Q!Ie 3irIhigau Dailyj Seveity-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publicitions 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JILL CRABTREE VP selection: Time to reconsider HAVING SECURED significant influ- ence in the choice of a new vice pres- ident for student affairs, Student Gov- ernment Council members have ironi- cally turned around and, sabotaged theirs own potential influence. In its far-reaching 'report on Uni- Versity decision-making, the Hatcher Commission last Spring strongly urged the inclusion of students on the selection committee for the new vice president. During the summer, the Student Re- lations Committee, which includes SGC representation drew plans for a search committee which provided for equal stu- dent and faculty representation. Everything seemed to be proceeding smoothly as President Robben Fleming sent letters to SGC and the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs asking them to send slates of nominees to the committee from which he would select the final group. THIS PROCEDURE as well as the in- clusion of a non-voting administrator as chairman, was all in accordance with SRC's proposal. Suddenly, however, SGC members balked. Still polarized in their attitude toward student-administration relations, the SGC members felt only students and faculty should be involved in the selec- tion process. Thus, they refused to send Fleming a slate of names, demanding that Council be allowed to appoint mem- bers to the committee directly. And SGC rejected the idea of allowing an admin- istrator to sit on the committee. In the three months which have fol- lowed, hope for a constructive solution to the problem has continually deteriorated. President Fleming has remained firm on the- issue (and has apparently convinced faculty he is right), while students have broken with the administration com- pletely by setting up their own selection committee. Meanwhile, Fleming's interim appoint- ment to the Vice presidential post, Bar- bara Newell, has been in office almost four months and there is no replacemen in sight. Although some of Mrs. Newell's ac tions as vice president have already prov ed highly controversial, they do not shoo conclusively that she is unfit for the job In fact, in comparison to her predecessor Richard Cutler, Mrs. Newell seems a least acceptable. IT IS quite unfortunate, however, tha students had no voice in Mrs. Newell', appointment. And if the present dispute continues, the acting vice president coul remain in office for a long tinie regard- less of how suitable she proves. Fleming's arguments for the inclusion of an administrator on the selection com- mittee are at least understandable. He is seeking to insure the appointment of someone who will be able to work with the existing administration. This is important to SGC as well as Fleming. For the vice president must not only understand the needs of students, but must be able to lobby effectively with the administration. And as for the president's selection of student committee members from a panel presented by SGC, surely Council can find an additional three students of ac- ceptable, ideology and perception to al- low Fleming the choice he desired. SGC's objections to the selection committee are minor - too minor to jus- tify the length of the present delay. And since committees of this kind tend to work by consensus, their precise com- position is much less important than the fact that students will be included. Neither the faculty nor President Fleming are particularly concerned with the delay. If SGC wishes to exercise the influence it secured in the Hatcher Com- mission report eight months ago, it must attempt conciliation with Fleming and the faculty. It is time for a rapproachment. -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN t - -_ w r. t t Sr re d n .s if s It 3 4/ -NEAL BRUSS Fillers of silence WE AWOKE one morning in 1968 to realize that words no longer had meanings. None of the words we heard meant anything to us, and nothing we said seemed to convey anything. Words, once units of com- munication became merely fillers of silence. What happened to words was similar to what had happened to music in the years following World War II. Meaningless words have now Joined the continuous and homogenous stream of muzak in that category known as earwash. It was the realization of an unreality, a condition stranger than Kafka's Gregor Samsa awakening to find himself a beetle. It was just like what it would be like if every man, woman, and child suddenly unlearned how to walk. IT SEEMS as if the politicians had agreed that they would no longer say anything. The politicians, of course, had never made any such rule - for making the rule would involve saying something, and that was forbidden. What happened was that politicians, especially those who formerly would have been considered the most forceful opponents, all changed their style at once. Political enemies no longer argued or debated. They ceased to even remotely make points or articulate programs. Instead, they used talk to fill silence with that vague fuzziness, with a soft, weakly reassuring emotion. One would listen to politicians as one would take Maalox. The best of the word fighters accepted the politicians's move most placidly. When they realized the politicians were saying nothing, they felt a strange uneasiness; then they began to view the new style as a new strength, a new mastery. So Norman Mailer, America's best journalist, simply concluded, v after the Republican convention, that one's chances of getting a poli- tician to answer questions were about eq'ual to those of an amateur throwing a haymaker at a champion boxer. THE MANAGERS of people had been exceedingly diligent. Con- troversy, they