Tlr irithgan Daily Serenty-eight years of editorial freedo in Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 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 al reprints. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN Feldkaimp tells freshmen, No room at the inn' FHE UNIVERSITY housing office's de- plorable failure to accomodate some 200 freshmen in regular University dorm- itories must, of course, be rectified im- mediately. But, equally important, those responsible must be made to answer for their mistakes. Misplanning a n d mismanagement by the University housing office - headed by J o h n Feldkamp - has resulted in those 200 students being placed in a 11 sorts of inconvenient and unpleasant "temporary" housing, a situation t h e y may be forced to tolerate for the rest of the semester. The fact that they were informed of the situation beforehand does not jus- tify what has happened to t h e m. Al- though the housing office knew as early as June of the problem, it made no effort to warn students until the last days of August. This is hardly enough time for an experienced apartment-hunter, let alone a freshman, to find decent accommoda- tions. The office works on various estimates when it makes housing plans for t h e coming year, and it is inexcusable that so many mistakes could be made leaving 200 students unaccommodated. ,'HAT IS MOST distressing is the cal- lousness with which the University deals w i t h the problem, a callousness which allows John Feldkamp to deliber- ately mislead the students as to the pos- sible solutions. He is willing to talk about 100 spaces available in the Union when just hours before he was told specifically that no more t h a n 40 spaces would be available there. He and others involved just don't seem to be aware, or don't care, a b o u t the problems this imposes on the students. Coming to the University is difficult enough for a freshman without the add- ed burden of having no place to go to be alone, to study by oneself, to be able to think. While those involved enjoy their own comfortable accommodations, the stu- dents are forced to live in barracks-type quarters that provide none of the neces- sities they have a right to expect.. John Feldkamp's incompetence aside- - and it is clear from this that he ought to be removed from office immediately - it is imperative that t h e University ade- quately accommodate the inconvenienced freshmen. "I"HE CLOSEST and most available f a- cilities are the Union and the League -- both owned by the Regents, who have final responsibility for the actions of John Feldkamp and the housing office. Every room possible in the two buildings should be given over to housing for the now temporarily housed students. The previous commitments of the Un- ion and the League - to alumni coming in for Michigan's first football game of the year - are not as pressing as the needs of the unhoused students. The Uni- versity must break those commitments and allow the students now living in the Union and League to stay there, and must also move in as many other students as possible. The University must bear the financial burden of its mistakes, making up the difference between dorm costs and the price of Union rooms. There is no reason why students should h a v e to pay any more than the going rates for their ac- commodations. And the University must also see to it that those displaced from the Union be- cause of the housing foul-up are given appropriate accommodations in private local hotels and motels. The University is at fault for what has happened and it must pay for it. IN THE MEANTIME, the students are developing some indigenous organiza- tion, and they must press their case as strongly and as effectively as possible. They must not allow the University to sweep their mistakes under the rug of bureaucratic complexity. -RON LANDSMAN :Managing Editor asi es I avida A nostalgic trip to North Hall marcia abramnson NOW THAT beleagured North Hall has become the focal point for campus drama--or perhaps the right word is comedy-all con- cerned students, faculty and outside agitators should take the op- portunity to visit. North Hall is a sad, almost pathetic building, strug- gling to perpetuate its gung-ho "Go ROTC" attitude in an age of growing disillusionment. Posters everywhere proclaim the many advantages of ROTC: "Your grades will be better than those of students do don't join ROTC." "You'll be eligible to compete for many scholarships." "Future employers prefer men from ROTC because they know 9 ROTC gives the leadership training that counts."' Inside and outside, North Hall is a complete cross between early frat house and Catch-22. The hallways are covered with pictures of loyal comrades; photos of last spring's Pershing Rifles pledge