Ee iMi$igan Dariy Seveity-tiniie years' of editorill freedom 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 all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: STUART GANNES Nixon's fiscal program: Prices up, employment down PRESIDENT NIXON'S anti - inflation program is getting results, but not the results he expected. Employment ratios seem to be the only things going down, while prices continue to head skyward. According to t h e Labor Department, unemployment last month reached a lev- el unknown since the Eisenhower admin- istration, soaring to 4.0 per cent of the civilian work force. And as usual, the rate is n e a r 1 y double for nonwhites as for whites - 6.8 as opposed to 3.6 per cent. 7HEN PRESIDENT NIXON announced his anti-inflation program early this year, economists agreed t h a t, however valuable any such program might be in and of itself, it could only work if it re- duced employment, at the predictable ex- pense of workers at the lower skill levels. Nonetheless, Nixon and his advisers - led by Paul McCracken, on leave from the University's School of Business Adminis- tration - chose to go ahead w it h the plan, which by a combination of tight money, high taxes and decreased govern- ment spending in domestic areas was cal- culated to reduce inflation by reducing government a n d consumer spending. This, it was hoped, would both lower con- sumer restlessness over inflation and be- gin to remedy our balance' of payments problem without ever really attacking the primary cause of both phenomena: the Vietnam war. BUT EVEN THOSE liberals who opposed Nixon's fiscal program on the grounds that it would increase unemployment at least expected it to work to reduce infla- tion. And though unemployment is now at a higher level than it has been since the pre-Vietnam fall of 1960, wartime in- flationary pressures h a v e persisted - despite token efforts at de-escalation. Fiscal programs such as Nixon's can be invaluable in checking undesirable eco- nomic trends, particularly when they are a result of the normal fluctuations of the business cycle. But when such trends have their roots in something as costly and unnecessary as the Vietnam war, mere fiscal measures - instituted at the cost of the poorest members of society -- are hardly the best solution. T h e y are hardly a solution at all. -JENNY STILLER Editorial Page Editor The b By LISA STEPHENS THE DETROIT NEWS has be- gun what it touts as "an ex- periment inljournalism" -- The Other Section --- a weekly supple- ment referred to as an "above ground underground" rag. A ma- jor, mass circulation paper with a heavy conservative bias is eating crow. The supplement is intended to open a forum for the life-style of "those under 35" and, if it is indeed so, the News' editors may not be aware of what they are get- ting into. Or if they are. they don't believe it anyway. . In one sense. The Other Section is broadly experimental. One wonders if an Establish- ment newspaper with strong ties to the Detroit status quo can really change its stripes? Can it really exercise what it designates as its own good news judgment in pacifying its adver- tisers or the business community in the rest of the paper and then turn around and let the voices of revolution be heard? It seems unlikely. AND INDEED IT is indicative of the News' intentions that the impetus for the supplement did not come from their editorial staff but from their advertising agency. W. B. Doner and Company. It did not spring from an edit- or's conviction that voices of dis- sent must be heard, but from a young copywriter's idea of "chang- ing the News' image." The new sales pitch is now "90 Turned-On Days." Presumably, if circulation does not increase after that period, another approach will be tried, and The Other Section may die. One can always hope, however. that the News will begin to believe its own propaganda. THE OTHER SECTION is high- ly significant if only for the tacit acknowledgement its publication gives to the influence of the "filthy little rags" hawked on street corners by kids wtih long hair. The voice of the underground is becoming one to be reckoned with, and the mass media is begin- ning to realize that some of its audience is tuning them out. The Section's format is a slick version of the Ann Arbor Argus or the South End, containing much of the style of both (even to coy first-names-only in the staff box). But it has little of the content that fills the pages of an under- ground. THIS IS where the supplement runs afoul of the dividing line be- tween the true underground and the "swinging scene" ethic adopted by those who follow the herd. The true underground is un- dilutedly and unabashedly polit- icalI. The underground exists because political and social heterodoxy have no outlet in the Establish- ment and because the ideologies of the underground and the Old Order are antithetical. The essence of the radical movement is that it works outside of. and in opposition to, accepted structures. In the case of the News, politics and circulation drives promise to make strange bed partners. In any attempt to