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 "I'd like to apologize for 'soft on communism' charge .. I was quoting the 'old Nixon .., I~r. -=-WA\LT ER S H A P IRO-C Is academia, academic? Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Dlly exp ress the'irrdividual opinions df staff writers' or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. DAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MANN Classified research one year la ter i ONE YEAR LATER, it seems absurd to sified contracts. The inter-university 1 resurrect and re-debate the contro- committee, recommended by the Elder- versy that was classified research. De- field Report to pressure against "over- spite arguments that the University's af- classification," is apparently no closer to tairs with the defense department are im- being formed now than it was before the moral or at least unfortunate, research- January release of the report. ers here are unlikely to relinquish their claimsi on handsome government contract THE RELATIONSHIP of the University offers. with the military should be clearly Even though the controversy has been limited and defined, if it is to exist at all. subdued by the promise that the Coon The operation of the Classified Re- committee would solve the conflicts con- search Committee is crucial in determin-5 cernin'g secrecy, the issue of classified re- ing exactly what the partnership of the search is, or should be, very much alive University and the defense, department simply because secret projects are still should be. being done here. Although it has been disappointingly During the months of June, July and slow in getting; down to business, the I August this year, more proposals were committee can be infinitely influential sent out by the University than were when and if it deqides to act. The faculty transmitted during the same period a group has the almost limitless power of year ago. Furthermore, these proposals a supreme court, 'since'"it will judiciously were transmitted 'without the review of interpret the general guidelines of the the new Classified Research Committee, Elderfield Report. Even Vice President assigned by the Elderfield Report on Clas- Norman's guaranteed veto cannot stop sified Research, and appointed last June the committee from demanding a Uni- to check new research offers. \ versity Assembly review of a contract. Thus, protests against classified ' re-' search are at least as valid as they were THE COMMITTEE can block any further T last year, because there is still not an ade- military research in foreign countries; no quate guarantee that the University will it can halt research whose eventual use lef not continue to accept blatantly' unwise may result in the death or maimings of fle and immoral contracts. human beings; it can stop the University When, and if, the new review committee from accepting contracts whose results on begins to function, it will be operating be- will not be allowed to widen the pool of pr hind closed floors, so that its own judg- scientific knowledge. he ments are beyond scrutiny. bef But there is another serious ditawback To vHIS IS NOT to insinuate that all ad- in the structure and power of the com- the mittee: it lapks' student representation. ph ministrators, faculty and researchers Although chairman Dr. Coon says he i are not toy be trusted when they act inde- ish pendently, nor that all classified con- hopes for eventual student membership tracts are insidious, war-oriented projects. on the committee, that possibility is ph dimmed by the fact that the Elderfield We However, the attitude shared by many Report suggested a group "broadly rep- Mr esearchers rthat "Unless you are making resentative of the entire faculty." Stu- Mr bullets your work is not necessarily for dent,+who t eredthe clsfe re- wa war use," is unreasonable and irrespon- dents,. who triggered the classified re- Te) ware, ishe ueraonblgiand irre.n search controversy, are conspicuously ab- tha sible in the era of technological warfare. sent from participation in its resolution. sce Despite sincere, scientific .notions on Pre the part of University researchers, it is It appears as if the classified research ha clear that involvement with the defense controversy, in its varied and complicat- hav department is at worst involving the Uni-. ed forms, should be revived for another aser versity in the conduct of an immoral war earnest evaluation. The fact that many dat or at best setting the University up in a administrators and researchers foresee be business in which it should have no in- no change evolving from last year's dis- s terests. cussion gives rise to doubts whether the vot Even harmless contracts, unnecessarily cautions and considerations advised by stif classified, are apt to remain secret, since the Elderfield Report have been taken se- trip of there is no easy divorce system from the riously. dox tight controls on all military-funded clas- -HENRY GRIX pro Sena Or eorge and .......... r ...,r MURRAY KEMPTON ',"+} }y:":':': :1'f: ':':ti :"i:::":" .'Z4 v "?JJJ':"J.