JAMES WECHSLER' 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 Murphy's appointment: Nixonism unveiled 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 [ Editoriols printed in The Michigan Doily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RON LANDSMANI The welfare sentences: Ironic, perverse justice "A NN ARBOR the Model American Com- munity" - a tribute to the American way of life. Friday, Nov. 22, was to be the first taste of American "justice" for many of those arrested in the welfare demon- strations. But the order for the day was a sick, perverse type of irony. "Justice tempered with mercy" was Judge S. J. Elden's description of the 7- day jail or work sentences righteously im- posed on the "criminals." What mercy was displayed by a court who deemed it justice to fine welfare mothers, whose on- ly crime was to seek better clothing for their children, anywhere f r o m $85 to $100? A $15 fine, $1.50 tax on the fine, $76 court costs and undecided probation fees completely nullify the $70 maximum per mother above original appropriations that the Washtenaw County Board of Super- visors grudgingly gave the ADC mothers. Ann Arbor has recollected its loan plus interest, and has disguised its loanshark- ing techniques under the veil of juris- prudence., JUDGE ELDEN expressed satisfaction with his decision. He claimed the pro- testers were not engaged in an act of civ- il disobedience, because no one expressed dissatisfaction w i t h the local trespass law. That statement by Elden may be re- garded as a glaring example of u t t e r stupidity or perverse naivete. Rather, it wks a callous court - cer- tainly not a merciful one - that chose to ignore the demonstration as both an expression of sympathy for victims of poverty drowning in a sea of capitalistic wealth and as display of anger towards a community insensitive to the signs of deprevation about them. The demonstrators w e r e further re- buked by Elden for their actions, because they "harmed" rather than "helped" the mothers. He suggested that the students direct t h e i r energies to establishing a fund to help the mothers pay their fines. Elden's suggestion is a cheap compen- satory plan that offers no resolution to the disturbing problem. What is to be- come of the mothers and their children next September? What efforts are being made by the county to break the demor- alizing welfare cycle? THE MOTHERS need jobs. They a10s o need someone to take c a r e of the children and assigning college students in three-day shifts as part of their sen- tence is not the solution. Let the County Board of Supervisors invest county direct relief funds into a Day Care Center, which would employ some of the mothers, thereby freeing the others for salaried jobs. If something constructive, similiar to what has been suggested, isn't initiated in Ann Arbor so as to eliminate the in- tolerable conditions which led to the ugly events of Sept. 5, then Ann Arbor will most certainly typify America. A LAND personified by its court system," which is a punitive one - rather than just is a preserver of the status quo - rather than a reformer of social ills. -LORNA CHEROT IN THIS INTERIM before the dawn, or the darkness, of the. age of Nixon, we grope for clues to the nature of the Administra- tion he will construct. Whether by studied design or solemn indeci- sion, he has flashed few clear signals. But one of his initial moves has been heralded by the right-wing newsletter, Human Events as a joyous augury. That was his rehabilitation of 74-year- old diplomat Robert Murphy as his personal foreign policy repre- sentative in Washington for the period preceding the Inaugural. "This Murphy appointment has particularly pleased hardliners in the State Dept.," the voice of Goldwaterism rejoices, adding that Nixon "can'ts go too far wrong" with Murphy as, a top counselor in world affairs. What makes Murphy's designa- tion so meaningful to the rightist Republican organ is that "he sup- ported such tough Asian patriots as Korea's Syngman Rhee and Formosa's C h ia ng Kai-shek againstathe appeasement cabal in the State Dept.," that he fought the "adherents of the grand de- sign of U.S.-Soviet cooperation who, he feels, forced us to retreat from Gen. MacArthur's formula for victory in Korea" and that he "reserves some of his more de- vastating criticism for that liberal sacred cow, the United Nations." WHEN MEN BECOME symbols, the truth about them may be over- simplified by the general impulse to find heroes and villains. Cer- tainly Murphy was long viewed by the American right as its true voice amid the sinister peace- mongers at Foggy Bottom. When he resigned as Undersecretary of State in the closing phase of the Eisenhower era in 1959, a dispatch from the Hearst Headline Service began: With the Presidential accept- ance today of the resignation of Robert D. Murphy as Under- secretary of State, the let's-do- business-with-Khrushchev bloc in the State Dept. was pictured as finally in the saddle. For many months a behind-the- scenes coalition of various State Dept. foreign service cliques has attempted to undermine theein- fluence of Murphy. The vet- eran career diplomat with the brilliant record has steadfastly opposed any form of appeasing Moscow. He was described in the same report as the special target of those who advocated "reaching an accommodation with the Soviet Union, catering to the aims and desires of our European allies and