"_' Qfi 51r414an sain Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Pompidou and French foreign policy 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 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 oil reprints. Tuesday, February 24, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER The ease for minority admissions THE DEMANDS of the Black Action Movement ( BAM) for increased minor- ity admissions certainly merit the sup- port of the University community. Although the black student community at the University has increased drama- tically during the last few years, the overriding impression of the University is still one of a school for rich white stu- dents as the Green report characterized it in 1965. The BAM proposal for changing this condition is reasonable if not a bit con- servative. In a University of more than 30 thousand students, it demands that only 900 black students be admitted next fall-450 freshmen, 150 transfer students and 300 graduate students. The demands also give the University three years to increase the proportion of blacks in the University to 10 per cent - more than enough time: The demands also take into considera- tion the desirability of supportive services to insure that the admitted students graduate. UNFORTUNATELY, it is becoming in- creasingly apparent that the admin- istration and the University community- at-large are unwilling to give enthusi- astic support to the program. The admin- istration argues that although the pro- posals are theoretically desirable, the necessary financing is not available. It is noteworthy that the same admin- istration has proposed that students be assessed $15 per term for 30 years to finance the construction of two IM build- ings. They considered that this request would be reasonable, yet they are unwill- ing to consider seriously a similar pro- posal to finance minority admission sub- mitted by Students for Effective Action (SEA). THE ADMINISTRATION'S lack of sup- port could be expected but the failure of the so called "liberal" University com- munity to provide significant support is disturbing. One of the major objections to the pro- posal is that they. also feel that financing is simply not available. Several methods for finding adequate financing have been proposed. A simple reversal of University priorities would help the situation a great deal, and a good start would be giving admissions a higher priority than the IM building. The BAM proposal for providing tuition waivers also is a possible solution to fi- nancing difficulties. But the final pro- posal by SEA is one that would show how willing the community really is to support minority admissions. It proposes that stu- dents and faculty assess themselves $15 and $25 respectively. Self-assessment is not a new idea, students will almost sure- ly vote for such a proposal in order to finance a student bookstore. ARGUMENTS THAT minority admis- sions is unfair to the poor whites, or that the real problem is the secondary and elementary level miss the point en- tirely. They are perfectly lucid arguments for saying that minority admissions is not itself enough to solve the problem, but they do not justify defeating the minor- ity admissions proposal. Other poor should be helped to get into the University, but although the minority admissions proposal does not do that, it does help some of the poor and that is desirable. And while the problem lies at least in part with the lower educational system, it is unacceptable to ignore the people who are already victims of that inferior system. Instead, people should push for educational reform while also trying to help the victims of the system as much as possible. TWO OTHER arguments, that the qual- ity of the University will suffer and that it is unfair to lower admissions standards are merely examples of aca- demic elitism. The only real question in admissions should be whether or not the students can succeed at the University, not what type of creditials ,he has to get in. The inate ability of the students that would be admitted under the minority admis- sions program is no less than that of the majority of students already here. With the help of supportive services to fill in the gaps that were caused by poor aca- demic backgrounds, not lack of intelli- gence, the majority of the students should be able to succeed. The quality of a university should be measured only by its abilty to provide people who are going to make significant contributions that will somehow change the society for the better. If this is the standard against which the University is measured, its quality certainly will not suffer, and perhaps it will be improved. E -ALEXA CANADY Editorial Page Editor (EDITOR'S NOTE: As France's President Georges Pompidou begins his statevisit to the United States today, Bill Lavely, a re- porter for Tihe Daily currently studying in France presents some views on Pompidou's foreign policy objectives.) NICE By BILL LAVELY W HEN GEORGES POMPIDOU sold 110 Mirage Jets to Lybia early this year, he put Richard Nixon in an embarrassing position. How could Nixon now avoid sell- ing to Israel the planes that Golda Meir requested during her visit last fall? How could he thwart Israeli arguments that the military balance of the Middle East had been upset by this massive transfusion of arms to an Arab side? In effect, Pompidou put Nixon in a dilemma: refuse to sell to Israel, and dam- age American-Israeli friendship (and the political dividends;that go with it), or sell to Israel, and tempt the increasingly edgy Russians to arm the Arab world in ernest; something that they have not dared-nor wanted-to do. While the Middle East situation con- tinues to deteriorate, and Nixon continues to flounder this quandry, he