I 94c t thgan 43 l Seventy-eight years of editorial f reed oni Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Re-ordering the priorities of the movement 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. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY SARASOHN The new vice president THE MAN who becomes the next vice president for student affairs will have a crucial effect on students at this Uni- versity - yet the student body has played too little a role in choosing him. It would be a mistake for students to ignore the issue as still more bureaucratic tedium -- because the decision will de- termine whether the vice president fights for student interests or becomes a mere appendage of the Fleming administra- tion. Traditionally, executive officers form a coterie of support for the president, fighting his battles when he has no time to fight them himself. Students have sel- dom been represented in the administra- tion - and so they can barely imagine a vice president for student affairs w h o would truly look out for their interests. ,BUT THE new vice president could be one of the single most important forces for students on campus -- since the office controls nine departments which control millions of dollars and makes scores of decisions which affect student life throughout the University. With so much at stake, students can hardly afford to let the University ap- point a mere administrator - yet this is precisely what will happen. Fleming has instructed his search committee to approve several candidates and leave the final choice to him. This means, of course, that the new vice president will be a Fleming maxi-- someone who is likely to give the president support and not opposition. EVEN IF THE committee did make the final choice, it would hardly represent wideipreaid student interest. Fleming picked the four faculty members and four students comprising the committee from a list of candidates proposed by the Stu- dent Government Council and Senate As- sembly - thus controlling from the be- ginning the selection process of the new vice president. The "small" students who comprise most of this university - the students who have no friends on SGC, who know no one on top committees, but who still have a crucial stake in the affairs of the school -have no influence on the man or woman who will control the huge por- tion of the University ostensibly formed to serve them. IT IS CRUCIAL that students let the search committee know that they exist - and tell it whom they wish to represent them. The next time the Uni- versity chooses an administrator, stu- dents should make sure that they take a major part in the decision - and not leave it to the president to decide for them. -DANIEL ZWERDLING By HENRY GRIX Editor WITH SO MANY worthwhile causes begging it is frustra- ting that so few ever locate cham- pions. Perhaps if there were more good men in the world they might be able to realize and solve more world problems. Maybe. But unfortunately too many good men are inclined to take on the wrong issues at the wrong time. And too many are disinclined to crusade for the right issues at any tie. LEST THERE BE any mistake, this is not to condemn students who protest against the presence of ROTC on campus. On the con- trary, I believe firmly that ROTC has no place in a community de- voted to pursuit of reason and world peace. Not only is ROTC void of redeeming academic value, but it is -designed to contribute to a dangerous military machine, and does receive, in cold dollars, a sizeable University contribution of land and building space. A student movement aimed at relegating ROTC to an extracurricular activ- ceter is EDITOR'S NOTE: For those of our readers who have missed out on all the exciting courses in the economics department, "ceteris paribus," the title of Jenny Stiller's column nicans 'everything else remaining the same." It usually dtoes, even after Miss Stiller finishes riting. ARTHA'S VINEYARD Island is a pile of rocks dumped off Cape Cod by retreating glac- iers, unknown by most Americans until Ted Kennedy drove his car off a bridge there last July. The Dike's Road bridge acci- dent which catapulted the Vine- yard to national fame drew hoardes of tourists to Edgartown and to Chappaquiddick, much to the disgust of the usual summer residents, who had a hearty dis- taste for the day tourists to begin with. For Martha's Vineyard is more than an extension of Cape Cod. It is one of the traditional meccas of the social, economic and edu- cational elite of the East Coast - the summer home of doctors, law- yers, college professors, and gov- ernment advisers who have their year-round residence in Cam- b r i d g e, Westport, Georgetown, Westchrster, or Bethesda. Be- cause it is an island, the summer people are able to feel very much at home and among their own kind there, untroubled by the less cultured souls who crowd them so much at home. Even on the island