The 94c fifir gan Buu Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan right to protest GE recruiting pr Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER The politics of recruiting AS DEBATE has grown in recent weeks on the question of the relationship between the University and the U.S. mili- tary-industrial establishment, the posi- tion of the University administration has more and more taken on an aura of un- reality. In his statements and open letters, Pre- sident Robben Fleming has declined to address himself to the substantive issues that have been raised by Students for a Democratic Society and the Radical Col- lege. Rather, he has been content to attack the tactics SDS has employed and to ig- nore demands for a moratorium on class- es and recruiting and a University-wide debate on the question by denying that an issue exists. BE SURE, the tactics that SDS has used to stop military and corporate recruiters from interviewing University students are open to serious scrutiny both because of the civil libertarian issues involved and the simple question of their political efficacy. But the view espoused so righteously by Fleming, that the University has kept its hands clean on the recruiter issue, must be challenged. The president argues that recruiting should be allowed to continue because the service; is desired by some students. However, the University does not offer all the services that even significant num- bers of students would like to have - in part because some of them would be 11- legal and in part because of budgetary considerations. For example, the administration h a s declined, in the past at least, to set up a day care center, to build low-cost single student housing, or to institute massive supportive services for minority students. Meanwhile, money has been going toward such activities as club sports and place- ment offices. This is not to say that past decisions have necessarily been wrong, but simply that the decisions were made, that they were based on value judgments and that they need to be reconsidered when the propriety or morality of what has been done is called to task. FURTHERMORE, President Fleming's argument that it would be more ap- propriate for SDS to stop its disruptions than for the University to suspend re- cruiting simply begs the question. Since the administration has the power to continue or suspend at will recruiting, Fleming can appear as the stalwart of peaceful rationality while refusing to act. SDS, because it is devoid of institutional power, necessarily looks bad when it acts to stop recruiting. In fact, neither Fleming nor SDS is "right" in any objective sense. Both have made moral and political decisions about the value of recruiting and their stands should be evaluated on that basis. Like almost all large institutions in the United States, the University is heavily involved in supporting the country's mil- itary and political activities. While the administration argues that the Univer- sity is open to all points of view, the fin- ancial dominance of the U.S. corporations and federal government allows their goals to become predominant over opposing ones. PROVIDING FACILITIES for corporate and military recruiters is only a small part of University support for the maintenance of the economic and poli- tical status quo in the United States. Other examples includes the millions of dollars of defense department research done by University researchers, the exist- ence on campus of the Reserve Officer Training Corps, and the numerous con- tracts given to researchers in all disci- plines by large corporations. IDEALLY, THE University could act as the source sorely needed of criticism and research aimed at improving a coun- try corrupted by militarism, racism and imperialism. But instead of following this course, the University has allowed itself to be- come corrupted by the very institution that most needs to be criticized. THE SITUATION must be reversed. The University must throw off the finan- cial chains which bind it to the U.S. mili- tary-industrial establishment. Hopefully, this change can be effected peacefully. As a first step, Senate As- sembly, which is meeting in special ses- sion tomorrow, should support demands for suspension of classes and recruiting so that a University-wide debate on the issue can be held. --MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Editor By BRIAN SPEARS LAST WEEK representatives of General Electric came to the University to recruit. The actions of the pro- testers who acted to block the recruiters, along with the actions of President Flemming and the Ann Arbor po- lice, has raised a host of questions. The main questions center around the nature of the policies and priorities of GE and other corporations, around the meaning of individual rights, and around the ideology and function of tolerance. GE is similar to many other large corporations based in the United States. It is heavily involved in both the production of war materials, and the growth of American financial interests abroad. GE is heavily dependent on war contracts; it is the second largest war contractor, having over $1.6 million of contracts. GE, because of its size and power, is representative of the large corpora- tions whose foreign interests have repeatedly influenced the making of foreign policy. Twenty-five per cent of GE's employees are found in foreign countries where the labor is cheap and where the markets and resources are available for exploitation. This