an e Mir$an ai Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Why wasn't Smith there? 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 ail reprints. IDAY, MARCH 20, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: RICK PERLOFFI Rmand Repression Offspring of the U' THERE WAS one very conspic- uous absence at yesterday's Regent's meeting. The major topic of discussion was minority admis- sions and the only Regent t h a t couldn't make the meeting was the black regent, Otis M. Smith. Everyone attending the meeting - only 30 tickets were given out -wondered where Regent Smith could be. When finally reached for com- ment last night, Smith, a General Motors legal counsel, explained his situation by saying that he had to help four or five other lawyers ap- peal a case for GM. He said that "He couldn't ask theeCalifornia District court of Appeals to change their court date." Therefore, the four or five other lawyers benefit from Smith's assistance, and the black students at the University wait until Smith has time for them. Smith justified his decision by saying that this case "means a great deal of money for GM." Somehow, I can't get too worked up about GM making any more money. Smith's absence at yesterday's meeting is a direct and unforgive- able insult to the black students that spent a great deal of time and effort researching and prepar- ing the Black Action Movement de- mands. But unfortunately, this is not the first time Smith has shown such disrespect toward b 1 a c k students. AT THE FIRST open meeting be- tween the Regents and BAM in early February, Smith first re- vealed his poor attitude toward black students. He was not at all hesitant to tell students just to "shut up." Andawhen several stu- dents tried to ask him questions. he responded by telling them "Don't be so damn smart," and further informed that "You don't know what you're doing." But even this was not enough for Smith. he went on to tell them what wonders are being done by the GM executives who have given a great deal of money to the Uni- versity. When asked if his encounter with the black students at that meeting had anything to do with his not attending this month's meeting, Smith says no. But some- how I can't help feeling that he felt his old style politics being chal- lenged by a new breed of blacks., WHEN I TALKED to Smith on the phone, a statement he made intensified my beliefs. He said of students and his own children that, "I don't like anyone who has just been born questioning my Civil Rights activity." A statement that could only come from a man who feels threatened by t o d a y ' s youth. He went on with a familiar phrase he used at the November Regents meeting, "I've been stoned in Alabama and threatened in Flint." But Smith left Flint al- most ten years ago. In that ten years, times and black attitudes have changed. People now realize that GM in its present form and its present structure is not compatible with the goals of black, poor or even middle class people. The c o u r t case in California isundoubtedly important to GM and to Smith as an employee of GM but, it is not important to the people concerned about minority admissions, a n d the general welfare of people. IT IS NOT enough for Smith to say that he has had a good record in civil rights. Th rpast is not as important as the present and the future, and that is what the black students are interested in. The tactics that Smith and oth- ers tried brought changes but not enough changes because many of the same problems are still here today. New tactics and new solu- tions must be found, and in order for this to be done ,the old tactics must be questioned. Smith said that tactics that tried to pin each Regent down on each item don't help the situation, but it is only by carefully analyzing what exists that new solutions can be found. REGENT SMITH'S absence at yesterday's meeting can not be ex- cused because he had important work to do for GM. His absence was an insult to the black stu- dents. A re-orientation of his priorities is in order. Yes, he works for GM and has a respon- sibility to them, but if that re- % sponsibility is allowed to super- cede his interests in equal oppor- tunities for the minority and poor students, then his past record of meaningful civil right activity is meaningless today. THE REGENTS' ACTIONS yesterday - passing paper platitudes which refuse to deal seriously with the minority ad- missions crisis, and calling squads of riot police to secure the administration fort- ress against a peaceful demonstration - show that a serious battle to substantial- ly increase minority admissions is just beginning. The Regents' compromise proposal, which endorses 10 per cent black