{ Urlie 1aRidyan &dtlj Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications . --- s / 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editprs. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN GRAYI e The AFS CMEcontract: Improving labor relations. THE CONTRACT with the University that was ratified last night by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes Local No. 1583 helps to end the reign of the University as an elitest institution. Both the University and the union should be commended for arriving at this agreement. The next step the University should take is the immediate termination of its court battle against Public Act 124 the act which gives the union legitimate rights to collective bargaining. The Uni- versity is presently challenging the valid- ity of the law in the Court of Appeals. The University should terminate this battle, because it can jeopardize the pre- sent agreement. Though it has never been determined exactly - what would happen should a court eventually decide the University does have the right to deny collective bargaining rights to its employes, the implications seem obvious. BUT MORE importantly, the University should terminate its court battle be- cause it is time for an acceptance of the philosophy behind the union. The nego- tiated settlement should be an admission, by the Administration that it alone does not have the knowledge, or wisdom to make binding decisions for all groups in the University. Whether it be students, faculty or employes - each has a legitimate con- cern and a legitimate right to determine the conditions under which the Univer- sity functions and the goals to which it aspires. The University's rationale for chal- lenging PA 124 - that the law infringes on its autonomy-is more correctly ex- plained as a law which infringes on the autonomy of the administration to make binding dedisions, an infringement that is about a'half-century overdue. While establishing collective bargain- ing rights for its employes, the union has raised their pay, and set the foundation for an equalization of job status. THERE SEEMS to be some disgruntle- ment among University employes with the new contract. However, the dissatis- faction seems only about the contract's provisions for the equilization of job status. The purpose of this provision was to align pay with work. In the past, the Uni- versity hired janitors at the "going rate" - the lowest pay possible. Thus, when employment surpluses were highest, the University paid the, minimum needed to hire janitors. As a result, there is a wide wage differential between janitors at the University. In the hospital, for instance, janitors are paid on the average far less than janitors in other buildings. The union's provisions, hopefully, will eventually lead to the same pay for the. same work. Persons will be dealt with more equitably, receiving certain wages for, their work and not because they hap- pened to be hired at a certain time. A PPARENTLY, those who are disgrunt- led want to maintain the old rungs of the work-status ladder: happenstance and coincidence. These are far less valid criteria for determining the scale of re- imbursement for work than the duties of that work. Those who retain these anti- quated criteria should realize it is an unfair method of dealing with a group of employes. This, if the University ends its court battle and if the union settles into its role as the valid bargaining agent for the University employes, we can hope for. continuing advancement in education, as well as labor practices. -JIM HECK Letters: The need for ROTC SGC's mandate for change SGC, INC., is not dead. For whatever rationale the student body used to defeat the incorporation funding referendum, it is clear that few students on either side of the issue un- derstood the motion at all. And, as with most SGC issues, fewer probably even cared,. Ironically, it was this apathy that the motion was trying to 'counteract. Yet as the referendum was written, this problem could never be solved. Just as Council's present allocation is automatically taken from student fees, the funds of SGC, Inc. would be taken in the same manner. The only difference would be that the students, not the Re- SEdgar IN A TELEVISION interview yesterday FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said,, "Justice is merely incidental to law en- forcement." Hoover went on to explain, "Law and order is what covers the whole picture. Justice is part of it, but it can't be separa- ted as a single thing." The charitable would have us believe that Hoover's latest statement does not reflect a neo-fascist mentality, but that the ageless FBI Director simply doesn't know the meaning of the word "inci- dental." Freedom of the press TAMPA, FLA. - Law enforcement offi- cers masquerading as news reporters policed a band of 80 to 100 antiwar dem-' onstrators who massed at the Federal Office Building in Tampa yesterday as part of "national draft card turn-in day." Tampa Police Chief J. C. Littleton ask- ed a newsman not to expose his officers to demonstrators. "You're either with us or with them," Littleton told the newsmen. Ty T? ''LT imrn coi -nlin ,l - - nr gents would determine the amount col- lected. In trying to take Council away from the financial control of the Regents, SGC had hoped to place itself under the con- trol of the students. In this way, Coun- cil