Seventy-eight years of editorial (freedom Edit-ed and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications 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 all reprints. Tuesday, November 12, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: ICHARD WINTER SGC funding r eeendum:' Vote .. Shall the Board of Regents of the University of Mich- igan contract with Student Government Council, Incor- porated, for the collection of dues in accordance with the terms of the proposed Agreement, in order to permit the student body, acting in referendum, to determine (increase or decrease) the per-capita funded? . .Yes STUDENT Government Council tradi- tionally, has been an organization seeking to justify its existence through meaningful action. Over the past few years, Council mem- bers have spent most of their time em- broiled in disputes with the University administration. The battles which have been fought on this front were well worth the effort involved: But today, these battles - on questions like the existence of women's hours - have been largely won, and Council mem- bers have sought new avenues for mean- ingful' action. 6pecifically, Council had chosen to be- come active in one of the most difficult, and most important areas of student con- :cern - the economic sphere. The monop- olistic control ,of local merchants assures astronomical prjices in the campus area. However, Council members are limited in what they can do to break the monop- oly. The limitations are largely, but not en- tirely, financial. Even now, the SGC treasury is almost empty. The 25 cents per student which Council receives from the administration simply is not enough to support presen't prograis, let alone initiate new ones. The other restriction which currently stifles Council action is the ultimate le- gal control of SGC funds by the Regents. This is especially crushing to Council's most recent aspirations for action in the economid are since a Regental bylaw prohibits the University - and, therefore, SGC - from going into competition with local merchants. IN AN ATkEMPT to liberate SGC from the confines of Regental regulation, Council members have formed SGC, In- corporated-a separate legal entity which would have a broad range of economic freedom to implement Councii programs. But without funds, SGC, Inc., would be ineffective. And to make things worse, the University administration w i 11 not even allow Council to use its usual appro- pri'ations in support of the new corpora- tion, This became dramatically clear 1 a s t month when the administration blocked Council's first attempt to fund SGC, Inc. While administrators finally1 made t h e minor concession of allowing $100 to pass from Council to SGC, Inc., .they made it clear 'that further appropriations would not be allowed. UNFORTUNATELY, the way SGC pres- ently is funded puts the administra- tion on solid legal grounds. Under t h e state constitution, the Regents have com- plete control of all University funds. And while SOC's annual appropriation is calculated on the basis of 25 cents per student, it actually is just another slice out of the University's general fund bud- get. By contracting with the Regents to col- lect SGC membership fees from the stu-. dent body, Council can eliminate both University control of expenditures and the present fiscal crisis.: .Things wouldn't look very different un- der the system proposed in the referen- dum. The Council membership fee, which is now hidden in the usual tuition assess- ment, could be collected just as it has been in the past. H OWEVEI:, the difference is that SGC funds would be legally separate from the general fund budget, and thus free from Regental control. Furthermore, the student b o d y - through referenda - could increase the membership fee to give Council more money for needed programs. The difference - perhaps 50 cents a year --- hardly would be noticed when paid with the University's presently extrava- gant tuition. + rate at which SGC shall be VOTE NO on this proposal. The issue involved is more than sim ply whether the Regents or the students decide how much money SGC should re- ceive. Even though students ought to de- termine funding of student government by themselves, the referendum still should be opposed. In this case, students are not going to be determining the funding of SGC, but of a private corporation named SGC, Incor- porated. SGC never asked the students of this University to approve incorporation. The members declared SGC a corporation, and now are asking students to support it. CONSIDER the "terms of the proposed agreement" referred to in the refer- endum. Each voter should know what they involve before he makes a decision. The terms of that agreement ask the Regents to make it mandatory