enroll- ment by 1973-74, but without adequate mechanisms for funding it, isn't worth the paper it's printed on in bringing black and o t h e r minority students to campus. The $3 million which the proposal al- locates to financial aid is less than one third of the amount needed to fund such a program., Either t h e University administration commits itself to funding minority ad- missions, or it doesn't. It didn't. Promises are nice -- but will fund ed- ucation for no one. STUDENTS WHO marched around cam- pus yesterday afternoon in protest un- derstood this, and they wouldn't swallow it. The University administration knew the stuldents wouldn't swallow it. That's why the Regents locked themselves in the Administration Building, asked in ad- vance for police "protection" from the students in whose name the Regents pre- tend to govern, and then. called r i o t squads to break up a peaceful demonstra- tion around the administration building. The administration's repressive police. tool arrived with clubs, arresting a n d beating some of the demonstrators in the process. MAY LEARN, three crucial lessons from yesterday's events. The administration does not intend to open the University to admit the minor- ity students who have the right to enroll here. It will not commit resources, it will not commit the funds-because minority admissions do not rank among the ad- ministration's highest priorities. The University administration no long- er maintains an aloof, liberal' distance from the police it uses, but has allied with them. WHENEVER demonstrations gain suffi- cient momentum to threaten the ad- ministration's ease in implementingi its policies - policies in which students have no ,say - the Regents and the President will summon the police to preserve their power. When students struggle against the police, they struggle against the in- terests which control their own Univer- sity - and when they struggle against the University they struggle against the same interests which control the police. Since students are fighting a powerful institution which h a s no intention of listening to their demands, they must start waging campaigns which are better. planned and better organized than the demonstration yesterday. Never before yesterday had so many students and faculty - 1500 to 2000 - organized so quickly and been so ready to do something, but what was there to do? Protesters snaked their way around campus, straggling through buildings, straggling to and from the Diag, with no clear purpose and no real leadership, and so the protest lost enormous momentum and petered out. THE; FIRST STEP e v e-r y student and faculty member should take now is to strike and close the University:. halt the functions of an institution which refuses to serve minorities and which refuses to listen to its own students. Strikers should rove through dorms, fraternities and so- rorities, knock on apartment doors, ex- plain the issues - and make it clear that the minority admissions crisis affects not only black students and chicanos and other minorities, but every white person as well who lives under the University and must ultimately bear responsibility for its policies. Such responsibility is material, not only idealistic. Institutions-like nations -are never spared internally the effects of their policies and attitudes toward ex- ternals. Nations which become chauvin- istically aggressive against neighbors go through parallel transformations within their borders. National discipline is rigidi- fied, criticism suppressed, police forces strengthened. SIMILARLY, institutions which act in an elitist fashion toward the sur- rounding society find the effects of that elitism corrupting every facet of its in- ternal life. In the case of the University, one can easily detect the effects of elitism in the curriculum, the power distribution among the various constituencies, the growing brutality of the administration toward "upstart" students. The campus must strike -+ and show the Regents and administration that this University w il11 not continue operating until it begins turning its interests to- ward . the disadvantaged groups who have every right to an education. -DANIEL ZWERDLING Magazine Editor -ALEXA CANADY Editorial Page Editor -BRUCE LEVINE Editorial Page Editor Regent Smith LETTERS TO THE EDITOR To fight pollution: Consumer boycott? Pollution i To the Editor: THE RECENT STUDENT cam- paign ,against pollution is to be' commended. However, I doubt that their recent actions will have one iota of impact on the manufactur- ers since a purchased auto or emp- ty container signifies income, which is necessary for profit, to the companies involved. In fact if I were in the auto or soft drink