recognition of Red China." He was, in short, a hawk from way back. MURPHY WAS UNDER heavy attack from liberal critics during World War II for his role in the Giraud and Darlan dealings that led to the invasion of North Africa, and for his "brinkman- ship" during -the postwar Berlin crisis. These, however, were events that divided many men on non- ideological lines. Moreover, Murphy has shown a capacity for detached analysis un- encumbered by dogma; in Octo- ber, 1959, he was among the first to see the portents of the Sino- Soviet conflict - a development that Dean Rusk refused to rec- ognize until long after it became a major fact of modern life. THE ULTIMATE portrait of Murphy asantintransigent op- ponent of detente, as critic of the UN, as cheerleader for such fad- ing Asian figures as Chiang and Rhee, emerged primarily from his own words and the adulation they evoked on the right rather than from the earlier liberal critiques. And these are the relevant mat- ters now. It can hardly have gone unnoticed at the UN, for example, that the President-elect in grant- ing early audiences to such dig- nitaries as J. Edgar Hoover, felt no compulsion during the imme- diate aftermath in New York to recognize the .existence of thet neighboring UN in any public way. His simultaneous choice of Mur- phy .as transition foreign policy spokesman seemed to underline the affront by omission. MEANWHILE, AMID the un- certainty surrounding the Paris talks, Murphy's role stirs other questions. Will his "hard-line in- stincts create new complexities for Messrs. Harriman and Vance in this crucial interval? Has Saigon invested excessive hope in Mur- phy's emergence? The answer may depend on the degree to which Nixon recognizes "Do you gentlemen believe in the (excuse the expression) domino theory?" his own stake in an early peace. For while Murphy's private dis- position might be to stiffen Sai- gon's stand, those who have known him well consider him an able, sophisticated technician and troubleshooter who has faithfully executed assignments when the marching orders were clear. The real question is whether Nixon has told Murphy what he wants-or whether Murphy is telling him. Thus one suspense story of the Nixon Administration is at hand these many weeks before the In- augural. Another, of course, is whether his apparently insepara- ble pal, "Bebe" Rebozo, the play- boy Batistaist, is serving as his adviser on Latin-American policy during their long post-election seance, or whether it is just for fun and games. (Copyright 1968 N Y. Post) V Y M - rrl r MI IYY .,~ / v l -" r a 1 t1 11 1,N \\ \ X I 1968, The R1aiwit ' aWW Ttbune Syndict . 16s-*m bC-et F ts r , ;, 1 r i. ? .. f l 4 t B L S xw~. Republicans' black analysis Language requirement solution , -°iURBAN LEHNER 4 RICHARD NIXON, the man who barely squeaked out a limp-wristed mandate from the American people, is trying des- parately these days to construct s o m e kind of consensus out of his meager elec- toral plurality. The best example of t h i s consensus- building is the Republican interpretation of what is called "the Negro vote." About 90 per cent of that vote went to Nixon's opponent. But the Republicans claim that they see some kind of trend developing that indicates that they are recapturing the Negro vote. Compared to Barry Goldwater's "ap- peal" to black voters, perhaps Nixon is justified in pointing to his 10 per cent as evidence that he is seen by blacks ,as an- other Abraham,. Lincoln. What is responsible for this unmistake- able "trend" toward the Republicans by black people? It can only be Nixon's com- prehensive plan for black capitalism. These two words were probably the only important thing that Nixon had to say about black people during his campaign. BLACK CAPITALISM is a very Republi- can response to the obstreperous cries for black power that so frighten them. Instead of giving blacks a meaningful degree of political power to help them im- prove themselves, black capitalism seeks to buy them off with a little share of the American economy. But the black capitalism plan seeks on- ly to raise a few blacks to the status of "forgotten Americans" - Nixon people - who pay taxes, who perhaps own a home, and especially who do not protest. The promised share of the American econoiny will be limited to only a few crumbs. For when the Republicans speak of black capitalism, they are not talking about giving blacks a piece of the corpor- ation action, or a piece of t h e defense spending that goes almost completely to about eight companies. No. When the Republicans talk about black capitalism, they mean small busi- ness. The Republicans will help set up their black constituents in small grocery stores, peanut stands or whatever they like so long as they don't aspire to any genuine economic power. WE CANNOT even go so far as to cate- gorize this solution to the racial prob- lem as being a finger in the dike. When most Americans are shopping at large chain stores and big supermarkets, a few small grocery stores will not even produce short-run gains for the black people. Black capitalism is only a timid excuse for avoiding the problems of Black Amer- ica. It was a good umbrella plank to bring the South onto the Republican platform., The Strom Thurmonds have always been for black capitalism; they have always preferred that blacks get their hair cut at their own barbershops. But the campaign is Qver, and the ploy of blackhcapitalism worked. And