re-establish some kind of credibility with the underground, an Establishment news paper faces, almost insur- mountable odds. There isn't really much middle ground. Any hedging on the use on Anglo-Saxon words or hesita- tion to call down those in power will be interpreted as co-option. An absence of fist-shaking would certainly deprive The Other Sec- tion of the real guts necessary for a successful underground paper. Failure to tackle the political issues squarely would relegate the Other Section to the realm of the 'pseudo," the plastic, the "fash- ionable." And the ignored. THE SUPPLEMENT is present- ly managed by regular News staff- ers until an editor can be im- astard son of the Detroit News Kerplunk!, ported and a regular stable of writers assembled. The question of who really runs the Section will be vital. It must have as much autonomy as the classical stand- ards of freedom of the press al- low. The News must swallow hard, pray to the gods of free speech, and give Tha Other Section its own head. This places the News' editors in the admittedly difficult position of financing and providing a ready- made circulation for a publica- tion that may turn right around and screw their own nice n e a t works. But hell, Wayne State's been doing that for years w i t h the South End, and it may yet prove to be their most lasting con- (Strange bed fell owrs tribution to good old-fashioned honesty. Turning The Other Section loose would provide a solid basis for belief in the good intentions of all those who usually mouth slogans about the press as the watchdogs of society against op- pression, BUT THERE IS one enormous saving grave that makes The Oth- er Section valuable: unlike the true underground rags, it reaches straight society. It goes to every single house the subscribes to the News. It touches people who would never consider reading the Fifth Estate and who wouldn't know where to buy it if they did. In this sense it may not be ter- rible important that the supple- ment does not appeal to the True Believers. They have their o w ri anyway. The Other Section goes right to the doors of "nice" middle class people and corporate biggies at whom protest is aimed. And they won't tune it out be- cause the News' reputation is be- hind it. Such a thin thread of communication is much too im- portant to be totally discredited or ignored by the radical left. It is the point of a wedge, a means of shoehorning people gently into a scene they might otherwise find repulsive or confusing. As such, it should be approached by its crit- ics with a scalpel rather than a meat cleaver. Meanwhile, let us hail the in- fant's birth. We can be thankful for small favors. ANOTHER OPINION: Failing grades on campus protest 'JAMES WECHSLER. Socking it to Dick now -not in '72 LESS THAN A MONTH into the new academic year, American campuses are already the scene of another round of violent confrontations. A guerrilla-style raid by youths claiming to represent Stu- dents for a Democratic Society has 'hit the Center for International Affairs at Harvard, leaving several people injured and threatening that University's fragile calm. At the University of Michigan, state police cleared a building occupied by angry students, and a long and ir- rational student-administration dispute seems well under way. More incidents are bound to occur. If any lesson can be drawn from the campus unrest at this early stage, it is not to generalize. The Harvard attack, for example, would be the worst possible focus for this season's choosing of sides. It represents neither a new strategy on the part of rebellious students, nor the imposition of a general climate for fear at American universities. Few among the 20 or so invaders of the Center for Inter- national Affairs appear to have been stu- dents at Harvard or any other university. They were more nearly vandals than ser- ious protesters. Their charge that librar- ians, secretaries, and students at an aca- demic research unit concentrating on arms control and American trade with Western Europe are "opposing the Viet- namese people" cannot be taken serious- ly. If anything, Harvard has been drawn together rather than paralyzed by the raid; students are joining in condemna- tion of such guerrilla action, IN ANN ARBOR, on the other hand, a more significant conflict simmers - a clear example of how little the opposing parties may have learned from the recent history of university protest. The issue seems to be a legitimate local one - whe- ther students should share control of the University's first campus bookstore. The students say they could assure discount prices, but the Regents claim they would abuse this power. But no one has conducted himself in a manner likely to bring an early and fair resolution of the dispute. University of Michigan administrators refused to en- tertain more orderly student representa- tions, bringing an escalation of protest. Student leaders resorted to occupation, the tactic most certain to bring in police against them. Police reacted with a de- gree of force uncalled for by the circum- stances, adding another cause to the demonstrations. More than 100 students remain under arrest, and the 37,000 stu- dents at one of the country's largest campuses threaten to strike. Officials in- sist they are the victims of a vicious .form of extremist agitation. (-OULD THIS REALLY be the best way to solve a disagreemeit over a book- store? -THE WASHINGTON POST Oct. 2 DAY AFTER day. in one public place or another. there ap- pears some agitated speculation about the identity of the Demo- cratic Presidential nominee in November. 