decreed, was merely a failure of communications. So when controversy occurred, the trick was to bring the opposing parties together to talk out their differences. The parties in conflict perfectly understood each others' positions. When they got together, they would drum out long, tedious expla- nations of their positions. When simply talking out their positions didn't solve anything, the positions would be explained again. And again. Eventually both sides would reel away from the conference table, numb- ed by hours of talk, their thresholds of listening surpassed by millions of words. Nothing would be settled. Life would go on as before. "Strom, isn't one Spiro T. Agnew enough .., A nd rMUlrRA Y KEMP TONa-- A nd after the Grail what? The pathetic old Greeks THE SECRET POW-WOW held Wednes- .day morning by a group of Univer- sity sorority alumnae to seek ways of cir- cumventing the Regents' recent ruling is utterly pathetic. The Regents ruled at their November meeting that sororities that accept alum- nae recommendations in determining in part the selection of their new members violate Regent Bylaw 2.14 which prohib- its discrimination. It is pathetic, because their action is in direct defiance of the law, the Univer- sity and most importantly, of humanity. Discrimination is one of the obvious pitfalls of the G r e e k system, and, no doubt, the system's attempt to live in a society that will not allow discrimination, may be its very downfall. That's too bad. If the sorority and fraternity system is unable to exist without discrimination, then it shouldn't exist at all. Secondly, it is pathetic because much time and energy is being spent on a rel- atively trite issue. The Greek system is dying. The Greeks will not be allowed to discriminate. And the Greeks don't want to discriminate (as indicated in Panhel- lenic's recent action). The Greek system is far less important than academic re- form or human rights of student power. But these same women who now try so desparately to manipulate this trite issue more than likely take no interest whatso- ever in the vital issues of a progressive university. Where were they w h e n the University asked for alumnae support of its increased budget? Where were they when the $55-M drive was diverted from building a progressive University to build- ing pretty, relatively useless buildings? Where were they when t h e University dropped from ninth in t h e nation in funds per student to 35th? Where were they? At the risk of being somewhat pre- sumptuous I would say most ofthem were wining and dining in Ann Arbor's exclu- sive City Club, flippantly speaking about their trip abroad. THIRD, IT IS a disgrace that such per- i sons are trying to socially stratify the campus at a time when the campus and the student movement in general is try- ing very hard to erase social differentia- tion everywhere. But what is most ludicrous about the entire situation is that the women have little, if any, local support. Not even the Greeks at the University condone t h ej tactics they employ much less the very discrimination the tactics seek to main- tain. Why, then, do they continue to act in defiance of the law, the University and the very locals they claim to represent? Do they s e e k, perhaps, to justify their o w n social discrimination by trying to manipulate others? The most pathetic point of all is the fact that they apparently feel what they are doing is right. They must feel that discrimination does have a place in this world - in their sororities. It is difficult, having lived through an era which has dedicated itself to the eradication of this social injustice, to, accept the fact that some persons still feel it a necessary part of society. Perhaps it shows only their ig- norance, but I would also suggest it shows their inhumanity, and perhaps that is why they have gone underground where their motives cannot be challenged and their goals cannot be fully exposed. -JIM HECK j RICHARD NIXON moves to needed command our affairs with a dealing: solemnity anything but majestic. import. His staff began moving its head- The quarters to the Pierre last week: 450 Par one of his aides was reported to departu I have designated that stately resi- the Pie dence as "the White House-in- establis exile," the Nixon people having a ask wh tendency to inject unnecessary' are dir notes of unease into prospects press o which would seem altogether fair, about % choosin All the journalists saw of Mr. met by Nixon's shadow was Ronald Zieg- move i ler, his traveling press secretary, "totali who briefed them on last week's recruitn advance of history. The new Ad- ministration is not without its In th charms; but they are, I am afraid, informa Ithose of solid worth one's daugh- dom ac ter neglected properly to appre- an earl: ciate in high school. Ziegler is meeting 28 and remarkably pleasant to his There w elders,,quick to smile at the levity been id of others, and without the smal- state bo lest apparent impulse to levity law firm in himself. uling fo All our new youth corps still So M wears those Nixon-Agnew cam- ing with paign pins, which suggest at a dis- whom1 tance that the bearer holds noth- striding ing less than the Silver Star and mit. I d will salute before speaking. Zieger ill will 5 used to handle the Disneyland ac- the day count; in America young men fret of t grow solemn in the management aithougl of amusement parks. dition t ing and HE HAD NOTHING substantial But h to tell us, and he told it in a a man w language proper to the spokesman reaching of an employer who has always which c Letters:o To the Editor: conduits IN LIGHT of Daniel Zwerdling as well . recent criticism of the New ithout Democratic Coalition, Nov.h15, the tie pro enclosed letter outlining the pur- tion lim poses of