r JAMES WECHSLER..... ier frdign Datj Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Inside South Vietnc 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521'd Editorials printed in The Michigan DOaily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: DANIEL ZWERDLING 'Pre-finals i " A priori DAILY EDITORIALS have often been justifiably criticized for dwelling too long and too Peavily on the same tired old issues. Considering this is the last real Satur- day before finals, we will attempt to save time and reader effort by present- ing, in a new easy-to-read short form, our a priori reactions to most of the news in this morning's and yesterday's papers. Not surprisingly, we totally deplore the unwarranted use of police at Harvard. We also wonder hbw administrators can consistently fail to recognize that re- liance on the police in internal campus matters is not only philosophically un- sound, but strategically counter-produc- tive. THE SECOND big story on today's front page concerns President Nixon's all- new surplus budget. While we recognize, the soundness of the economic thinking behind the President's entire anti-infla- tion program, vfe lament the fact that all too often such purely fiscal efforts mean ,reduction in vital domestic spending while the military machine continues to grow fat pn a 10 per cent income tax sur-, charge. The third major story on today's front page concerns an inane speech that Gen- eral Hershey made in Lansing, claiming that legal conscientious objection to the draft is on the way out. We can only hope that the general is confusing wist- ful thinking and political insight. But perhaps we are naive in placing so much faith on the good judgment of Congress. FOR A MOMENT, let us pause to bow our heads in honor of those two brave fraternity entrepreneurs who have fallen In the line of duty. Theirs was a noble mission-keeping students supplied with vital-albeit nefarious and sinful (not to mention illegal)-chemical and biological substances. Remembering the basic economic prin- ciple of supply and demand, we can only hope that the incarceration of these two brave men will have only a minimal effect on the prevailing price level. Hell, finals are only a week away. HAVING EXHAUSTED today's rather empty front page, we now turn to yesterday's paper. The Stanford University sit-in protest- ing classified research reminds us that the issue has been settled less than ad- mirably here in Ann Arbor. While there may have been strategic merit in the decision to focus student activism this year on such academic issues as the lan- guage requirement, there is still the un- set-tled matter of government research on the campus. Editorial Staf HENRY GRIX, Editor STEVE NISSEN RON LANnSMAN City Editor Managing Editor MARCIA ABRAMSON .....Associate Managing Editor PHILIP BLO(K .........Associate Managing Editor STEVE ANZALONE .......... Editorial Page Editor JIM EC'K...........Editortai Page Editor JENNY STILLER ......... ...Edtorial Page Editor LESLIE WAYNE ......................... Arts Editor JOHN GRAY .................. Literary Editor ANDY SACKS ......... Photo Edttor LANIE LIPPINCOTT ............Contributing Editor MARY RADTKE .......... Contributing Editor MICHAEL THORYN .............Contributing Editor madness: opinions Infact, academic reform can only be of a limited nature until students assert effectively their demand that teaching take priority over research in the Uni- versity community. Thursday, the Board of Governors of Residence Halls recommended' that all restrictions on women's hours be abol- ished. Dormitory in loco parentis now seems so much a part of the past that we were rather shocked to discover that even 10 per cent of the girls under 21 still musti observe hours. Since the battle has been effectively won, we can only applaud the demise of the last vestiges of this out- nioded philosophy. T TNFORTUNATELY, at this point we have exhausted all the news available to us for comment. Aware, like most of the literate inhabitants of Ann Arbor, that the only really decent paper avail- 'able here is the New York Times, we now turn to the Friday morning edition (Sat- urday's hasn't come in yet) for enlighten- ment. All our predictions went awry when we discovered that former New York Mayor Robert Wagner has finally decided to run for a delayed fourth term. We can see no reason other than masochism for Wagner -who has little political future, whether he wins or loses-to again seek the most thankless job in America. Wagner's entry creates myriad prob- lems for current Mayor John V. Lindsay, since Wagner's 12 tumultous years have begun to take on the same nostalgic aura that the Eisehhower Administration held during the darkest days with LBJ. REFLECTING HIS traditional