sIeve anizaie - n quAet desbperatioI The Sirhigan Daiy Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan The great ROTC myth F. 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, OCTOBER 24, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY SARASOHNI HRC jurisdiction over the r[HE ANN ARBOR Human Relations Commission's decision to seek juris- diction over discrimination in the Uni- versity is an admirable a n d necessary move. For the past several months, HRC has been drafting proposed changes in their authority that would allow them to deal more effectively with problems in Ann Arbor. The changes that they have out- lined are very good and necessary: the power of subpoena, the power to s e e k cease-and-desist orders, and the power to test establishments suspected of racial bias. But these powers are nearly meaning- less if the jurisdiction excludes the Uni- versity. If it does exclude the University, it excludes Ann Arbor's largest employer and the largest employer of Ann Arbor's black residents. COMMISSIONER Theodore St. Antoine, a University professor, argued for this exclusion with a contention which is pa- tently ridiculous. He argued that concen- tration on the University would be a mis- allocation of HRC's resources because "the University has an internal system of its own." St. Antoine never did elaborate on what this system does or even what it is. He didn't indicate what types of problem it has handled in the past and which it has solved, if any. The University has a mystery system of its own, a system St. Antoine helped to institute. Perhaps this is the source of his great faith in it. But the existence of a system in no way insures that it pre- vents or attempts to correcttthe racial discrimination or racial tensions that plague black students, black staff a n d black faculty. AT THE Sept. 7 meeting of HRC, David Cowley, director, pointed out that this mechanism does not work. He said. "a re- cent report of the federal contract com- pliance division showed that although the University has set up mechanisms f o r dealing with problems of discrimination, it has not effectively changed its meth- ods of recruiting staff and faculty." St. Antoine also argues "if we (HRC) move in on the University with cease-and -desist orders it would declare its state of immunity and we would be involved in several years of litigation." This is undoubtedly true. However, this type of litigation should be welcomed, not avoided. It is time that the limits of state University agencies' immunity be examined, and stripped where a conflict between the in- terests of the people and t h o s e of the agency conflict. State immunity statutes are designed to keep local governments from hampering state agencies. Tax-exemption, for exam- ple, exists to prevent a local government from taxing an unpopular state agency out of business. ADMITTEDLY, close HRC scrutiny of the University would hamper the Uni- versity, but this is the type of hampering that is necessary for the enforcement of state laws against discrimination. But why would the University sue? The answer is clear; the University does not want to be watched by someone who will be present all the time. The federal con- tract compliance people can only make it to Ann Arbor every one or two years, and the local employes are not familiar with the people from Washington and are reluctant to t a k e their complaints to them - even when they know who they are and how to contact them. If the University does seek such litiga- tion, it is effectively serving notice to the community that the days of the Green report, which characterized the Univer- sity as a school for rich white boys, have returned. Commissioner Deborah Grubbs p u t it right on the line Tuesday night: "T h e University is one of the worst w h e n it comes to complying with regulations." Albert Wheeler, former state president of the NAACP, and a University professor, also said "the University is t he biggest employer and also the biggest discrimni-. nator in Ann Arbor." PEOPLE HAVE LOST faith in the Uni- versity's ability to handle its problems internally. The University has more than sufficiently demonstrated - with other issues on campus this fall -- that it will not do anything until it is stuck in a cor- ner. Black service and hospital workers are not in a position to defend themselves. The black students are too busy trying to keep themselves above water to help, and black faculty must always think of ten- ure and the possibility of a promotion. Someone h a s to protect those people who are being victimized by the Univer- sity, and HRC is the only agency even re- motely capable of giving it a try. -ALEXA CANADY A ,royv wit hot cultureIT iS A dull-witted arim vm ,- ,Adull-witted rmy cannot defeat the encilly. (.haruiimm Miw I se-Tullg j HE GREAT Chinese military strategist shows us the real importance of educa- tion to the military. It is purely pragmatic. The military believes that smarter officers are more capable; this is probably right. And universities help them in the construe- tion of cultured, efficient, sharp-witted officers. One of the key arguments used in de- fense of ROTC programs sees the relation- ship of the university to the military in another way. The argument is that ROTC must be retained, for it is a way to human- ize the military and to insure effective civilian control. Some liberal professors and many students claim thai university- trained officers are necessary to keep the military from becoming even more power- ful. I am afraid that careful scrutiny of this notion will prove it a delusion. MIUCH OF THE criticism against the military has been misdirected. While the military's appetite for power is real and growing, the real responsibility for this country's warlike posture belongs to our civilian leaders. Lyndon Johnson sent the troops to Viet- nam. He is the one who ordered the aerial devastation of the North. Even though the military has too-easy'access to these levers of powers, still the power to wage war lies in the hands of civilians like Johnson. Four years of college and tenure as a school teacher did little to humanize Lyti- don Johnson. And what about the other architects of war? Walt Rostow V Dean Rusk? Herman Kahn? Henry Kissinger 2 Quite frankly, the universities are supply- ing the leadership in the production of war and not for halting the military. Nor are these freak exceptions. John Kennedy, a product of the grea test. human- izing institution of them all--Harvard- was no different. He crept into office warning of a "missile-gap," and armament production swelled. His administration paved the way for the nation's reliance on a super para-military elite. Funds al- located for chemical and biological war- rI he l Fell t-a The Chairman fa e- the1 techlolog y in office. Wiost inhuimari