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 Under the Influence 'Tis Better to Give ... of Meredith Eiker -~ Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-6552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7.1967 NIGHT EDITOR: WALLACE IMMEN 1 The Most Secret Research of All THE EVERGREENS and synthetic trees have begun to sprout conspicuously around Ann Arbor, and Santa Clause is alive at Arborland, and there are only fifteen more shopping days till Christmas. With this thought in mind, The Daily editors began making out their gift list the other day and came up with the following items for some of our favoritetfriends. We extend our good wishes along with each gift and hope the recipients will find them useful: Starting at the top, we've arranged for President Harlan Hatcher to sign an eight-month, University-ap- proved lease for his new house on Oxford Rd., and for President-Designate Robben Fleming to receive a large air purifier to ward off carbon monoxide fumes from the General Library construction. The Regents are going to get a matching set of eight megaphones and huge, gold-lettered name tags for the backs of their chairs. Executive Vive-President Marvin Niehus will have Harold Stassen personally present him with a campaign button and Vice-President for public Relations Michael Radock will have a special opportunity to walk the plank of the boat used for $55M fund-raising cruises. UNFORTUNATELY, Vice-President and Chief Finan- cial Officer Wilbur Pierpont won't get to use his gift until next spring. Nevertheless, The Daily hopes he'll enjoy his new set of clubs for use on the golf course he pre- served by helping to keep the Residential College off the land and into East Quad. Vice-President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith is to receive an academic affair; Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler gets a gold watch this year, and, though we'd love to tell, Vice-President for Research A. Geoffrey Norman's gift is classified. John Feldkamp, director of University housing, is en- titled to a three week vacation in the dorm of his choice, though we're afraid he'll have to observe curfew. Assistant Dean James Shaw of the literary college will have his very own pen pal starting next semester and a brand new "Confidential" stamp for his letters. The Board in Control of Student Publications gets a super-sized bottle of Excedrin. We figure that they must be up to at least Excedrin headache no. 191 over our latest Editorial. STARTING NEXT season, Coach Bump Elliott will have only a two game football schedule-The Daily has arranged for the Wolverines to play Mt. Holyoke and Wellesley Colleges. Meanwhile, basketball Coach Dave Stracks' gift will go into effect immediately: five minute halves. Our favorite members of the Engin School faculty will receive a season pass to the Paris Art Theatre in Detroit which is currently showing "Lust is a Must," and Imad Khadduri gets an eye patch. Michigan State University President John Hannah will no doubt find his new IBM milking machine and chicken plucker a big help on whatever farm he may retire to. AND ON THE student level our list includes a tube of Brylcreem for Eric Chester, 5,000 Visa membership cards and a student mobile for SGC President Bruce Kahn, a psycho-therapy session with Dr. Cutler for Roger Rapoport ... And they've promised me a new picture for my column. *p THIS WEEK the Faculty Research Poli- cies Committee released a comprehen- sive report on the University's four secret military research projects in Thailand that are worth a total of $2,727,592. The big revelation was a short para- graph on "Project 1111" buried at the end of the report. The work is a $261,192 sub-contract from Stanford Research In- stitute that is so secret that its name, sponsor, purpose, and the researchers in- volved are all secret. "Project 1111" clearly demonstrates why classified research and a free uni- versity are incompatible. Although the University has been working on the proj- ect since July there was no way for any- one outside the Office of Research Ad- ministration to find out about it. Normally all new projects are recorded in the ORA publication, the "Reporter," each month. Generally a project will start about one or two months before the actual contract is signed, ORA oficials say. After the contract is signed it is entered in the "Recorder." BUT "PROJECT 1111" is an exception. Two University researchers from the WRL Geophysics Laboratory have already spent three months in Thailand this past summer, completed field work and are now writing their reports. The work has been going on and ORA officials indicate the contract still hasn't been signed. This neatly manages to get the University around its obligation to enter the contract in the Reporter. The "Reporter" lists the name, sponsor, researchers, dollar amount and expira-' tion date for each new project. But since the name, sponspr and researchers in- volved in "Project 1111" are secret no one knows quite how to handle it. Donald E. Thackery, who edits the "Re- porter" says he doesn't know what he's going to do if the contract for "Project 1111" is signed. "If we can't list the name, sponsor or researchers its going to be pretty hard for us to run this." Presumably then "Project 1111" may never show up in the "Reporter." How many other research projects escape the "Reporter" this way? AN INDEPENDENT DAILY probe has disclosed that "Project 1111" is being carried out by David E. Willis and Row- land McLaughlin of the WRL Geophysics Lab, and that the work probably involves radar studies or measurement of natural noise level. Also it is known