Europe- first, attitudes, President Nixon at- tempted in a speech before the NATO Council of Ministers to credit an illusion of life to that outmoded organization. His new idea-to give NATO a "more pro- found political image" - does not solve the fundamental problem of a lack of effective Allied limitations on unilateral American decisions. In a major speech in Washington, King Hussein of Jordan offered a six-point plan to diffuse the tensions in the Middle East. The peace plan was even more significant because Hussein claired to be speaking with the' "personal authority" of Presi- dent Nasser of Egypt. What Hussein essentially offers is a guarantee of Israeli sovefeignty and a guarantee of access by Israeli shipping to the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba in exchange for the return of the territories Israel captured during the 1967 war, in- cluding Jerusalem. We tend to regard this as a major breakthrough in ' the continuing impasse in the Middle East, and fervently hope that Israel's self-righteousness has not blinded her to the folly of placing too great a reliance on a military solution to this festering crisis. WE HOPE THAT this brief survey of the most timely of our top prejudices has convinced some of our less-patient read- ers that there is merit in our tendency to comment perhaps excessively in our more regular editorials. -THE EDITORIAL DIRECTORS DAVID TRUONG and I talked about a letter he had received from his father, a leader of the peace movement in Viet- nam who has been imprisoned by the Thieu-Ky regime. We discussed at length the question of whether I should publish his father's letter. It is'too easy to make Journalistic decisions that may involve one man's life or death. But at the end of our meeting, we agreed that the desperate effort of the Thieu-Ky regime to pretend that it is the voice .of South Vietnam was so outrageous that the statement of the man who stood up against that cabaldin the Vietnamese elec- tion should be placed on the record. And I hope that the following words from Truong Dinh Dzu to his son will be heard around the world. Associated Press, please copy. MY DEAR DAVID, Today is the fourth of the first month of the Vietnamese calendar of the New Year of the Cock. It is your year, as you were born on Sept. 2, 1945. It will also be our year, the year of success for the group for peace in Vietnam. I am feeling well although the deten- tion and the constant surveillance are quite hard for my nerves. Without any pressure from Nixon, I don't think I and other well-known non-Communists will ever be released. I am doing my best not to break down. There are terrible moments when I feel I am cracking. A delegation of deputies from the Assembly recently visited the island, and I promised the major of the place that I would not try to meet them. However, my guardian had clamped with lumber every door and window of the little shack for two days and there wasn't any food coming in. After the delegation left, then I was let out. I felt like hitting the guardian. 1M.View from DESPITE ALL this, I believe that the might not allowr Americans must give some justification to a month and pu their people about continuing this war. our family. On th With the new communique of Hanoi and tell the people b the NLF about a peace cabinet for Saigon, is far from over. Nixon and Lodge will eventually have to paign might be ov concede on that point if they want to end there is need fo the war. Otherwise, there are good pros- present rate, we; pects that it will not be over by 1972. 1972 with a bigge To a New Yeara On the other hand, the ne governmenthappiness and p must include those renowned nationalists who can deal with the NLF and Hanoi NOW LET ther because they have the potential to organ- If the consequent ize the existing religious groups in South this column is s Vietnam and because they hold high revenge against th prestige with the people. From now until late May '69, events will lead to my re- quoted here, I am lease, and by July it is possible that a an explosive expi new cabinet will take shape in Saigon. sense of justice an I hope you will handle this letter with thing goes wrong, care because if the Saigon regime finds out paperman watchi that this is for release in the U.S., Saigon (C) N tjail mother to visit me once t tighter restrictions on he other hand, you must ack there that the war The Presidential cam- ver, but not Vietnam. So r further effort., At the all might have to face er Vietnam, of success for all of us, of eace for our country. e be only this footnote: ze of the publication of ome form of Thieu-Ky he man whose words are n confident there will be ression of the American nd decency. And if some- there will be one news- ,ng. ew York Post I *WALTER SHAPIRO Fleming and the De