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 idomly culled notes " randomly culled notes * randomly culled notes " rang iled notes e randomly culled notes e randomly culled notes " randomly cu rtes * randomly culled notes " randomly culled notes " randomly culled not 20 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Rhone: 764-0552 Editorials printed n The Mchigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in oil reprints. ATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA ABRAMSON Safeguards needed for polem s un11i fo oieme' uio DURING the last month policemen from the nation's four major cities have gathered in Cleveland to consider formulating a, constitution for a'national policemen's union. While the idea is certainly palpable to any who espouse the rights of employes to collective bargaining, serious questions are raised in this particular case because of the atmosphere of the meetings held so far. The patrolmen have spent the greater part of their time not discussing the merits of wage guidelines or job benefits, but rather the "undue public criticism" of the forces in Chicago and New York. It is obvious from- the tone of these discussions that the policemen are not so upset about the status of wages and benefits as they are with the nation's freedom to criticize horror. More than several times patrolmen have inculcated into their pre-constitutional mumblings, that it is their right to decide how and when a billy club should be used. And not unpredictably, their dictim is ex- ceptionally to the point: use it when you feel like using it. It is not difficult to foresee such an organization taking a dangerous turn -~ it could become, in effect, an autonom- ous military segment of society. PERHAPS A point at which the union could be limited is to specifically deny it the right to bargain for its autonomy and in this way keep its conduct always subject to 'civilian orders (from the prosecuting attorneys, etc.) It would have legal collective bargaining rights f o r wages, job benefits and supplements, but at no time could the union negotiate who has the authority over police con- duct - it would always remain, and must remain with the men who are directly responsible to the public -the elected and appointed civilian officials. To insure that no under-the-table- bargaining involving this authority comes into negotiations, it would be necessary to make all negotiations public. Even now police by themselves deter- mine to a large extent exactly what the law is. They decide whether to enforce certain laws, to restrict them, or to ne- glect them. To give police complete au- thority over their own conduct would give them even greater opportunity to force their mores upon the rest of so- ciety. IT IS CLEAR that the public is generally discontented with the police forces in many large cities, especially Chicago., This discontent manifested in congres- sional concern as well as private com- plaints is a force in suppressing unneed- ed violence. To cut off public .influence gives the already potentially dangerous police far too much power. -JIM HECK (The Editorial Directors, realiz- ing that not every student may have the time or inclination to stumble through their more lengthy news analyses, have decid- ed to devote this column to the tidbits of news which have drift- ed across the editorial desk dur- ing the week). By HOWARD KOHN Associate Editorial Director 'THE PRIVATE sector" has been the latest catch phrase mas-4 querading as a solution for our domestic problems. No one ser- iously expects private enterprise to do everything. But three large unidentified insurance companies exceeded all expectations this week by offering to buy the entire 27 campuses of the California state college sys- tem. Claiming they would be more efficient at educating than the present bureaucracy, the insur- ance companies also noted they would eliminate part of the heavy tax burden on Californians who also support the 11-campus Uni- versity of California. Governor Ronald Reagan can see some other advantages to the plan, since activists could be sternly disciplined with greater legal impunity. And if shareholder earnings ever decline, they can always raise student tuition. * * * DEARBORN, MICH., this week received a "Distinguished Achieve- ment Award" for its 1968 anti- litter program. The Dearborn Press paid tribute to the city's beautification plan in a page one story. On the same front page ran an article headlined "Integration Won't Be Forced Here." * * * HERE AT THE University a student movement is underway to reform the language requirement. Under-a new plan, each LSA fac- ulty member would be required to pass a proficiency test in a foreign language every two years, or lose tenure. Advocates of the plan, many of whom have been impressed with their own language courses, point out that the test would help pro- the order, however, and the ships and