itself there are certain clas-type divisions. although no one takes them terri- ity is highly commendable. It is a morally right issue. BUT THE BATTLE against ROTC assumed lilliputian propor- tions yesterday because it is strikingly ill-timed. Dramatic stu- dent action against ROTC is ill- timed when the issue of whether the University should continue ROTC programs will probably, hopefully, be placed before the Regents at their October meeting. While a faculty committee pre- pares a final report on the issue and as student leaders publicly de- nounce ROTC, other students who ;would participate in an anti-ROTC movement must wait to act pend- ing the outcome of regental action. Meanwhile, "creative disrup- tion" can dolittle good, and, pos- sibly, much harm by clouding the issue at stake. For creative dis- ruption is an arbitrary act by a certain group who feel a certain "illegitimate" class must not con- tinue. The disruption of R O T C classes can be condoned only if the disruption of any class is per- mitted. More concrete student action is called for if and when the faculty karibus :ยง>2. . ignore or reject student senti- ment on ROTC. And' if and when Regents ignore or reject faculty and student deliberations, a real movement can be directed against those who now have the final power to determine the fate of ROTC, THE FIRE ON ROTC must wait until next month. And in the meantime, students should begin organizing an effective action against ROTC then. Judging by the student response to a worth- while issue during this semester last year, there is fertile, ground at this University for purposeful radical action. And ,considering the surprisingly large attendance at this year's mass meetings of radical groups, there is reason to believe that choosing the right issue at the right time would cata- lyze many. However, as one who was fearful that yesterday's ROTC action would plunge this campus into turmoil, I must admit that I thought the ROTC issue might have been more antagonistic, had a ROTC instructor panicked and called the county sheriff, had De- troit -DS members provoked a confrontation, the whole thing might have turned out differently. It still may. WHAT CONCERNED ME then, and what concerns me now, is that while the existence of ROTC programs on campus might be a worthwhile issue to explore, it might not really be the issue which should rest most heavily on the conscience of the concerned student. While a visiting Blafran student fears for the survival of his nation, while ADC mothers have too little money to clothe thtiir children, while the Univer- sity has inadequate funds for scholarships to disadvantaged stu- dents, it is dubious whether the granting of academic credit or even University facilities for ROTC is the issue for concerted student action. IT IS POSSIBLE that the ROTC question has been seized upon simply because it seemed like the viable issue on which to build a student movement. All too often, however, student move- ments built solely upon and by a right issue cannot survive the resolution of that issue. Besides, student movement building is not, in itself, designed to better the condition of the University com- munity or the world at large. This leads me to suspect, along with Carl Oglesby, that student leaders must consider re-ordering their priorities. Although Oglesby has forced himself into semi-se- clusion in the radical confines of Antioch, he came here last year and pointed out that university- centered student movements are selfish and socially useless-re- volts by, for and of the favored and affluent. WHILE NOT discounting the value of a student movement, I would argue that it must tran- scend the university and univer- sity issues, The Reserve Officers' Training program is such an issue. Its relation to the care and feed- ing of the defense establishment is clear. But on a list of priorities, I am not at all sure that a disruption of ROTCrclasses should precede positive support for Washtenaw County's welfare mothers (if they want) it, for Biafrans, for the urban and suburban ghettoes. Caste in a classless society jenny stiller Saving the Everglades bly seriously. Up-island, Edgar- town and to a lesser extent Vine- yard Haven are the homes of the sober professionals of old-stock Anglo-Saxon lineage. Oak Bluffs, n e a r Vineyard Haven, has the largest Negro population, and has long been a favored retreat for the upper echelons of the black bour- geoisie. , Down-island, Chilmark and Gay Head are t h e favored spots of the Jews, the artists, and the intelligentsia. But everyone looks pretty much the s a in e in bermuda shorts or bathing suits, and most of t h e sununer people are extradorinarily tolerant of each other, regardless of what part of the island they come from. TiiE DAY tourists, however, are something else entirely. Day tourists are the people who are spending their vacation at one of the motels on the Cape, who decide