overseas activity provides GE with a vested interest in American foreign policy which is aimed at protecting corporate property and markets abroad, and whch requires increasingly costly military expenditures The activity of a recruiter who comes to campus must be seen in the context of the economic and political system which exploitative corporations breed. Ultimately, corporate recruiting serves a similar function for cor- porations as ROTC does for the military. One of the issues with which one must deal is that of the "right" of the corporation to function, i.e., re- cruit, on campus. Yet this issue is too narrowly perceived unless a more fundamental issue is raised. The issue concerns the process by which a corporation, or any other social institution, derives the right to function in society. SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS are legitimate in the event that they systematically satisfy the human and material needs of the people who are affected by that institution. If a modern corporation establishes as its priorities profit maximization and expansion for the sake of market con- trol, it will become exploitative and oppressive. Corpo- rations such as GE and Dow Chemical derive their rights to recruit on the basis of their position of power in our society. The "rights" which corporations utilize are protected by other institutions, such as universities.'The aid which the University gives to the military, and to morally cor- rupt corporations by allowing them to function on cam- pus is even more reprehensible when President Fleming issues statements such as the one of last Thursday. In it he states, "The University must always be a world of ideas, often in conflict. It ceases to be a University, how- ever, when a group which is willing to use totalitarian tactics can impose on the rest of us its views." The implication of the President's statements is that he would have us believe that somehow a recruiter is simply exercising his freedom to express an "idea". The fact is that a recruiter is serving a direct function for his company. The "world of ideas" concept of the University is unrealistic. As a social institution the University per- forms a series of functions, one of which is sponsoring corporate recruiting. Conflict over recruiting is conflict over the tasks which the University will perform. If the University were simply a "world of ideas", then the out- come of "conflict" would be socially irrelevant. Of course, if the University were a world of, ideas, recruitment as we know it would not take place. THE POLITICAL QUALITY of recruitment is re- flected by the fact that President Fleming did call in police. Many people assert that it is their 'right" to see, and to be recruited by, a corporate recruiter. In this issue, it is necessary to clarify the nature of the "right" which that student might exercise. In order to justify recruit- ment to a certain position, one must be able to justify the function of that job. A corporate job is not a "right" if in the exercising of that job, one will aid in the systematic oppression of others. That is a privilege which no one should need or desire. In a truly human society, such a privilege would not exist. THERE ARE THOSE who would deprive the re- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR cruiter and the recruitees the privilege of unmolested recruiting. How do these people claim the right to block a recruiter? They rely on the same right by which they can demand an end to the war, and an end to racism. Inherant in that demand is the denial of someone's "right" to make war profits, or their "right" to exploit black labor. Human beings have a right to a human, non-exploitative society without war. They have the right and obligation to change their social institutions. People have the right to affect the conduct and nature of their society. IN LIGHT OF THE ABOVE, it is clear that the tol- erance which President Fleming Oemands we have for GE and other recruiters is a perversion of the purpose of tolerance. Tolerance, as a general ideology, 'is functional for human goals and needs only when certain necessary conditions exist. In advocating tolerance we assume that established society is free, and that social improvement and change can come about as part of the normal course of events. By tolerating recruiting, we extend immunity to poli- cies, and behavior, which should not be tolerated. Those policies endanger, if not destroy, the chances of creating an existance without fear and misery. The objective of tolerance is freedom of choice, thought, and expression. To achieve that freedom we must be intolerant of those policies which systematically oppress us, and others. Tolerance cannot be indiscrim- inate where existance is at stake, or where freedom is at stake. THE FIRST STEPS to building that open and free society can be taken by individuals who will demand the right to make moral judgments. Members of the Uni- versity should, not be fooled into thinking that it is unreasonable to demand an end to the exploitative poli- cies of GE or any other social institution. The goal in ending corporate recruiting is not to deprive others of legitimate rights. The goal is to end the exploitative nature of our economic system. That must be achieved before legitimate, human rights will exist as a natural outgrowth of an open, free, and just society. AV An open letter from Fleming on recruiting a - I , . -"I, I jr-I - i 7-51 1" .!'\ a,.'.' . ,: ' * - -. .. I y~'OUR. PEWS I.