now if the President-elect is really serious about uniting this nation, he will have to come up with a meaningful program for black people.. By RON LANDSMAN THE AD HOC curriculum com- mittee of the French depart- ment has come up with moderate proposals for experimentation in elementary language instruction- the area of the language require- ment. But rigidity on the part of the department may threaten any refreshing attempts at experimen- tation and change. The committee has recommend- ed that a track system be tried - offering students in selected sec- tions the regular 231 or 232 course, or courses specializing in either reading or conversation. The committee itself does not consider t h e requirement a re- striction on its freedom to experi- ment. However, the requirement as approved in 1951 does stipulate that the student should develop some proficiency in reading, writ- ing, listening and speaking. De- partment chairman Prof. James O'Neill warns that the track courses therefore might not be acceptable. LITERARY COLLEGE A s s t. Dean James Shaw indicates that the track system, on an experi- mental basis, would probably be acceptable to the curriculum com- mittee of the literary college, which would decide this issue. It would depend, however, on the de- partment's willingness to do a lit- tle fighting to get it approved. The chairman and the executive com- -mittee must not be allowed to use the pretext of the 17-year-old lan- guage requirement as a b a r to healthy experimentation in their language programs. If the curric- ulum committee is willing - and Shaw says it probably is - then all the experimentation possible should be undertaken, experimen- tation to improve a very bad sit- uation. There is more, though, that the literary college curriculum com- mittee should do. T h e pressure right now from students f o r a quick" abolishment of the require- ment - right as it may or may not be - seems to make consider- ed educational judgments diffi- cult, if not impossible. A way out, to allow both students and faculty to air intelligent views on the is- sue, would be to forward a tem- porary policy easing as much as possible the pressure and friction created by the present require- ments. THERE ARE A FEW possible alternatives: -acceptance of a 101-102-111- 112 sequence as a reading track; - further development of the proposed reading track; -easing of the administrative board's policy on granting excep- tions to the requirement. Concerning the last point, the administrative board does not have as wide a range as might be assumed. It is bound now by the requirement. However, there are sound educational, policies which' the faculty couild endorse -- weighinguthe educational gains of keeping -a student in a course he can't handle, and its negative ef- fects on work he is doing else- where - what would warrant a different policy, one . giving the board wide lattitude in consider- ing for whom it can waive the re- quirement. The French committee's action should not- be ignored however. The question remains as to ,wheth- er or not this move or extensions of it are valid in place of abolish- ing the requirement altogether. IF THE FRENCH department is serious about further experimen- tation - a sort of "permanent Hawthorne effect," as Donald Dugas phrased it - it would put the decision about the language requirement in a different light. If the experimentation and sub- sequent improvement a r e really serious, the department should not have to rely on the requirement to keep its classes full. That is the ideal. If the department can do it, or is even willing to, is another question. The Hog Farm pie blues hip fades away ONE TREND that the Republican alysts must look at is that blacks becoming discontent with o n 1 y a crumbs off the political table. Letters to the Editor an- are few AMID THE colorfully painted psychedelia which adorns, the Hog Farm bus are the lonely words, "The Hog Farm Loves You." At ' any other time in history such a proclamation of undiscriminating affection would, unless uttered in some religious connection, have been received with incredulity. Now, although the bus has become a familiar campus sight, no one seems to be discussing, much less appreciating, this offer of universal good feelings. Only recently did the children of love appear on the horizon, and already their light has burned out. Their way of living, uninhibited, unambitious, almost personally anarchistic, will refnain, because it is a way of living that is enormously attractive; and some of them will continue individually to live by the love ethic. But gone is the notion that the hippies are the leaders of some organized movement down a newly-discovered pathway of Love. THE MOST VOCAL hippie theoreticians, those most concerned with proving their own hippieness-these love least. They walk in self-con- tained, narcissistic cliques, flaunting their contempt for all those so bovine as to wear "straight" clothing. Theirs is a sensitivity so rare that they cannot risk the metabolic damage that might result from a conversation with one of the non-Chosen. The Hog Farmers are the friendliest and most flamboyant har- bingers of love yet to visit Ann Arbor en masse, and they have been granted tentative community acceptance as a sort of conversation piece. "Hey, did you see that pig those guys had on the Diag the other day?" What happens when the novelty wears off is uncertain. The group travels