planes were called back. THE FAILURE of the Navy's vaunted communication s y s t e m was another embarrassing point in the testimony. The radio offi- cer on the Pueblo needed 10 hours to raise Japan after radio silence was broken. And persistent reports again say that the Navy needed help from Russian submarines to finally pin- point the wreckage of the Scor- pion, lost at sea for five months before being located. But the Navy refuses to give up. It contracted this week with Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. to develop prototypes of the F-14 fighter plane. Estimated to cost $5 billion over the next 10 years, the planes will be the largest single defense ex- penditure in U.S. history. PROTEST OVER nudity at Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa, this week ,ceptered on Hugh Hefner, the author of "playboy philosophy." Six women and four men took off all their clothes while singing and holding up signs which read "Liberated women are even more fun." The group decried "Playboy's images of lapdog female play- things with idealized proportions and their junior-executive-on-the -way-up possessors." A spokesman for Hefner in Chicago said he was "shaken up." fessors improve their fluency should they ever want to travel. * * * NON-VIOLENT sit-ins have al- ways provoked some truly aca- demic reactions from the great minds in our universities. Latest convert to the hysteria is Prof. Bruno Bettelheim of the Univer- sity of Chicago. "I saw a small group of stu- dents disrupt the universities in pre-Hitler Germany," reflected Bettelheim after a sit-in at Chi- cago last week. "And I see the same thing happening here from the so-called left." University of Chicago uber alles? * * * AT SAN FRANCISCO State the embattled American Federation of Teachers has published a prose epic called "Quotations from Chairman S.I. Hayakawa." There are extensive excerpts from Hayakawa's 1939 classic "Language in Thought and Ac- tion." And no greater testimony to Hayakawa stands than the relev- ance of his words 30 years later. "In early stages of culture," he wrote, "the principal means of imposing patterns of behavior was, of course, physical coercion." Hayakawa's contemporary quo- tations also point to his percep- tive grasp of a situation. "I will not try to come to terms with anarchists, hooligans or Yahoos," he is quoted. "I am not afraid of these people, for God's sake." His calm and easygoing manner is also reflected: "I've sat here and listened for more than 20 minutes while you've been report- ing on your talks with my ene- mies" and "I resent very much this group of newsmen ganging up on me this way." * * * U.S. NAVY traditionalists were immediately incensed when Cap- tain Lloyd Bucher, a non-Anna- polis officer, surrendered t h e Pueblo a year ago. But not until, this week's closed-door hearings did the intensity of the bitterness surface. Top-ranking Navy officers ad- mitted that ships and planes were set in motion to destroy the Pueblo and its 84-member crew hours after its capture last Jan- uar. Navy brass said their plan was to bomb the Pueblo before the secret material aboard could be taken ashore in the Wonsan har- bor. Lyndon Johnson refused to okay the in formed source --fl7tlJAMES WECHSLER 4AM1 5V Bickering while the killing goes on FOR MANY Americans the delays in Paris-so grotesquely dramatized for so long by the interminable, insuf- ferable debate over the shape of a nego- tiating table-have been an interval of exasperation and almost an incitement to riot. But for some of our citizens these slow-motion proceedings contain a spe- cial agony. They are those whose hus- hands or sons or other loved ones re- main under fire at the front in a war that rational men realize is all over except for the diplomatic shouting and the purposeless shooting. They are also those whose young are facing imminent induction and are grappling with crises of conscience over whether to resist the draft.1 Nothing that happens now can mat- ter too much to those "next of kin" who have already received their fateful notices, or who have welcomed home the maimed and the blind. BUT FOR THOSE who still inhabit the limbo of uncertainty and dread,. these must be the worst days. They have been told by President Nixon and others that any step toward an im- mediate ceasefire is impractical because this is a "guerrilla war" in which no ef- fective restraints can be imposed on the NLF until broader agreements have been reached. Perhaps the point has some technical validity, but it can hardly be meaningful to the mother whose son is slain tonight on some obscure patrol mission in some clash of dubious significance.. And if that is the ordeal of those who dwell in remote America, consider the Vietnamese-after two decades of war- whose homes and families are still caught in the cross-fire of a conflict of which most of them wearied long ago, and for whom new bombardment