{- trical appartus often blows fuses because of insufficient current. Adding to the technical inconveniences, the photography rooms vibrate whenever someone jumps or the wind blows be- cause they occupy the top floor of the 40-year-old tower of the architecture college. Burdened with the scarce, worn, and often unreliable equipment, students are able to produce high quality pictures only with difficulty and luck. f IF THE UNIVERSITY wants to main- tain its purported high quality, it must move and expand the photography class- room and laboratory. The administrative policy forbidding renting space outside the University re- stricts improvement of the conditions in photography classes. The deplorable situ- ation of photography students demands a change in this policy, for rented build- ings could serve as temporary classrooms while extensive renovation or a new lo- cation is provided. Administrators have been discussing improvement plans for 15 years. Con- struction or rental of temporary, space must begin as soon as possible to elim- inate the intolerable teaching conditions of the photography clas'ses-locked in a tower of administrative sloth. -BRIAN FORD WITH A STRAIGHT face Michigan State University Vice-President for Business and Finance and Treas- urer Philip Jesse May has offered to open up his files to Attorney General Frank Kelley. Kelley is investigating May for possible violation of the state conflict of interest law in the wake of published reports about his private Lansing land dealings. -Judging from what has been revealed so far, May has nothing to lose by letting the Attorney General have a closer look. Stories in The Daily, and the Detroit Free Press have detailed a fascinating chapter in Vice-Presi- dent May's extracurricular activities. IN 1955 MAY secured a $165,000 loan from the Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. (which writes group life in- surance for MSU faculty and staff) through the Ann Arbor Trust Co. (which has served as fiscal agent for $100 million in construction loans at MSU) to build a two story building at 608 Washington St. in Lansing. The sole occu- pant of the building until June of this year was Inter- national Business Machines Corp: MSU does a sub- stantial amount of business with IBM. In the fiscal year ended June 30, 1967, MSU leased $494,437 in services from IBM. In June IBM moved into the first two floors of the new four-story, $950,000 "Philip Jesse Building" located t at 1111 Michigan Ave., adjacent to campus. The building was built by the Philip Jesse Co. whose officers and directors include May's wife and brothers. (May divested himself of 50 per cent stock interest in the Philip Jesse Co. late last year on the advice of MSU attorney Leland Carr Jr. Mr. Carr has served as May's attorney in some private transactions.) A $1.1 million mortgage loan for the Philip Jesse build- ing was secured through Michigan National Bank. Michi- gan National Bank is MSU's chief fiscal depository and May served on its board until this September. He resigned this post like nearly a score of other state university officials in line with a conflict of interest opinion by At- torney General Kelley. Kelley ruled that university of- ficers and trustees could not serve on the boards of banks and companies doing business with the school. One of the other two tenants of the Philip Jesse Build- ing is Michigan Bell Telephone Co. MSU President John Hannah is on the Michigan Bell board. The land for the Philip Jesse building was purchased from the Whitely foundation, a charitable group with $1.4 million in assets. The secretary of the Whiteley foundation is Harry Hubbard, a Lansing attorney. Mr. Hubard's law firm represents Heatherwood Farms Dairy, MSU's milkman. The firm was awarded a $545,000 milk contract in competitive bidding earlier this year. When IBM moved from Mr. May's 608 Washington building to his new Philip Jesse Building this summer, the MSU vice-president unsuccessfully tried to lease the vac- ated building to the State department of education. Mr. May offered to bring together the scattered offices of the education department in the 608 Washington building in a $224,225 lease over five years. However, the Attorney General disapproved the lease, holding that a state officers is forbidden from contracting with the state. So instead, Mr. May leased the premium office space to the Ingham County probate court on the same terms. MEANWHILE, MAY'S NEW "Philip Jesse Building" became the topic of conversation at Lansing social gath- erings. It wasn't long until one MSU trustee, C. Allan Harlan, learned the details. "I went to Hannah and recommended that May be fired," says Harlan. He says the MSU President replied, "I wish he hadn't done what he did. But