to come over to the Vine- yard and have a look around. They come by car or tourist bus across the ferry from Wood's Hole, catch as many of the "sights" as they can, and disappear again in the evening, There were always a lot of them. and now that Chap- paquiddick is famous, there are many more. Day tourists are the plain, dull, hardworking middle class people who the summer people usually see only as faces in a crowd or statistics on a page. They are the people with American flag decals on their car windows. They are P r e s i d e nt Nixon's "forgotten Americans." They are, heaven help us, the great American mid- dle. And they are the antithesis of everything the brokers in their Edgartown mansions and the in- tellectuals in their glassed-in A- frames stand for and believe in. THE SUMMER people think of themselves as enlightened and liberal. They treat the rich Ne- groes at Oak Bluffs with exag- gerated equality, deal easily with the 600 or so really native Vine- yarders, and would be horrified at the accusation of harboring class prejudices. Nonetheless, they ral- lied four years ago to oppose in- troduction of cheap hydrofoil transportation across Vineyard Sound, and even now many of their cars sport bumper stickers urging the county government to "Ban Big Busses." Lacking con- scious class-consciousness, t h e summer people are nonetheless very sure of where they stand with regard to the day tourists, whom they consider a nuisance at best, at worst a pestilential invasion. ON THE LARGER, national scale, the day tourists - the American norm - are aware of this sentiment and resent it. The wealthy, educated elite who are so anxious - perhaps understand- ably - to preserve their summer haven for themselves and their social and intellectual equals are to a large extent the same people who have been close to the seats of power more or less since the Roosevelt administration. They have everything the man in the street does not - money, power, grace, and position. Since many if not most of them pulled them- selves up from the poverty of the Depression, they feel justified in assuming that they deserve the things they have, and that others -especially other whites - would have the same things if they had had the talent or the drive to ach- ieve them. The Vineyard elite honestly do not think of themselves as a n y different from the day tourists they despise so much. They de- scribe themselves as "middle class," even though they often make twice as much money as the true middle. Intelligent and edu- cated as they are, it somehow re- mains very necessary to their psyches that they do not define themselves as either rich or pow- erful. If they were to admit that their lot is among the best in the nation, and knowing how much power they actually do wield, they would perhaps feel that they had failed to achieve true power or even true material contentment. THE LITTLE two-car ferry chugs back and forth to Chappa- quiddick Island, while the day tourists line tip dozens deep to wait their turn to drive over and see the bridge into which some- one has carved "Teddy Loves Mary Jo." The newsman crowd i n t o Edgartown for the inquest - cir- cus-like but nonetheless easy for the summer people to understand. Labor Day has gone, and most of the summer people have left the island. But their inability to comprehend their own class pre- judices persists, as do their senti- ments regarding those people who are "not like us." Their hypo- crisy is no less deep for being un- intentional, and the middle class senses this and is insulted and offended. If such class distinc- tions must persist in this country we should be willing to recognize them for what they are; the pre- tense of a classless society is far 'nore harmful than the actual ex- istence of classes. .gVERGLADES National Park has sur- vived the latest threat to its exist- ence so far. At a news conference in Washington on Wednesday, Interior Sec- retary Walter Hickel, Transportation Secretary John Volpe and Florida Gov- ernor Claude Kirk announced that they were united in their resolve to prevent construction of a new jetport that would destroy the Everglades. The huge jetport was proposed by the Dade County Port Authority to alleviate congestion at Miami International Air- port. The site of the jetport is only six miles from the northern boundary of Everglades National Park, the only sub- tropical park in the United States. It is a sanctuary for 22 endangered wild- species, some of which are unique to the area. r HE EVERGLADES ecosystem is very fragile and totally dependent u p o n water. The proposed jetport would have changed the drainage pattern of the water coming into the national park from Big Cypress Swamp which supplies 38 per cent of the park's water. If the jetport were allowed to be put into oper- ation, the Everglades ecosystem would undoubtedly suffer irreparable damage, including the elimination of some plant