the Coalition as I con- around. ceive them may be of interest to NDC we your readers. The letter was sent develop to those active in organizing a political state-wide group in the state of Of vet- Oregon. the effor I might add that, though Mr. liberal n Zwerdling interviewed me at some by devel length both at the meeting he ical educ covered and by phone afterward, ample, ti he chose not to consider a single allocatio one of the arguments I gave him the Vietn for a point of view opposite to the begun. L one he expresses. His so doing groups a makes for provocative copy, but tively to not good journalism or good polit- portion ical thinking. tuency ti (Editor's note: the following tional p is a copy of the letter sent to the is likely t Oregon group.) appear i This is in response to a request ments an for information about the general we must perspective of the New Democratic to more Coalition. I should like to make and polit it clear that we are just in process ments of of formation, so what I have to ment tha say is not official. It is based on mitous c interpretation of what we have turies of done and' where we appear to be buildingz going. tion with Broadly, the NDC has three foci of political activity. AND O consolida WE MEAN to engage in and of insurg support community organization so deeply that is ancillary to the established lished D political process. Thus, many local during th and state NDC groups support the folly to ra,'nmwn-r1rnR.'c. cf'a n r nnA ,.n.-+n a to elevate his most trivial s to matters of the gravest staff is not moving from rk Av.; it is "finalizing its re"; it is not moving into .re but "is in the process of hing" itself there. If you en the briefings will be, you ecting "inquiries regarding perations." Feeble inquiries when Mr. Nixon will start g his official family are the promise that "as we nto firming there will be nformation on manpower rent." e interim the less total the tion, the smaller the bore- ound. Mr. Nixon got up at y hour and was currently with "key" staff aides. ere four names: One has dentified as specialist on nd issues for Mr. Nixon's n; another managed sched- r his campaign. r Nixon seems still linger- the gray lowlanders with he is comfortable before up and claiming the sum- Jo not really bear him the o abusively expressed here after his election; that temper must be explained, h not excused,nby the con- ,at it was 4 in the morn- my feet hurt. e has always seemed to be ho withdraws rather than out,, a characteristic ontributes to the rather affecting dignity he conveys in private even while it explains the. persistence of his habit of failing in public. He is distrustful of ven- turing into places where he might feel uncomfortable; naturally then, he fell back on the garrison of the orthodox Republican reli- gion, wandering from it cautiously a little while last summer and then fleeing back at the first sign of rain in October. Now he seems stationary; and the less a man is doing the more ponderous the language to sug- gest the weight of great move- ment;tthe language is for himself more than for us. IN FAIRNESS, of course, Mr. Nixon would not be unique if the end of the long quest leaves him immobile before the prize, al- though he is. I am afraid, unique for the suspicions his history evokes that he will remain im- mobile longer than most men in his position. More than the new rulers of our experience, he makes us re- member the Victorian dinner par- ty where Dante Gabriel Rossetti was giving way to his enthusiasm for the - Arthurian legend. Lord Jowett, the classicist, heard him out to a pause. Then he asked very gravely: "And what were they going to do with the Grail when they found It, Mr. Rossetti?" SO-CALLED OBSCENITIES were used by moral fascists as the world's greatest red-herring issue. The false controversy surrounding a line appearing in Leroi Jones' poetry (for example, in the poem "Black People") is an especially important example. What had been censored was the business about Mother. But no one read on. The critics stopped reading Jones at, "Up against the wall, mother f- ---r." What followed was, "This is a stickup." This is a stickup. A stickup. Up against the wall. By focusing on the business about mother, Jones' friends and enemies totally ignored his message, the meaning of his words. This is a stickup. That's what up against the wall and that business about mother is all about. Up against the wall, mother f - - - - r. This is a stickup." Many readers wonder why don't I just come out and say that busi- ness about mother. The answer is because of exactly what I'm writing about. If The Daily used the proper dirty words on its pages, it could well be shut down. As a writer I wonder whether it would be worth it to tangle with the word killers over them. Generally a writer decides it would be better to fight over words which have serious:meanings. Like "This is a stickup." BUT BACK to our story. Poetic youth got faked out over non-verbal communication. First dope. Then rock 'n roll music, with its wordless electronic goodies. Then, the group grope. Poetic youth correctly found it could communicate, could have experience in ways that did not require word. But poetic youth, potentially the most dangerous element in so- ciety, wasn't looking when the politicians and managers of people were wasting the word. Instead, they were stoned out on their bodies and on their non-verbal lobes. When poetic youth came out of its non-verbal trip, words no longer had meanings. JARGON IN two ways poisoned the Universities. Scholars sought to make their insights as difficult to comprehend as possible by writ- ing in languages which guaranteed that the few - not the many - would have access to their ideas. No wonder, then, that a half-crazed