Seventyeight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications The deficient state of the University 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP BLOCK To preserve editorial freedom SINCE ITS INCEPTION, the special student-faculty Committee on Com- munications Media has operated under unusual circumstances - considering philosophical qtiestions against a back- ground of intense political pressures. Their report, released last month, re- flects these strained circumstances by attempting to satisfy the whole gamut of critics and supporters of The Daily and at the same time resolve the prob- lems of.communication at a large uni- versity. This proved to be an impossible task. The Regents and the faculty Assem- bly are about to begin consideration of the report a n d eventually decide whether or not to accept the commit- tee's recommendations. We hope they will not accept the re- port's recommendation to maintain the power of a publications board to make Daily senior appointments. IMHILEWE AGREE w i t h the com- mittee's basic premise that greater dissemination of differing opinions and perspective increases the likelihood of realizing the truth, we find that this report on the whole would do more to damage than to improve campus com- munication. The circumstances under which the committee w a s formed clearly illus- trate why we are so apprehensive about the continued presence of a publica- tidns board with the power of senior appointments. In February, 1967, the.Board in Con- trol of Student Publications, unhappy with The Daily's general editorial prac- tices, asked the Senate Advisory Com- mittee on University Affairs (SACUA) to investigate T h e Daily. As SACUA was considering the request, the Board rejected the appointment of T h e Daily's new .editor because of his harsh criticism of the policies of the Hatcher administration. Although the Board tree days later reversed its earlier decision, this blat- ant attempt to censor The Daily per- manently ruptured any relationship based on mutual trust between t h e Board and The Daily staff. As a result of this confrontation, we no longer ac- cept as legitimate the p o w e r of the Board to approve Daily senior appoint- ments. Their concerns too often have been surpressing the truth rather than dis- covering the truth through free opin- ions. The only legitimate function of the Board is to pass on financial mat- ters, when their advice and counsel is solicited. HOPING TO STUDY the broader and more legitimate problems of cam- pus communication, the Committee on Communications Media took up their assignment in April following t h e Board-staff confrontation. The facul- ty Assembly appointed a comittee of sincere men who we must admit are generally friendly to The Daily. Their integrity cannot be doubted. Under the strained circumstances, committee chairman L. Hart Wright of the Law School and his associates made a conscientious effort to deal with the problems of communications media. But they also had to deal with political realities. And these realities are that many influential men, both on cam- pus and off campus, fear an indepen- dent student newspaper such as The Daily. The committee report implicitly ar- gues that the University must retain some control over the campus student newspaper in order to keep it within the proper bounds, as a publications board would define them. Supposedly the danger of The Daily stepping be- yond the bounds of propriety is greater than the danger of a board censoring independent political views. We think the record is clear as to which is the real danger. In the last eight years, the Board has twice tried to block senior appointments in retaliation for Daily editorial positions. MANY OF THE REPORT'S sugges- tions for, improving the news cov- erage and internal operation of The Daily are constructive and will be adopted by us immediately. But t h e continued presence of a board with the power of appointment is unacceptable. The report does suggest more equi- table composition for its proposed "Board for Publications." The new board would be composed of t h r e e elected students, three faculty mem- bers appointed by the faculty Assem- bly and three professional journalists selected by the University president f r o m a list submitted by The Daily staff. But even a board with a more equi- table composition should not make and is not capable of making senior ap- pointments. The committee apparently worked on the erroneous assumption that what was wrong with the Board was the men on the Board. What we are unhappy with is the il- legitimate p6o 1 i t I c a 1 considerations which often enter Board deliberations. The political pressures which arise from a newspaper which advocates un- popular or unconventional political ideas in the past have been sufficiently intense to corrupt even well-meaning men. No matter. how conscientiously the committee denies that this is a device to censor The Daily, they cannot give us any insurance that the circumstanc- es of just two years ago will not occur. THIS UNIVERSITY is subject to such political pressures that even against its will it might be forced to move to suppress editorial freedom. If The Daily's editorial policies were beyond the control of the University, pressure could not be directed against the Uni- versity. T h e legitimate recourse against newspaper infractions is to sue for li- bel, not to censor. If .it is not libel the censors are worried about, then their purpose should be exposed as the sup- pression of differing political views. Moreover, the determination of sen- ior appointments is not a p r o c e s s in which any board would have the time or expertise to participate. The senior editors set policy for