^40 + i ."n i"}:5 : Doing it with dignity 'HE ph )w, j t b d t The eced tly 1 ecau irs f fore e an rey ng ed It i rey einb yed .r trd l xas at p nsic esid d g ,ve itj fect e t tho so es ffed p tc Lou o bab UNFORTUNATE Mr. Hum- Carolina (44 votes) all refuse to rey, it must plainly be seen support the ticket. The South then is the bookkeeper the firm came to Chicago to nominate a ehind whileall the partners candidate upon whom it would at o Venezuela. once run out. excesses of solicitude which Mr. Humphrey,' if he has the led , his appointment can slightest hope left, must depend be explained as a business on the Kennedy heirs. This is pre-, ition to keep the Kennedy cisely what Mr. Johnson does not from getting hold of the files ' want him to do; and, besides that, the ;packing of the bags. along with all the other tawdry ost of his 'original backers, prizes of his triumph; the V i c e ly argument for Mr. Hum- President has to make do with or- as a candidate was his not ganizers whose passion is less for Robert Kennedy; that van- him than it is against the Ken- with Sen. Kennedy's murder. nedys. s doubtful that Mr: Hum- EVEN SO, if Mr. Johnson hs heard from Sidney would stop and think, he would erg since. A few persons know that the only certain way aroundt on the strength of to keep Sen. Kennedy from in- umphrey's not being Ed- heriting the party would be to Kennedy; Gov. Connally of elect Vice President Humphrey; seems even to have thought if that is beyond imagination, the )erseverance in this conde- only.remaining chance would be on migt ringi andice to invite the Kennedy heirs in, ential nomination and, If he give them full command of the otten that, he might e v e n campaign and, if they work hard, endorsed the ticket; but, blame them for its failure and, is, Mr. Humphrey, while a if they dog it, blame them for its tly good Democratic candi- sabotage. o his friends, is hardly to It is hard to believe that any- ught of as a President. one established cares enough to GOV. CONNALLY (100 think of such devices. Still, in to nominate Humphrey) New York, the early Humphrey the Vice President on his supporters are fleeing to any o Texas; Govt. McKeithen judgeship suggesting shelter; isiana (35 votes) and Mad- those who, are not lawyers just f Georgia (19 ,votes) and quiver there immobilized; f o r ly Gov. Moore of North them the game is up; they cannot his amazing imagine a society in which the Mayor, the Governor and the Pre- sident will not all be Republicans. HE SHOULD announce t h a t John English is his campaign chairman in New York and Jesse Unruh in California. Each would be at once excessively embarrased at the suggestion and debarred from declining. They may not be able to carry their states-w h o could conceive of a genius w h o might?-but they will have 'to work and they might carry Mr. Humphrey out with honor from what is otherwise a sure disgrace. The Vice President ought to know himself disabled enough by the past to understand that he could not do worse with the fu-' ture. If he would begin with per- sonnel, he might even have the 'delightful surprise of discovering that principle occasionally fol- lows. Mr. Humphrey, so far, has endured more humiliation that I had imagined would satisfy even, me; enough and more. Let him turn what -is left of him over to the Kennedy heirs. Let the thing be done, if it must be done, with dignity. Mr. Johnson gave him the nomination only to dbandon him. May he trust the mercy of the Kennedy heirs; whatever else we know about them, we know at least that they do the thing with dignity. (Copyright 1968-New York Post Corp.) budget LAST WEEK I dutifully went to all my classes and filed ver- batim accounts of the proceedings In my green spiral narrow-lined notebook. Eagerly I awaited Sunday and the chance to claim my reward for diligence. But imagine my horror when I discovered that the General Electric College Bowl had been pre-empted for a football game, As my .senior year grinds re- lentlessly toward graduation, I fird myself spending more and If the university is to survive as anything, more than a reserva- tion for the alienated, it must rediscover some internal ration- ale of its own.u more time talking with my friends about mutual futures. , These conversations all seem to begin with some wistful remarks about the joys of a farm in Nova Scotia. The image flickers before us for a few moments and then ursts under the glare of oppres- sive reality. AN AWKWARD SILENCE soon follows, occasionally broken by vague mutterings of Europe or Canada. But the speaker dimly recognizes, even as he speaks, that the expatriot is a rakishly pathe- tic figure from another era. Finally, with a kind of resigned sigh, my friend begins talking about graduate schools, applica- tion dates, and GRE's. Then with his voice rising he begins enumer- ating the joys of life in academia, He mentions the low-kep at- mosphere, the long summers, and the congeniality of company and environment. But just as the cancellation of the GE College Bowl left me de- void of any academic motivation, my friends who speak slowly and sadly about taking refuge in an ivory tower seem devoid of all but the pragmatic motivations of the disenchanted purist. ADMITTEDLI~ THERE still are' some commonly held justifications for academia. There are those who delight in the perverse and semi- sophisticated ritual of