Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan idomly culled notes " randomly culled notes * randomly culled notes * rane wled notes * randomly culled notes * randomly culled notes * randomly cu rtes " randomly culled notes a randomly culled notes i randomly culled not 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed n The Mchigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JIM NEUBACHER EMU and the blacks: An abysmal situation IT MAY SEEM that the situation at East- ern Michigan University is but a part of a general trend of student demonstra- tions and that the demands m a d e by blacks there are simply material hastily compiled in order to fabricate a cause. This, however, is untrue. While there is little doubt that the demonstrations at Madison and Berkeley gave the leaders at EMU impetus for demonstrating, the sit- uation on the Ypsilanti campus is unique- ly deficient of even the minimum amount of academic freedom, to say nothing of its abysmal race situation. For years Harold Sponberg has ruled the campus with a sternly autocratic phi- losophy. His aspirations lie not in educa- tion, but in prestige. The fact that he felt it so necessary to build an athletic dyn- asty attests to this fact. More than once he has told groups of people that only through making the campus the athletic kingdom of Michigan could the campus "go anywhere," SEVERAL YEARS ago Sponberg brought in Northern Michigan University's president as athletic director. He h a d built Northern's athletic dynasty. Four years ago Sponberg began his ex- pansion program. But all the while he kept a tight hand over the academic poli- cies of the college, running academia much like a tiny republic over which he was dictator. But the student population has finally mustered enough power to at least dem- onstrate their pitiful situation. Blacks at Ypsilanti are less than three and a half per cent of the student population and there are only seven black professors. Given this, the blacks' demand for in- creased black enrollment and faculty is all but essential if EMU is to maintain even a facade of academic relevancy to its students. Further, the nature of EMU is one that is more closely knit to the ghetto, because of its size, tuition and location. For all these reasons it seems absurd that Sponberg has kept the admissions of blacks at such a low percentage. Crime JT WOULD thus be appropriate to im- plement another of t h e blacks' de- mands: that a large number of Ypsilanti area blacks be admitted to the college. While fulfilling the needed black pro- portions, the college could then m o r e easily identify with the problems of the ghetto by relating to those in proximity to it. One of the more controversial demands concerns athletic scholarships. Apparent- ly, several black athletes have been kick- ed off the teams and lost their scholar- ships after being injured. No such cases have been reported with whites. If this is true, it is blatant violation of several counts of the civil rights bill and should be immediately corrected. A further demand that a board be or- ganized "to hear and act upon students complaints of teacher prejudice" could easily be implemented without much in- convenience and would certainly help to facilitate a dialogue between the students and administration - regardless wheth- er "teacher prejudice" exists. All of the above demands could be most easily implemented by accepting the first demand of the blacks: that a Vice Presi- dent for Minority Affairs be appointed. THE DEMANDS for a black studies pro- gram, tuition based on family income, a section of the library to be set aside for black books and black art, that the roles of b l a c k s be introduced in all history courses, that Martin Luther King a n d Malcolm X scholarships be created and the recipients determined by blacks and that a black co-op dorm be builtare de- bateable requests. Some do not exhibit a great deal of forethought. Nevertheless, they merit further consideration - by the blacks, as well as the administration. The demand that remains is that am- nesty be granted for all protesters and that the charges be dropped against those arrested. Only a few times during all of last year were demonstrators charged with s u c h high counts as inciting a riot. And these cases were all limited to extremely vio- lent confrontations that usually entailed the destruction of property. There was no destruction at EMU. All the violence en- sued because of t h e police's aggressive and premature action. By HOWARD KOHN DESPITE his bastardly insensi- tivity to the price of our dead and wounded in "limited" wars against Communism, Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey does have his wistful moments. "The commies are a lot smarter than us. If old people give them any trouble they tell 'em to shut up or get shot," says the 76-year- old Selective Service director. "The commies put all their resources in developing their youth. "That's w h y we're fighting them," he winks.. Hershey is not really anti- youth, of course, although he does get angry with student militants and has tried to draft war pro- testers. But he does get particu- larly incensed over university fac- ulty members whoside with the students or who even go out on strike like at San Francisco State. "ACTUALLY I HAVE a lot of sympathy for teachers. I'm a trus- tee at Tri-State College and un- derstand their problems," "But they're being given a chance to work. I'm really surprised that the public hasn't gotten fed up and given them a swift kick in the pants." Hershey was not always director of the world's largest conscription program. In his youth Hershey was a deputy sheriff under his father, He quickly found out that crim- inals were not to be trusted after handcuffing a prisoner with buck- skin thongs. "This joker b i t through the buckskin and got loose and then bit me," he says. BEHIND - THE - SCENES ma- neuvering in Congress since 1966 has shielded oil companies from the full liability, of major oil spillage. Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Me.), is heading up a subcommittee to study the Santa Barabara oil dis- aster and will hold hearings in Santa Barbara beginning next week. Staff members of the subcom- mittee startled Muskie when they revealed that protections for the industry w e r e "quietly" written into law three y e a r s ago and haven't been changed since. EVEN IN THE privileged world of the Pentagon censors are sometimes fallible. T h e stamp pads of Pentagon bureacrats got blotted up in their own red ink in two separate inci- dents last week. The Navy's public information service w a s merrily rolling o u t details of a special communications project in Wis- consin, while a censor dutifully marked "secret" on the same in- formation in the files. And the Air Force upstaged the Army by releasing details of a $425.000 grant by the Midas-In- ternational Corp. of Chicago. Evidently, he has found a home among his former "capitalist ene- mies." * * * AGAINST THE WALL: For the first time in U.S. history no one was executed under capital pun- ishment in 1968, although 37 states still have the dealth penal- ty and legislators in Iowa are try- ing to restore it,. *. Herbert Marcuse, contro- versial Marxist professor, has been hired for another year by the University of California at San Diego despite Regental pressure to forcibly retire the 70-year-old philosopher.. .Adam Clayton Pow- ell is seeking the Democratic nom- ination in the New York mayoral race . Bob Neff, Gayle Rubin aid Larry Deitch of SGC spent last weekend in Washington at t h e convention of college newspaper, editors under a special appropria- tion voted the night before they left. ("We thought it was going to be a serious convention," said Dietch) . . . A federal court in New York hasdfound out why Willie Johnson didn't show up to stand trial for attempted bank robbery a year ago. Johnson was out rob- bing another bank and couldn't make it . . . The Michigan State Police want another swimming pool because their present one "isn't big enough." #i Our family motto: Grin and bare it 1961 crash of a bomber in Golds- boro, N.C., after the Army had is- sued a memo to censor the facts. A House subcommittee is now in- vestigating the crash. * * * THE ARMY has also been upset over the case of Pvt. Robert J. Hinkle whose parents claim he hasl the mentality of a 10-year-old. Hinkle's parents lost a federal court battle in Portland, this week, seeking his release on the grounds he cannot read or write. The Army immediately flew the 21-year-old private to Fort Dix, N.J.. but on a stopover in Seattle he called his father long distance and then "fell on the floor, kick- ing his heels and screaming." Army doctors again found noth- ing physically or mentally wrong with Hinkle and he will be in eith- er Germany or Vietnam in s i x weeks. Said one Army official: "The Army may be the only institution that can get this boy out of the trap he is in and g i v e him a chance to make something of him- self." DOROTHY YOUNG, 14, has been in a Sandersville, Ga. jail for more than two months awaiting arraignment on a charge of dis- turbing the peace for allegedly cursing on a school bus. Judge Walter McMillan has de- nied a writ of habeas corpus for the girl, saying he wouldn't be in- timidated by blacks who have boy- cotted schools since her arrest. * * * A MOB of 60 shouting young men raced through the streets of Lusaka, Zambia, this week rough- ing up miniskirted girls and slash- ing their hems. Members of the militant youth wing of the ruling United Nation- al Independence Party, the mob attacked and mauled both white and black girls. A recent cultural conference urged that miniskirts be banned in Zambia. IN KEY WEST, Fla., Paulette and Amber Graham strip down to pasties and g-string under t h e watchful eyes of .their mother and father, who are part of a family theatrical troupe. Mom Graham says she is too fate to strip too far, so she does a tassel act with Papa Graham as top banana. The show is shown mostly to sailors five times a week in be- tween a skin flick called "T h e Taming." "This strip show is nothing -vulgar," says Papa. "Most clergy- men would probably enjoy it. Most strippers are just exhibitionists but these girls are entertainers. "Their mother taught the girls everything they know." THE SAIGON POST, one of South Vietnam's leading English- language papers, has charged that Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) "is either loony or a Communist" because of his dovish position on the war. In a front-page editorial The Post called McGovern "dangerous, fanatic and treasonable," a man who had sided with the "bloody weirdos in killing women and children." The Post asked that the Senate, investigate "Senator McGovern for his hippie-leaning