The Daily a n d these responsibilities are n o t turned over lightly. The selection process t a k e s a full year of almost continual re-evaluation and reassessment of those personalities seeking senior positions. Any board would be unable to determine the par- ticular merits of a staffer since the extent of its knowledge concerning The Daily is limited to the final pro- duct. There is.no way to institutionalize a board which would be aware of all the intricacies of a daily newspaper operation. ADMITTEDLY we don't have the . best process and we are trying to improve it. But the process the com- mittee suggests leaves The Daily at the mercy of a board which would be subject to the identical pressures which affected past boards. No one but The Daily staff has either the right or the capabilities to make senior appointments. The Daily is an open organization where promotions always have been based on journalis- tic and organizational ability rather than political attitudes. We thank the committee for their efforts. But in the long run, we can- not entrust our editorial freedom to a board subject to illegitimate political pressures even if its membership is determined in a m o r e equitable manner. --THE MICHIGAN DAILY (Editor's note: The following is a policy statement from the Michigan chapter of the New University Conference (NUC). The NUC is a national organization of radical scholars, stu- dents and intellectuals whose stated purpose is to transform American universities into demo- cratic institutions. The NUC was founded in March, 1968. It presently has chapters on twen- ty campuses across the nation. N SEPTEMBER 30 the president of the University, in a speech more enlightening than any of us had anticipated, made clear what the University was all about. The speech appraised the climate of the University in terms of cost differentials, in- flationary trends, productivity factors and cost- benefit planning. For those of us involved in the educational process, it was indeed news that the climate of the University could be described solely in these terms. Although we recognize that economic planning and analysis are components of the University-as they are of any large industry-we also recognize that if the University is to be; anything more than another large industry, it must identify and face the prob- lems that are unique to it. An analysis of the climate of the University must be made. In response to the inadequacy of Presi- dent Fleming's analysis, we have prepared our own statement. As members of the Michigan chapter of the New University Conference, we hope that those members of the faculty and graduate school who agree with our analysis will join us in our effort to change the present climate. LET US BEGIN by stating our conclusion that the state of the University is rotten. It is so not because of a shortage of funds but because the University is living a lie that is becoming apparent to an in- creasing number of faculty and students. The lie is told at the very beginning of the literary college catalog where it is stated that the primary goal of the University is ".. expanding the intel- lectual frontiers of each student by stimulating him to explore the unknown and by providing him with knowledge, not in the narrow sense of facts alone, but in the broadest sense of new awareness about man and his surroundings." We feel that the Uni- versity has betrayed this goal for the goal of power. The actual goal of the University is the mass- production of the technicians and the techniques that keep society functioning smoothly. In exchange for these commodities, the University receives money and recognition. If the University is to succeed, it must insure that its products will be useful to society. Thus, the University must encourage the competitive sprit which society finds useful. It must also encourage the ac- ceptance of society's narrowly defined concept of success. Most important of all, the student must not be allowed to question the fundamental assumptions upon which society is based or the existing system of priorities. As a result, the needs and desires of the students are subjugated to the needs and desires of society. THE UNIVERSITY requests and receives support from the wider system on the basis of the services it provides. Therefore, the kinds of activity the Uni- versity undertakes are determined by the demands of the buyer. The independence of the University has already been severely damaged by its absolute dependence on government contracts to maintain its research machine. This dependence prevents the University from assuming the important role which it is uni- quely qualified to play, that of Independent and ob- jective critic of the values, structure and policies of the society. Until it takes this role, the University will never lead in changing society but will merely adopt changes which come from other institutions. The consequences of the University's dependent -position are evident when we consider the ambivalent attitude of the faculty toward teaching. Success within the University is attained in exactly the same way that it is attained in the outside community-- from individual output. A faculty member's worth is measured quantita- tively, by counting the number of papers he has published, or the number of times his name is men- tioned by colleagues at professional meetings, or the amount of money he has received from research grants. The faculty member as a teacher or simply as a creative individual who can function outside of his field is given little or no consideraton. THIS EMPHASIS on a conventonal form of success is passed directly on to the students, who succeed or fail on the basis of their willingness to "play the