like an army, with rumors of its movements reverberating throughout the surrounding countryside. The rumor this weekend was that the Hog Farm was leaving Ann Arbor Monday or Tuesday. Which may be good, for already there were signs that their boundless love was not being reciprocated. LAST FRIDAY NIGHT, driving down Thompson toward Packard, I pulled up three or four cars behind the Hog Farm's psychedelic con- traption at the corner of Thompson and Madison. A green car sat directly in its path, inches away, at a ninety degree angle. It looked like there had been a collision, but as the events subsequently unfolded it became apparent that the driver of the car, for whatever reasons, was attempting to harrass the bus. As the line of car behind the bus began to pull left to pass it, the green car backed east down Madison toward South Quad, then darted back in front of the bus again. A minute passed, and the green car moved forward and started a u-turn in the intersection. When the bus proceeded, the car lurched after it and squealed around the hair- pin turn at Packard in pursuit. I got a good look at the five guys in the green car because they squeezed me into the left lane as I was crossing the intersection, and when I honked they all turned and gave me the finger simultaneously. "Hippie lover," I could hear them saying. They looked like guys who were big jocks in high school but got cut from the teams here because they drank too much. In the thirties they would have been beating up zi -STEVE ANZALONE H. L. Hunt's oil over the world MOZAMBIQUE HAS made a deal with H. L. Hunt. Hunt will get oil rights to a sizable portion of Mozambique's rich coastline, and in return Hunt will give armaments to Mozambique for the pur- pose of quelling native unrest. This deal is straightforward enough, but it has an extensive and unique symbiosis which de- serves examination. In the first place, Mozambique needs Hunt to drill the oil for them. Hunt, on the other hand, needs the oil to continue, building his empire. Both Hunt and Mo- zambique want to k e e p the natives in their place because that lends stability to 'the country, and makes the investment there more valuable. - of South Africa depends on the stability of Mozambique. South Africa also helps by sending guns to Mozambique. Portugal stands to gain, too. Portugal owns Mozambique and all the oil and na- tives. A stable, productive Mozambique means a stable and productive Portugal. That is the reason why Portugal sends guns to Mozambique. THE UNITED STATES and all of t h e NATO nations have something to gain from the transaction. The United States gives guns to Portugal. In fact,' all of the NATO nations in their small way give guns to Portugal. The guns are used to quell unrest among the Portuguese peo- ne A C fn-h1i nfii+ n rh n - .Q n v c nh Thg Bretton problem To the Editor: T SEEMS to me that the issues raised by Prof. Bretton's chal- lenge involve not only freedom in the classroom but the responsi- bility of the press. I think that The Michigan Daily would have been derelict had it not reported the invasion of the class. An in- formed public, to my mind, con- tinues to be an important bul- wark against the storm trooper. You have taken note of another aspect of responsibility-ugetting the facts straight. I fault T h e Daily for this. In addition, I felt that our account gave a certain glamor to the invader. He came out in your pages as a latter-day RobinHood with high vision but senseless method. Early in my newspaper career, a young reporter mentioned that he had seen a house burning but hadn't stopped because he was late for work. He was fired. --Paul Harsha In order to reduce faculty and student involvement in the time- consuming details of university administration and at the same time to assure administrative re- sponsibility, why not adopt one possible version of what we call parliamentary government? Thus, t h e administration (president, vice-president, deans and certain upper-level officials) might be thought of as "the government" in the British sense. THE GOVERNMENT would hold office at the pleasure of the fac- ulty, and could be removed by the Regents following a vote of no confidence at any time, requiring the negative votes of perhaps two- thirds of the entire professional staff (assistant professors and above). And just as the faculty would be equivalent to a House of Commons, the student body of the various colleges, plus the alumni, might be thought of as the con- stituencies, and the Regents as a tition or independently, were dis- satisfied by the performance of the administration, it could call for specific policy changes, the resignation of certain officers, or in extremis, the resignation of the president and his "government," with the Regents perhaps holding some sort of veto power. SUCH AN AGREEMENT should, hopefully, do the following: in- crease student influence over uni- versity policy while retaining ul- timate faculty control, minimize faculty (and student) involvement in matters which should be the re- sponsibility of the administration, and yet assure greater responsive- ness of the administration to both students and faculty. This general proposal, many of whose details remain to be ex- amined, is offered as a tentative basis for discussion, and as an al- ternative to the increasing "poli- ticization" of the University's de- cision making process. Confronta- tion politics are only appropriate I