and strafing must evoke only the cry: "Will they never leave us alone?" IN PARIS the other day Vice Presi- dent Nguyen Cao Ky gathered around him an assemblage of journalists and laid down new terms for negotiation that, in the words of an Associated Press dispatch, provided "little chance for breaking the deadlock." But there remains the uneasy sense that he has just drafted some "captured secret documents" for Joe Alsop and others who will produce them as evi- dence that the enemy is on the verge of collapse and that one more manifesta- tion of American military might will be the knockout blow. So far the Nixon Administration, despite the heavy pressures of the Also- pian battalions, in the Pentagon and Saigon, has given no apparent encour- agement to Ky's delusions. But the critical hours are still ahead, involving as they may the question of whether any accord can be achieved without an affront to the Ky-Thieu regime and a release of those elements in South Vietnam-Buddhist, progres- sive Catholics, students-currently being treated as enemies of the state. MEANWHILE ONE GOES back to the initial sadness. How much more ex- penditure of American life is tolerable in a time when escalation of the war is unthinkable and when random military action cruelly multiplies casualty lists already too long? I will be told that any sign of "soft- ness" may jeopardize our bargaining position, and that the other side shows no disposition to ratify an informal truce. The concept of "talk-and-fight" is in effect embraced by both sides, each attributing original sin to the other. But who is kidding whom? Barring an almost unforeseeable development, there will be no return to the tragic miscon- ceptions that 16d Lyhdon Johnson into political disaster in this wasteland. Neither is there serious indication that Hanoi, having begun to dream of recon- struction and shadowed by the Moscow- Peking struggle, is plotting a massive new intervention that could trigger de- mands for resumption of the U.S. bomb- ings. Surely it is time to reduce military action to a defensive minimal, to avoid any stupid "charge of the light brigade," and to consider, as Sen. Mansfield has proposed, the beginnings of an Amer- ican withdrawal. Ky's latest unilateral' declaration of his terms can only strengthen the suspicion that no other language will persuade him of our re- solve to end this war, and our impati- ence with obstructionism. THE AMERICAN DEAD and wound- ed, the dissenters languishing in jail and others facing imprisonment are far too many; Vietnam's victims will never be fully counted. After all the Communist and American praises of salvation for the battered land, Thich Nhat Nanh, the eloquent Buddhist monk, cried: "Who will save us from salvation?" In this final phase let there at last be a moratorium on murder and let death take a holiday, no matter how many weeks or months are required to end the stalemate. (C) New York Post THE UNIVERSITY has hooked two of the biggest names in the academic world with the funds garnered from last year's $55 million drive. The new Bentley Chair in history has been accepted by David Donald, one of America's foremost Civil War historians. Donald, professor of history at Johns Hopkins University, is au- thor of the Pulitzer-winning "Charles Summer and the Coming of the Civil War." The Walgreen Chair in Human Understand- ing has been offered to and is expected to be accepted by Nathan Glazer, a leading American sociologist. Glazer, who co-authored "Beyond the Melting Pot" with Daniel P. Moynihan, is presently teaching at the University of Cali- fornia at Berkeley., Considerablefriction occurred In the history department when the Bentley Chair was origin- ally offered to Daniel J. Boorstin, the controver- sial University of Chicago historian who wrote "The American." Prof. Arnold Kaufman of the philosophy de- partment will leave the University to teach at UCLA after this semester. Kaufmah is a charter member on the national steering committee of the New Democratic Coalition which is trying to coalesce liberal fac- tions within the party. Reports say Kaufman is looking for a position with a Democratic administration in 1972. Although not under the pressure of "publish or perish," Prof. Marvin Felheim of the English. department helped write the lyrics to The Supremes' latest hit, "Living in Shame." Felheim met the lyricist for The Supremes on a plane flying from Los Angeles and offered to help. He didn't even ask for a percentage of the record's receipts. * * * William Hays, dean of the literary college, did not study a foreign language as an under- graduate at North Texas State University. * * * The University Press has released a literary map of Michigan writers' in residence, which one source called the biggest put-on since the Sesquicentennial. Just as the University's birth date was backed from 1837 to 1817 to accom- modate the $55 million