I -1 4el Sfriigan DaiIy Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan' ceteris paribus::-:::-,- ..,'},v.;, . {%.'' :}v :".""...:;: .. . , "t'.. .: .. . . ."f'"ti:.'." {1{,"L1i''4..1''31 "..{{{:{v ;.a :t" :;: :x{ :z; ^',>"x+:: _ ~vi t"{v ,:k... " 'w11-. . Vive la difference-BUT 0 . jenny stiller a ............: .... .... v::.v::;; ................... .::.-r.::v:w::.1:::1v: f:rev: ".": vv.: "................ ....,.,..,.... ...........,.....,... .............. . r....:::::.{..1h Y11"."f.v:::::.1 :::.:::"."".h":"::;::.:Y.'f::f..".'::f:.:.}::":{:". :...... ...,::."::: f::. r:."."::.": ::.:::..... .... ,,,.h... e..,...... .. ...................................... ....................:::.:, ... .,.......... .. .. ,............... F .:.rh ......h... ,..... } .^...,.......,. ............. .. ....::.hh".::av;:;: r:.v."rhv."n'.Y r::: r. ,raa":: .1vf:.v:"rr:.":n:::::v::7:":.v:'}::"}:"d4'.h:....nn^.:.::::::w::.. .v: :.":.".fiauvf:f:.f.:vr:.t:v.ah:rof.".1":.{:"7r.vx: h'{".v:."X.:{"?8?}:{i"}:"7b 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in ll reprints. THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: STUART GANNES A solution the faculty must accept LAST NOVEMBER a large group of students petitioned for an end to the literary college language and distribution requirements.. For the next eight months faculty members traded information, debated and drew up proposals. But mostly, they postponed. Students demonstrated their concern many times, even once spending a night outside a dean's office. Still nothing hap- pened. In the impasse the curriculum commit- A hungry House THE HOUSE of Representatives praised itself recently for "strengthening of children's food service programs"-or so the title appeared in the March 20 Con- 'gressional Record. However, the passage of House Bill 515 was not quite as fortunate as the con- gressional record made it sound. Under the bill, as Michigan representa- tive Mrs. Martha W. Griffiths (D-17th district) pointed out, 51 per cent of the children in the city of Minneapolis, 78 of the 79 ghetto schools in Detroit, one-third of all elementary schools in large Eastern cities and many other similar areas will not receive the benefits. It appears the House wrote into its philanthropy the provision that subsidi- zation will only.be given to schools that have cooking facilities. Naturally, ghetto schools, which barely have classrooms, don't have ovens. "SO IN REALITY," Mrs. Griffiths ex- plains, "when this program is passed, Bloomfield Hills, which has a very high income, and also Grosse Pointe will be getting subsidized school lunch programs but in the ghettos of Detroit nobody will be fed." Next week Congress considers more crime legislation, with particular em- phasis on ghetto crime where stealing seems to be on the rise. -JIM HECK Editorial Page Editor Sports Staff tee sent to the faculty somewhat reason- able proposals which culminated months of study. But the faculty ignored them. Again, action was postponed. Instead, a committee was created to structure a "general studies degree." Its report has now been completed and in view of the student referendum last week the faculty has little choice but to take some kind of decisive action. THE REPORT recommends .a restruc- tured Bachelor of Science degree with two possible options: -Departmental concentration in which the department would set its own require- ments for the degree; -A degree in general studies requiring 60 hours course work in 300 level and above courses with no concentration and no more than 20 hours in any one de- partment. Each will be considered separately by the faculty at a meeting expected next week. Only one deserves endorsement- the general.studies program. This option places the burden of getting an education precisely where it belongs- on the students' shoulders. Students who choose the general studies option would need only a coun- selor's permission in their freshman year. This gives students an extremely flexible and broadly-based program which would permit them to decide their own type of education. THE BEAUTY of the general studies degree program is that since there is no coercion the student is able to deter- mine his own education. This is an ulti- mate in student power, and this student power is without doubt educationally sound for it affirms the belief in the necessary sancity of the individual learn- ing process. The departmental option is not as sound. It is highly unlikely that all the departments would structure their pro- grams to comply with the overwhelming student mandate to eliminate the lan- guage requirement. Indeed, as it exists as an alternative to a proposal in which there is no language requirement it seems implicit it is intended to provide the faculty with the option to ignore student demands nd relegislate the status quo. -RICK PERLOFF BOUT 150 people, mostly women, got together in St. Andrews' Church Mondat night under the auspices of Women's Liberation. We listened to an introductory panel explain what the movement was and is striving to become, saw a film of the demonstration at the Miss America pageant last summer, and broke up into groups to rap about women and men and society. Women's Liberation is a loose conglomeration of local groups, with no national headquarters and no central statement of goals. Rather, each group takes the shape which best suits itself, some being essentially discussion circles, some concentrating on reaching ghetto or suburban women, others planning militant disruptions of beauty pageants and bridal fairs. Many of the