will at least be offered some diversion today during Pompidou's visit to the U.S. At that time, Nixon will try to forgive Pompidou's recent sins, speak gravely of the "differences" that exist between him- self and the French president, and then, amidst the flourish and fanfare of the Marine Corps Band playing the "Marsell- laise," Nixon will likely invoke a "new era" in Franco-American relations, but speak glowingly of our harmonious friendship with France. THE SITUATION is certainly paradox- ical; but the contradiction is a superficial one. For in Pompidou, and French foreign policy, Nixon doubtless sees a perfect com- pliment to his own "low profile" world strategy. Despite the current differences, Pompidou, in the long run, will prove to be a valuable partner in the new, Nixon- led western world. Since General De Gaulle faded away last spring, French foreign policy has lost its tempermental personality. No longer does the French president criticize American Vietnam policy. No longer does he oppose British entry into the Common Market. Nor does he agitate French Canadian seperatists. Pompidou has reversed all of these idiosyncrasies-except perhaps, in the case of the French Canadians, where the agita- tion has at least taken on some subtle and respectable clothing. Pompidou, like Nixon, seldom mentions Vietnam, and British en- try into the Common Market is now fever- ishly hoped for in Paris. These changes do not represent mere elimination of old Gaullist quirks. Pom- pidou's philosophy of France's world role is basically more modest than the expansive view that caused so much friction not ong ago. De Gaulle saw France with a spiritual mission. Rejecting the two super powers, he dreamed of forging an independent third power by unifying Europe under a Franco- German partnership. DE GAULLE SHUNNED NATO in favor of his own "force de frappe," worked for real European economic integration in the Common Market, and vetoed British entry which would jeopardize France's key posi- tion in the European community. This in- dependent attitude also translated itself into ties with Eastern Europe and the People's Republic of China-two vast markets ready for European exploitation. Pompidou has no such ambitions. The French mission from now on is not power and prestige but dollars and francs. Pom- pidou sees no necessity to oppose British entry in the Common Market because European leadership is no longer fund- amental to French policy. A corrollary to this notion is Pomipdou's disinterest in European economic integration and unity. ONE FEARFUL SPECTRE for Pompidou and France's leaders determines French foreign policy. With the new Socialist- Democrat government in West Germany, the prospects of an economically united Germany seems at least less impossible than a short time age. Such unity, if achieved, could leave France stranded without the vast German market that she now enjoys. Partly as a cautionary move against such a development, France has pushed for en- try in the Common Market, and also con- tinued its explorations in Eastern Europe. In the search for markets, Pompidou has initiated his Mediteranean policy. Under' this policy, the French have carefully re- newed and cultivated relations with the former French colonies the Maghrebs (Lybia, Morocco, Tunisia), notably thaw- ing the Franco-Moroccan freeze that has existed since the Ben-Barka slaying in 1965. To the South, French troops are giving Vietnam-style aid to the Chadian govern- ment harrassed by guerrilla activity, there- by insuring a beachhead of French in- terest in the heart of Francophonic Africa. Closing the ring is Lybia. TO SAY THAT POMPIDOU made a mis- take when he sold 110 warplanes to Lybia would be like saying that Jesse James made a mistake when he robbed a stage- coach. In the Pompidou cash register diplo- macy, old Gaullist moralism such as the arms embargo have lost their sanctity. Taking their place are watchwords such as "balance of payments" and "profits." To Pompidou, the plane sale was a fine business maneuver. It repatriated a sixth of the five billion francs that France last year agreed to pay Lybia for oil in the next ten years. It also put France in the position of being the Arab's single ally in the west. Incidentally, Lybia, in the bargain, agreed to stop aiding the guerrillas that the French are fighting in Chad. No amount of justification on Pompi- dou's part could ever convince the world that the planes will not someday be used against Israel. In a word, Pompidou is hard put to explain why a country like Lybia would want 100 warplanes if they were not to be used in the Arab-Israeli war. But Pompidou is correct to point out that this danger is at least not immediate: the planes will be several years in delivery. SALVAGED FROM THE fiasco is the fact that Pompidou is the one western leader that has influence in the Arab world (if none at all in Israel). As the conflict boils down to a pull and tug be- tween the U.S. and the Soviet Union, a French middle force may be useful. That middle role isrthe one in which Pompidou now feature himself. When Moroccan King Hassan II talked to Pom- pidou in Paris two weeks ago, Hassan argued that the only workable solution to the Middle East conflict would be a separate Arab state in Palestine next to Israel. Pompidou was reported to be not entirely unsympathetic to the idea, and it is not unlikely that he will fall into some disaccord with Nixon over plans for ending the conflict. But we can expect the two presidents to play down these differences for the mo- ment. And the only other point at which Pompidou and Nixon should disagree is over NATO. Here the dispute is largely rhetorical. What is done is done. The last thing that Nixon wants is to have Pom- pidou