formal, absurd military memoranda, and more propaganda than I ever have seen collected in one place-including the student organization offices in the Student Activities Bldg. Trophies and plaques are hung every- where, and the observer might well wonder if some of them had been stolen from MSU-ROTC during some golden glorious week before the big game. THAT IS THE initial impression North Hall gives. It is a military Dai1y-Larry Robbins fraternity house, a slightly more grown-up military-style prep school. Memos inform cadets when and where military regulations require them to wear their name-tags. A big bulletin depicts the exploits of the men of the Pershing Rifles (who came to campus-wide attention a RTn A dwhile back for their daring defense of the sidewalks from radical per- version.) Space is reserved on another board for standings in the ROTC By MARTIN- HIRSCHMAN intramural league. Yes, it's a great place, where you not only get all the inestimable advantages proferred by ROTC, but also have one hell j)ARE TO STRUGGLE, dare to leaders, that a movement is being pened since, Columbia remains the win," the Maoist s 1 o g a n built which will help topple the biggest campus movement of its of a good time. dopted by those pressing the pres- forces of economic and military kind. Over a thousand students Now, I don't believe that, and I'll bet nobody in ROTC does nt attack on ROTC. is ironically, imperialism in the United States, were arrested in a month of dem- either. I don't know why North Hall tries so hard to give this parti- seems, a back-handed and even can only be seen as a tired myth. onstrations and building seizures cular impression, but I can guess that the idea must be to snare the nasochistic admission that the Especially, distressing about the and support for the actions ran uncommitted. After all, signing a contract with ROTC is roughly the ruggle isn't getting anywhere at' ROTC protest is not, of course, the deep in many corners, equivalent of selling your soul to the devil - or more correctly, leasing IL apparent abrogation of free speech But when the smoke cleared it to the old boy for eight years of your life. Not, of course, that the battle and academic freedom involved in over Morningside Heights four without merit. The existence of the disruption of a class: Those at months later, the movement was Much of the propaganda is directly aimed at recruits. But there is he officers training program on all familiar with the nature of dead. In the interim, some of the a much more insidious kind of propaganda plastered all over North ampus, both for its academic ROTC know there was very little more repressive conduct rules had Hall, and those of use who are rational beings can only hope that acuity and its real and symbolic of either freedom present in the been eliminated and the univer- anyone who reads can see through the shallow facade of super- upport of the U.S. military estab- first place. sity administration had undergone patriotism. a eT it In si al is th c v Su lishment, is intolerable. Clearly ROTC must go. And, given the reluctance of the faculty to respond to this need, as well as the apparent interest of the adminiistration and the Regents in maintaining the status quo, it is equally clear that positive action by the students has been neces- sary to make sure that the Uni- versity community faces the issue squarely. If the University does sever ties with ROTC in the com- ing months, it will no doubt be attributable in part to the events of the past few days. BUT BEYOND such a minute restructuring of the University's relationship with the Pentagon, it seems highly unlikely that the present actions will have any di- rect. productive effect on the sorry state of this country and the present course of U.S. foreign po- licy. The idea, espoused so enthusias- tically by ROTC demonstration What is upsetting about the course of radical action on this campus, however, is the tiredness of the rhetoric, the staleness of the tactics and the generalbore- dlom which the whole p~ageant tends to provoke. Simply stated, there is very little that is new or different about the pattern of the past week-cer- tainly nothing which evokes op- timism about the potential success of this movement vis-a-vis the in- glorious failures of the past. THE EXAMPLE which most readily comes to mind is spring 1968 at Columbia University--cei- tainly because it was the first mas- sive attempt at building a student movement around societal, rather than campus issues, but more im- portantly because if failed even though the issues involved were cumulatively so much stronger than those which face this Uni- versity today. For everything that has hap- a quick facelifting. The students --except for the hard core van- guard