business I would en- courage more action of this na- ture since it means more sales and thus more potential profits. Ban- ning vending machines legally re- quires many hearings, possible court actions, and. your time and your money. IF YOU ARE REALLY sincere and want disposable containers eli- minated, do it the expedient way and make money at the same time. Stop patronizing the vending ma- chines and stop purchasing soft drinks in disposable containers at the stores. The vending machines are there only because they are making money. Stop the source and either the machines go or the disposables go. Either way you've accomp- lished your purpose. The same is true for auto pollution. Simply stop buying autos and stop driv- ing what you have. Use the peda- mobile. The automakers and oil companies will understand t h i s message. -Charles A. Klimko Irving,!Texas March 15 Strike! To the Editor: THE UNIVERSITY COMMUN- ITY should realize that once again the Regents and the Administra- tion have shown their complete in- sensitivity to the needs of the Uni- versity, itself. Demands made by the Black Action Movement were either accepted in a greatly water- ed down version, or completely dis- missed. Or so the Regents thought. These demands cannot be dismiss- ed. This time both large numbers of the faculty and the student body have united. We are firm in our belief that if we all stick to- gether and act together the Re- gents will be forced to accede to BAM's demands. - Specifically, we must begin by shutting this University down. No one should attend classes until the Regents agree (by vote) that all of BAM's demands will be met. Once again we urge all students, staff and faculty members to form a united front, and strike against racism. Marty McLaughlin, President, SGC Marc Van Der Hout, Ex. Vice-Pres., SGC Joan Martin, SGC Member-at-Large David Brand, SGC Member-at-Large Jerry DeGrocel, SGC Member-at-Large Marty Scott, SGC Member-at-Large Bob Hirshon; Adm. Vice-President Mark Rosenbaum, Chr, Aca. Affairs, SGC Roberta Hirshon, Personnel Dir. of SGC March 19 Immature To the Editor: ANY STUDENTS WHO DOUBT the effectiveness of SGC need only refer to the minutes of the last meeting, contained in Wednes- day's Daily (March 18). On the pretense of taking a stand against the atrocities and injustices of the American system, SGC indulges freely in a series of inflammatory and meaningless generalizations. Not content with neatly encompas- sing all the U.S.'s evils in a few resolutions, the SGC follows with a self-righteous, juvenile attack on Fleming: "The SGC condemns robben phleming for his unfair and biased treatment of the issue BAM demands) and his blatant repression of the truth on cam- pus" and also, "SGC demanded that robben distribute the truth (as SGC sees it) at his expense." THE BASIC ISSUES behind the SGC resolutions are, of course, vital and serious, and require im- mediate attention, but the tactics of hackneyed rhetoric and w e a k sarcasm defeat SGC's efforts by failing to inspire any sort of think- ing. The responses elicited by these tactics, the total alienation of the antagonistic side or t h e thoughtless "Right on!" of the supportive side are hardly t h e bases for awareness, concern a n d action. -Sandra Douglas, '72 March 19 Grades To the Editor: I HAVE BEFORE me, as I write, a copy of the "Drop-out Convoca- tion" flyer, with the contents of which I vehemently, disagree. First, while it is true that the grade system has no necessary re- lationship to "real education," it is untrue that it is antithetical to "real learning." The assumption that those students who are suc- cessful in the context of the grade system do not have such an edu- cation is, moreover, at best er- roneous; at worst it is a kind of intellectual snobbery. My own ex- perience, borne out by that of others,p suggests that although ad- justing and accommodating (my) goals and interests" to the system, I find myself still capable of think- ing critically. SECONDLY,.the -expenditure of funds on the Honors Convocation is not a "hypocritical ordering of priorities," for while the Univer- sity has the responsibility for aid- ing disadvantaged minorities, it has also the responsibility for re- cognizing good students. (I might add tha, unlike the flyer's im- plication, the two groups are not necessarily distinct.) -Denis G., Paz Teaching Fellow, Dept of History March 19 For free child carenow! By HESTER PULLING 'AST TUESDAY afternoon,; thirty women, all members of the Child-Care Action Group, met in front of the Administration Bldg. with plans to present de- mends to President Robben Flem- ing. The women then climbed the stairs to Fleming's second-floor of- fice and found the