1972. But for many young Americans--and especially those drawn into political combat in last year's ferment--a more relevant question concerns the condition of Present and prospec- tive Democratic leadershp in this September of 1969. Most of the manifestations are uninspiring. It was both fashionable and plausible for a while to explain Democratic silence and hesitation in terms of the usual period of grace and tolerance accorded any new Administration. But eight months have elapsed since the Nixon inaugural and on a series of fronts the Nixon regime is p~lainly vulnerable to serious op- position. Despite many headline exercises, it has brought peace no nearer in Vietnam: it appears as entrapped in the dead-end alliance with the Thieu cabal as Lyndon Johnson ever was. WHILE NO calamitous domestic eruptions occurred during the summer, no new "togetherness" can be discerned in the realm of racial conflict. On the economic front the so- called war against inflation has produced no decisive breakthrough, but rather a deepening skepticism -in the business community as well as the modest home-about the combination of prophecy and prayer that recurrently emerges from the Nixon economists. Yet only in the ABM fight has there been what could be described as a coordinated offensive of lib- eral Democrats (and their Repub- lican allies). Nothing before or after has revealed much animation and most of the ABM battle oc- curred before Ted Kennedy's mis- adventure abruptly diminished his role. GEORGE McGOVERN and Wil- liam Fulbright have continued to speak out on Vietnam, with oc- casional assistance from a few others. There are scattered out- cries against Thurmondism. But the largest political mystery surrounds the failure of the Democratic opposition to articulate the steady growth in national sup- port for price-wage controls. Last April Louis Harris reported that "a majority of the public has consistently favored a system of wage and price controls" as an anti-inflationary alternative to higher taxes. In June the month- ly letter of the Cleveland Central National Bank said that "if by the year-end t h e inflationary spiral shows no signs of responding to general monetary-fiscal restraint, new approaches will have to be considered and direct controls is one method that has worked in the past." - word, comparable sentiments have been increasingly expressed in re- cent months. In July a Gallup poll reported a 47.41 per cent vote in favor of a price-wage freeze. Yet the subject remains virtual- ly muted in Congress. FOR A LONG TIME such re- ticence among Democrats was at- tributed to their reluctance to tangle with their longtime AFL- CIO cohorts. But not long a g o George Meany publicly abandoned his resistance to controls, insist- ing only that ctrbs on wages must be equitably accompanied by equi- table price-restrictions. Clearly Meany's shift reflected the deepening conviction among many unionists that wage increas- es embodied in their contracts were illusory triumphs. In the face of all these develop- ments, it is hard to fathom why progressive Democrats (with very rare exceptions) are still treating the subject as unmentionable. John Kenneth Galbraith, whose heresies, on Vietnam and other is- sues, have been so often vindicat- ed, is a lonely missionary among the Democrats in pressing for ad- vocacy of a selective wage-price control program. He has warned that the Administration's present emphasis on t h e "tight money" tactic will in all likelihood pro- duce "a slowing down in output, an incr.ease in unemployment - and continuing inflation." Recent- ly he wrote: "This unemployment, needless to say, will affect the poorest and most vulnerable members of the community and the socially most tense sectors of the society. The reduction in investment f aI11s heavily on the households, small merchants and whoever operates on borrowed money . . . And ad- ding to the general deprivation will be continuing price increases, reflecting continued large w a g e increases . . . Price stabilization cannot be expected until unem- ployment is intolerably severe." WHAT HE calls for is a machin- ery of price-wage restraint "for that sector of the economy where there are strong unions and where the enforcement of wage restraint requires, as a matter of simple equity, that t h e r e be price re- straint." He visualizes no vast bureau- cracy to administer the program; "there need only be a determina- tion of the increase in wages, giv- en the productivity gains, that is consistent with stable prices" and a system of sanctions against the few unions and corporations that