Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS - - Where Opinions ee, 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 all reprints. i [URSDAY, MAY 18, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: WALTER SHAPIRO School System Discrimination: Ann Arbor Passes the Buck .a I 4 -w ~. r t ...=. t iAaPit Vsml t 1%1, The Register . , and Tribune Syndicate N ITS OWN INIMITABLE style, the city of Ann Arbor has again managed to ury an issue of extreme importance to he welfare of its citizens. The Human Relations Commission HRC) has been concerned for a long time bout possible discrimination at the Ann rbor High School Cooperative Occupa- ional Training Program, which places tudents in part-time jobs as part of their ormal education. Since January the staff nembers at the HRC have twice called the ;OT offices under assumed names seek- ng job applicants, and both times were old upon request that no -Negroes would e provided with information on the po- itions. This evidence strongly suggests that iscrimination is being practiced on a egular basis by the COT. And, if this s true, it may very well be possible that he attitude of the COT is merely a re- lection of a generalized attitude through- ut the high school and in the city at arge. )ESPITE THE SIGNIFICANCE of this problem, no effort was made either by he school's principal, Nicholas Schreib- r, the School Board, or the City Coun- iU to investigate the situation further, lespite strong protests from local civil ights groups. Instead, the issue was uried in a flurry of controversy over he ethics of the techniques used by the IRC. Last Monday Mayor Wendell Hulcher recommended to the Council that a state- ment be drawn up reaffirming "city pol- icy to deal with the public in an open manner and not under false pretenses.'' The motion was tabled indefinitely, but in doing so the whole question of dis- crimination, intricately tied to the HRC's techniques, was also shoved aside. The tactics used by the HRC should not be an issue here. Robert J. Harris, profes- sor of race relations law, said at the meeting Monday that the conduct of the HRC cannot be considered "entrapment" (as some critics have claimed) because "there was only a request made to a sus- pected discriminatory source and not ca- joling or pressure to engage in the unlaw- ful act." In criticizing the conduct of the HRC, Mayor Hulcher has said, "The most es- sential ingredient in government activity is the confidence of the people. This con- fidence must be maintained by proper actions and behavior by all public serv- ants and employes." HULCHER IS RIGHT, although for the wrong reasons. There were some pub- lic officials who did not act properly. But they are not the staff of the HRC. They are men;like Hulcher, Schreiber, and con- servative School Board member William Godfrey who are willing to use any de- ceptive means at their disposal to avoid admitting that there could be a discrim- ination problem within the school system. -DAVID DUBOFF "Gentlemen, choose your 'defensive' weapons... !" Death of a Poet [HE DEATH of John Masefield last Fri- day ended the long career of Britain's steemed poet. He had' held the post of oet-laureate for 37 years, a record ex- eeded only by Tennyson. Masefield once said of his job that it as "responsible for some of the worst xafmples of poetry in the history of nglish literature." In the 350 years that ritain has maintained public poets, only few of them have been able to achieve respected position in literary history i the face of the demeaning character f their official claim to fame. Unhappily, 'riting poems on invitation for state oc- asions has never been conducive to great terary effort. 'ORTUNATELY for John Masefield, he did not need to be poet-laureate. He, Do, will never be remembered for the orks he produced in his official capaci- r. They were not inspired by his own eed to describe, but rather by others' leas. of what needed describing. But [asefield had already established his pputation long before he became Brit- in's "state poet." He is best known for the poems and ovels he wrote early in the century. They are almost without exception about poor, wokk-hardened, struggling men and women-not world leaders, but those who are led and often abused by the world they find themselves in. In "Salt-Water Ballads," an anthology of poems about the sea, the main characters are sailors (Masefield was apprenticed as a cabin boy on a merchant ship at the age of 14). In the narrative poem "Everlasting Mer- cy," which gave Masefield his first rec- ognition and notoriety by shocking the fine sensibilities of Victorian England, the hero is a prize fighter. THE ENGLISH GENTLEMAN who died Friday at the age of 88 was a man singularly unimpressed by his job. One could almost say he was sublimely un- suited for it. In his introduction to "Salt- Water Ballads" he writes, "Others may sing of the wine and the wealth and the