and his long record of queer statements." McGovern has called the war "senseless" and urged that t h e United States withdraw some men andspull back to defensive posi- tions. IN WASHINGTON this week McGovern has been busy holding hearings as chairman of the Special Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs. After listening to a number of medical teams list the findings of a year-long study in South Carolina (e.g. 73 per cent of all black preschool children h a v e worms in their stomachs), Mc- Govern asked for immediate fed- eral food distribution. The Agriculture Department re- plied that he could have up to $2 million to continue studying t h e problem but none of it could be allocated for food. SAUL ALINSKY, the oldtime community organizer; has contri- ved a new way of fermenting re- volution from within. After pooh- poohing black power forces and a student-worker coalition, he has instead agreed to organize alien- ated executives and socially-ex- ploitable suburbanites under a .... PRESIDENT Richard Nix- on's effigy in Madame Tusseaud's wax museum has been replac- ed because "the image was too much of a smiling one." A group calling itself SPASM (Society for the Preven- tion of Asinine Student Move- ments) has called for a milk-in at Wichita State University in re- sponse to a recent beer drink-in. The beer-drinkers want a refer- endum to permit the sale of beer on campus . and from Janie Lewis, 17, who was held captive at pistol point in Dallas by an ex-convict, "He was really such a nice guy," after the police shot and killed him. 4 MANY PEOPLE GUESSED that1 testers in last year's violent stration in Chicago were guiltyt sort of criminal offense. They were right. Former Daily editor Tom the pro- demon- of some Hayden, now a kingpin of the New Left, was found guilty of obstructing a policeman on August 25. Hayden let the air out of one police car tire. -S.A. Business Staff GEORGE BRISTOL, Business Manager STEVE ELMAN .. Administrative Advertising Manager SUE LERNER.................Senior Sales Manager LUCY PAPP...........Senior Sales Manager NANCY ASIN..Senior Circulation Manager BRUCE HAYDON. .. .......Finance Manager DARIA KROGULSKI......Associate Finance Manager BARBARA SCHULZ .............. Personnel Manager Sports Staff JOEL BLOCK, Sports Editor ANDY BARBAS, Executive Sports Editor BILL CUSUMANO............ Associate Sports Editor JIM FORRESTER ............ Associate Sports Editor ROBIN WRIGHT .............Associate Sports Editor JOE MARKER.................. Contributing Editor AT NO TIME had the blacks there an- ticipated' any real disruption. The marches were peaceful and orderly. The blacks staged a lock-in of the adminis- tration building to draw attention and publicity, not to destroy. But more importantly, given the op- pressive situation at EMU it only stands to reason that the demonstrators have helped, not hindered the campus there. Nothing was damaged but hopefully the pride and autocracy of Sponberg. Thus, amnesty does not only seem ap- propriate, but essential. For the blacks there can hardly be asked to cooperate in further negotiations with the adminis- tration while 14 of t h e i r brothers are charged with ludicrous offense f o r at- tempting to improve not only their own lot, but the condition of the entire school. -JIM HECK Editorial Page Editor "And now, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Garrison, with his bare hands . - p 4 -4 J -'1 ..u Letters to the Editor ROTC the past year I have had to read the works of Mao Tse-Tung, Che To the Editor: Guevara, and General Giap. If we BEFORE ROTC loses academic are being indoctrinated I respect- credit on this campus I think fully submit our instructors go all involved should understand the about it in a funny way. motives of those who wish to elim-' Perhaps professional training is inate it. The basic rationales giv- not a fit endeavor for academic en are: the program is not rigor- credit? To this rationale for ROTC ous enlough, it is training and not credit elimination I can only point academnic work, it is an indoctri- to the colleges of dentistry, medi- nation program for the Army, and cine, business administration, etc., military training is an improper etc., and ask why their credit isn't subject to be taught at a univer- taken away. sity. Let us examine these given This brings us to the last ra- reasons to see if we can locate the tionale, that Military Science is real ones. not a fit subject to be taught at a university. This was the reason The first rationale, that ROTC frankly given by Harvard and courses are "cake" courses a n d Yale, and while not agreeing, I thereby are not entitled to credit, must respect their honesty. This seems to be a newly arrived at in- seems to be the only of the rea- consistantly applied, criteria for sons given for credit elimination granting credit, not to mention that doesn't fall upon examina- false when applied to ROTC. The tion. There is no definition of what mean grade point average for my is proper or improper in the aca- Military Science 301 course was demic community beyond indiv- 2.31. probably one of the lowest of idual freedom. any junior course taught. We re- Those who would t a k e away ceive 1 hour of credit for 3 hours credit f r o m ROTC courses be-' of class, not to lmention prepara- cause they don't approve of what tion and o a "cake" course. Butis being taught take upon them- if we are o ato eliminate credit selves the role of censors. O n e goingtmight argue that elimination of for all cake courses, then Psych. credit is not censorship, but really 101 must be a resounding choice it is tantamount to it. If credit for first on the list. B u t there were eliminated for Philosophy doesn't seem to be any movement its study would decrease drastic- to disenfranchise Psych. 