the work is defense department-sponsored. But all this hardly solves the problem. "Project 1111" clearly establishes that the Office of Research Administration be- lieves it can take on any sort of classified research project without letting the rest of the University know about it. Fortunately a hard-working faculty in- vestigating team found out about this proj ect. But how many other secret research contracts are going ahead without formal Regental approval: If Willias and Mc- Laughlin can complete three months field work inThailand before the rest of the "University is even told "Project 1111" exists, the researchers can get away with anything. THE SCHOOL SHOULD NOT start work on any project that it cannot name publically. It is hard to believe a school would take on work so secret that no one can even admit who's sponsoring it with- out fear of being sent to jail. If the Regents don't look into this carte blanche policy, they may well find that some devious researcher has secretly accepted a contract from the Kremlin to design missiles for the North Viet- namese. A researcher can simply get going on his project, complete all his field work and then the ORA can take the contract to the Regents for final approval. In effect the Regents are being circum- vented. For example, the Regents would have a hard time dropping "Project 1111" if they didn't want it. After all, the heart of the work is already gompleted. Beyond the immediate issue, this affair suggests that classified military research has no place at this university. It is simply subverting the free and open na- ture of the school. More important it opens the school up to being a willing accomplice to any kind of agency that is willing to pay the price for clandestine work. --ROGER RAPOPORT Editor 'p Letters: Inner-City and Negro History Courses To the Editor: AS A NEGRO, I found last weeks article concerning the "Inner City Course" valuable for two reasons. First, I acknowledge the need for a course with such per- tinent subject matter. A large part of the racial crises stems from the white man's ignorances and apa- thy toward our problems. Perhaps through an intensified study a few more whites will become cognizant of the fact that the Black Power movement is more than Stokely Carmichael's call to arms. However, I can not avoid ap- prehension. Quite possibly Inner City residents will resent being eximaned like zoology specimens by "lily white" Michiganders. I would. Instead, if Michigan stu- dents are sincerely interested in determining the causes of the Black Revolution, I suggest that they talk with some of their Black clasmates first. If they are inter- ested in possibly preventing future outbreaks, they should begin by eliminating discrimination on campus (i.e. ZTA's pledge pro- gram). THE OTHER interesting aspect of the article concerns the en- thusiastic response that the new type of course has elicited from faculty members. From what I can discern, the ideas for an on-locale course were conceived in Septem- ber. Now a mere two months later, the course's groundworks has been laid, students have registered for it, a professor has agreed to sponsor it, and the minute details are being smoothed out. While, on the other hand, an- other new course remains shroud- ed in oblivion. The proposal to in- corporate a New History course to the Lit. School was submitted to Professor Wilcox, Chairman of the History Department, over a year ago. He is still "considering" it. Yet, most of the course's pre- liminary details have been worked out. Conceivably it would trace both the Negro's socio-economic development and his contribution to America's development as a na- tion. Recent surveys have revealed that the overal student response to a course in Negro History would be even greater than that for the on-locale program. Moreover sev- eral qualified prosessors have of- fered to teach it. As it is now pro- posed, Negro History would be a four hour, non-requisite course applicable to distribution require- ments. Consequently. the prolonged de- lay in responding to the proposal seems unnecessary. If the admin- istration is willing to adopt com- paratively unorthodox courses, such as the on-locale program, to its curriculum, why is it hesitating to initiate a less radical approach to education? -Connye Hunt, '71 Who Cares? To the Editor: IF BUMP ELLIOTT is not named as the University's new Athletic Director, he should remain as head football coach until he voluntarily leaves that position, regardless of whether or not his teams are play- ing winning football. First, who really cares if the football team is winning or not? Sports is a form of weekly enter- tainment which has no impact upon the academic progress of this University or the nation. Surely the nation at large could not care less as to the ability of our football team. The University has one of the finest academic reputations in the country. Few schools can boast the caliber of legal and medical training offered here, let alone the excellent under- graduate curriculum. What's more, students here enjoy a degree of freedom and self-autonomy which probably cannot be matched any where else. Even many of the ath- letes who come here do so because of the academic program. SURELY A MAJORITY of the student body is not concerned about our football team since less than half purchase season tickets each year, including the year we went to the Rose Bowl, thus dem- onstrating a lack of real interest: Surely we need not be concerned with alumni cries either. Some aruge that without a winning team an alumnus will hesitate to donate money. No one has ever-been able to effectively demonstrate how much