for each student at the University to become a dues-paying "stockholder" of the private corporation. Becoming a stockholder would be a condition for admission to the University and continued enrollment. The Regeits currently subtract money from each student's tuition and give it to SGC for operating funds. Students could simply ask the Regents to delegate power to determine the amount of funds to be appropriated to SGC, and avoid the incor- poration of student government. That is implied in the current question. THE REAL ISSUE in deciding how to vote on the funding referendum is the relative merit of incorporating student government, or leaving it a part of the University. Incorporation has two major d r a w- backs, By incorporating, students might' lose student government entirely, or re- strict its operations severely. Each year for the last three years, SGC has been un- able to stay within its budget, and the University has had to bail SGC out of debt with extra funds. If SGC went out on its own as SGC, Inc., and found itself in debt, there would be only two alternatives - bankruptcy, which would put an end to student gov- enment, or asking students to raise the per capita fee they pay to support it. There exists no strong force in our gen- erally apathetZr student community to keep SGC within its budget. Even if the miracle could be performed, SGC most likely would be forced to cut back from its present scale of operations. Thus, stu- dents would continually be faced with the choice of paying more money or having no student government. IN ADDITION, SGC, Inc. would be liable to lawsuit for its actions; SGC is not. If one of the managers of an apartment firm had decided to sue SGC for slander during last year's "Wait for Eight" cam- paign, SGC would have had the protection of the University. A similar suit against1 SGC, Inc. might mean theend of student. government. There is a need for a student govern- ment, and students should decide how much money they give it. But there is no need to go outside' the University to do this: it can be done without incorpora- tion. A vote against the referendum will help keep SGC, Inc. from becoming a dan- gerous reality. -JIM NEUBACHER -Daily-Eric Pergeaux Flo peddles her wares Fora fewdimesa week... .URBAN LEHNER-- The almanac as escape lite rature "1871: OCT. 8, Peshtigo, Wisc.: over 1200 lives lost; 2 billion trees burned." Oct. 8, 1871, the same day as the Chicago fire. 2 billion trees - an Information Please Almanac typographical error? What I should have been doing was my Russian. What I ended up doing was reading the almanac. Not for any Marcusian poverty-of-alternatives reasons, of course. Had I not read the almanac I might have tried cracking the logical riddles in one of those games and trivia paperbacks. Or reading the Travel and Resorts section of the Sunday Times. But I read the almanac. The only remotely academic thing ap- pealing was Zooey, and somehow fourth rereadings should be saved for moments of far more acute restlessness, Salinger paper due or no. AND THUS eventfully passed another Sunday in the life of a stu- dent dilettante. Sometime between now and the next paper or the next exam I'll sit down and force myself to memorize my Russian vocabulary and write the goddam Salinger paper. The academic and social sanc- tions for non-performance are operative at least to that extent. Sanctions, coercion, discipline, repression, whatever the word, are the beginning of all education, at least education in the classical sense. Curiosity, zest for knowledge,'in the long run make education pos- sible in the long run. In his four undergraduate years every student takes at least three and a-half courses that inspire him to avid stud- iousness and visions of a cushy niche in academia. (Coercion leads to curiosity). But without channeling, without coercion, curiosity alone produces a race of almanac-readers. THE ONE TENET of philosophical conservatism I cannot entirely divest myself of is a belief in human nature. Man is lazy. And education is painful. Maybe it is presumptuous for me to impute my own weakness to all of humanity, but I have seen little evidence that anyone else is really, fundamentally different. Ambitious, hard-working students (and people) simply have been coerced and channeled more effectively. If education in the classical sense must grow out of the barrel of a gun, is it worth it? Don't ask me impossible questions. The only criteria that can be applied are of the Jeremy Bentham, greatest-good-for-the- greatest-number variety. And man has yet to devise an adequate cal- culus for measuring happiness. The mystics advocate tearing down the factories and returning to organic food, poetry, and uncomplicated human relationships. While I can