groups. outgrowths of the New Left, sprang up within the last year or so in response to male chauvinism within the Movement. Most of these maintain close ties with the parent organization. Often, as with the Women's Caucus of People Against Racism (PAR), they exist as a subsidiary body of some sort. But many of the women present at the church Monday night were neither the militants of the New Left nor the socially concerned of Guild House or the Social Work School. There were a lot of students there, of course, but also quite a few housewives and former housewives (now students or working women), most of them in their thirties. WHAT MADE them different from most of their neighbors was not an unusually strong social conscience, but rather an awareness of their own inferior position in, society. They had realized that there must be something more to life than being a wife and mother, and they came to the Liberation meeting to see if they could find out how to get what they were missing. The discussion groups were of prime importance. They ranged in topics from the political ("Women in the New Left") to the social ("The Black Women"), to the psychological ("Psychology of Women"), to the sexual ("The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm"). There was even a discussion section to which the few men present were par- ticularly invited-the one dealing with male chauvinism. These discussions all seemed to point up the two essential prob- lems which the Liberation is trying to deal with. The first and most pervasive and long-range is essentially psy- chological in orientation. It involves trying to define a new concept of femininity-one not dependent on male domination and female subservience. The second problem is much more concrete and as such easier to deal with in the short run. This is the economic issue-the battle for equal job opportunities, equal wages, and equal educational op- portunities. MOST OF THE women seemed chiefly concerned with the social/ sexual aspect of equality, rather than the economic issues, but perhaps this is due "only to our own choice of discussion groups. The issue was further muddied by the Leftists' view of the struggle. Some of them were reluctant to discuss the concrete issue of "jobs now" because they felt that under the present arrangement of ty society men are not free, and therefore women should not aim for ey job equality in a corrupt society, but work toward a Revolution which it would liberate everybody h- , .But while there was some disagreement over economic issues, everyone agreed that socio-sexual exploitation would have to go. te And since no one is really sure just what personality characteris- n- tics are biologically feminine, most discussion of what the feminine t. personality should be were exploratory in nature. ss But the whole problem in both its aspects was played out in ic miniature in a discussion which occurred late that evening. The l topic was male chauvinism, and over half the people present were is men. n IT SOON became obvious to every woman in the room that the as worst thing about male chauyinism is that so few men are willing he or able to recognize it in themselves. n-- Very few educated men today are hardliners who would insist that d. the woman's place is in the home. Instead, while giving lip service to the idea of sexual equality, they refuse to take any feminist movement seriously and persist in maintaining the barriers which exist between the ambitious woman and the professional world, using the old circular argument that "you'll just get married (or have a baby, or move away when your husband does) and quit anyway." When the smoke cleared around midnight, and we all began to leave the room, the reporter 'talked to a couple of the more vocal men on the way out. And because she had been somewhat assertive earlier, l they paid her their ultimate compliment: they treated her like an equal; that is, like a man. Thrillsville, as they say in the business. Sisters, we have a long, long way to go. 01 -Daily-Jay Cassidy LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Brains in that beauteous body* A To the Editor: IN RESPONSE to your front page editorial entitled, "Free- dom from 36-22-36" run Sunday, March 23, in The Daily: Certain matters of fact, espe- cially as regards their error, omis- sion or interpretation concern me. I attended the pageant, remained for its duration and found no oc- casion for sleep or boredom. No where in the editorial was I able to find the name of the suc- cessful contestant, Diane Michele Borgus. What puzzles me even more is that such an omission could occur when she is a student (sophomore) at The University. JC's are, as almost anyone knows, a group of young men be- tween the ages of 21 and 35. A check of the JC membership rec- ords would indicate a median age of about 27. Further, of the "15 male Ushers (all of them well over 30") only two actually are over 30, and just barely at that. THE SINGULAR preoccupation of the author of the editorial with women's rights and recognition of all people as beautiful clouds another very important fact: that a black woman won, even when adjudicated against white stand- ards. She was chosen as Miss Ann Arbor not only because she was beautiful, but remarkably talented. Talent accounts for 50 per cent of the points when judges evalu- atetthe contestants. Yet the editor- ial would lead you to conclude that beauty and body were the key to success. Personally, I feel much more threatened by the attitude of an editor who finds it necessary and is able to