mirth. The portly presence of potentates goodly in girth-Mine be the dirt and the dross, the dust and scum of the earth." Thankfully, the earlier works of John Masefield the poet will in no way be dimmed by the works of Masefield, the poet-laureate. -JILL CRABTREE Lett( Kirk Walter Shapiro's analysis of or- ganized crime (May 16) begins with an account of the distaste- ful' Kirk crime campaign but launches into a polemic against illegal gambling, narcotics and prostitution. Shapiro assumes the false pos- ture of a social reformer by im- plying that legalizing vice will serve the best interests ofthe poor and of society. Anti-crime cam- paigns are futile 'and "naive," ac- cording to Mr. Shapiro, because the crimes exist only because hu- mans have an appetite for gam- bling, prostitution and dope ad- diction. His analysis of the prob- lem is economic and as such fails to penetrate the issues he raises. Society, he says, fails to profit from the revenue collected from vice, while the "American consumer industry" of organized crime hogs all the revenue col- lected from the illegal practice of these now illegal "goods and services." His solution, legalizing vice, creates the paradox of the dog chasing his tail. The states, hungry for revenue to cure conditions of poverty ("slums" and "inferior educa- tion"), would finance housing projects and beef up urban schools by collecting funds from legalized gambling, dope addition and pros- titution, all of which aregenerat- ed by the very slum conditions the cities and states would be try- ing to eliminate. WHAT MR. SHAPIRO fails to note is that crime and vice are caused by more or less the same human proclivity for degenerate behavior and, legalizing one will never eliminate or even control the other. He might do well to re- member thatour laws, which he calls "peculiar native customs," which declare both prostitution and murder illegal are among the same set of "native customs" that abolished slavery and obtained civ- il rights legislation. If it would be legal to sell sex, then why not revert to selling human beings outright into slavery, since pros- titution, like dope addiction, de- prives the individual of the free- dom to act and to think, thus leaving him in the condition of slavery? If a depraved physical environ- ment leads to a "hopeless fu- ture," it does not benefit those deprived of a future to institu- tionalize the same vices that keep them futureless. -Susannah Smith, Grad Today and, Prs to the Editor 'Fallacy of Mortals' the plague: the last of branches breaking from yot and because the most vi we ourselves have not yet broken from yot we assume to bend the path of all this you wind and it shal you."~ and why as though we as though titude we could block the hail from more than or every blossom to crowd the and around every orange we watch the; could cup our hands at the rumor so that the frost would never crack both touch it open and then the wind, feeling faint leaving them and sorry, fertile rubt would swear on honor to stop of baptized s whipping. stars; but now they and why to hear listen the sound of our self-sanctified for bullets th voice : zealous pri+ "We shall heal your enduring "Such was wounds mortals.' and when we are near -Chri s will not find you pirates shall be lost ur ports ,ie of demons, cast ur cities shall see 1 be a sign unto expected the mul- nce disappointed mountain and sky that truth would t syand mountain free to till the ble oil and groundly bother only to at inevitably echo the fallacy of stine Hoyt, LS&A D den und isn' W scho lemr the that the univ sert L cha Fac alen Cou prin Stu in t out arou mut stud MOv inte T Lar vigi den 3 to hon Is bers of f a c men tore mem cess and cam eith year you trat B ligh part and Det men dem pati the ply thro But near the com thei tend hou a fa day from abou torie Pi vigil tion lack the proc kept poli You Stud ty;a arre tivit May son befo stud ize agai cent K he di But to b he h V Way the trt: the dent to p whe: ther the Report From WSU By MIKE THORYN under the direction of Harold and JEFF HADDEN Stewart. former director of pub- Special To The Daily lic safety at Wayne who died in ETROIT-Wayne State stu- 1964. They were continued by two t leader Chuck Larson's words university security police, Edward erscore the obvious: "This Stodgill and George Sykes. t the University of Michigan." The files were burned in a TSU is an urban commuter girls' dormitory while Larson and ol with its own set of prob- two others watched. Donald Stev- s and characteristics. One of ens, director of public safety since most significant of these is last June, said that the only rec- the majority of students leave ords maintained by his staff were campus at night, giving the in a criminal complaint file. In- ersity the appearance of a de- formation in the burned file was ed factory after closing. "of no value at all." arson, a 19-year-old junior, is irman of the Wayne