appreciate their romanticism and even share their dreams of a small farm in Nova Scotia, my American pragmatic roots are too strong INDUSTRIALISM is the only answer, and even if we could tear down the factories I would argue against it. Somehow the machine must be tamed so that it doesn't destroy men; some system must be contrived so that its product is divided more charitably in a world of unparalleled privation. But industrialism in 'the long run is the only way to end human suffering. And industrialism demands - not necessarily technically trained people - but people who at some juncture have acquired at least min- imum habits of self-discipline. A successful industrial world can tolerate only a limited number of almanac-readers. Professors work harder than any other occupation group precisely because they are so self-disciplined that they have made a life's work out of their own particular substitute for almanac-reading. MY PERSONAL and political sympathies are all with the academic reformers. Teaching should be improved. T h e curricula should be broadened. Courses can and should be made More "relevant." Three and a-half captivating courses in four years is a deplorable average, after all. But. But there is one nagging reservation, one back-of-the-mind pro- viso. A certain level of coercion is desirable, if only to preserve society's overall efficiency and allow' the British in The Bridge on the River Kwai to build bridges, and make me, sometime, put down the almanac and the Travel and Resort section and memorize my Russian. By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN P LOWAS jubilant at 10:57 a.m. when the NBC computer gave Richard Milhous Nixon the state of Illinois pushing him "over the top" and into the White House. Flo would have been jubilant, that is, if she had not been going door-to-door in Rahway, N.J., sell- ing educatignal materials to low- er-middle income blacks. "Good morning. I have a ques- tionnaire for mothers of young children. Oh do you? Could I come in and talk to you for a few min- utes?" At 12:37 p.m., with two $250 or- ders under her worn leopard-skin belt, Flo entered Rahway's elite corner luncheonette (Ernie's) and got the word. "Nixon's the one," boomed white corner-luncheonette owner Ernie White. Flo smiled and sat down to a bowl of New England style clam chowder. Flo is a 58-year-old former French teacher who switched to selling because the Darien, Conn. parents all expected her to give A's to their children regardless of how much work they did. FLO WAS GLAD Nixon won. "We have to get rid of the Demo- crats because they spend too much money. Nixon will balance t h e budget and stop inflation." Flo stared lovingly at the chunky Doxie clam at the bottom of the bowl, bathed in the creamy white broth. "We'd like to give you this pro- gram - all these books. But there is one condition. You've got to take our series of ten annuals. They pull the whole program to- gether and keep it current." FLO PAID Ernie White for the bowl of iclam chowder and went back down Cherry St. ringing door bells, "Good afternoon. Ihave a* questionnaire f o r mothers of young children. Oh you don't,?" "Hello. Hello. Is y o u r mother h o Mn e? Oh she's working. Isn't there anyone home with you child- ren?" Flo took her black folder 'and moved off to Blossom Rd. "Good afternoon. I have a questionnaire f o r mothers of young children. Oh, could I come in and talk to you for a few min- utes?" "i . Then there's t h e Negro History book. You probably had it in high school in Atlanta, didn't you? But they don't teach it up here." "Come here young man. See how he likes the pictures. He'll learn a lot from the program, don't you think?"' "OF COURSE, we'd like to give you the whole program - all these books. But there is one condition. New things happen every day and the series, of course, won't have it. For example, yesterday's elec- tion. Naturally, the main series isn't going to have; anything about it yet. But this series of year-books will tell you all about the voting and in a few years it will say what Nixon did as President." "Now we give you this bank. It teaches the child thrift. Now if you just put in a f e w dimes a week, you can pay for the cost of the yearbooks and have the whole program." "Now all you have to do is sign this white card and I can let you have the Negro History r i g h t now.'' AT 3:30 FLO went back to the car at the corner of Blossom and Cherry to meetCharlotte. "How many orders did you sell, Char- lotte?" She hadn't sold any, "I got right up to the white card with two but then I found out they were on welfare." Pearl and James had one order each. As they drove back towards the Lincoln tunnel, Flo said "What did you t h i n k of the eletction, Charlotte?"e