he's good a finance man (for the university) even though he may be involved in conflict of interest." Harlan adds that "I've had a unanimous opinion that if May was in private industry and did those things, he'd be fired." Moreover, Warren Huff, former chairman of the MSU board of trustees, indicated that in 1964, May un-. successfully lobbied for the purchase of, IBM equipment. The board overruled May and bought a $2.3 million Con- trol Data Corp. unit. Control of computer buying decisions was shifted this June from Vice-President May to Prof. Lawrence Von Tersch, head of the computer lab. "Hannah took this IBM control out of May's hands after I raised hell," MSU trustee Harlan explains. May has also had financial relationships to MSU of- ficers. He is on the board of the Walter Neller Realty Co., of Lansing, which bought 180 acres of land adjacent to campus this summer from President Hannah, who had originally acquired the property for "retirement purposes." Hannah explained that he had to sell the-land when re- assessment forced taxes up higher than he could afford. May insists that the Neller company is "very informal. About once a year the Nellers call me up and we eat din- ner together and chat informally. I have never discussed Mr. Hannah's property with them." THIS LAST DEALING has prompted Attorney Gen- eral Kelley to indicate he will also rule on whether Han- nah's dealings violate the state conflict of interest law. However, observers generally feel Hannah is not in serious trouble. Says Harlan, "President Hannah bought the land long before the University took the direction it eventually took. He has simply been a favorable victim of circum- stance. John Hannah is bigger than money." But, Vice-President May, who makes $36,000 a year at MSU, is in a different position. His far-flung dealings probably will not stand up under the Attorney General's conflict of interest investigation. His best course might be to resign now from his uni- versity position. From the public standpoint he will save the Attorney General's office a good deal of time and money needed to come to an obvious conclusion-that his relationships are untenable. And from a personal standpoint, he will be freed from the constraints public office puts on his healthy interest in real estate. There is no reason why May's MSU job should continue to interfere with his outside financial interests. .1 I Letters: Musket and Freedom in the Far East To the Editor: rHIS COMES from a small vil- age 30 miles north of Hue, South Vietnam. I have a few hours and would like to write this be- :ause it says something that the jniversity should be proud of. Two months ago, while outfit- ting on Okinawa, I saw a U.S.O. show with singers, band, and :ancers. It was the show from the University of Michigan and it was probably the best U.S.O. show to date. Believe me, my men thought it was the greatest thing since sliced bread. I would like to have thanked them all. ON A DIFFERENT note: Last week I saw freedom-Viet Cong style. The village chief was pro- government so "Charlie" came in, opened his guts with a knife and spread them out on the ground. Then they tied his children to the ground and pushed bamboo stakes through their eyes and through the back of their heads, pinning them on the ground. All this be- ause of what a man believes. Maybe this one example will make you think, at least a small cit, that "Charlie" is not the way either. -Lt. R. Dworsky Phong Dien, Vietnam Pro IHA To the Editor: AS A MEMBER of IHA Presi- dent's Council, a member of the IHA endorsement committee, and an offended President of Markley who was accused of seek- ing power through IHA, I would like to make a few additional re- marks about the IHA endorsement and the unfair criticism of Don Racheter. The IHA President's Council has not always endorsed candidates in the past because it felt the candi- dates were not in a position to ac- complish or want to accomplish anything beneficial for the stu- dents in the residence hall system. This year the council felt at least one of the candidates, its Execu- tive Vice President Don Racheter, is in a position to aid the residence halls students. It matters little that the original motion for endorsement was made by a Markley President when that motion was voted upon and passed by the entire assemblage of the President's Council. If they had thought the motion inappropriate they would not, have passed it, since the nine presidents of Mark- ley could hardly carry a majority of twenty-five to thirty votes. The President's Council then agreed to, meet and hear the recommenda- tions of the committee and vote either for or against those recom- mendations. Harry Halme is blatantly trying to convey the impression that the