request the return of American troops to France. The laAt thing that Pom- pidou wants is for American forces to leave Europe. Pompidou will likely pledge cooperation with NATO-a policy he has already initiated, and Nixon will no doubt accept the French "force de frappe." "Dif- ferences" expressed over NATO will likely be perfunctorily expressed for the edifica- tion of the other treaty members. THE POMPIDOU VISIT will be the oc- casion for Nixon to welcome France back to the fold. No longer will the U.S. run into French resistance at the far corners of the world. Nixon, persuing a foreign policy in which Africa has nearly been forgotten, will be content to let France build bridges to the \Sahara and the South. The Nixon "low profile" will be complimented by an amicable France quietly persuing nearby markets, rather than a maverick with global ambitions. As for the Lybian problem, the sore- point of U.S.-French relations, Nixon will have to Anake the best of a bad situation. The Kosygin letter might well be taken as a warning to Nixon not to do to the Rus- sians what Pompidou did to Nixon. The Soviets have so far withheld the sophis- ticated MIG-23 from the Iraqis, Syrians and Egyptians, choosing only to arm them to their pre-1967 strength-a force in- ferior to Israel's by definition. If Nixon feels the French Mirage sale compels him to sell F-105 fighters to Is- rael, then the Soviets will no doubt feel equally constrained to arm the Arab world in like manner. For this situation, the French president carries a large part of the blame. And there will likely be some awkward moments for Pompidou when he explains his action to Nixon. 4 1 -etters to the Editor Politics and the environment THE CAUSES of environmental decay are deeply rooted in the present po- litical, economic and social system of this society. This realization, intuitively ob- vious to some but shocking to others, is the problem and the promise of the "save the environment" movement. While the symptoms of over-popula- tion, air, water and noise pollution can be papered-over with advanced techno- logy and huge sums of money, little per- manent improvement in environmental conditions will come until basic societal reforms are made. A competitive growth economy en- courages planned obsolescence while dis- couraging large corporations from mak- ing anti-pollution efforts voluntarily. The pioneer ethic itself, still prevalent in American society, sees nature as some- t h in g to be conquered and exploited rather than carefully protected. ANSWERS TO environmental issues, on the surface uncontroversial and non- partisan, strike to the heart of what is wrong with American society - a gov- ernment removed from its constituents, a competitive economy that molds the de- sires of the people it exploits and a col- lective mentality decades behind today's realities. The problem of the environmental movement is that many in its ranks are by up-bringing and education politically conservative. Sincerely interested in pre- venting ecological disaster, they find to their dismay that the only adequate so-' lutions are radical solutions. sity's environmental teach - in, have found out, this process is not an easy one. If a change in attitudes is the environ- mental movement's problem, it is also its promise. Some radical leaders see organ- izations like ENACT as a plot to divert attention from what they consider the more serious problems of Vietnam, rac- ism and imperialism. THg ISSUE of the environment, in fact, may turn out to be one of the most ef- fective radicalizing influences around to- day, politicizing the apolitical and forc- ing conservatives and moderates to the left. Of course politicians and corporations have tried to co-opt the movement with money and claims of support. And many "middle Americans," sick of protests and vandalism, see the environmental ques- tion as something to get the kids out of the streets. The nature of the problem and the on- ly adequate solutions to it defy such ef- forts, however. People who.get deeply in- volved in saving the environment inevi- tably see the need for basic reforms and become increasingly radical when t h e y are blocked. THE SITUATION in Santa Barbara, California, is a good example of what can occur. Santa Barbara was an essen- tially conservative town with public of- ficials to match until January, 1969, when thousands of gallons of oil began leaking from off-shore drilling rigs. When government and industry offi- ENACT apologizes To the Editor: THERE HAS BEEN some recent controversy over the relationship of ENACT to black students. Ori- ginally, we had planned for our program to relate to urban condi- tions and the concerns of blacks, as well as the conventional clean air -- clean water problems, but, as Mr. Randy Davis pointed out to us in a recent steering committee meeting, our efforts amounted to no more than tokenism. WE ADMIT that , we failed in coming to grips with the real is- sues involved, and ENACT wishes to formally apologize to the Black people for not giving the neces- sary attention to the problems of blacks in our Environmental Teach-In. We hope that we will be able to accomplish some of the necessary changes in our program, and especially that the implica- tions are not lost on the national environmental movement, so that the questions of social equality and of the environment do not work at cross purposes, but become complimentary. -David Allan -Douglas Scott Co-Chairmen, ENACT Feb. 19 Fleming and GE To the Editor: LAST WEDNESDAY, President Fleming issued acstatement in at- tempt to justify calling the police to "protect" GE recruiting. It was distributed on the Diag and drop- ped in dorm mailboxes the fol- lowing morning. The essence of the letter was this: the