s... .. "Come let us reason together!" 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 , -' .' .: 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. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: ROB BEATTIEI Rent strike: Inescapable conclusion THE CONCLUSION is inescapable. The only way to materially improve the off-campus housing situation is to sup- port the rent strike. Those who have lived in Ann Arbor apartments for any length of time know the grievances of the student commun- ity intimately, they include: -.high rents; - inadequate service; - arbitrary and inequitable handling of damage deposits; -the twelve month lease; --advance rental payments and con- tract commitment; and - code violations. Attempts have been made to deal with local landlords on the "responsible" lev- el that those on the other side of the generation gap endlessly delight in rec- ommending. Attempts at bilateral nego- tiation, over those fundamental, concerns have produced nothing.. LAST SEMESTER Student Housing As- sociation attempted to arrange a meeting with the Ann Arbor Property Managers Association through the Uni-; versity. The landlords refused to discuss substantive issues with students. The landlords are more than happy to take student money but have s h o w n themselves unwilling to deal with stu- dents on the level of equity that a busi- ness ,relationship. implies. Those who think patience and a faith in the 'system will ultimately see an im- provement in Ann Arbor are dreamers. The housing market will be incredibly tight next fall and prospects for the fu- ture are dim. University officials predict a combined vacancy rate - for University and private housing - of one per cent. (Cost projec- tions are usually based on a five per cent vacancy rate). New construction that might improve conditions by alleviating the short housing supply is unlikely in the face of high interest rates. THE UNIVERSITY, the one institution which has the power to affect living, conditions in Ann Arbor by erecting low- costs housing on its own, is unlikely to make any effort on the part of students. Regental refusal to compete with private businessmen merely serves to strengthen Ann Arbor's unitary tendencies. The rent strike is not a radical cause. It is an action by students who want to take practical steps to change housing conditions. The Ann Arbor landlords are exploit- ing a tight housing market by providing inadequate service to students for high rents. They have made no serious attempt to explain their apparently avaricious actions to students. If the strike fails the situation will worsen dramatically - the last barrier to total domination will be removed. THIS IS one issue everyone on campus j should be able to support. Only the ac- tive participation of the student b o d y will bring about an improvement in Ann Arbor's housing conditions. Those who want to act in their own behalf to im- prove their living conditions should join the strike. There is no other way. -DAN SHARE MURRAY KEMPTON\ _ Taking Dick for granted PRESIDENT NIXON did not so much progress through the pitfalls of his first press conference Monday as stand back and contemplate them with grave and objective concern. He has easily made the shift from the alarms of a candidate to the complacencies of an incumbent. A cry for succor from crime in Washington drew from him a reply suggesting that the New York Times, although its interest is always welcome, is being rather an old lady in the matter. So now it is the Democrats who shudder at the erosion of law and order. DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTS announce themselves in language designed to stir and Republican ones in tones designed to soothe. Presi- dent Eisenhower was a success and President Harding a failure with the stance of quietude; and President Roosevelt a success and President Johnson a failure with the posture of activism. So we have no overwhelming historical evidence for assuming that the active is preferable to the passive; all we know is that Democrats are active and Republicans passive. Mr. Nixon turns out to be clearly in the tradition of his party since its disturbance by Theodore Roosevelt 57 years ago: Republicans are al- armed out of office and calmed at once by coming into it. The style of his Inaugural deserved the criticism it has drawn from persons who look for style in these exercises. But we ought not to be surprised if Mr. Nixon's rhetoric is an awkward fit; he buys his words off the rack as he does his suits. SUCH CUSTOMERS GET the cliches they deserve; and the cliches of Mr. Nixon's taste suggest that he deserves rather better than his enemies had anticipated. There is, after all, a considerable difference between being vague in progressive as against being