which fought, on for a while without the support of its "pro- letariet "-went back to class some- what relieved. More recently, and perhaps more apparently applicable to the cur- rent situation were the demon- strations at Harvard last spring, where ROTC was also the focal point. As a result of those protests, the military officers training pro- gram has been castrated-but the only movement which followed was back to the classroom. BUT IF THE CASE against the likelihood of success is impressive, the need for radical reorientation of U.S. society and foreign policy is no less acute. The role U.S. gov- einment has played in repressing nationalist movements in places like Thailand, the economic im- perialism of American business in Latin America and the genocide of the Vietnam War cry only too loudly of the need for change. It is the unspeakable tragedy of our times that the single country most capable of putting its massive economy and technology behind world progress has become the bulwark of a militarily enforced status quo. Given this seemingly unavoid- able analysis of the appalling mis- direction of American foreign po- licy, it is difficult to muster much invective behind a critique of the tactics currently being employed by radicals on this campus. BUT THE disruption of a few ROTC classes is simply not going to bring ,the military-industrial complex to its knees. Nor is there a convincing case that the disrup- tions will lead to something more successful as the next step. I would like this criticism to re- main as blunt as possible, however. If the past three years have been frustrating for the left, certainly the next two or three are likely to be exasperating. And no one is walking around with a bunch of ready-made solutions flowing from his pockets. One document, called "Courage," would rate about a C in English 123 for its platitudes. It tells how an officer must only think about completing his mission; that is the meaning of this leader- ship which ROTC proposes to teach. "Patience, persistence, and cour- age-these three-but the greatest of these is COURAGE," the author said. He was an officer, and he showed his courage at An Hoi, where no doubt some other equally courageous soldier fulfilled his own mis- sion in killing the young writer. NOWHERE IN THE ROTC propaganda is it proposed to teach the cadets how to think, how to reason, how to doubt. and if, perhaps, the young men are learning this elsewhere, they do not seem to be encouraged to bring their minds along with their bodies to classes in North Hall. Another poster advertises the Valley Forge Patriot Award essay contest-ah, admirable, nothing like essays, professors in the English department would say. But the topic for the prize essay appeared rather limited, "My hopes for America's future," seemingly a request for more platitudes. The 1969 winners of the contest open to all armed forces members were duly awarded their George Washington medals by the Freedoms Foundations, sponsor of the event. The astronauts are held up as an object of pride and reverence, and the next most popular patriot subject seemed to be the good old days, the great invasion and victory of D-Day. Nothing was said about Vietnam anywhere that I could see. North Hall is apparently also willing to spare just a little wall space for friends of the military. In my brief meandering, I caught a glimpse of a colorful ad from the Camellia Hotel, Ft. Bennington, Ga., indicating that it was a great place to stay for wives and assort- ed families of America's protectors. The ROTC classes described in the course catalogue all emphasize leadership-above all else leadership. In Air Force ROTC, for example, a total of nine classes are listed, seven include leadership training, and two ARE leadership, pure and simple. But when an officer, presumably a product of this training, re- fuses to lead his men into battle because he knows they are too dis- illusioned and too tired to go on, he faces the severest sanctions of military justice. Obviously it is not leadership that ROTC cultivates, but the unthinking devotion of a khaki robot. A VISIT TO the ROTC building can only prove that the sole pur- pose of the organization is to produce automatons for the U.S. mill- tary by luring students with money, commissions, and the promise of draft-deferred grad school, as the course catalog boasts. It all sounds better than the draft. But it's really the same as the draft, or perhaps even worse, since it functions not by force but through the most blatant propaganda and bribery. North Hall is in reality a relic of a passing age, of Richard Nixon's vision of America, of "my country right or wrong," of the unquestioning good-bad ethic of World War II.. It cannot hold out too much longer, no matter