perjuretherself, her story and the facts to accomplish a subjective end than by a "maiden- form mentality."' I would like to make one last point that to me is significant. This is only the second time the project (The Pageant) was under-, taken. It is large, very complex, and demanding, planned and ad- ministered by JC's who donate their time as did many of those who participated in the produc- tion. It also offers an opportunit for up to six girls to obtain tnon for their education whereby might not otherwise be fortl coming. I recognize the right of anyor to disagree with some of the fur damental precepts of the Pagean It further is their right to addre their grievances to the publ (even though their picketing a most blocked the entrance). It not their right and is in fact v infringement upon my rightsE well as. those of the rest of ti audience and participants to di rupt the performance. Such car not and should not be condone -Richard L. De Lisle Member, Ann Arbor Jaycees March 24 Letters to the editor should be typed triple spaced and no longer than 300 words. All let- ters are subject to editing, and those over 300 words will gen- erally be shortened. Unsigned letters will not be printed. 9i JOEL BLOCK, Sports Editor ANDY BARBAS, Executive Sports Editor BILL CUSIJMANO...... ... Associate Sports1 M FORRESTER ..... ...Associate SportsI ROBIN WRIGHT.. . ,.Associate Sports JOE MARKER........ ....... Contributing7 Editor Editor Editor Editor Enter due process and equal enforcement through the bay ok door u .L ' EDITOR'S- NOTE: In his earlier arti- cles, Mr. Neubacher has traced the university's so-far unsuccessful at- tempts to establish a campus-wide governing body, University Council, and the conflict between students'and faculty on the nature of that proposed body. Today, in the final article in his series, he discusses the formation of a student judiciary, Central Student Judiciary. By JIML NEUBACHER (Last of eThree Parts) IN THE FALL TERM, 1967, students, and administrators were at odds over the judicial processes of t h e University. The Joint Judiciary Council, the all-student body entrusted with final judicial decision-making power in cases involving non-academic behav- ior of students, had refused to con- vict students of violating rules not made by students. Only SGC rules, or rules made under authority granted by SGC (dorm-living rules for ex- ample) were enforced. Administrators began to take things into their own hands to insure their continued control of students' lives and politics. In December, it was revealed that then Vice President for Student Af- fairs Richard Cutler had written a letter to the administrative board of the literary college asking that the board discipline Voice-SDS political party leader Karen Daenzer for her involvement in a student protest against military research. Cutler nev- er told Mrs. Daenzer about the letter. The administrative board, which in the past had operated solely to review academic matters such as cheating and plagarism, refused to handle the request by Cutler, That did not deter administrators, however. Director of University Hous- Cutler-Daenzer incident. The Presi- dential Commission on the Role of Students in Decision-Making, which spent more than a year devising new University legislative and judicial processes, saw clearly that power was either hazily defined, or blatantly unrestricted in the hands of adminis- trators. That commission, created in the aftermath of the aborted student power movement of Fall '66, released its report just one year ago in March '68. The report recommended a cen- tralized judicial system, with control held by students. It further recom- mended that students have original jurisdiction over cases. Schools and colleges with their own judiciaries, especially those professional schools, were asked to join the centralized system. WITH THIS REPORT in mind, the the student-faculty ad hoc committee on Regents' Bylaws went to work to define a judicial system, and to set up areas of jurisdiction and standards. of due process and judicialfairness. Whether the version they h a v e created combines all of these things is a disputable question. A violent split exists between student and fac- ulty members on the committee over questions of jurisdiction, student membership on tribunal bodies, and the process of appeal. There has been more of a struggle over the judicial structure than over any other part of the bylaws. It is a delicate and sensitive issue. The ju- diciary is where the ultimate power of rule-making really exists. ating a legislative body for the Uni- versity as a whole, the committee had recognized the principle that there are specialized interest groups with- in the framework of the University. There must, in addition to the Uni- versity-wide rule-making body, be a student government, with sole re- sponsibility for and authority over those activities and concerns of strictly a student nature, the com- mission felt. The commission also recognized that the faculties of the individual schools and colleges must be given the sole power to manage those af- fairs pertinent only to faculty mem- bers. But the concept of school and col- lege autonomy is not, and was never intended to be, equal to the antiquat- ed but practiced concept of faculty dictatorship over events and proce- dures in a given school. The decis- ion-making commission had insisted that students be given a say in all matters of a departmental nature af- fecting them. At the school and college level, the commission report specifically stated that