Executive Board of IHA was the committee that recommended the candidates for endorsement. It definitely was not. That commit- tee was open to anyone. from IHA, except candidates, who wanted to have a voice in the selection, and the only Executive Board member present was, rightly, Steve Brown. M. Halme chose to be on that com- mittee. That is, of course, his pre-, rogative. just as it was his prero- gative to vote no on the four candidates recommended, - to skip the special meeting, to neglect to send his delegate proxy thus vio- lating the IHA Constitution, and to neglect to find out the results of that meeting. BUT NOW he criticizes the deci- sion-making. process of IHA and claims it is influenced by Qutside interests, when in fact all decision have been majority decisions of the entire council, and it has only been IHA members themselves who hap- pen to care enough to take an ac- tive interest in the proceedings of this election, which is their pre- rogative. Though Don Racheter was the only candidate the IHA committee could unanimously agree upon, if Mr. Harme thinks that the un- fortunate matter of the IHA News- letter is enough to warrant con- demning Racheter for his cam- paign practices, I submit unequi- vocally that Don Racheter was not responsible for that Newsletter. --Marty Most Pres. Elliott House SOC Merchandise To the Editor: HE PRESENTATION of your SGC endorsement in Sunday's paper was offensively lacking in tact. By so stringently grouping. the candidates under such infall- ible sounding titles as excellent, acceptable, and unacceptable, I was given the impression I was reviewing the merchandise rank- ings in the "Consumer Reports." -Helene Bryant, '71, Old T.T.T.T. ro the Editor: WOULD LIKE to compliment you on having finally "rounded 3ut" the Staff Writers for your publication. The one department in which you were so constantly sadly lacking, has been the de- partment of Military Analysis. Now, I am pleased to note the'ap- pointment- of Brigadier General S. L. A. Klivans to fill this neces- sity, and I would commend you in your excellent choice of so august a figure. The good General did well to explain to us in your paper of Nov. 8th, in an article entitled "Lyndoh Johnson: How I won the war," that "the very nature of the war in Vietnam, .a guerilla conflict that negates American Firepower," thus "eliminating any prospect of Johnson winning the war." I feel sure that I need hardly make mention of General Klivans' experience , in such matters as "guerilla conflict," and the ensuing "negation of-American Firepower." He is familiar to us all, especially those;who had the honor to serve under him, as "Old T.T.T.T." For the benefit of those not familiar with this nick-name, it stands for the "Tremendous Tinker Toy Tac- tician," and even a hint of his presence near any battle front has, in the past, caused our enemies to emulate lemmings. It has been said that they w re not in a rush to get away from his immediate battle area, but they passed a lot f other people who were! COME ON NQW, Klivans, Rapo- port, and company, nobody really minds your playing at Jounalists, even your constant, childishly left- slanted favors do not aggravate, but merely disgust the ;average adult reader. But the military is assuredly not the place for your remarks, either Yea or Nay, and it is suggested that- you put away your plastic facsismile carbines, and stay with your "Rifleman" kits, before Gen- eral Klivans impales himself upon his own rubber bayonet! 6~v a HO C{a1 Mr K y ;z Ali _ l 1 ..._. .,fir A -James A. Tomlinson Grad, Royal Navy, Royal Air Force .... ..... ..... .. ...e....v........ . ............5 *..::x:: ~~....../.,.:...tN ;.N"N "N:.;.... .. . .. .5.;;5g r N . :y .~........A:::::: .. ........ ......:.... .......*..*...... .......... J................ ............ .. 1... .. .. t............ :,... ... .. ..{SN Theooun Dems at the Crossroad I i 1. ,, I ;, f Of.The tio* and ''riuh. $yMd Victory at Sea, Johnson Style L OBVIOUSLY INSPIRED by the suc- cess of the recent aquatic Gover- nors' Conference, President Johnson solemnly declared Saturday that he would meet the leaders of North Viet- nam on a "neutral ship in neutral waters" if that would speed a settle- ment in Vietnam. This revival of the President's "any- where, anytime" lament may only be the latest installment of his frantic search for the set of justifications which will again make the carnage in Southeast Asia popular with the people. However, psychic defense mechan- isms against failure may have so ef- fectively cushioned Johnson from real- ity that he truly believes that time and place are what is standing in the way of peace in Vietnam. mi nN TV PrRO BLEMwith the Ad- have to deal with good old neutral LBJ. And the really important "credibility gap" which Lyndon has been pathe- tically unable to breech is the well- justified conviction held by Hanoi that to a Texan "to negotiate" is merely the polite form of the verb "to surrender." Furthermore, the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Enterprise, while pro- viding a nautical backdrop for John- son's latest appeal for negotiations, did little to dispel the pervasive "surrender or else" motif underlying all Admin- istration peace efforts. THE "NEUTRAL SHIP in neutral waters" bit may be viewed as the first of a series of comedy routines emmanatinx from the White House during election year '68, designed to convince the voters that the continua- tion of the war is solely due to Hanoi's By GREG ZIEREN SUPPORT of President Johnson and his Vietnam policies is the crucial issue which will domi- nate the national ocnvention of Young Democratic Clubs of Amer- ca convening in Hollywood, Flori- da today. Underlying these issues is the possibility that the convention will split over the presidential nomination, with a faction throw- ing its support to an alternate contender, such as Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D-Minn.) or Sen. Robert Kennedy (D-N.Y.). This, however, seems slim in the light of the action taken last week- end at the national convention of the College Young Democratic Clubs of America, a dissident group which was formerly a part of the YD national. THE CYD MEETING in Boston, which represented the Democrat- ic affiliate clubs from about 50 schools, passed a resolution call- ing Johnson's Vietnam policies "unsound." The convention also called for an end of the bombing of North Vietnam and for the en- try of a -United Nations peace force to supervise a plebiscite on the future status of North and South Vietnam. However, the delegates defeated a constitutional amendment that would have permitted the conven- tion to endorse someone other than President Johnson in 1968. The Vietnam resolutions came as no surprise to national Demo- ACCORDING TO RON PAUL, a graduate student at the Univer- sity, and former YD national com- mitteeman from Michigan, the CYD was formed in 1959 as a sec- tion of the YD's by YD members who felt an organization was need- ed specifically on the college lev- el. Nationally, Young Democrats their late twenties and early thir- ties and not basically college stu- dents, as in Michigan where an often represent party members in age limit is in effect. Following the pasage earlier this year of a resolution critical of Johnson, the CYD was denied of- fice space and funds by its uarent organization. It was not formally excluded until the Young Demo-. crats convention in Salt Lake City shortly after the CYD resolution controversy. Paul explained that the CYD "was dominated by East and West schools." He added that as many delegates at the YD's Salt Lake City convention voted for exclud- ing the CYD because they ques- tioned the need for such an or- ganization as those who disagreed with the CYD's anti-Johnson res- olution. Paul said'that since the founding of CYD many state Young Democrats had become in- creasingly dominated by the col- lege clubs. Furthermore, the CYD was ac- cused of falsifying signatures, mis- using proxies and admitting mere paper organizations on some cam- puses, Paul explained. LAST WEEK members of the that "traditional sources of funds have dried up." They attribute this to the anti-Johnson resolu- tion passed last month at the state-wide Michigan Young Dem- ocratic Convention. Paul, now a member of the Ann Arbor Democratic Party, explained that, in his opinion, the Miami convention would be a "trial run" of the 1968 Democratic National Conevntion. He said that "if there is any serious opposition to John- son in 1968 it will skew itself in the YD convention." He added that many of those at the Miami con- vention would be delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago next year. Ten men are seeking the chair- manship of the national YD's, with two describing themselves as "peace dandidates" and three sup- porting administration policy. The favorite is R. Spencer Oliver, of Bowie, 'Md., who resigned about two months ago as an assistant to Democratic National Chairman John Bailey in order to campaign for the post. One of the anti-war candidates is Alan Reed, an assistant profes- sor of political science at the Uni- versity of Nebraska, who already has issued a call for delegates to support an "anti-war resolution" at the convention. Reed says that if such a movement carries, the momentum is likely to win him the presidency. HOWEVER, DAVID C. BANKS, executive director of the Young Democrats, has confidently pre- dicted, "Our convention will reach 4 A 4I A i I -1 -1 ... - . -1 ok *ff"T s