money the University loses each year from such disgruntled alumni. If anything, this argument does not carrry much weight when compared with the over $55 mil- lion the University has been able to raise in the past few years when the foobtall team was floundering. Finally, the athletic system will not deterioate due to a losing football team. The University is not bankrupt, a substantial num- ber of fans still attend each game, and radio and television coverage revenue will continue. Another good reason for keeping Bump around is that he is a nice guy. It is a pleasure to know that when he represents the University he is no loud-mouthed buffoon who will create doubt in the minds of other concerning the intellectual Double-Standard To the Editor: THE LSA Administrative Board has declared that: . a student of (LSA) who in- terferes with any other member of the academic community so as to disrupt that persons's partici- pation in any activity or function conducted under the auspices of the University should be subject to disciplinary action." for the University to solve this problem. But now that the Residential College has regretfully been forced to remain in East Quad, there is a solution. At a minimal cost the University could and should convert the proposed North Campus site for the Residential College into intramural fields. Since this solution is both sim. ple and practical, it probably will never be implemented, but at least I can dream about playing softball in the daylight next fall on grass. -John D. McKenzie, Jr., Grad Abuse of Power TO THE EDITOR: ANYONE WHO WAS shocked or repelled at the recent Teach- In by Staughton Lynd's descript- ion of America as a vicious im- perialist and proto-fascist nation state and by his warning that we are in for another era to challenge and surpass the dreams of the late Senator Joseph McCarthy must not with special care the front page of The Daily of Sat- urday, Dec. 2. Hershey wants to draft all anti-war demonstrators; Holmes will draft all dissenting subjects who are "not in the na- tional interest" (let's not even discuss the implications of Hol- mes' grammar) . . . At the Uni- versities of Illinois and Wiscon- sin students have gotten the axe as the wrath of the big daddies descends upon them for their de- fiance of such a Sacred American Cow as Dow Chemical Company . And atethe University of Michigan Cutler moves to expel one undergraduate - without first informing her - and two graduate students . . . and? . Good wholesome loyal military careermen brandishing Old dlory like the flaming sword of the Archangel Michael, ' and white- collar university administrators waving the red tapes of Disciplin- ary Action like the Sacraments of priests . . . Both thirsting for revenge on behalf of a society that would rather see its young people raking communal leaves and bar- becuing grade-A steaks -- as its locust culture devours the rest of the world. It is very sad that the Uni- versities, once again, are becom- ing the seedbeds of this very fascism. -Justin Vitiello 0 '4 "Some mental institution administrators are out to get me! . . But, I'm wise to them ... I'll show 'em !" Rent Strikers vs. Charter Realty CHARTER REALTY has increased the existing friction between Ann Arbor landlords and tenants, as well as jeopar- dizing itself financially, by refusing to bargain collectively under the terms of its student tenants at Albert Terrace. Charter makes a fine distinction be- tween individual apartment complaints and grievances concerning "common areas"-halls, grounds, etc. Although they have not made this clear to the residents, they are reportedly willing to meet with representatives of the striking group to discuss only these common areas. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiawe Press service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $450 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mall). 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. Editorial Stafff ROGER RAPOPORT. Editor MEREDITH EIKER, Managing Editor MICHAEL HEFFER ROBERT KLIVANS City Editor Editorial Director SUSAN ELAN. ......Associate Managing Editor STEPHEN FIRSHEIN ...... Associate Managing Editor LAURENCE MEDOW......Associate Managing Editor RONALD KLEMPNER .... Associate Editorial Director JOHN LOTTIER ........ Associate Editorial Lirector SUSAN SCHNEPP ...... Personnel Directoi NEIL SHISTER ............... .... Magazine Editor CAROLE KAPLA...Associate Magazine Editor LISSA MATROSS.....................Arts Editor ANDY SACKS......................Photo Editor ROI3ERT SHEFFIELD.... ............Lab Chief NIGHT EDITORS: W. Rexford Benoit, Neal Bruss, Wallace Immen, Lucy Kennedy, David Knoke, Mark Levin, Patricia O'Donohue, Daniel Okrent, Steve, W ildstrom. DAY EDITORS: Marcy Abramson, Rob Beattie, Jill Crabtree, Aviva Kempner, Carolyn Miegel, Walter Shapiro, Lee Weitzenkorn. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS. Eleanor Braun, Henry Grix, Jim Heck, Richard Herstein, Helen Johnson, Lynne Kilin, Ron Landsman, Urban Lehner, David Mann, Ann Munster, Steve Nissen, Dan Share, Jenny Stiller, Michael Thoryn, Richard Winter, Greg ?.