Student- WITH THE destruction of the ulty Council (S-FC), the equiv- records accomplished, the move- it of our Student Government ment has continued with agita- ncil. He is also one of the tion for a greater voice in govern- cipal leaders of the new Wayne ing student affairs. WSM pre- dent Movement (WSM). It is sented a list of six demands to the he role that Larson is finding administration:tvoting member.. just how difficult it is to ships for students on each presi- use student interest under com- dential advisory committee; a stu- er conditions. The group of dent spokesman on WSU's board lent activists spearheading the of governors; binding referen- 'ement is smalland marked by dums investigatory powers for the !rnal dissension. stuent-faculty committee; student he movement "according to selection of administrators, and son" grew out of "a 24-hour sole decision-making power for " outside university Presi- the students "in areas of basic t William R. Keast's office May academic policy, such as faculty protest a "lack of intellectual hiring." esty within the university." Larson said at the time that the sues that inflamed the mem- manifesto was "definitely not a of WSM were the discovery demand for student control. "On iles on student activists and these presidential advisory com- oncealed movie camera in a mittees we'd be only one vote out is' washroom that had moni- of; 10. But if they're playing tricks" d both student and faculty we'll be able to see it, that's all." abers. The movement was suc- There is some feeling among ful in getting the files burned students, however, that the admin- in publicizing the use of the istration is not the only group sera which had been removed playing tricks. Both Kupelan and er a year-and-a-half or three Jim Wadsworth, secretary of S- s ago depending on whether FC, think that the movement may believe WSM or the adminis- be a ploy on Larson's part to se- ion, cure his own position as S-FC chairman in this week's election. OTH INCIDENTS brought to Wadsworth charged that Larson t a lack of fair play on the and WSM are too eager to dem- of previous administrations onstrate rather than discuss, and gained big headlines in both points to the timing of the "vig- roit newspapers. The move- il"dthree weks before a campus it is now making the familiar wide S-FC election. Kupelian was and for more student partici- blunt. "Before the movement, on in university affairs. But Larson didn't have a prayer." vast majority of students sim- Larson denies any personal po- aren't interested. litical motivation. He feels that GC found it difficult to break he is representing the interest of )ugh student apathy last year. all students. Describing student the odds against WSM are reaction to the movement,Larson' ly insurmountable. Most of outlined three levels of improve- students live off campus and ment: the five or six leaders, peo- mute to class. Some 13,000 of ple active in shaping policy, and university's 30,000 students at- finally those who are merely sym- Sclass part time, work 30 pathetic. rs a week, and often support Kupelian is skeptical of any of amily. The average full-time Larson's efforts. When asked what student commutes to class S-'C had accomplished, before the a as far as 15 miles away. Only protests, he replied, "Bus shelters." t 800 students live in dormi- He predicts, at best "another com- es on campus, mission to study commissions." 'eceding the round-the-clock Wadsworth sees the movement , 18 students signed a peti- making small gains from great de- stating their concern over a mands. Individual college units of student participation inrwithin the university will be the university decision - making organs through which pass-fail ess and the existence of files courses and ag reater student voice Sby the university security on committees will be achieved. e on groups such as the Disavowing Larson's methods, .ng Socialists' Alliance and Wadsworth Predicts the changes lents for a Democratic Socie- will continue to come through rec- as well as records of criminal ognized channels of communica- sts, thefts and homosexual ac- tion, y. When asked why he chose 3 to initiate his protest, Lar- THIS WEEK'S S-FC election will replied that it was well enough indicate the success of the Wayne re midterm exams to allow Student Movement in winning over lent interest to build. "We real- the students. Their demands have the time table is working met a discouraging response from nst us. That's why we are con- the administration. "Keast," said rating on educational issues." Kupelian, "very eloquently told east at this time stated that them to go to dhell." In the face lid not know of any such files. of repeated demands for more stu- the next day Keast promised dent participation, Keast set up urn the files whose existence a committee composed entirely of tad earlier denied. administrators to investigate the artan Kutelian, editor of the camera incident, ne Daily Collegian, expressed But Larson remains optimistic. view that the Keast adminis- "These are new people he says, ion hadn't really known about committedrto a lifetime of activ- files: "Vice-President for Stu- ism." Affairs McCormick set out Others are not so sure. "Most rove the files didn't exist, and people of this university," said !n he pulled the drawer out, one student, "don't give a damn e they were." Dating back to who runs the place as long as they early '50's, the files were begun get their sheepskins." Meetingo 4 'I 4 I F."