students should have participa- tion in judicial procedures. DESPITE THE WORK of, a year, the ad hoc committee has left unde- fined the legislative and judicial rights of students on the school and college level. Instead, it has devised a plan which outlines a University- wide judiciary, but makes no guaran- tee that students will have a say in the judicial system at the school and college level. This plan for a University-wide ju- Student Judiciary should be an all student group. This body would have original jurisdiction over cases aris- ing under rules proposed by the Uni- versity Council, a University-w i d e rule-making body of students, fac- ulty, and administrators. The CSJ would be established through SGC, or by referendum of the student body. Under the plan written from the faculty viewpoint by P r o f. Robert Knauss of the Law School, the CSJ would hear appeals from lower tri- bunals, like dormitory and student organization judiciaries, with one limitation; although the CSJ has the power to make the final decision in these cases, it cannot do so w h e n hearing a case appealed from the ju- dicial body of a school or college. In such a case, "if the Central Stu- dent Judiciary finds a lack of judicial fairness or due process, it shall re, mand the case to the school or col- lege for a new hearing," the Knauss draft states. Under the plan wi'itten by students, the CSJ would be able to make a fi- nal decision in all cases. It would be the supreme judicial body on campus. Students on the ad hoc committee feel the Knauss plan is simply an ex- cuse to propagate faculty control of students, especially in the light of the guarantees for student voice in school and college rule-making. NEITHER VERSION is acceptable, at this point in the negotiations, to the other side. Students have verb- ally degraded the faculty version of the judicial system in the most ex- plicit terms, while the faculty gen- tion that is astounding, looked at Westerdale with resignation, and told him quietly that the student ver- sion was just as unacceptable. "To submit decisions of a mixed student-faculty board for appeal to an all student judiciary is unaccep- table to the faculty," he said. THUS, negotiations h a v e reached an impasse. Students are insisting on a final appeal to the all-student CSJ, because they are fearful schools and colleges will not allow students enough voice in judicial matters on that level. Faculty members, assuming t h a t school and college judiciaries will be "mixed," refuse to allow their voice in matters to go down the drain. Both sides have taken a position based on mutual distrust and basic fear. The solution to the-problem is not an easy one. Each way one turns, there is a problem. Any proposal that solves one segment of the problem violates another equally important concept.' The idea of an all-student CSJ is basic to the plan. Student representa- tives would m o s t likely refuse to agree to any plan not including this provision. EQUALLY IMPORTANT, however, is the concept of school and college autonomy. Faculty members feel that decisions by a University-wide body of students will certainly not be made on the same basis as those made by a mixed board of students and fac- ulty, all from the same college. This, they feel, amounts to having some- one on the outside telling them how aries will always be of a mixed na- ture, students are justifiably suspect. Unfortunately, this problem has been handled with a "back door" ap- proach in both the student and fac- ulty drafts. The provisions under the section of due process and judicial fairness declare that no students shall 'be tried before any judiciary except those created by duly con- stituted governments. The definition of a duly constituted government is a government whose legislative body includes all of those governed, or allows all segments of the governed community to have a voice in affairs. THE SOLUTION to the current impasse over the judicial system would seem to be this: students must be very explicitly guaranteed sub- stantial voting representation on school and college rule-making and judicial bodies. With this explicitly stated, those rules made by a school or college could be enforced by the school or college. As it stands now in the student draft, the decisions of any body can only be appealed to CSJ when viola- tions of due process or judicial fair- ness occur. Thus, the CSJ, under the faculty plan would still be able to rule on whether judicial fairness h a s been ignored. However, it would have to allow the student faculty board that made the decision to reconsider the case according to standards set forth by CSJ. THIS SOLUTION really helps pre- serve the integrity, of the school and college judiciaries. And although students would not have final say over the decision, they would have substantial influence, both on the actual tribunal of deci- sian, and in the process of insuring student rights. Both students and faculty will be forced to compromise a bit in order to accept this solution. Both should realize, however, that it preserves both of their goals. Further, this would not limit the power of the all-student CSJ to hear cases from lower student judiciaries. It would also not impair the right of the CSJ to hear originally those cases arising under University Coun- cil rules. This is the most important function of the CSJ, since the Uni- versity Council is responsible for those rules of conduct pertaining to campus demonstrations, and student conduct at University events. IT ISCRUICIAL thait sonmecorn- ti SI J