vague in reaction- ary tones. The President obviously regards his 100 Days as a transition from being inconspicuous to being taken for granted. He is unobtrusive, cau- tious and anxious to avoid reminders of the exciting changes he prom- ised. He is moving with great comfort from the time when we thought of him as always the country's Candidate to a moment when we will come to believe that he always has been our country's President. His care to avoid disturbance in the transition has left him, of course, with one' problem of housekeeping. On the day of his Inaugura- tion he had appointed only 100 of 'the 300 persons who would occupy the most consequental offices at his disposal. Yet he seemed entirely content to know that two-thirds of his retainers had been Mr. John- son's retainers the day before. I #i of Letters to the Editor Spectre of 'preventive detention' TUCKED AWAY in a q u i e t corner of Thursday's New Y o r k Times lay a story the doom-predictors have warned against for several decades - and true to the Orwellian dream it drifted slyly past without a whimper. The story: "Pre- trial Jailing Weighed by Nixon 'Preven- tive Detention' Urged By Some to Bar Renewed Crime in Bail Period".' Minus the camouflaging qualifiers, the proposal is that perhaps the traditional assumption that the accused is considered innocent until proven guilty really ought Ao be changed to allow detention of "poor risks." That is, if the state's authorities consider a man one of these poor risks,, they have the right to incarcerate him before trial without right of bail. The first reaction is that the President must have slipped and let Spiro make an unauthorized speech. For immediately there arises the vision of mandatory arm- bands to identify high-risk citizens. And no more do the ideologue's "paranoid" concentration camps seem so paranoid. Of course, it's only for regular, repeti- tive offenders, the writer reassures us. But regular, repetitive offenders include - as one reads further - black citizens arrested for "looting" along the burned out streets of Washington, Newark, Chi- cago, and Detroit. Then comes the "prop- er perspective": it is all part of President Nixon's new War on Crime for the Dis- trict of Columbia. This is to be the Nixon Model City for crime control - the ex- ample for policy and practice over four years to come. BUDS OF REAL fascism have appeared before in this country, but always be- fore the proposals have "stemmed from the likes of Minutemen, Mendel Rivers, and Joe McCarthy. But t h i s proposal, which could be so idly dismissed were it from the Vice President's lips, emanates from Nixon himself - and therefore the thought that it would be ignored is, by a magnitude beyond compare, the m o s t frightening move the new Administration has suggested. -FRANK BROWNING To the Editor: THIS LETTER is directed to my fellow students as well as to the faculty and state legislators. I have been very disconcerted by the dispute over the language re- quirements. This manifestation of student irresponsibility has caused me grave concern over the pro- ductive outcomes of the so-called "youth movements." If we have criticisms to make and feel that requirements hold back true intellectual progress then we should argue on those grounds and not pick out a sacrifical lamb to be the scapegoat of our frustra- tions. I would gladly accept and support a general degree program with only a minimum and maxi- mum hour requirement that would allow a student to pursue courses as he desires and take from three to five years to finish. But this picking on languages appears to me to be an example of the age old American ethnocen- trism expressed in "Children's Let- ters to God": "Why did you make people talk foreign languages. It would be easier if everybody could talk english like you and me. Alice." This philosophy allows us to tell others what to do and not to give a damn about the way they might feel about what we say. Such thinking got us into Vietnam and will probably get us into other situations like it. IF THE LANGUAGE require- ment proves difficult as indeed it does, reforms should be under- taken at the course level. Criticism is indeed justified, especially in the Department of Romance Lan- guages. My recommendations are as follows: 1) students could elect required courses as pass-fail: 2) teachers should be hired on their desire and ability to teach, not on the basis of so many courses etc., as is presently the case; some other means must be found to fi-, nance deserving graduate students in literature who have no real in- terest in teaching "languages": 3) courses should be changed to offer a choice between reading only and "regular" courses; 4) the second year should allow more variety; students might be polled each