defy these rulings. The counselors who repeatedly persuaded Mr. Johnson-and now Mr. Nixon-to shrink from such proposals have prevailed for too long; too many men who lack ad- vanced degrees in economics have been intimidated by their gospel. But Dr. Galbraith is not an ama- teur - in economics or politics. Democrats who would lead us in 1972 should be listening to him now. (c) New York Post Isetters to the Editor Iii ISS5 were numerous areas of the busi- community where "controls" long branded an obscene The allegory of the Mets r---" LAST WEEK NEWSWEEK devoted its cover story to the forgotten American, the people who put Richard Nixon where he is today. A few weeks prior to that Time did the same thing by focusing on the Mets, the Dick Nixons of the sports world, It all goes back to 1962 when the Mets lost 120 games to set a record for the all time low of baseball. A few weeks after the end of that baseball season, Nixon lost the race for the governorship of Cali- fornia and hit a low point in politics from which no one thought he could re- cover. -UT BY 1969, Nixon had made it to the White House, and now the Mets are in the World Series. Furthermore,, the New Yorkers a r e striking parallels to the men the Presi- dent has gathered around him. They are all grassroots Americans--the products of small town life, much like Nixon's in Wittier, Calif. Take Jeprrv T'oscn.rmho~rn oi-f iini-dniy'c Koosman from his b r o t h e r who was serving in the army with the pitcher. The natural sequence in these boy-wonder times, when middle America outquali- fies city sophistication, is for the whiz kid to become the local Horatio Alger. And Koosman did. LIKEWISE, BURGER spent his youth in rural Minnesota. His career, too, was obscure until the President pulled him out of the judicial bush leagues and put him in charge of the nation's highest court. The remainder of the Mets came from out of the way places just like Koosman. Only one grew up in New York. AS FOR THE NIXON CABINET a n d other appointments, well, how many had you heard of before last December? How many had political Hall of F a m e credentials. (Former automobile execu- tives not eligible in this contest.) So the Mets personify the spirit of 0R4AThN 4INT'rW~PT r/ . 1w y(' V t Bookstore politics To the Editor: THOSE STUDENT government= leaders involved in last week's confrontations over the bookstore issue are in danger of subverting the righteous cause they have championed since last spring. The Regents and Administra- tion have been accused of break- ing off dialogue because they have not capitulated to student de- mands for control of the proposed bookstore. But dialogue implies bi- lateral communication and nego- tiation involves reciprocal com- promise. Initially the bookstore issue was billed as a test of whether the Regents were concerned about the exploitation of a monopoly situ- ation by privately-owned book- stores. Although reluctant to ad- mit the validity of this charge. the Regents did recognize the fi- nancial "squeeze" being felt by students. For instance, there was ample precedent among the Uni- versity and other Big Ten schools for a tuition hike this fall. The Regents elected to pare the budget instead. One can infer that -tuds agitation about ballooning f osts was a factor influencing their de- cision. WHEN THE REGENTS reversed their earlier stand and recognized the legitimacy of student demands for a non-profit bookstore, I had expected the SGC to retain the initiative by agi'eeing in principle to the Regents' proposal while re- serving the right to negotiate oil- fernces over policies governing bookstore operations. Instead there was repudiation of the proposal and an attempt to impute ulterior motives to Administration officials SGC LEADERS, however, have opted for the puerile tactics of categorical rejection and melo- dramatic confrontation. They have manufactured martyrs by forcing President Fleming to bring police onto the campus. And so the struggle for control of the Univer- sity--not for the establishment of a bookstore----becomes the battle cry of the "victimized" students. Friday I heard some of those students address mass meetings on the Diag and in Regents Plaza. They complain that their rights are being infringed by the Re- gents, the President. the police, by almost anyone who is not cowed by their extremist tactics. These charges are being put to the test of law, and rightly so. Meanwhile, what about the rights of those who do not want to see the Uni- versity shut down? I am a former college drop-out determined now to finish my ed- ucation as quickly as possible. The University (not the cops) gave me a number when I enrolled. I con- tend this gives me the right to get my money's worth from those who have taken my tuition! IT WOULD BE ironic and un- fortunate if the bookstore were buried by the reactionary rhetoric and disruptive tactics of those who claim to represent the van- guard movement on campus. -Bruce F. Currie Sept. 29 Daily eye To the Editors: I FIND interesting the apparent tendency of Daily reporters to drastically underestimate the at- 72 5 I