Charlotte, a 19-year-old black girl, said nothing. She was think- ing about having to work Satur- day unless she could get a few orders Thursday and Friday. "What difference does it make," said James as he guided the blue 1954 Chevy stationwagon north- ward. "They're all the same," 4"011, NO, JAMES. I like Nixon because he won't spend so much. We've got to end inflation, don't you think so." Thty were silent the rest of the way back into New York. A dull five o'clock mist hung over the city as they drove d o w n Fifth Avenue, back to the home office. r "4' Letters: To the Editor: BECAUSE The Daily does not have enough integrity to ad- mit in a retraction that it lied in its editorial (Nov. 10) on the Stu- dent Government Council candi- dates, I am forced to use the let- ters column to refute the smear against the candidacies of Michael Modelski. Douglas Morris and Wil- lim Eldridge. First of all, as to the platform of the above being one "of ob- struction and reaction," well, The Daily is entitled to its own biases. I just hope people will read what our platform has to say. What I object to, however, are the points which follow in The Daily editorial. The points are nothing more than the creations of some highly imaginative Senior Editors. Eldridge never said that he resigned from the Young Amer- icans for Freedom and as a matter of fact, he is presently treasurer of the YAF chapter here on cam- pus. Secondly, he never stated that most members of YAF were sup- porting W a 11 a c e. Nationally, though YAF takes no official posi- tion, the support is overwhelmingly for Richard Nixon. The same is true here on campus, where the University Students for Nixon headquarters was directed out of the YAF office. UNFORTUNATELY, it seems that The Daily does not like to bother itself with facts. Finally, I would like to ask what the issue of YAF affiliation has to do with anything. Though our slate Is made up of YAF members, how is that relevant as to our qualifications? We are running as a slate of concerned students, not as YAF members. We are also members of the College Repub-, licans, why didn't The Daily cry about that? Why didn't The Daily refer to the organizations that the other candidates belonged to? What are the Senior Editors afraid of? They seem to be un- willing to debate us ons the issues What does YAF have to do with it? ial in question they would tertainment networks. RCA has certainly print a retraction. acquired Random House which But the statements were not had bought Knopf and Pantheon, lies; they w e r e honest at- CBS has moved to purchase Holt, tempts to portray what we Rinehart & Winston: Xerox got were led to believe was Mr. American Educational Publica- Morris' position.. That the tions from Wesleyan University, statements were inaccurate is University Microfilms, and Heri- d u e to the ambiguity and tage Library, and has explored haziness of Mr. Morris' an- buying CBS. General Electric and swers in his interview.TmehvcradteGnrl Nor did Mr. Modelski ask Time have created the General The Daily to print a retrac- Learning Corporatio.tu tion AsEdioria Diectr I The inadequate factual and tion. As Editorial Director, I political coverage of the political would certainly have been mudr inMxc Cty th aware of such a demand. As it murders in Mexico City, the was, Mr. Modelski merely events in France, the Berkeley handed me the above letter. iiots as well as those in the ghet- Rather than edit or emend to, let alone the lies about Viet- his letter, I chose merely to nam cannot be dismissed as nec- correct herein what are clear- essary human non-objectivity. For ly misrepresentations on his a political organization such as part. SDS attempting to communicate ' --U.. L. its political beliefs, the issue of cooperation with reporters for the .rt i major news networks is not one of SIJS prtection freedom of the press but of what To the Editor: political interests shape their I WAS pretty amazed when I journalism. read Ron Landsman's article NO REPORTERS were removed in The Daily on SDS because he from the meeting in the Adminis-, obviously misunderstood our posi- tration Bldg. last Tuesday because tion on the press, in general, and it is a public building and we had the issues in the discussion at the no legal right to privacy there. Administration Bldg. Rather than SDS members in other situations, repudiate all the false accusations however, decide collectively what he made, I would like to clarify procedures will be followed. We our understanding of the press. have the right to limit filming First, a distinction was made and taping of our meetings ac- between the student and under- cording tho our own democratical- ground press and the massive ly agreed upon choice. This prac- news networks (bourgeois