what the fate of this particular protest. Let us repeat, Mr. Nixon BJY THE MIDDLE of December, t h e r e will be 37,000 m o r e troops coming home. Some 35,000 of these will be re- turning as part of Nixon's latest troop cutback; the other 2,000 will be returning in boxes. And as Nixon continues to bring the boys home dead or alive, we f i n d our- selves again trapped by the futile ges- tures of a man who yearns for peace only because he believes that he cannot win the war. So again, our response is like it was in the past: Mr. Nixon, this is not the way to end the war. We must admit the errors HEN Y GiRIX, Editor STEVE NISSEN RON LANDSMAN City Editor Managing Editor MARCIA ABRAMSON ....A soclate Managing Editur PHILIP P>OC7K ..... Associate Managing Editor CHRIS ST Ir. , . As(o'iate City Ed.itor SIEVE ANZALONE.. . Editorial Page Editor JENNY STILLER Editorial Page Editor LESLI WAYNI2 Arts Itor JOH INCRAY Litorar; : A1,EC OBI E P ?)Fditor L.ANIF ILPPINCOTT'1A-i,st.rnto vthe anaiiEdior WALT ER SHAPIRO Dl' waihinton Corresponden MANY RADTK ................contributing Editor that led us to this atrocity; we must with- draw complete support of the Thieu re- gime; we must bring all the boys home now. Somewhat wearily we must again re- peat: Repeated justifications of our pres- ence for the purpose of "self-determina- tion for the people of South Vietnam" are based on deceit; our plans for grad- ual "Vietnamization" of the war are built on deception. WXITH GREAT exasperation we k n o w that Richard Nixon will never come to understand the realities of the Viet- nam war and more will die as he blunders down the road of folly. And we will keep writing editorials that Nixon won't read and that the rest of the people are tired of looking at. But we'll keep on pounding away with the very slim hope that some day Nixon will realize that a belated act of coitus interruptus will not restore our virginity. --STEVE ANZALONE Editorial Page Editor I Letters to the E -Daily-Jay Cassidy I 5- sv.A MM SH'AT (A A SEALING REVau UflO&[AY (MPCTT OF AMERICA. SLACK< RFVO- IT A ' ON-, 3E6- 60 l CORECT- CO2 THEU UWM AMP 6CEEJGUD ITFO-5M LfiTEU7 Pf5VO- &VTONJARIUS. 0' War petition To the Editor: IN CONJUNCTION with other anti-Vietnam war activities plan- ned both locally and nationally for the following months, a peti- tion drive to influence Congress- men from Michigan is to be begun at the teach-in, Friday, September 19th. The petition will rest on four basic demands: (1) an immediate ceasefire in Vietnam, unilateral if necessary; 2) an accelerated timetable for the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Vietnam, to be completed by a specified date; (3) a reduction in all U.S. military supplies sent to Vietnam, with an end to all such supplies by the close of 1970; (4) a massive pro- grain of economic rehabilitation for Vietnam conducted under U.N. auspices and financed by U.S. contributions to repair damage caused by the war and the U.S.'s part in it. It is our belief that the war is generally unpopular, both on the Congressman's votes and speeches could be monitored and then ad- vertised throughout this year. We expect that church a n d citizen groups throughout the state would quickly join us in this drive and that if Ann Arbor 1 e a d s other campuses will follow. A complementary action being considered is to have a congres- sional resolution sponsored by a Michigan Congressman asking that the President effect an im- mediate ceasefire and withdraw all U.S. troops. At this vote, all Congressmen would finally show their constituents where t h e y stand. PLANS FOR the petition drive will be discussed and the petition and/or resolution will be drafted at the teach-in of September 19th and 20th. All citizens interested in any phase of the operation are invited to come and help us ini- tiate the program. -Prof. Alfred G. Meyer -Prof. Rhoads Murphey litor over to introduction of new fac- ulty members. The introductions were dull enough (so and so, a poet, so and so, Ph.D. from Columbia, etc.) un- til the department of Air Science provided w h a t might be called tragic relief. Their new member was a major whose announced qualifications consisted in his hav- ing flown more than 100 missions over Vietnam, and having won the Silver Star. "AT THE conclusion of the in- troductions, Dean Hays explained to us that we should be very grate- ful to have joined an extraordin- ary group of humanists and sch- olars. A humanistic and scholarly group who admit as a full mem- ber a man who seems to h a v o done little more than deliver le- thal weapons by airplane more than 100 times is extraordinary indeed, though peculiar might be a better word. -Prof. L. M. Sander IT AS ccec u HW1\~Vl r (TAC-) ?E- AM w yw' I T f. eor rAr)I-rA!- I i