sociology undergrad refers to the ISR as "The Tower of Babel." Also, University managers boggled controversy by injecting hollow' or mawkish cliches into the discourse. It became possible for students, while arguing against the paternalism of administrators, to find them- selves waltzed around by the administrators, paying due reverence to what was called. "the University Family." Some contended that in the beginning there was the word. One will recall the day in 1968 when the word meant nothing. It In defense of the, Coalition 4 to larger constituencies as the political muscle which the most imagina- grams of political educa- nply and aimlessly flap To summarize, through hope to reinforce and to outside pressure on the system. y special concern will be rt to broaden the base of militancy in the country oping programs of polit- ation of our own. For ex- he fight to determine the n of moneys saved when nam War ends has already Unless politically salient act promptly and effec- convince a much larger of the national consti- hat the reordering of na- riorities is imperative, it that the moneys will dis- n the form of new arma- nd tax rebates. Similarly, somehow make relevant Americans the insights ical message of those seg- the Black Power move- t seek to reverse the cala- onsequences of four cen- slavery and serfdom by a democracy of participa- hin black communities. F COURSE, we want to te and expand the wedge ency that has been driven y into the base of estab- 3emocratic Party power he last year. It would be squander what we have The attempt to transform the Democratic Party is certainly an essential part - but only a part - of the total effort to translate the traditional rhetoric of Amer- ican liberalism into meaningful institutional change. I hope that these brief remarks are helpful in the deliberations of your state meeting. --Prof. Arnold S. Kaufman Department of Philosophy Nov. 18 and more To the Editor: AS A MEMBER of both the stu- dent and the Ann Arbor New Democratic Coalition organiza- tions, I woud like to react to a Nov. 15 editorial on the alleged fallacies of the Coalition. For a combination of reasons coalition members feel that work- ing within the Democratic Party is at present more effective and- less difficult than working on a sepa- rate party effort. Zolton Ferency has, estimated insurgent precinct delegate strength in Michigan at about 40 per cent. If coalition ef- forts succeed in obtaining a ma- jority it certainly will have a broader electorate base than a separate movement, because so many voters are traditional about party loyalties rather than tought- ful about candidates and issues. THE POLITICAL experience of many members in the coalition meads that they feel that organ- ;n- - n - - n_ ---_ 1 A s__M.1 _ forts is that some of its more po- litically aged members and lead- ers do have a tendency to submit to old party leadership with the notion that such tactics somehow enhance their own power. They defend their course with vague references to "the issues" (the Coalition's reason for being) while. forgetting that they are in a pow- er struggle-not a game--with the underlying issue being not merely control but very importantly re- form. Fortunately most members, I believe, do recognize tactics of political expediency for what they are and see them as part of the old-style game which they will not play ven if it eventually means the difficult course of working in a brand new party. Now, however, is not the time. If the struggle in the Democratic party is not re- solved in favor of the reforma- tionists fairly soon, only then do I feel we should look seriously out- side the party. -sPatricia Larsen Nov. 21 Language To the Editor: PROF. FEUERWERKER feels that students should be forced to take a foreign language, since the increased ability to communi- cate with people of other coun- tries will aid in international un- derstanding. Unfortunately, the latter proposition does not follow from the first. nores the reasons for the lack of language achievement by Amer- icans, and so proposes an inap- plicable solution. The average American is almost completely isolated from exposure to a foreign language, due to geographical fac- tors and the paucity of foreign tourists. Thus the average Amer- ican simply has no use for a lan- guage facility in his day-to-day existence, and does not want to learn 'a language. The opposite is true in Europe, where the close proximity of dissimilar cultures makes being multilingual a neces- sity. AS A RESULT, American stu- dents do not consider a language facilty desirable. This apathy is, soon changed to outright resist- ance when the heavy, demands of a language course cut into studies in more relevant areas. Where there is resistance, or apathy, there is no learning; in fact, re- sentment towards the language is probably the more likely result. The absurdity' of language re- quireMents stands out when the poor esults are compared with those of the Peace Corps, where Americans quickly learn foreign language when they have the de- sire to learn and the lessons are followed by a constant exposure to the language in the foreign coun- try itself. Although I have emphasized the impracticability of the professor's suggestions, I do not wish to ig- nore the philosophical aspects. Roes the nrofessorreally ish re- 4 Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Editorial Staff MARK LEvIN, Editor STEPHEN WILDSTROM URBAN LEHNER Managing, Editor Editorial Director . Sports Staff DAVID WEIR.............. .Sports Editor DOUG HELLER Associate Sports Editor BOB LEES . Associate Sports Editor BILL LEVIS ..............Associate Sports Editor Business Sta ff RANDY RISSMAN. Business Manager KEN KRAUS ............ Associate Business Manager nA .T- 7.. .. . 4