door locked. Retracing its steps, the group this time took the elevator up to the second floor-only to find that the double glass doors which par- tition off Fleming's office were also locked. A secretary finally explain- ed that Fleming was in a previous- ly-scheduled Executive Officers meeting and could not be disturb- ed. But perhaps, if they would like to come 'back next week .. . Their demands centered around the establishment of free child- care facilities for both University and community use which would benefit working mothers. SIXTY-TWO per cent of all women working in 1967 were doing so out of economic neces- sity. Women bring in needed money to the family and cannot. afford the expense of hiring a baby-sitter. In addition, qualified sitters are hard to come by. The women have to work and the chil- dren have to be cared for. The ob- vious solution is a child-care cen- ter. The question of child-care has periodically been raised by differ- ent organizations over the past few years, and each time they have been told to come back some other time. Student's wives on North Campus have circulated pe- titions supporting child-c a r e, women have appealed to Director of University Housing John Feld- kamp and also to Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Wil- bur Pierpont. T HE NEED for such a center is demonstrated by the limited number of child-care facilities al- ready in use. Local churches and different schools in the University are running cooperative child-care centers but these just aren't suf- ficinet to meet the needs of the community. Even the University has recog- nized the need of child-care facil- ities. Acting Vice President for Student Affairs Barbara Newell recently put in a bid for a center at University School. lyirs.-Newell also has met at different times with various women's groups all expressing interest in child-care. Mrs. Newell has offered the child-care group money for re- searching the project, but the money could better be used as a start on getting facilities. Just last month the child-care group asked the University if a house on North Campus, which was to be torn down, could be converted in- to a child-care, facility. Revamping the house would have required about $1000, but it was bull-dozed down without the University re- sponding to the group's suggestion. THE CHILD-CARE A cti o n Group is returning at 2 this af- ternoon to pick up Fleming's re- sponse to their demands. President Fleming should ;ac- knowledge the legitimiacy of their demands and take immediate steps to carry them out. at The Honors Convocation: A waste of time and money Creating lunar landscapes on earth, AT TODAY'S Forty-Seventh Annual Honors Convocation o v e r 3,000 stu- dents will be honored for "superior aca- demic achievement" with rewards a n d scholarships and memberships in various honor societies. The basis' for these hon- ors is how well students have fared in the University's grading system. It seems the administration finds grades a trust- worthy measure of learning. But this is a simplistic assumption. Per- formance does not necessarily reflect ac- quisition of knowledge; it is largely a function of socialization. Grades, 1 i k e I.Q. tests, are culturally biased against minority groups, the underprivileged, and foreign students. Even when cultural bias is disregarded, grades do not necessarily correlate w i t h learning. Absorbing ob- jective "facts" on which exams are often based may inhibit true learning by re- stricting a student's attention to those specifics on which he thinks he will be tested. (And who can blame him when graduate schools or job appointments rest largely on having high grades?) The University has also used dubious logic on two counts in canceling classes First, only 3,000 of these students have been formally 'invited to attend the event. But more importantly University officials have in the past refused to cancel class- es for discussion of on-campus recruiting, black student demands, and other mat- ters more important not only to the Uni- versity but to society at large. Finally, the Honors Convocation costs an exorbitant amount of money which should be put to better use. Total costs have not yet' been compiled, but at least $1,200 of University funds is being spent simply for publication of a Daily honor supplement which lists award-winners. Additional funds have been spent on var- ious items, including printing and mail- ing several thousand invitations to the convocation and for a tea honoring those awarded. At a time when the University is short of funds due to recent decreases in gov- ernment scholarships and aid, increased demands of minority and disadvantaged groups, and rising c o s t s