}5:":4:54":{:4:iC!":i-}:iv?:":%::"i:{:":"F 4}:"}::4i7{";":ii'.":"i:":i4XJ5iia"Y. ?}:.;.. ."l.: ii% "i: }iii;:"::4:"%fiti :::":":S<"}:.; p".;s:}"r.:.:"::::.<.r:.":.vsr .v:.-::-vr.":: +.: ." . ;-i ..::............... :."s:.:....:..Y *f ~bk I 467. ThEe keister --- S -R Iand Tribune Syndicate oIt "Could you please hurry it!" Tomorrow ... By Walter Lippmann Jeoar Education Act WASHINGTON-There is under serious attack the measure which may well come to be thought of as the greatest single peacetime achievement of the Kennedy- Johnson administration-the Ed- ucation Act which passed in 1965. This act opened the way through the conflict between the Cath- olics and the anti-Catholics, the conflict which has been so stub- born and perplexing an irritant in the life of the American people. The 1965 act which was worked up in the Kennedy administration and improved and enacted in the Johnson administration settled, or at least quieted down, the contro- versy over whether federal money may be used for the education of children in Catholic schools. The cation in districts with many poor families. The monies are spent by public school authorities, but they devise programs in which Cath- olic students participate. SINCE 1965 the old controversy has subsided. The anti-Catholics have accepted the act which pro- vides Catholic children with edu- cational advantages. The Catholic hierarchy and the Catholic com- munity have been satisfied, al- though the parochial schools re- ceive no direct aid. The National Education Association, which ard- ently proposed a quite different measure of federal aid, has sup- ported the 1965 act since it was enacted. Quie Droposed to unsettle all cation funds. But the constitu- tions of some 20 states bar the use of state funds for parochial schools. If the funds presently adminis- tered by HEW were to be given over the states, the whole church-state question would be reopened. The Quie bill would bring down in a crash the struc- ture of the 1965 settlement of the church and state school issue. FURTHERMORE, the Quie bill would spread education funds much more evenly over the na- tion's school districts. This would mean that poor schools, mainly in the rural South and in the big cities, would lose support. If the Quie bill were passed. 16 South- By DAVID BERSON CBS News, well-known for its persistance in placing the issues before the American people, knocked off a situation comedy or something- like that, presenting "Town Meeting of the World" on Monday night. The program starred Senator Robert Kennedy and Governor Ronald Reagan, with the part of hostile audience played by a group of international students. The program got off to a rough start with neither American having much success at answering the students' questions. They evi- dently weren't communicating with themselves either, beginning each state with "I guess I didn't make myself clear on that Sen- ator/Governor." The students seemed annoyed at first by this and persisted in shouting, "You didn't answer my question! Answer my question!" "I was just getting to that. Please listen to me," said the star apologetically. THEN THERE came the tradi- tional hang-ups over history. Was Diem a puppet? No, he was elected in a national referendum? What is the legal justification for U.S. intervention? Well, we were in- Governor had chalked up equal meter ratings by the first com- mercial. THEY CAME OUT for the second act, apparently determined to end the deadlock. Reagan, who noted he was the oldest person there, began his Death Valley Days changes, saying things like "We have been consitent with our her- itage of defending all peoples' pursuit of freedom and happiness and equality." Kennedy got out his apologetic bag-"There are mistakes. We are not always right. We are trying to find the best way." As they came down the stretch, the two were mouth-to-mouth and teeth-to-teeth, when Kennedy took to the whip. He interrupted narrator Charles Collingwood's close with "May I have just one moment?" "I know I speak for the Gover- nor and myself when I say that we need more of this kind of fruitful dialogue. The world is growing smaller and smaller and we must understand each other." The moment turned into about five minutes. Then Reagon inter- rupted the narrator and asked for his moment. Collingwood then busted the meter with, "Yes Gov- ernor, you may second that."