= 0 Ov *;m& ommww IF ( e Ie IIiv" 1 . . . . . W 0 ~ -ma I A ft E.'. II .a " " .wrir E IIA .. -j, The state of the world AFTER A LITTLE more than a year in office, President Nixon has decided to inform America about the 'state of the world.' The United States, we were told must seek the creation of a "durable peace,' but in reality the new peace pro-. gram is nothing more than a belated at- tempt to hide the U.S.'s world influence and power behind the mask of a new world "mission." Like any official address, Nixon's speech was overloaded with rhetoric and double- talk. Dividing the text into geographical regions, Nixon explained how he would attempt to influence the destiny of each corner of the globe. NIXON'S APPROACH to control was de- fined in a three part strategy for peace: partnership, strength, and nego- tiation. His whole partnership approach is an extension of his "VietnaMization" concept, wherein the puppet governments of various nations will be used more and more to legitimatize our interference in their affairs. The second point in the strategy, which, makes the amazing statement that peace requires American strength is very ob- viously an attempt to justify and ration- alize military spending. By creating the paranoic supposition among the silent majority that world peace cannot exist unless the U.S. maintains complete mili- tary superiority, the Nixon administration succeeds in making any opposition to the military appear to be not only trea- sonous, but against the interests of world peace. "Willingness to negotiate", the third point is another ploy used in dealing with Vietnam. By claiming that the NLF and ONE OF THE most interesting parts of the text is the section on Europe, which was just filled with euphemisms for racism and white supremacy. "T h e peace of Europe is crucial to the peace, of the world. This truth . . . is a central principle of United States foreign pol- icy. For the forseeable future E u r o p e must be the cornerstone of the structure ofs a durable peace." This statement and references to "the values and heritage we share" is in reality saying "Well, it's us against the Third World now, and we bet- ter all stick together." Nixon correctly (or incorrectly) feels strong enough internally to tell the people of the U.S. the blatant fact that, "Our objective, in the first instance, is to sup- port our interests over the long run with a sound foreign policy," and "We are not involved in the world because we have commitments; we have commitments be- cause we are involved. Our interests must shape our commitments rather than the other way around." Heavy rhetoric us- ually allows people to believe that U.S. foreign police is one of international welfare, but Nixon's own words make it clear enough to convince anyone other- wise. In reference to the Western Hemis- phere, Nixon, proclaimed "there is no more delicate task than finding n e w modes which permit the flow of needed investment capital without a challenge to national pride and prerogative." In effect, this means we have to find a way to get Latin American countries to allow U.S. corporations to move in strong- er without getting the peoples of those nations as uptight about it as they've been of late about Rockefeller and Dulles. The "challenge" in the Middle East is *0 h at l' y. *rd Tribune Sp: .,e stwe..o .,....iys+. s-fl..,cs. s7a. (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is an open letter, written by University President Robben Fleming.) Dear Prof. Mendel: I HAVE READ your open letter, published in The Daily on Sunday, Feb. 22, and I now send this open reply. You have spoken eloquently of the problem (of 'radical tactics). And I note with pleasure that though you find civil disobedience justifiable on occasion you do pot accept either personal assault or property destruction as being a part of the kind of civil disobedience of which you write. You conclude your letter by asking that I endorse certain recom- mendations "calling for a University-wide forum to discuss all aspects of non-campus recruiting and of the University's relations with the military and with war-affiliated corporations." The recommendations to which you refer are, I take it, the ones handed to me last Friday on behalf of those faculty members and teaching fellows who describe themselves as "The Radical College." The two relevant points appear to be: first, immediate suspension of recruiting, and second, a mora- torium of classes to formulate, through Uiversity-wide debate, a policy on corporate and military involvement in the University. I SHALL SPEAK to the recruitment issue first, because it con- stitutes the most immediate problem. Then I have a suggestion which applies to both issues. Protests against certain employers have now been a part of campus life for several years. Innumerable suggestions for a solution which would please the contending interests have been made. Our current policy, for instance, was agreed upon as late as the end of April, 1968. It evolved after many faculty, student, and Regent discus- sions, and calls for representatives of recruiting agencies to participate in public forums on campus when so requested. This was thought to be a way of allowing a thorough discussion of a given employer's policies without at the same time making it impossible for the employ- er to recruit on campus. The policy seems to have worked relatively well until recently, al- though interest in such forums died out soon after the original policy was