University will tolerate so-called dissent so long as it is of no consequence. "Dissent" will be tolerated - no, praised! - so long as the pro- cesses basic to the University are not seriously threatened, i.e., so long as it is dissent, only. The po- lice will be called to crush opposi- tion when that opposition gets serious, when the people are no longer satisfied playing under the rules which are designed to render them impotent. FLEMING'S MESSAGE is clear: the processes at the very heart of therimperialist University - counterinsurgency research, RO- TC, social control research, mili- tary and corporate recruiting, etc. i, T e .gt-e Poll reports more Americans disturbed over My } :J::ALJAM SWE4IHSLER=m Nixon is insensite to black America THE PSYCHOLOGICAL and emotional gap between the Nixon Administration and a large sector of the nation's 20 million black citizens - among others - is ominously widening. Initially the White House seemed fatalistically reconciled to the breach; now it increasingly appears to be 'cynically aggravating the ad- versary relationship in pursuing the favor of- George C. Wallace's constituents (Northern and Southern branches). Peculiarly insensitive - and inflammatory - is the apparently deliberate avoidance of any symbolic acts that might help "bring us together." On the occasion of the recent observance of Dr. Martin Luther King's birthday, Mr. Nixon conspicuously refrained from any ack- nowledgement of the date. For those who may have believed that this was merely a lamentable oversight amid the many distractions of the Presidency, there is evidence at hand to dispel such illusion. It *is embodied in an exchange between Bronx Borough President Robert Abrams and the White House. ON JAN. 20, FIVE DAYS after the widespread commemoration of Dr. King's birthday - an event that stirred visibly deep outpour- ing of sentiment in the Negro community as well as other areas - Abrams sent a letter to President Nixon urging that steps be initiated now to convert the anniversary into a national holiday by 1971. Adreply, signed by Noble M. Melencamp, staff assistant to the President, recently arrived. It read in full: Thank you in the President's behalf for your recent letter sug- gesting that steps be taken to authorize the observance of Jan. 15, the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, as a holiday. Compliance with your suggestion would require action by the Congress and by the legislatures in those states joining in such an observance. I an glad to' assure you that should the Congress pass such legislation to present it to the President for official action, the matter would receive his most thoughtful attention." Commenting on the correspondence, Abrams observed that "Presi- dent Nixon is too closely tied to Southern racists even to have the decency to say he would approve such a bill if Congress took the initiative and thrust it upon him." In some affairs of state the simplest explanation may be the most valid. IF THE COLD BRUSHOFF that Dr. King's image evokes at the White House were an isolated instance of indifference, one might plaintively implore reconsideration. But the tone of the Melencamp reply is ,wholly consistent with too many other things that have oc- curred to confirm the fear that Mr. Nixon is surrendering to the spirit of George C. Wallace in ostensibly seeking to outflank him. There arrived recently the latest edition of "Human Events," the rightwing newsletter that represents a spiritual marriage of the Goldwater and Wallace platoons. One of its major missions is the exposure of liberal heretics within the Nixon domain, and a notable target in its current. edition is Leon E. Panetta, a key official in Robert Finch's Health, Education and Welfare Dept. Reading the latest "Human Events" blast at Panetta, I recalled that, during the bitter strike of hospital workers in Charleston, S. C., last year, Moe Foner of Local 1199 had often mentioned Panetta as one of the few men in the Nixon Administration who privately manifested symnathv for the embattle~d black workers in their cuest for union .i Lai publicity than My Lai describe any of these things would indeed be "inflammatory" and Fleming knows it; hence, it is sup- pressed. Let's check out GE: GE is the second largest war contractor, it builds part for the engines which propel the B-52's which drop 10,000 lb. bombs over Laos and VietnAm. GE is an integral part of the imperialism it is helping to de- fend; for profit's sake it exploits the labor of black South Africans kept down by a fascist regime, and the labor of Indians in Bombay, paying 7c an hour. Soon GE will open a plant in Saigon to exploit the labor of the Vietnamese who have been driven from the coun- tryside by the bombs dropped by the B-52's. GE has a sordid history which persists to the present day: it has been involved in the heaviest price-fixing scandals since the New Deal. Today GE persists in exploiting workers domestically-the recent strike settlement was a farce; the massacre itself. -News Item est jobs, as are women. Women are paid up to 80 cents per hour less than what men are paid for the same work. Fleming tells us that "the Uni- versity must always be a world of Ideas." In fact, the University in its practices gives concrete aid and support to GE. The University is the service and skill center for a corporate capitalist empire which denies men and women their freedom all over the world. WE SHALL not confine our- selves to "dissent," nor will we be content to express our dissatis- factions in the "world of ideas" while the University persists in its practices as an arm of GE and other corporations. Our struggle will be carried out by any means necessary. -Mark Mayer -Frank Hammer Ann Arbor SDS Feb. 20 a