game." Although the student is expected to increase his ". . . awareness of man and his surroundings," he is certainly not expected to act on the basis of his new knowledge. Indeed, if the student is not ex- pected to act on this knowledge, the faculty member is punished for any such action. Any analysis of the state of the University must also consider the elitist composition of the University community. The University's narrow definition of "excellence" has traditionally excluded whole social and economic groups from participation. In addition, the Regents who are supposed to represent society's interests in their control of the University consists entirely of members of the privileged groups. The expansion of the University community to include all groups is vital. Efforts to correct this situation have been token at best. The climate of the University today is one of mis- trust and iritation. President Fleming has taken the stand that violence, threat and intimidation cannot be tolerated on campus. This view' appears to mis- understand the true condition of the campus. THE UNIVERSITY thrives on its own varieties of violence, threat and intimidation. Without them it could not perform the role it has chosen for itself. Students are threatened with failure if they do not accept the orthodox analysis. The faculty is coerced, usually by other members of the faculty, into follow- ing the accepted path to academic success. Indeed, no other path is available. And destruction of the curiosity and hope of entering students is surely a form of violence. It is this climate that the University has attempted to avoid dealing with. These are the problems which the University has not confronted. The aim of the New University Conference is to bring together people who are not satisfied with the University's performance in these areas and who are ready to' take a variety of actions to build a University which is truly free. * Fleming on cost differentials Letters to the Editor Penalty forprots (EDITOR'S NOTE: Howard Miller is a member *of Student Government Council. A resolution condemning- the House bill referred to in this editorial was passed by SGC last week.) By HOWARD MILLER THE UNITED States House of Representatives recently passed a bill called the Higher Education Amendments of 1968. In Title 5, Section 504 of this bill colleges are empowered to deny loans or fellowships to individuals found guilty of breaking any law, whose actions contributed to a "substantial disruption of the administration of the institution." This is apparently an attempt by the House to levy. a double penalty against campus protesters. Any citizen found guilty of a legal infraction will be penalized by the courts as prescribed by law. A college student, however is subject to the further penalty of losing his loan. This is patently unfair and denies the individual his right to equal protection -of the laws. Thedsituation bears similarities to the regulations providing for the drafting of people who disrupt draft board operations. They may be convicted of trespassing, spend time in Jail, and then further face immediate induction. Thus an individual having paid the pre- scribed penalty for his crime is subject to further punishment by virtue of being a draft-age male. In both of these situations it is apparent that the intent is to make it as difficult as possible for concerned Americans to protest publicly. The government is committeed to suppressing dissent with every means available. BY SELECTIVELY dispensing federal funds to those who are not deemed disruptive and withholding them from those who are, the government is trying to bribe American academia to refrain from pro- testing. It seems that even the Congress feels that its policies cannot stand up to public criticism. Another clause in the bill states that once an institution decides to withdraw federal funds for illegal disruptions, the student may not obtain any federal loans for two years regardless of where that. individ- ual attends school. This means that a student who has his loan revoked by one school, cannot received federal funds when he transfers to another school, even if the other school wishes to give him money. The clauses may be illegal in terms of arbitrary discrimination and the lack of equal protection under the law, but at least they acknowledge that an individual must be guilty of some crime before the penalty fo loan withdrawal can be imposed. However the bill does not stop there. It goes on toi say that uni- versities shall deprive individuals of federal funds if they refuse to obey the school regulations'and in so refusing are substantially disruptive. Here is license by which an individual may be deprived of his fed- eral loan or fellowship without having broken any law at all. THIS PROVIDES a mechanism by which penalties are applied with federal authorization for infractions of rules set up by completely private organizations. If Harvard College can deprive a student of his federal loan because he participated in a rally on campus banned by the administration, then so could the Congress authorize General Motors to suspend social security benefits to an employee participating in a work slow-down prohibited by the company. This process could be extended to control everyone who receives some type of federal benefits. And that is just the point. By expanding federal assistance into more and more areas of private life, the government is obtaining a powerful tool for manipulating the population. Those who dissent will be in danger of losing their government assistance. Hopefully in this case the guideline establised for revoking federal loans and fellowships will be found to be arbitrarily discriminatory by the