and animal species. The controversy over the fate of the Everglades mushroomed into national importance last summer. The Dade Coun- ty Port Authority had previously select- ed the airport site and - without holding public hearings - had begun construc- tion of the first runway. Dade County has announced that this runway, which will be used as a flight-training facility, will be opened in early October. "HE ISSUES at stake in the fight to save the Everglades go deeper than ust saving one unique ecosystem. The fight embodies the struggle to b r i n g regional planning into natural resource decisions. Conservationists have long urged careful coordination of these de- cisions to eliminate some of the more blatant developmental errors. The Ever- glades jetport is a classic example of planning which does not consider the na- tural environment and the alternatives which would allow the needed develop- ment without automatically destroying valuable and unique ecosystems. The Republicans' announcement seems to be a victory for the conservationists. The original site picked by Dade County now appears to be almost certainly ruled out, removing the immediate threat to the Everglades from the airport. Still, this does not mean total victory, because the area will still be open to development by private interests. The announcement may also mean that the Nixon administration will be increasingly interested in preserving the environment. Last fall, conservationists were disturbed by the appointment of Walter Hickel as Secretary of the Inter- ior. During the nomination hearings, Hickel pledged support of conservation. Since then, many skeptical conservation fanatics have watched Hickel's moves closely waiting for him to keep his prom- ise. Hickel's hardline on the Everglades jetport issue hopefully signals his con- version to the cause of conservation. [HE EVERGLADES decision sh o u lc mark the beginning of the era of close coordination of government projects in- volving the environment and natural re- sources. Its importance lies not only in the preservation of a unique and beauti- ful ecosystem but also in the introduc- tion of an approach which will preserve the rare ecosystems and still allow ex- pansion of development needed to en- compass increased demands on the na- tion's valuable resources. -JOHN R. LUTON _ _ _~ Letters to the Editor U.S. troops continue to be withdrawn from South Vietnam. News item. - 1 - . - Tennits To the Editor: ANN ARBOR LANDLORDS have found a new weapon in blaming the Ann Arbor Tenants Union for this year's housing crush. (Daily, Sept. 5) Barnhill and Renken now claim the rent strike has made the student housing market "extreme- ly insecure, discouraging new con- struction." Even without questioning the landlord's analysis of the housing market we can see that the rent strike could not possibly have any effect on this year's housing avail- ability. Housing requires several year's planning and building; the decisions which failed, to result in adequate housing this year were made at least five years ago, long before the Tenant's Union was even a dream. The collusion and agreements which created this year's sellers' market were in full swing without the help of the Ten- ants Union. Barnhill and Renken speak of an "extremely insecure" student housing narket. This is mislead- ing. There is hardly anything in the business world so sure as the booming demand for student apartmemts in Ann Arbor. With their captive market, Ann Arbor landlords do not worry about leas- ing apartments even at incredible rents, and demand can safely be expected to grow steadily and pr'e- dictably. With this kind of market it is no surprise that rents am'e high, maintenance bad anid profits enormous. THE TENANTS UNION is not ultimately a disruptive force. The role of the Tenants Union is to equalize the disparity of bargaining power between landlord and ten- ant so that leases can be nego- tiated between economically mo'e equal pamties. Omice the landlords have reognized the Tenants Union as a bargaining agent. leases will mnore equitably balance tenants ability to pay and need for decent housing with landlords craving for profits. Long-term residents of Ann Ar- bor know this year's housing crisis is no recent development. Ann Ar- but is in fact a great victory and demonstration ofnthe strength of theim' organization. THE RENT STRIKE is the only hope for breaking landlord mono- poly power in Ann Arbor. Thus, rather than being the cause of apartment problems in Ann Arbo', it is the only solution. The Ten- ants Union has from its begin- nings pushed for low-cost public housing and co-operative housing. We should know by now that the landlords will not by themselves oppose their own interests end provide enough apartments in Ann Arbor. -Stephen Marston Sept. 7 No vioIlce To the Editor: IT WAS VERY disappointing to read Mr. James Graf's letter in the Sept. 9 issue as he did an