worked out. ANOTHER POSSIBLE ALTERNATIVE, most recently mentioned in Stuart Gannes' editorial in The Daily, Feb. 24, is to have the employer actually do his recruiting in a hotel off-campus. We tried that in a controversial case at the University of Wisconsin a few years ago while I was still there. Unfortunately, it failed because the hotel cancelled the employer's reservation after disrupters threatened action at the hotel. This put the whole problem back in the lap of the Uni- versity. Several problems are posed by a suspension of recruiting. One is that many national companies schedule their recruiters long in ad- vance and a suspension might result in actual cancellation for that recruitment year. Since our placement offices are reporting a greatly expanded student demand for interviews this year, probably because the job market is less active than it .was a year ago, this would t penalize students who do want to interview. n Moreover, the number of students who disrupted interviewing at e Engineering is tiny as compared 'with the hundreds of Engineering d students who are now saying through their student government, their r student publications, and via petitions, that they have a free right e to interview. Finally, there are a very large number of people who feel t strongly that a decision on whether or not to interview is a matter r- of individual choice. 1- All things considered, there is doubtful wisdom in suspending o- recruiting. The burden would fall entirely on the large number of students who want to interview and who are in compliance with the 1968 policy which was directed towards this same problem. Would it not be reasonable to expect the disrupters, who are fewer in number and who are not in compliance with the 1968 agreement, to cease their y activities while another solution is sought? I COME NOW to the suggestion that there be a moratorium on classes. This is, of course, done on occasion, but only under quite t- unusual circumstances. It would not be difficult to obtain from school y and college faculties, and from school and college governments which exist in most of the colleges, an expression on this question. In the y absence of any such expression one wonders whether there is justifi- et cation for a moratorium on classes for the 32,000 students who are here in Ann Arbor. te FINALLY, LET ME MAKE this affirmative suggestion. Last Fri- day the Regents passed Section 7.01 of the new bylaws. It is a product of long hours of work'rby members of SACUA and SGC. It is concurred in by the administration and the Regents. It provides a six man committee - two faculty members, two students, two administrators - the function of which is to provide open and clearly visible channels e of communication, stimulate frank exploration of controversial items, and promote discussions when disagreements arise within the students, faculty and administration. There is clearly such a disagreement at e this point in time between the Engineering faculty and students and r Letters to the Editor Radical faculty To the Editor: IF THE SO-CALLED "radical faculty," which recently stated in The Daily itslintention of "strik- ing" against classes if SDS is ban- ned from campus, still retains its faculty of reason, it might con- sider the following; why would it "strike" against classes to defend SDS' right to articulate its inter- ets, but not "strike" SDS which has physically prevented others from articulating their interests? -Zvi Gitelman Feb. 19 Dissent To the Editor: WE ARE DISTRESSED by the political situation both on our campus and throughout the coun- try. We firmly believe in the right to dissent and the right of free- dom of speech, but we cannot ac- cept any form of violence. For in- stance, campus recruiters visiting the University can and should be demonstrated against by those who disgaree with the policies of the institutions which they repre- sent; however,there is no reason that their lives or the lives of in.Pru iPu I'P1a. hn~1 1(i Lufl a v,~r~ real possibility of Richard Nixon's apathetic and alienated "silent majority" from turning the polit- ical climate of this countrysharp- ly, and tragically, to the right. --George Bristol Business Manager of the Michigan Daily -Nancy Asin Circulating Manager -Greg Drutchas Sales Manager -Steve Elman Admin. Advertising Mngr. -Bruce Haydon Finance Manager -Darina Krogulski / Assoc. Finance Manager -Susan Lerner Sales Manager -Barbara Schulz Personnel Manager Recruiting To The Editor: THE EDITORIAL in Feb. 17 Daily which was entitled "Murder in my heart for the Judge" would better have been stated "Murder in my heart for the capitalist sys- tem" which was responsible both for the 1968 protests and for the tribution and the socially usefu services have it in their power t organize in the way they functioi from day to day for the purpos of restoring the ownership an control of the tools and othe means of social production to th people, to establish a governmen based on the relationships inhei ent in industrialization and abo ish representation based on ge graphy. -Ralph Muncy '23 Feb. 17 Conspirac; To the Editor: AFTER WATCHING last Sat urday night's University hocke game, I question why thenRegent have not been indicted under thi anti-riot conspiracy law. The seem to have met the criteria s down by the Justice Dept. i.e organizing the crossing of stat lines for events at which the oc currence of violence was likely. -Kelvin Shea Feb. 20 Tenur To the Editor: I WAS SORRY to learn of th Ao