courts if and when the bill becomes law. The provision for loan revocation for breaking school regulations rather than criminal law would likely to be found to be an infringement of due process as well. This present attempt and all other attempts by the Congress to suppress criticism by the people should be vehemently opposed. A society that must suppress criticism from its citizens cannot call itself a democracy. Goals for the b lack student i To the Editor: BEFORE ONE CAN justify the existence of a politically active organization of black people on this campus, one must consider the reasons for black men and women being here. Education is certainly not the least of the reasons for the enroll- ment of blacks in this white Uni- versity. The University offers as much, if not more, academic training as any other college in the United States. But an exclus- ively academic education, it is gen- erally accepted, is an incomplete one. Total education should expose the individual not just to academ- ics but to many varying ways of life. It is obvious, by virtue of our small number, that we black stu- dents are constantly exposed to a different way of life, a white one. This exposure, although vital and valid for individual and group growth, may and often does dis- associate the black man from his community. THIS BRINGS US to the sec- ond primary reason for the pres- ence of black students on t h i s campus; to gather skills and knowledge to take home. As many noted authors and thinking men have concluded, a black skilled man or intellectual is of no use to his community or self separated from it, a member of the native white elite. If as Charlie C o b b of SNCC stated he "teaches us (black men) that what we should get is theirs and not for everyone to get . .", if the educated black man loses his identity to where he sees white halluncinations in the mirror, he is lost. This loss of self is not as unlike- ly a possibility as it may imme- diately seem. Consider t h a t on this campus only one person in 50 has even a black face. Consider, further, that eight months out of twelve are spent in t h is white bright atmosphere of unreality. Think also of the fact that it is here at the University where the chance is greatest for every Negro to achieve his potential, of be- coming a black man. AFTER THE BLACK STUDENT leaves this place, unless he has thought out his course 'of action. he may well become a token, in- 'effective, lost. But there is another way; that of a man who is an integral part of his community working in it. There is the way of the individual who affects his world through a well oiled political and therefore social organ accessible to him and his. To- point out this way, to work toward these directions, there ex- ists on this campus the Pro-Black Organization. This organization of unified black men a n d women seeks to answer the challenge of Frantz Fannon, who, in his man- ual for revolution Wretched of the Earth, charges; Comrades, I e t us flee from this motionless movement where gradually dialectic is changing to the logic of equilibrium. Let us reconsider therquestion? of mankind. Let us reconsider the question of cerebral reality and of the cerebral mass of all hu- manity, whose connections must be increased, whose channels must be diversified and whose messages must be re-human- ized." -Steering Committee, Pro-Black Organization Oct. 16 I,, i Iu man ity: The h igh price' of progress By JIM HECK SIX DAYS AGO this great land of ours shot a million and a half-pound arrow up into the sky. Six days ago a kid died in Me- rango, Nev., because he didn't have enough food. Our great land threw a triangu- lar parapipeloid around the world three times. But our great land didn't have the strength to throw 220 million pounds of surplus wheat to the 10 per cent of our population dying of hunger. Grasses of Wrath is nice, I like it, but sometimes I think a more realistic approach to o u r civilization can be found in Alice in Wonderland. Don't get me wrong. I like space. As a matter of fact I would be the first to support student half-fare to the moon-- that is, providing student half-fare to the m o o n didn't jeopardize a kid's life in Mernago. Nev. which have come from space re- search!" you boast. "The advance- ment in science, medicine, weath- er control, cyrogenetics! !" Fine, but the scientific advance- ments meant nothing to. the kid who died in Merango, Nev. - he couldn't read. Apparently, the ad- vancements in medicine couldn't save his life. His parents' farm- lands are so poor it doesn't mat- ter what the weather is like; when' it rains it ruins the land, when it doesn't rain it ruins the crop. I' don't even know what cyrogenetics is. "Space research means national security!" you yell. For what?, I ask. "To protect our great opportun- ities!" Uh-huh. "There will always be the poor !" Fine. "What if Queen Isabella spent her money giving Portugese kids clothes instead of Columbus guard the world's seas! We made a bomb - a bomb that could de- stroy everything we had built!!" Yeah, I know. I was just sorta bringing up the fact that this kid -- he was 13 - died when he could have been saved with a few cents and instead we spend tons of money on . "Satellites, missiles, weapons!" Space, huh? "The last Frontier! The hoife of the gods!" I see. "We must conquer it, because it's there!" Hunger is there, hate is there, evil is there . "I envision the day when huge ships the size of cities take hun- dreds of persons into that void to colonize other planets, other sys- tems!" You wanta go? "Who wouldn't! Imagine seeing that great beyond!" Your children? Your friends? I, 1 (AM P Mi 6 r4tgatt FitllJ Editorial Staff MARK LEVIN, Editor STEPHEN WILDSTROM URBAN LEHNER