Sade Memorial Orgy MAYBE IT was all the sudden attention being given to "Michigan, the Quiet Campus.' Perhaps it was the sobering real- ization that in three short weeks this institution is scheduled to hand me a degree duly certifying my four years of residency. More likely it was something I,aite. Anyway the other morning I had a dream about this place. I fan- tasized what this University would be like seven years hence in the early spring of 1976. Like the proverbial old grad who seizes any opportunity to revisit the haunts of his impetuous youth, I stopped off in Ann Arbor on my way to a plumbing fixtures sales conference in Chicago. Seized by an unfathomable urge to return to the classrooms which had provided the focus of my un- dergraduate i education, I was startled to hear my footsteps echo across the empty Diag. Academic tranquility is one .thing, but a total absence of movement is something else. THE COBWEBS on the doors of Mason and Angell Halls - testified to their long disuse. What is this, I wondered, a student-faculty boy- cott in the midst of this hotbed of academic harmony? Not exactly. Reading a mimeo- graphed handbill taped to the wall, I discovered that University President Robben W. Fleming had cancelled classes in honor of the 220th anniversary of the birth of Aaron Burr. The handbill - printed by Stu- dent Friends of Villified Vice-Pre- sidents - bitterly attacked Flem- ing "for setting aside only one' short day to honor this great American." The leaflet condemn- ed as "conscienceless corporate li- beralism" Fleming's contention that he would have cancelled classes all week forBurr had he not already set aside the other four days to honor, respectively, Jean Jacques Rousseau, W. C. Fields, Luther Burbank and Pan- cho Villa. RELUCTANTLY PASSING up an opportunity to attend the spec- ial memorial services at Canter- bury House, I wandered around the corner to Mark's Coffeehouse. It was populated by one rather wan 1 o o k i n g bearded-radical- Communist-hippie-freak n a m e d Tom. He looked up from his New York Times uncomprehendingly when I greeted him by announc- ing, "Hi, I used to know Eric Chester and Bruce Levine." Feeling incredibly middle-aged and corpulant I tried to make conversation by asking, "What's happened to this place - calling off classes in honor of a 220-year- old politicians? Why, hell, when I was a lad, the University didn't even call off classes wh e n former Presidents died." Suddenly I knew I had struck $I a responsive chord. A light gleam- ed in the eyes of this lonely radi- cal, a bit of spittle appeared in. the orifice between his black beard and moustache, and he began to talk with the kind of insistant quality which reminded my col- lege-trained mind of the Ancient Mariner "who stopeth one of three." "IT ALL STARTED in t h e spring of '69," he began with a torrent of pent-up emotion, "when President Fleming completely pacified the Black Students Un- ion by merely cancelling. some classes in honor of Martin Luther King. There were a few student objections, but these came only from malcontents who wanted the University to also cancel classes for such worthies as Dwight Eis- enhower and Jesus Christ. "Anyway," he continued, "Flem- ing, who had been really afraid that the black students w o ul d want more scholarships or some- thing else that would cost money. suddenly realized the strategic possibilities of symbolic cancella- tions of classes." BY NOW TOM had warmed to his topic and went on with his tale in a voice a little softer than a shout. "So that fall, when SDS threatened new protests over war research, Fleming moved quickly* to preserve his national reputation and the University's fat Pentagon contracts. Realizing that he could no longer pacify the militants with toothless commissions, Fleming called in the SDS leaders and of- fered them three days of cancelled classes in honor of Che Guevara, Rosa Luxembourg, and L e o n Trotsky. When he threw in Fried- rich Engels and Joe Hill. SDS yielded." The speaker paused for breath and tears welledup in my eyes as I contemplated the brilliance and audacity of the peerless Robben W. Fleming. Tom began again: "From there things mushroomed like mad. A YAF threat of a class boycott got the University to similarly honor Joe McCarthy, Douglas MacAr- thur, and Pope Pius IX. The tired liberals got a day for Adlai Stev- enson, the Ripon Society got to commemorate Wendell Wilkie and the Sexual Freedom League was allowed to rent the Events Build- ing for the Marquis de Sade Me- morial Orgy. "A few academic departments put up a halfhearted resistance to the wholesale* dismissal of classes, but it was really no use. A mass resignation by the entire classics department fizzled when Fleming agreed to lead a vigil in the middle of State