press). tice is not an arrogant denial of This distinction is based on both humanness, but a necessary pre- experience and theory., We've caution against the professional found that the student and under- political distortion of the local ground press services present a and national bourgeois press, clearer picture of us to their read- -Tom Lee ers than does the bourgeois press. Nov. 11 The bourgeois press will continual- ly distort the political issues in- ROTC l volved in our atcion; it must sub-Rri ject us to journalistic sensational- To the Editor: ism since it is an agent for ad- YOUR NOV. 8 editorial headed vertising and popularizing the cor- '"ROTC: No academic value, porate nature of American so- no academic credit" is refreshing- ciety, to which we are opposed. ly in support of academic excel- During the Columbia strike last lence and makes the valid point spring, it has since been docu- that ROTC credits are not as in- sequences. Unless human nature takes a dramatic turn for the bet- ter, the United States is going to have a sizeable military force for many years to come, and this es- tablishment will require people: civilians, officers and, as the Brit- ish phrase it, "other ranks." Of- ficers comb f'oi three main sources: enlisted men who have both the capability and desire to upgrade themselves, ROTC and the "trade schools," West Point, Annapolis and the Air Force Aca- demy. Even under the present circum- stances it takes a lot of motiva- tion to be an ROTC cadet and if credit is withdrawn, the amount of motivation needed will be so great that there would be very few if any ROTC cadets on the cam- pus, which may well be your aim. ROTC or no ROTC, the military establishment will still be there and will still need officer inputs, but will now be reduced to two sources, the trade schools and en- listed men. THE MILITARY managers would recact in two ways: First, triple to quintuple the size of the trade schools, and second lower educational and intelligence ci- teria to let in as officers those en- listed men who now have the de'- sire but not the capability. The large percentage of ROTC trained officers in our military services have had and would con- tinue to have both a democratizing and liberalizing, effect and it seems to me that it is a retrograde ac- tion and contrary to liberal tradi- tion to eliminate from the services those men who both aspire to serve in the military for a set period of time and also want to get a liberal arts degree. Do you want your sons (what you propose will not affect you individually) and your 50 or more billion dollars every year super- vised and spent by men who either got all of their academic training at a trade school or, on the other hand and in the main, of ithe professor teaching the course. In this manner the cadet meets the standards set by the military for military subjects anda the academic subjects areisepa- rately handled by the academic authorities. -Barton S. Pulling, Grad Colonel, USAF '(Ret)4 Nov. 8 Right but warm To the Editor: AM disturbed and rather dis- mayed by the attitude ex- pressed by Mr. Okrent in his ar- ticles of Nov. $ on the political campaigns. I am disillusioned be- cause it is an attitude that is be- coming increasingly prevalent with many left of center, a sizeable majority as your newspaper cor- rectly reflects. The attitude is that all people to the right of center are faceless and lack any sort of interest as human beings. I am sure tha the people who hold this attitude will be surprised to hear that I, as one who is left of center politically, could find that my experience of last year as a roommate of Dave Eisen- hower's at Amherst Invigorating and warmly personal. Even as one who a orees substantially with the conservative policies of his grand- father and Mr. Nixon, Dave is an intensely personable andainterest- ed human being. He is always ,eaver to talk and think out in- tellectual and individual prob- lems. The jokes he told. were no dirtier than those an SDSerwould, sniggerat and the expanses seen were no broader on the right or the left, or collectively than those seen at Mark's. To sneak of his love life as no more human than a Nixon rally is to suggest that Mary McCarthy would abstain after an unhappy affair. Why cannot we liberals try to see what warmth there is in peo ple, or is it that ideology has tran- sended humanity? A I"' TODAY AND TOMORROW students will elect four at-large members to Student Government Council. T h e Daily Senior Editors h a v e endorsed Larry Deitch, Mary Livingston, Howard Miller and Bruce Wilson. All four are excellent candidates with thoughtful and concrete suggestions for SGC's fu- ture direction. The Senior Editors rated Mike Far- rell and Mark Rosenbaum acceptable, I f l ;] t i 1