thought it could answer critics that said it was not responsive to the stu- dents. YET A major problem- remained with this proposal-that of mandatory col- lection. Consequently, the motion, at best, was merely a half-way approach towards Council's goal. Only when students can chose whether or not to support SGC, and not just the amount of support, will Council become responsible to their needs and demands. The defeat of this motion has left two options for SGC. It can either return to its present inadequate funding scheme or it can collect its funds directly from the students. And if it opts for direct collection, it will have to do more than pass paper motions and constitutional amendments to justify its existence. Plans that SGC has considered for a long time-including a student book ex- change, an expanded student health in- surance, a politically effective s t u d e n t consumers' union and student housing association-must show some indication of success if Council ever expects to draw members. SGC will be forced to earn the title of a student organization-not just assume it. THE INITIATIVE for -'change has now been tossed from the students back to SGC. It can take this defeat and create an organization better than that defeated by the students. If not, the defeat will not be of SGC, Inc. but of SGC itself, -LESLIE WAYNE Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mchigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48104. Daily except Monday during regular acadeni' school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summnier session. Editonrial Stuff To the Editor: I KNOW NOTHING about ROTC at the University, but I am sure Mr. Landsman's description (Dai- ly, Nov. 8) is reasonably accurate. Few military science courses, I suspect, have "academic value:' However, as the same curricula are taught at virtually all t h e leading universities in the coun- try, credit or non-credit, s u c h courses can hardly "tarnish the University's name" as Mr. Lands- man suggests. The University does not need ROTC, but it is scarcely tarnished for having it. As a former Naval officer (via OCS) I would like to suggest that we Americans need ROTC very badly indeed. Most of the ROTC graduates I have known have been by far the best educated and the best prepared of all those filling the unenviable role of junior of- ficers. While having the opportun- ity to get a superior education, the ROTC 'student can develop a rea- sonably mature attitude toward his future responsibility. OCS pro- grams do not have this advantage, andthe service academies simply do not provide a superior educa- tion in the arts and sciences. All this may not seem very important, but it is very important for the college graduate draftee or the eighteen year old h i g h school dropout who may have to depend on his Second Lieutenant at his court-martial or in traffic court. Abolishing ROTC programs would be catastrophic. Abolishing all academic credit for ROTC courses would be sufficient harrassment to force students out of ROTC and abolish ROTC at the University. I HAVE NO MODEST proposal for ROTC courses, but some things are self-evident. The number of course hours required for ROTC students, I understand, has been decreased in recent years. T h e only way further decreases will be made is by a combined assault of university presidents upon the Pentagon hierarchy. Officers as- signed to the ROTC units should not teach political science; pro- fessors of political science should. But there is no logical reason why the smaller hard core mili- tary subjects should not be given academic credit. They obviously should be put on a pass-fail bas- is, as the grades have no relevance whatsoever for anyone but the ROTC Commanding Officers. Na one should make the Dean's List because of an "A" in Military Sci- ence, but then no student should fail to make it, because he was forced to take five or more cours- es besides ROTC. Courses of pure- ly vocational interest are offereds in every undergraduate school in the University. The ROTC student should n o t be discriminated against. He may be your company commander some day, -J. C. Sheehan, Grad. Nov. 8 Northwood Terrace To the Editor: UNFORTUNATELY, there were errors in the story on t h e Northwood Terrace Association in Tuesday's Daily a n d confusion was caused by several ambiguous statements in that story. The income limitation proposal has been made not by our group but by the Student Advisory Com- mittee on Housing and thus, pos- sibly should best be clarified by them. However, it could directly affect our constituency and for their benefit I feel it necessary to attempt/ to clarify some parts of that proposal which were, obvious- ly unintentionally, misleading. First, the proposal does not only give occupancy to students, but also low income staff. SECOND, THE P R O P O S A L would allow continued occupancy to tenants whose income is less than 125 per cent of the highest income of all those admitted to the apartments with income pri- ority during the previous year. Third, the proposal would affect not just Northwood I, II, and III but a 1 s o University Terrace, Northwood IV and pesumably all future projects unless specifically excluded. Fourth, The Daily article says : "Students who apply for income priority would be ranked . . . ac- cording to an adjusted assessment of their incomes." Perhaps it w o u I