Street mark- ing the untimely death of Socra- tes. The only problem was that most students thought it was a funeral for an Ann Arbor restaur- ant owner." SUDDENLY I noticed that it was now the middle of the lunch hour and we were still the only two people in Mark's. "It'must be pretty lonely to be a radical around here these days," I said sympathetically. "What do you people do with your time a n y - way?" "Mostly we sit around aband- oned coffeehouses waiting to an- swer the questions of national magazine writers who come to town to do the definitive feature on 'Robben Fleming: Michigan's Miraculous Mediator.' By the way," ,he asked,' "what magazine are you with anyway?" "Magazine? I'm not with any magazine. I'm with an alumnus and the Midwest sales manager for Peerless Plumbing Fixtures, Inc.," I said proudly. When Tom . left rather too adruptly, I wandered about, re- membering to pick up a catalogue and An admissions application for my three-year-old son. Glancing through the catalogue, I noticed the academic schedule bore a distinct resemblance to the medieval church calendar. The one with five saints 'days p e r week. Except Michigan even had the Catholic Church beat. The only days when classes weren't dismissed were April 1 and Hal- loween.+ "And," the secretary in t h e alumni office told me,' "a few months -ago there was some talk by a few religious groups on cam- pus of claiming Halloween as a religious holiday." AMAZED at this veritable trans- formation of the Harvard of the Midwest, I wondered how the faculty was taking the new state of affairs. "What has happened to all those faculty members who love to teach?" I asked the secre- tary. "Both of them left last year," she said. "The rest of the faculty just love this new system," she added enthusiastically, "for they are now almost totally free of stu- dents. They spend theirdays re-' searching, publishing, and most- ly chatting with their colleagues. "And it has paid off," she added proudly. "Last Year the University was topped by only Harvard and ,Berkeley in the number of publish- ed words per faculty member. This year we're shooting for the top." "Where does the money come from?" I asked: "When I was a student the University had con- stant trouble getting enough money from the state legislature." "Oh, we don't have to worry about hose stick-in-the-muds in Lansing anymore," she said, beaming. "Almost all of our money comes from the Federal Govern- ment's research grants, and the slack is picked up by research con- tracts from big business And oft course, there's always tuition." "Tuition? Why do students pay tuition if there are only two days of classes a year?" "Because we still give degrees," she explained. "It costs something to print the darn things. And those few students who actually want to learn do it on their own or catch faculty members during their coffeebreaks. It all works out just fine."I SADDENED by the epic changes that time had relentlessly wrought, I bade a sad farewell to my alma mater. Once settled into my airplane seat with my plumbing fixtures display case at my side, I picked up the intellectual reading matter that my years at college had taught me to appreciate, There on the cover of Time was the smiling and somewhat bemused-looking Robben W. Flem- ing. Eagerly I turned to the cover story, expecting another insight- ful in-depth study of "Michigan, the Quiet Campus. Instead I discovered a six-page spread on . Robben W. Fleming, labor mediator and University President, generally ,considered the prime contender for the Dem- ocratic Presidential nomination. Turning the page, I discovered that polls showed that only 6 per cent of all voters had any objec- tions to a Japanese-American President. Time then went on to cautiously predict that the Re- publicans would nominate Senator Hayakawa of California as this year's law-and-order candidate. And the smart money at Vegas was predicting that he would choose Governor Pusey of Massa- chusetts as his running mate. With that dismal vision of the world of 1976 still dancing before my eyes, I leaned back in the air- plane seat, closed my eyes, .and woke up to discover-to my infi- nite joy-that the University of Michigan in the spring of 1969 isn't such a bad place after all. A I Letters to the Editor Form/Content To the Editor: PROF. DAVID SEGAL'S letter to The Daily yesterday about the Sociology Student Union is an. example of the type of faculty misunderstanding / misrepresenta-. tion that we consistently face in the sociology department. To clear up the facts: The union is working in the department to achieve structural changes that will allow for equal student and faculty decision-making. At the present time the sociology faculty does not even allow students to attend faculty meetings to