program,.the map creates Me a mythical heritage of Michigan authors. James Fenimore Cooper and Earnest Hemingway, among others, are listed as having "significant ties" with Michigan. * * * There may be as many as seven candidates for SGC president in the March election. SGC members Mark Rosenbaum and Bob Nelson have all but announced that they will be running to- gether for president and vice president. SGC incumbent Roger Keats, Mike Farrell and Howard Miller are also reportedly consider- ing making the leap for the presidency. And Peter Denton, organizer of the Rent Strike, is being pushed into the race by campus radical leaders. Meanwhile former IFC officer Bob Hir- shon, who lost out in petitioning for a vacant SGC seat, is piling up promised endorsements. Lurking in the shadow is, former SGC mem- ber E. O. Knowles., If Knowles should enter the race, many of the other candidates' aspirations will quickly evaporate, since he has been; re= elected to council for three years. However, Knowles is not enrolled this semester and may have trouble meeting candidate requirements. a :: 41 Letters: On To the Editor: IN ANSWER to Mark Rottsha- fen's letter printed Feb. 6, there are a few assumptions made that are incorrect. First, the Tenant's Union does not claim, as I would, that "all Ann Arbor landlords are b a d." It claims, instead, t h a t several landlords, acting' in collusion, have found ways to increase rents, decrease services, ignore building code regulations, illegally with- hold damage deposits, force ten- ants to sign a 12-month lease or pay ten months' rent for an eight- month lease, require roughly three- months' rent before occu- pancy and exercise disproportion- ate influence with the City Coun- cil in questions of zoning law. The Tenants Union is to be a bargaining agent between the ten- 'ants and the landlords and seeks to remedy these flagrant violations of tenants' rights and state law. THIS MEANS where landlords are clearly exploiting the ghetto- ized students who have no choice but to live in the University ghet- to, the Tenants Union, via the Tenants Union, Mark could prob- ably have avoided the legal has- sle and expense. The union could deal at once with the landlord, using levers like the threat of bad publicity, in the case Mark's land- lord is to withhold his damage de- posit. The money h e 1 d by the landlord is not stolen, simply "withheld." Let the distinction be made. WHY WOULD a landlord want to withhold a damage deposit, given that pressure from the ten- ants usually forces him to cough it up? Simply because that mon- ey, withheld, represents interest- free capital for further develop- ment and growth. Alternatively, the 1 a n d 1 o r d could've invested the money in bonds or perhaps is simply col- lecting bank interest on it. Even the pleasant-little-old-lady who rents her upstairs is not iso- lated from the trends of rent-in- creases. Indeed, she generally sup- ports rent hikes or attempts at enforcement of the 12-month lease because "everyone else is doing it." She justifies a monthly charge Remember, landlords, due to long-standing tradition establish- ed by years of stomping on ten- ants have come to count on mon- ey gained by withholding damage deposits. Further, even t h e University gets into the action. In the past, dorm fee hikes often prompted off-campus housing rental hikes. The University is not uricon- cerned with the housing situation. Currently it has proposed t h e building of low-cost housing for. 1000 students in 1972. Sounds good at first glance, but a thousand is not_ a significant proportion of the student body. Further, this proposal has a low- priority in University building plans. IN UNDERDEVELOPED coun- tries, peasants frequently resist change that would benefit them because they are content with ex- isting conditions.. I first thought that you were a landlord, Mark Rottshafer, but you are probably one of the last of the holdouts with a peasant SGC-CNP To the Editor: I WISH TO criticise the action taken last week by the SGC when they allocated $100 to the Citizens for. New Politics. SGC is set up as a student governing agency, and funds (which come from a part of each student's tui- tion) are allocated to it for that purpose. Since SGC is supposed to be functioning in the interest of all students, and since it is financed equally by every student, I feel that SGC has an obligation to re- frain from contributing to parti- san groups-be they the CNP or the College Republicans. If the CNP feels that Mr. McCoy would be an interesting speaker, they can provide for his speaking fee themselves, like any ;other club on campus, or they can try to work through UAC. They certainly shouldn't, how- ever, try to obtain general student funds to pay for their private club activities. SGC should also realize its responsibilities and refuse to contribute these general student the peasant mentality .., .-,. k l4'I td , I i