d be clearer to say: "The previously mentioned adjusted ao- sessment" rather than "an ad- justed assessment." FIFTH, AND MOST important- ly, the article claims: "The North- wood Terrace Association supports the income priority proposal." Our organization has considered this proposal, and many other alterna- tives, but has come to no decision on any of them as yet. To be more precise, we have m a d e with strong conviction a statement on the role of Univer- sity-married student housing and given a series of alternatives to alleviate the chronic need for low cost housing. We see no reason why action from the University should not be forthcoming, but we do not intend to "t a k e to the streets" in the immediate future, as the headline of the article may have implied. Signed, -Alan Kalyor Cline, Grad Chairman, Northwood Terrace Association Nov. 13 SGC, Inc, To the Editor: NOW THAT the SGC Incorpor- ated plan for taxing students in order to raise "funds has failed, it is time for SGC to try other means to get money. Profit-making services is such a means. Because they're moder- ately well organized and have of- fice space already, student gov- ernments throughout the country have found it very much worth the effort to engage in providing profit-making services f o r their students. In several instances these have proved so successful the students have been able to refuse all Ad- ministration money (and thus their control). SGC COULD EASILY make $10,000 per year, according to an estimate by the National Student Association (NSA). This could be done by subscribing to NSA ser- vices like student gavel, magazine subscriptions, and, other money- making ventures. These are just the bare begin- nings of what can be done. Just selling Coca Cola and pastry to residents yielded a dormitory $1 000 per year at one campus. Cof- fee and pastry sales yielded one of. the religious groups on the same campus a very large profit. In areas like entertainment and speakers, student governments elsewhere have raised l a r g e amounts of money. On one cam- pus, a well written student guide to the campus and community was a big money maker. The list of examples is virtually endless. A responsible SGC could easily raise its own money. Other schools all o v e r America are doing it, there's no reason why the Univer- sity can't. -Alan Bloom School of Public Health Nov. 14 JAMAES IVECHSLER Theimpenetrable PHORTLY after Election Day, a correspondent for a London news- paper asked for a brief statement on Richard Nixon's election, Rather off-handedly I replied that I thought his Administration was more likely to be dull than dangerous, more mediocre than menacing. Yet the more one mediates about the shape of the next four years. the deeper is the sense that there is little secure knowledge about the nature of the man who is to be our President. That is what imparts so much anxiety to the succession: the unknown is our deepest dread, and Richard Nixon still eludes confident description. Despite all the sadness of recent years, I knew that Herbert Hum- phrey cared deeply about economic and social justice: that he was a warm, humane figure with a zest for life; and that even when he fail- ed a test of nerve (as in the Joe McCarthy era or the battle of Daley's Chicago) he would be sensitive to criticism of his delinquencies. None of this proves he would have been a great President. He might have suffered from an excessive yearning to please too many people, and not all those in his entourage had the selflesness of such dedicated supporters as Marvin Rosenberg. BUT HE WAS identifiable; even when one differed with him, there remained a frame of reference - of common values and shared ex- perience - which sustained the dialogue, and gave continuity and coherence to his role. While I have never had any ac- cess to Mr. Nixon's private sean- ces, I have read many accounts o f sympathetic journalists who have tried to present intimate por- trayals of "the real Nixon;" the results are inv~riably unsatisfying and barren. we know that he works hard. lie is a loner, devoted to his fam- ily but wary in friendship He has a genuine passion for sports- watching, and regards athletic en- counters as symbolic of man's -..." strivings. He has a highly functioning intelligence - meaning that he can understand what he reads andabsorb what he hears without prolonged translation by experts. He has no vulgar racial or religious intolerances. In retrospect one suspects that he became a Republican by accident rather than commitment. HE IS SHY AND self-conscious; rarely has a man who has devoted most of his adult life to politics seemed so palpably ill at ease in prac- ticing its routines, so contrived in his "informality," so calculated in his spontaneity. Much of the political game seems an ordeal for Mr. Nixon in which, like the football player who really dislikes rough contact, he has been forever mirthlessly proving something to himself about himself. Throughout much of his career, the game has been the thing and often it mattered not how honorably you plyaed but whether you won or lost. To many Americans he is the stereotype of the hard-line, ruth- less warrior against communism. But he has shown himself as capable of delivering a sophisticated analysis of the breakup of the Communist monolith as he is of restoring to patrioteering. POSSIBLY our misfortune is that he did not