hear discussions about the issues that are directly relevant to our aca- demic lives, We are unsure why the depart- ment has such a passion for secrecy, particularly in light of the fact that the literary college has opened its meetings. The union voted last week to go to the faculty meeting regardless of the specific items on the agenda in support of the principle of open decision-making. Segal asserts in his letter that we went to the ieeting on the basis of misinformation from Marc Van Der Hout that the fac- ulty was going to discuss our cur- riculum reform proposall In fact the statement we pre- sented to the. faculty said . spe- cifically that we were there be- cause we believe the faculty should have open meetings. Of course, the haste in which the faculty ad- journed the meeting on seeing students may be one reason why Segal missed the contents of the statement. IT IS PLAIN that there is little communication in the department between students and faculty. We will continue our efforts to -work for change, but we hope we can do so with the cooperation of the faculty. The Student Union invites all sociology faculty and students to an open forum Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the student lounge, where of usage by men not characterized by a nice sense of words it has lost, all of its meaning and much of its sting. At various times in my life. I have gone to school in the gutter, and at five I had a more appropri- ate, ornate and baroque vocabu- lary of pejoratives than Mr. Landsman has at age 20. After all, "fascist" is such a weak and silly WASP term of denigration. More importantly, Mr! Lands- man's want of imagination is ex- ceeded only by his lack of knowl- edge of what a "fascist" is. "Fas- cists" are men who do not want and cannot stand debate and dis- cussion. "Fascists" are men who wish to deny any appeal to the democratic process. "Fascists" are men who believe in rule by lead- ers, committees, and elitks. "Fas- cists" are men who assume that force is a more apt educational in- strument than reason. IS IT "FASCIST to suggest that the whole college rather than a committee acting arbitrarily should decide the issue of credit for ROTC courses? Is it "fascist" to argue that such questions ought to be considered and debated rather than accepted on the man- date of The Daily and the cur- riculum committee? Is it "fascist" to urge that in political matters confronting the University the to- tal political community should be consulted? I have, in my misguid- ed way, always assumed that such attitudes Were democratic. MICHAEL POLANYI in his book Beyond Nihilism has argued that one of the characteristic marks of the "Fascist" is his undiscriminat- ing moral enthusiasm, a moral en- thusiasm which enables h i m to commit crimes in the name of the "higher life." Of course, do not wish to call Mr. Landsman a "fas-, cist" but he does s h o w certain signs of an undiscriminating mor- al athleticism which if he contin- ues to practice it will plunge him-' self into either buffoonery or mis- ery. -Prof. Stephen J. Tonsor sage of respect for humanity, young performers and values, in- tellectual honesty, and just plain good entertainment into o u r homes than any television show for several years. If t h e r e is a show on television which attempts to "tell it like it is," this is it. 1 URGE that all readers who sympathize with the causes of the Smothers Brothers and the ideals that they represent write a letter today to CBS, its local affiliate WJBK-TV in Detroit, and/or the brothers themselves to 1 e t their views be known. It may not be toc late to rescue this show, -Marcello Truzzi April 4 Come, 2Mr. Nix To the Editor: COME NOW Mr. Nix, and offi- cials of the gov., hate is..one thing, a n d another, love. - O u r ABM, though it blast Them (af- ter lengthly haw and hem), will despite our boo and hoo, surely blow us sky-high too. Let us then forget this fuss, lest it be said by earthly, dregs, that soldiers lifted their h a t s to us, while dogs lifted their legs. -Rod Ratt, '68 March 24 Racist languages To the Editor: THE PRESENT discussion on the language requirement of- fers a perfect example of the in- stitutionalization of racism. Trad- ing the language requirement for an admission requirement has a two-fold benefit for the Univer- sity. It will give the appearance of meeting student demands and it wIll help to keep blacks and other students which the University considers "undesirable" out of the University. Admission requirements are rac- ist by nature and requiring a lan- I MISP.1 U F H W19. y'V TOEUP A%~ A -A 5TX< THE K05, I'5 AU L w 61 r,,,-, p v . . TO 66 HUSBAMP AMP STAY AVT SAVE TO -J a X'V6 *TP A ©0DD FATHER AMP o eY MY CHI REVU~ C Oc. Got;. \ i * 5 I+DPt AC2PID A lm, -I-,-.,1f " r" v _,r I