of education, Honors-Convocation-spending shows a despicable misordering of priorities. By DAVE GORDON (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author is co-chairman of Ann Arbor New Mobe and was moderator of the ENACT panel on the war and the environment.) "ONLY WE Can Prevent For- ests!" is the slogan of Opera- tion Ranch Hand, says Air Force Major Ralph Dresser, head of the group which sprays defoliants on Vietnamese forests and croplands. "We are the most hated outfit in Vietnam." Air Force C-123's are equipped to lay down wide swathes of spray of 1,000 gallons of herbicides per plane-load to deny food and cover to the "enemy" in Vietnam. About sixteen per cent of the total for- ested area was treated with herb- icides up to thelend of 1968. The estimated area sprayed between 1962 and today is a minimum of five million acres of defoliation and half a million acres of crop destruction. This is just one thing we are doing to disrupt and de- stroy the ecology of Vietnam. There is so much shrapnel in the trees now t h a t Vietnamese lumber mills are expected to break down for several hours each day, their saw blades broken by pieces of metal buried in the wood - an indication of the extreme and extensive bombing damage. ONE ECOLOGICAL SIDE-EF- FECT of war can be an increase in predators.. In Europe during WWII wolves increased in certain areas. In Vietnam, it is the tiger. After 25 years of war, the tiger has learned that gunfire means the presence of dead and dying. To- day, Vietnamese tigers converge when they hear gunfire. T h e i r food supplies are assured, but ecol- ogical balance is destroyed. "You are making our countr*y; look like the surface of the moon," said one Vietnamese describing the millions of large bomb craters pock-marking the land. Some of these craters are as much as 30 feet deep and 45 feet in diameter. Our bombers added two and one- half million new craters in 1968 alone. Any areas with both bomb craters and defoliation must in- deed look like the surface of a dead world. It may be impossible to restore these areas. No one knows the an- swers to many of the questions about herbicidal destruction of the environment over the long run. When the facts are all in, it may be too late for the Vietnamese countryside and the Vietnamese people. Two zoologists (E. W. Pfeiffer the only other vertebrate observ- ed. The ecology of the area had been fatally unbalanced by our defoliants. How many years it will take such ant area to recover, if it ever does recover, is an open question. NOT ONLY HAS THE SPRAY- ING DESTROYED the habitat of many species of plant and animal, the herbicide 2,4,5-T used in about fifty percent of the spraying may have teratogenic (fetus-deform- ing) effects upon animals. Sena- tor Hart spoke iabout this in the Senate (Congressional Record - Senate, Feb. 16, 1970), remarking that the herbicide 2,4,5-T in addi- tion to its probable serious disrup- tive ecological effects on fish and plant communities" . . . may con- stitute a direct threat to human life."' According to the results of a study conducted by Bionetics Re- search Laboratories, Inc., "e v e n small dosages of 2.45-T will pro- duce fetal deformities in both mice and rats." And despite the absence of any such determina- tion' [finding a basis for estab- lishing safe residue tolerance lev- els in food1 by the FDA. this pesti- cide (2,4,5-T) continues to be sprayed at home and abroad on food crops which are ultimately used for human consumption." Other materials used in spray- ing are 2,4-D, Cacodylic acid and chemical have been sprayed on rice and vegetables in Vietnam in our efforts to deny food to the "enemy" UNDERSTANDABLY, W I T H THE FARMLANDS DESTROY D or rendered unsafe, there is the mass forced migration - part of our plan to control the population - of the peasants from the land into the city or into concentration encampments in the countryside. In the past ten years Saigon has grown from a city of 250,000 to over 3 million. Such rapid migra- tion, particularly under wartime conditions, causes a serious disrup- tion of the normal growth and change patterns in the human ecology. With the rapid concentration of the population in areas not having' adequate sanitation services, jobs, and food services, along with the other evils of crowding, rats and disease, comes the very real pos- sibility of epidemics. BUT WHAT IS MOST CLEAR about the relationship of war and the environment is that war is an aberration It is not part of the ecology, but rather a destroyer of ecosystems, an enemy of the en- vironment. Modern war is Ecocide. The war in Vietnam is a war of ecocide. Truly, "war is not healthy for children and other living things." I- I 1