concentrate his life on the practice of caw. He has an unmistakable gift for the earnest advocacy of any case he chooses to argue at a given moment, and has never been visibly tormented by the hobgoblin of consistency. The temptation, is to conclude that he is a man at once informed and shallow, persevering and hollow, who will seek in his own fashion to restore peace and quiet to a turbulent country rather than confo'und his conservative constituency. The posture of "unifier" is a peculiarly difficult one for a man whose history is so linked to discord and so shadowed by distrust. It is further complicated by his reliance on the Southern route to the Presi- dency - a course which not only further alienated him from the over- whelming majority of Negro votersaand young rebels buthalso placed him in the debt of Strom Thurmond and his rightist Southern allies. He is, by his own rather melancholy confession, lacking in "charis- ma." Men imbued with deep conviction can sometimes break the sound barrier. BUT ONE who possesses no program beyond pragmatism and vague "consensus" becomes especially vulnerable to the pressures of the right, particularly if he tends to lose his cool under fire. This could achieve more serious proportions if the floundering statesman of the New Left persist in the fantasy that only mindless "confrontation" and upheaval are the valorous tactics of our time. A vagrant hope - perhaps it is a formsof daydream - survives, that Mr. Nixon will unveil hidden, surprising resources. Such things have happened. But in facing the reality of his victory one is struck not by the cliches of the Nixon devil-theory, but by our remarkable ignorance of anything about him beyond tenacity, banality and, perhaps most trou- blesome, an insecurity that bears no clear resemblance to authentic humility. An aide has. prophesied that this will be a "government without pageantry." The real enigma may be whether we have elected a stranger whom nobody knows, or whether there is not much more to be discov- ered. (Copyright 1968 N. Y. Post) .4 M a t. New coalition, By DANIEL ZWERDLING THE RECENT organizational meeting of the New Democratic Coalition in Ann Arbor causes us to consider the hard lessons of last week's election. Americans who are bent on changing the nation's institutions and values have a long, tough struggle ahead of them. The New Democratic Coalition, a new liberal-left group, must° buck the for- midable conservative trend that was ex- pressed in the Nixon and Wallace vote. Against this trend, the New Democratic Coalition hopes to rally those voters who in their political anger are likely to re- cede to frustrated indifference. Anger with the debacle in Chicago led to the formation of the New Democratic Coalition. Meeting in Minneapolis shortly after the convention, supporters of Mc- Carthy, Kennedy, and McGovern met "to restructure and revitalize the Democratic and all that is needed are a f changes to get them going aga The New Democratic Coalit not give its endorsement to th ness of the nation's institutionsa tudes. It will seek to revamp then seek to change them to meet tl need-not just the economic andr requirements-of the country. These new progressives will b the same game as the tradition ocrats and Republicans. But they play it better, with more com and with moral talent, and th they will win. A LARGE AMOUNT of suppor new group has developed among McCarthy, Kennedy and McGov tisans. But they are not alone recruitment of the dissatisfied el Another group, headed by Marcu has already formed the New Par but' same. old taCtics ew small black convention delegate from Minnea progressive movement plays it now, every- ain. polis, and the University's own Arnold body loses. ion does Kaufman explain that working within e sound- the Democratic Party is a tactic, not a THE NEW DEMOCRATIC Coalition and atti- moral commitment. In short, they regard wants the Democratic Party's money and n. It will it as a quick way to get power. power but repudiates its moral myopia. he moral This is unfortunate, because the New military- "PERSONALLY, I would rather in- Coalition may end up getting the old volve myself with something less nause- guard's conscience, as well. e playing ous than the Democratic Party," Craig The New Coalitionists are seared' by Lal Dem- said here at the campus organizational third party movements. They have seen y hope to meeting. "But we don't have time for most.of them fail. They have seen them imitment that kind of (third party) politics.' rise suddenly in the times of crisis and ey think If Craig and his organization are serious then collapsed right after election, about revamping American institutions, But the very flux in the political con- government policy, and even the Dem- ditions that have produced today's large 't for the ocratic Party, they must squash any il- core of dissatisfied voters reflects vastly g former lusions about doing it in a hurry. different conditions. ein par- Working within the Democratic Party The tremendous impact of communica- in their will not insure speedy success. In fact, tions that permitted Gene McCarthy and lectorate. their struggle will be delayed by staying George Wallace to become national fig- s Raskin in the party because the New Democratic ures in a matter of months indicates ty which Coalition must first wrest control from how much easier it is to build a mass 4 4