101. Mr. ally. Those who would take the Landsman writes no editorials role of censor legitimatize t h a t about it, so this can't be the prime role and automatically extend criteria for credit elimination. that right to every one who has Perhaps ROTC is an indoctri- the power to censor. In the aca- nation program, for the Army? It demic c o m m u n i t y censorship probably is to the degree the busi- should be the last thing we should ness school is an indoctrination find, program for business, the medical -Roger McCarthy school for medicine, etc. In ROTC Feb. 17 * Who would hire an Afro-Mexican-A merindian wog nan? *S By JENNY STILLER Editorial Page Editor ONE OF THE standard demands increasingly being put forth by militant Black and Third World forces, particularly on the West Coast, calls for university administra- tions to guarantee the hiring of Afro- A m e r i c a n s, Mexican-Americans, Orientals and women in proportions equivalent to their predominance in the general population. While adoption of such a basis for hiring would undoubtedly lead to a more varigated, and thereby pre- sumably more interesting faculty, it might also bring with it unexpected difficulties. * * *h Imagine that the millenium has P.M.: I'm afraid I'll have to ask you a few questions, to see if you confirm with our new fair hiring practices. Smith: That's quite all right. P.M.: Well, it's obvious that you are a Negro. Could you tell me what your religion is? Smith: Protestant. P.M.: Denomination? Smith: Baptist. P.M.: (consulting a list): Oh dear. The sociology department already has its quota of black Baptists. Would you consider changing your religion? Smith: I'm afraid my wife would object. P.M.: Hmmm. Well, I see here that you minored in history as an under- graduate. Would you consider taking an appointment in the history de- you are a mathematician and a phys- ical chemist. Is that correct? Freihoff: Yes. You should have the information right there. I've done postgraduate work at both M.I.T. and Cal Tech, P.M.: I didn't realize that you would be a woman, Doctor. Of course, we don't ask for information that would reveal your sex, race, creed, or country of national origin in your resume, in compliance with the 1964 Civil Rights Act, as interpreted by the Supreme Court in Francescetti v. Dow Chemical Corporation in 1974. However, in accordance with our fair hiring practices policy, I must say that it is extremely fortunate that you are a woman. Are you married? Freihoff: Yes. P.M.: Excellent, excellent. That means I can fit you in as either of German or British extraction. Reli- gion? Freihoff: Atheist. P.M.: Uh, functional or tradition- al? That is, were your parents also atheist? Freihoff: Yes, My grandparents too, though they were nominally Protestant. P.M.: Then I'm afraid I won't be able to make a place for you, Dr. Freihoff. Both the math and chem- istry departments have as many atheists as they can handle. Freihoff: But neither department has more than two or three, as fir as I can tell. P.M.: Yes, but you must realize His secretary shows in the next ap- plicant.) P.M.: Miss Gonzales? Please be seated. Gonzales: Thank you. P.M.: I understand that you are applying for an instructorship in the English department, Miss Gonzales. I hope that you realize that it is ex- tremely difficult for us to find any- one who can fit into the English de- partment at the predoctoral level. When do you expect to finish your thesis? Gonzales: Not for another year at least. I need the instructorship to live on while I write it, or to enable me to take the time off to write it later. a P.M.: I see. Well, we might as well get right down to business. Could you UCLA, I moved to England, and earn- ed my Master's at Cambridge. P.M.: Oh. (Consulting his files.) I see. (A smile begins to come over his face and he leafs through his lists with growing enthusiasm.) I think I may offer you the instructorship. Just one more point, though it's relatively unimportant. What is your religion? Gonzales: Druid. P.M.: What??? Gonzales: Druid. I picked it up at Cambridge. P.M.: Hmmm. Well, um . . . (con- sults another list. His face falls>. I am very sorry-truly " sorry-Miss Gonzales, but there is already a Druid in the philosophy department. I wish there were some way to hire you, but unless you could change your reli- P.M.: That's very interesting. You're the first white applicant we've had for the black studies department in some time. Could you tell me your religion and country of national origin? Brown: Well, I'm a Methodist, but as to country of national origin, I'm not really sure. Ohio is about the best I could come up with, but I'm only basing that on the assumption that my great-grandfather fought in an Ohio regiment during the Civil War. P.M.: Do you mean to tell me that you are an old-stock native Amer- ican, white, Anglo-Saxon, and Prot- estant? Brown: That's about it. P.M.: I wish you had come to us sooner. Almost every department in *~hP ,,ini7',vr c, iG o'ring fr 'm~n of i