semester to see what type of courses should be made avail- able; 5) culture and values through language should be a primary ob- jective' of these courses; 6') stu- dents should not be made to take standarized exams. The University is guilty of the American prejudice as well in its lack of interest in encouraging the study of less "popular" though equally populous languages. The Department of Romance Lan- guages has only a meager one course per semester at the ele- -mentary level in Portugese (100 million speakers) and none in Romanian or Catalan. This limited outlook extends to the Eastern European. languages as well, though there seems to be ex- pansion in the Slavic Department. There is no apparent reason why a school of our size and "quality" does not have a Department of Southern A f r i c a n Languages (Michigan State offers three years of Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, and Swa- hili). The languages of the East are e q u a 11 y underrepresented, along with the Indian languages of South America. THE UNIVERSITY has done nothing to advertise the programs it has in these areas or to en- courage their expansion and de- velopment. It seems to show that on the part of the administration there also exists the idea that only the languages of "Western Civilization" are worth learning. While our glorious state legis- lators debate student unrest they remain a major ' cause of it by failing to provide the funds to keep students busy pursuing a quality education. They worry about a nude play, put on by out- siders though at our request, which many of them saw' all the way through (proving that it was not so very-offensive), while forgetting that their job is finding ways of promoting intellectual expansion and not censorship on campus. Perhaps this is a heavy indict- ment, but it is my opinion, and I hope that those involved in this controversy will come down off their self-made pedestals and con- sider constructive solutions to this serious problem. -Will Vroman Grad., Linguistics Jan. 30 I BEING TAKEN FOR granted is obviously a blessing to him as a public figure; but it was a distinct handicap to his performance as a governor. He had gotten himself so well taken for granted as to deprive the prospect of worling for him of the smallest excitement; it was plain that too few of those called had wished to be'chosen; he had had to canvass second choices and was already casting over thirds and fourths. Having carefully separated the wheat from the chaff, he would now have to serve forth the chaff. And so Mr. Nixon, so long an object of disquiet suddenly begins to look as comforting as a steward, the mild caretaker of Mr. Johnson's general opinions with no taste for Mr. Johnson's adventures. He seems very much to want the times to be quiet for him; and we are fools if we do not continually and faithfully pray him that boon. (C) 1969, The New York Post ~NWthe, inf ormed source NEW DEAN OF the education school, Wilbur J. Leading a movement against Ann Arbor Cohen, is reportedly only an interim dean "scattered site" public housing program is a con- for at most two years. Cohen, who was HEW servative professor from the political science de- secretary in the Johnson Administration and partment. who was called "irrepressibly merry" by The New He will meet with other concerned citizens of York Times, only accepted the education post the plush Second Ward today to discuss strategy because a university presidency of appropriate on how to keep out the planned 12-unit Glen- status was not in the offering, wood Apartments. Ironically, the city bought the As soon as such an opportunity arises, he will site aided by a ,$5,000 contribution from citizens leave the ed school in the lurch. in the ward. ** * * Prof. Roger Hackett of Japanese studies, who knew Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird in his college, days, says that undergraduate friends nick- named Laird "Bomb." Ken Ford, WJBK's TV-2 newsman, was watch- ing the performance of "Dionysus in 69" when one of the actresses (still fully clothed) lay down in front of his seat, raised her legs and undulated them suggestively. Ford, dressed in his electric-blue TV-2 blazer, turned crimson and then, apparently at a loss on how to react, began taking notes. One villainous Ann Arbor landlord has decided to purge himself. Roy Ashmall, a member of the rent strike steering committee, is trying to sell the house he has previously rented to students. Two Ann Arbor policemen walked into The Daily last week with a warrant for the arrest of Editor Mark Levin. According to the police, evin owed $261.00 for back parking violations. But Levin cheerfully borrowed $200.00 from a Daily staff member and did not go directly to jail. Fred Ulrich, owner of Ulrich's Bookstore, re- portedly has guilty feelings about the money he's making. Ulrich has been showing visitors a listing of all of his contributions to charity for the last 11 years. After being criticized by faculty and students in the recent controversy with Student Book Serv- ice, Ulrich has been showing off the listing more often. 