#r' In any case the distinction is meaning- less because "non-common" complaints about individual apartments are uniform throughout the building-the twelve- month lease, dissatisfaction with the fifty-dollar inconvenience compensation, incomplete furnishings, and poor service. SINCE THE TENANTS have already met in mass meetings and designated rep- resentatives, it is clear that students don't want to be forced to complain to Charter individually--a situation which puts them in a powerless position. Medi- ation between Charter and the Albert Terrace representatives would save time and trouble for everyone involved. Then any tenant who felt misrepresented by the striking group could solve his own problems with Charter. But Charter is taking a pollyanna stand in dismissing the entire problem as tri- vial. Refusing to recognize the signifi- cance of opinions stated in the strike petition and in tenant-circulated ques- tionnaires, Charter appears unconcern- ed about the situation since few students continue to comlpain and rents are being paid at almost a normal rate. A Daily investigation revealed, how- ever, that a group of 22 fraternity men who are using Charter apartments would not have paid their rents last month if they had been able to. notify their bank, which handles their finances, in time to cease payment. Charter was unaware of this fact. From now on, however, they as well as the other strikers will not pay rent until Albert Terrance is com- pleted. TENANT COMPLAINTS have trickled off since the signing of the strike petition because they are somewhat satisfied now c4 Irm r.c . hov n r n t.nv',i-,o. rcnt;i caliber of our University. He is no Woody Hayes who talks gruffly to newsmen after a defeat and storms out of a press conference. Bump does not ruffle feathers, thus he is in harmony with the notion that the University must maintain its educational image. So let's keep Bump-nice guys are hard to find these days. Any- how,.sports should be subordinated to the academic advancement of our society, thus no one should really care if our football team is winning or not. --Gary F. Wyner, '68 Law Daily Associate Sports Editor 1964-5 The LSA Administrative Board holds closed meetings. I, a mem- ber of the academic community, can't participate in its activities and functions. Three members of the Admin- istrative Board are students in LSA. -Kenneth Winter, Grad IM Fields Forever To the Editor: ANYONE WHO has participated in the touch football intra- mural program at the University knows that there is a desperate need for more IM fields. Until recently there has been no way 4 THR USHi n g Johnson on War Policy *A By KEN KELLEY and AVIVA KEMPNER AS NAPOLEON SOLO he is an agent trying to rid the world of thrush. As Robert Vaughn he is a dissident Democrat who is trying to rid Vietnam of the United States. Vaughn was speaking last Sat- urday in Detroit to the Concerned Democrats of Michigan, a group which seeks to reverse the admin- istration's policy in Vietnam. He is a member of the Concerned Democrats of California which differs from the Michigan group "in that the Californian group, as a last alternative, will support a Republican candidate provided his views are more acceptable than a Democrat." As an exam- ple, Vaughn cited his organiza- tion's support of Paul McClosky of San Mateo, because of his "en- lightened stand on the Vietnam war. He explained the goals of the organization. "We started with the issue of the war, and now have a candidaten-tSen. Eugene McCarthy. Our next goal is to make an effort to gain control of the national convention." Vaughn asserted that he would also support either Sen. Robert Kennedy or Sen. George Mc- Govern for the Democratic nomi- VAUGHN .VIEWED President Johnson's present position as be- ing "boxed in. Johnson thinks he's being another Lincoln by doing something the general populace opposes, but which is nevertheless right. As such he thinks future historians will award him a fav- gather he supports the President's action in Vietnam." When asked what he thinks about California Gov. Ronald Rea- gan, Vaughn replied, "nothing, and as little as possible." COMMENTING ON draft card burning, Vaughn frowned and thought for a few minutes before he answered. "It is a violent and emotional thing to do, and something I can understand and sympathize with. I'm not so sure that if I were their age, and given the same set of circumstances, I might not do the same thing.' I think, however, that it has had an adverse effect on the peace movement. It tends to draw those who are not defi- nitely for or against the war to the Administration side because they don't want to associate with something they believe to be un- patriotic." And "General Hershey's opinion of the way moral objectors to the war should be treated is obviously unconstitutional. His way of look- ing at their protests is sick, and he's incompetent. Anytime a bureaucrat reaches that point, he should be removed," Vaughn claimed. He said Shirley Temple Black's loss was due to her being "unin- VAUGHN DENIED that he would ever run for office. His answer was a simple "no, never or ever." With the "Man from UNCLE" leaving the air in January he plans to devote his time to writ- ing a doctoral dissertation at the University of Southern California on the philosophy of mass com- munications, and plans to teach in the future. He goes along with Marshall McLuhan and his phi- losophy of mass media. For those who are still interest- ed in Vaughn's plans as a Holly- mented arguments regarding pol- itics and the war. He seems untarnished by Holly- wood glitter, but also unmoved by the prospect of holding political office. In viewing his public re- sponsibilities, he said: "I feel I have a moral obliga- tion to speak out on issues of national importance because of my profession, rather than in spite of it. I know some actors don't feel this way, and in fact feel exactly the opposite - that their position should silence them. I cannot agree with that; each person has a responsibility to do t Robert Vaughn . orable place in history for having prevented World War III." He clarified, however, that Pres- ident Johnson has a "remarkable m .... .. ..... . ' a