ex- cellent job of reaching the right conclusion for the wrong reasons. I agree wholeheartedly with. Mr. Graf's conclusion as to the futility of more campus demonstrations at the present time. Ram'ely indeed has the Left fashioned so suicidal a technique; rarely has anything been so well designed to alienate the American working class from the educated youth of our nation. It appears to be anomalous that those desiring a worker-student alliance should choose tactics that ensum'e thme continuing animosity between the two groups, However, to put the case for campus peace in terms of Dlacat- ing conservative politicians so that University funds are not jeopardized, as Mr. G r a f does, smacks of selling ourselves "for a mess of porridge." If the Univer- sity and its faculty and students ame to emain silent on matters of great moral significance (e. g. Vietnam, white racism, political prisoners) so as not to threaten its material and academic wealth. then it is as guilty of the immoral conduct as those who perpetrate it. The "crime of silence" of the timid majority in the face of im- moral acts can make omission as T'ttA}n }Ln r nr tiirc Pro-ROTE To the Editor: UNFORTUNATELY, given t h e state of mankind at present, an army seems to be necessary to the protection and security of a na- tion as large and influential as our own. Further, in the right cir- cumstances the U.S. Army, or'at least the threat of its involvement, can still be used to help create a better world order. In the main. serious objections against the army are raised not on the question of its existence, but on how aid whe'e it should be used. Decisionis of this sor't am'e imade or influenced largely by military leaders themselves, and' the effectiveness with which they are carried out depends on these leaders. It should be obvious, then, that we need the best, most competent men, especially those w it h the broadest possible perspectives to run our army. Such are exactly the somt of men to be found at a university. It follows that the tini- versity has an obligation to allow those men who desire it the op- portunity to train f o r military leadership. Such training requires much work and time invested, and thus must be endowed with aca- demic credit if it is to be feasible for an individual. ROTC must be maintained on campus. --Robert Loewenstein, '7I1 Sept, II Ticketing bikes To the Editor: TJHIS MORNING a4 9 a.m. I parked my b i k e behind the bench which is in front of Kres- ge's. I as given a ticket by the A. A. police for' parkinig omi the sidewalk. I went downtown and pointed out that the city removed its bike racks last year. The only racks remaining are those owned by the U. of M. I was told that t he State Sttreet merchamts have complained to the police because of bikes parked on Reflections on a ROTC disruption By PHILIP BLOCK Associate Managing Editor r1"HOUGH SOME observers might feel that 'esterday's anti-ROTC action was more like a T-group meeting than a political confrontation. the incident did afford s o m e interesting observa- tions: 0 The ROTC instructors, except for Col. Reynolds, exhibited an unusual de- gree of self-control. One officer in par- ticular, C a p t. Stanley McLaughlin, showed that t h e demostrators were not up agaimnst a group of unthinking, 0 The students who participated in the disruption also acted with precision and self-restraint - with perhaps one exception. At the beginning of e a c h class that was to be disrupted, there was some argument over whether Daily photographers should be "permitted" to take pictures. Some of the disrupters tried frantically to hold books or coats in front of the cameras, as if being photographed would mean certain pros- ecution by Univer'sity or civil author- ities. Such paranoia was hardly war- ranted by the situation. Tieir easons fo' wanting to stop the 0 It now appears that the ROTC dis- ruptions/discussions may turn into open forums on the war in general. At one point during yesterday's Military Sci- ence 401 class, a middle-aged l a d y standing at the back of the crowded classroom took time floor. Most of those present expected her to deliver a tirade against the "commie-hippie-freaks" who were trying to disrupt the hallowed education of our country's fighting men Much to everyone's surprise Mrs. Thelma Miller from Oak Pamk, Mich., gave a stirring speech against the evils 0 It is difficult to conceive of the final outcome of the anti-ROTC dis- ruptions. The coalition will probably continue to disrupt military science classes until confrontation with Uni- versity or ROTC authorities is reached. Even though several members of the ,oalition feel that further disruptions would not help the anti-ROTC drive any further, the more militant elements are sure to renew calls for a physical shut- down of ROTC activities on campus. The ROTC comimandanits may decide to let the action wither away at the exnense of oneo r two weeks of lost