40 * More randomly culled notes on heresy happenstance By HOWARD KOHN Associate Editorial Dir ctor ; E OF the most telling comments on life in these United States today is a sampling of leftover news items at the end of a week. The Record, student newspaper at Antioch College, is in trouble af- ter printing an exchange of letters between Sen. Stephen Young (D- Ohio) and a constituent. The voter wrote an abusive letter to Young chastising him for his en- dorsement of tough gun control leg- islation. Included was the writer's telephone number and a notation to Young, "I would welcome the oppor- tunity to have intercourse with you." Young replied, "No thanks, I will have nothing whatever to do with you. You go ahead and have inter- course with yourself." LEOPARDS ARE often condemned as the most indiscriminate, vicious killers of the jungle. But the clouded leopard of Southeast Asia has met his match. Bombing and shelling of the vege- tation has robbed him of shelter and food and driven him into open ter- rain. There he has become an easy target for hunters who sell his rare, softly-spotted coat on the black market. Even if the Vietnam War ends soon, the clouded leopard will prob- ably become extinct. BLACK LUNG is the curse of many miners who have to inhale coal dust every day for 20 or 30 years. The dust coats the miner's lungs, effec- tively scarring them until he dies of pneumonia, tuberculosis or emphy- sema. Mining corporations have been no- of the general population are not compensable. As long as mining companies can keep the frequency of Black Lung at its present high level, they apparent- ly can escape all penalties under this rather perverse interpretation of the law. * * * DR. LLOYD W. BAILY, the elector from North Carolina who cast his vote for George Wallace instead of Richard Nixon, warns that the United States is "dangerously close to be- coming a democracy." his share of wives is strongly ob- jected to." TRADITION WAS a little unset- tled this week when Mrs. Shirley Chisholm became the first freshman ever to change an appointed com- mittee seat in the House of Repre- sentatives.. Mrs. Chisholm, a Democrat from the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, was originally placed on the House Agriculture Committee. Outspoken freshmen are frequently dumped here for a two-year period of acclimation. But Mrs. Chisholm protested and was reassigned to another committee. The Ways and Means Committee, which makes the assignments, man- aged to preserve its reputation for archaic obstinacy, however. It ap- pointed Allard Lowenstein of New York, another freshman who worked against ex-President Johnson early last year, to the Agriculture Com- are heading up the New Party, a fourth-party, effort replacing the de- funct New Politics Party . . . Picking a site for Michigan's first arnti-bal- listic missile system has been post- poned because of the fear of possible fallout . ..Alcoholism is on the rise, reportedly because of a rift between a faction advocating moderation and one championing abstinence within the temperance leagues . . A report on protests, third in a series which has included the Kerner and Walker Reports, will be out in April with ringing criticism of the police, ghetto businessmen and the V i e t n a m War... AND ONE FINAL note. Prof. Ed Halpern, a good friend, died yester- day of a heart attack. He was 47. Halpern was on the Board in Con- trol of Intercollegiate Athletics last spring when The Daily printed a story on discounts and compensations given to athletes. Amid the rabid in- dignation of most board members, he "r.f,. J.ha+ +hpe4 4-PAIII 3 - ha'cyAn iira... Baily draws his definition U.S. Army manual in which racy is called "government masses . . . which results bocracy and whose attitude property is communistic." from a democ- of the in mo- toward Wonder to us? why that never occurred were killed in riots initiated and car- ried out by whites. THE ANN ARBOR NEWS, which printed a picture of students reading in the UGLI under the caption "Yes, U.S. VANITY notwithstanding, we seem to be at a remarkable stand- still in time. In a single copy of the Chicago Tribune of 100 years ago appear a couple of hauntingly fa- miliar issues. Congress was debating President ALSO IN 1869, controversy over the first amendment centered on polygamy in the Mormon Church. Western miners were petitioning Congress to outlaw it because they felt the practice violated society's morals.