of all military tripled during Kennedy's yea's- Civilian icontrol coe lot nc ssarly pro- mot e peace. College-t-rained civian leaders aoe it nicessarily a bulwark of humaiuty aea inst a barbaric militaty. ANI) HE LIBER I, argumeILt that tumu- \ers tt-based ofTicer traintin oiramAs i1 htima nize atd c heck the mit aix ignores Ii. a': realities. W t abotU ('olles and universities hems Ives': I find it prcsumltuous to be- lixve thI at uni versitie's that accept military resear'h contracts are in any position to ilmirt m0!a] gtidance to anyola- IT 1967. the Pentagon eleasid a list (i ,. tniveits this one in(luitdedthat were tecipients of chemical and biological wartare contracts. These institutions ca- 1 not expect to mantufacture these divices im m1a atrocit y. relegate reponsibil ty lio1 their liumnane use to the military, nld then expect to insure much humane use with ROTC cadets. These contradictions between the ideals and actual practices of universities are no more apparent than on campuses that give facilities, manpower, and support to mili- tarist think tanks. At Georgetown, Stan- ford. and Pennsylvania, these institutes engage in strategic planning for combatting social revolution. The work is done under the auspices and with the prestige of the host universities. Clearly, universities must began human- izing and building effective control over themselves before they think they can do so against the powerful military establish- mnent. ANOTII(ER ASSUMPTION that this liberal strategem makes is that the human- ity threshold of college-trained officers is higher than that of military academy graduates. I know of no empirical evidence to support this assumption. icaudemi~c ursting 0 t of' By RICK PIERLOFF IF YOU ARISE for a 9:00 at five alter, finish your washing and dressingit in ten minutes, you will probably arrive in the auditorium by 20 after and by ail reliable estimates. should be asleep by half-past. Then you will file out with th rest of the lecture crowd, nodyite h y'our head to friends who k'pt awake. but who also netted 1i ttle educational profit from the talk. Later you will contact them to copy over the notes you must study for next week s midterm. You will be asked to discuss the lecture and assigned reading in recitation. but few will have read it carefully and Teaching eltlow. s I e lite tine Wi' studeints too. Pueparhin'' disser- cotions tak's time. yOu kinow'.', 1 th're ate just not inough hotr's in the day Iior tis to eserch doe- toral t hessh worry bot hi dia, and still ('otnil ways to ii- Thlen there a: e the as tudenti iihienselves. Many are 100 preorco - lpied wvith alpple cider' and donuts rthe fiat hotl'e to p aise a mii- ment anci {itistiotn what a lprotew sot' says or titi par'' a '0o1unta- ar'gtum't to ii riadinig assigner BI 'T WIRY sIhould they? 'They' know. they multst arise by . 9 a in. each Tuesday for' atn An gell ' ox mnyi pages of notes did you takh today'?"' contest. () her faculty membr's seem to ievex'c there is a clear (Oriea''tt lo l betxxween the number of notes aken and the amount of Knowl- ed' e obtained. YET KNOWL.EDGE is re anly 010' thatt deciphei'ing shorthand. t , act [he rabid note--taking a tee cir's lostr i' tiends to dis- 10 a e-dentIs from coilcentrat- 11? (01 a img any value from the p1 li'ssors' feetutre. 1(1eally, the lecture should re- :'Imble a mystical experience. oth lectu ei' aiid student should sepa- ate thmnev from the rea ities Graduate Assembly awakens to ROTC IT IS A SURPRISING and commendable step that the normally lethargic Grad- uate Assembly has submitted its own v i e w s on ROTC to the Regents. It is a step which bears repeating by all repre- sentative student organizations on cam- pus which have an interest in the issue. For too long student groups have ab-- dicated their right to make their views Both sides now ON OCTOBER 18, John P. Roche wrote in the Washington Post of Hubert Humphrey's refusal to call for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam. Instead, Roche wrote, Humphrey told the press that Nixon deserved "nonpartisan support for his peacemaking efforts." "The easy thing for a liberal Democrat to do right now is to bask in the sunshine of anti-war militancy - the youngsters provide a wonderful ego-valet service for those who feed their frenzy. Humphrey took the harder road ..." And four days later, the New York Times reported: "TOKYO, Oct. 22-Hubert H. Humphrey declared today that the United States had achieved its objectives in Vietnam and had fulfilled its obligations to the South Vietnamese people. "Interviewed in the luxurious Okura Hotel, the former Vice President said that the U.S. had two basic reasons for going into Vietnam: to prevent the spread of Canmunst rmpl crcrP-c n ati o mt known in independent reports. Instead they have stated a position and attempt- ed to gain its acceptance by militant ac- tion - action that often alienates n es- sentially sympathetic University com- munity. Or, alternatively, students have relied heavily on faculty support to ac- complish their desired ends, and have in the process compromised both groups. In this case, Graduate Assembly h a s views it wishes the Regents to consider which the faculty report does not include. GA will c a l1 for complete abolition of ROTC -- a step which the faculty has al- ready ruled out - but with the explicit reservation that, if students wish, they may establish the program as an extra- curricular activity. The faculty report re- duces ROTC to t h e status of an extra- curricular activity automatically, if the Defense Department finds t h e restric- tions imposed by the faculty too difficult to observe. GA believes only students can determine whether ROTC should remain on campus as an extracurricular activity. THE GRADUATE ASSEMBLY'S position is the only viable one. The students - not t h e faculty, administration or de- fense department - must choose which student activities operate on campus. It may be argued that an intransigent Board of Regents will ignore with impun- ity any report submitted to it by students. But it neither fits the temper of the times nor displays very good sense for the Board to fail to recognize student opin- ion. It would be m o s t unwise for the Board to dismiss any report thoughtfully tures center on ideas, the h whys instead of the wha dents would be encourage quire and perhaps evenI FOR EXAMPLE, in an ductory world history co professor should not addr lectures solely to date-infer planations of who overrant man Empire. where feud existed and when the C power was at its peak. Instead he should speak trends of history which these specific developmen What were the concepts, ning a government in Rom do they differ from prese interpretations and howd lead to dissolution of thee What philosophies on property and political po; through the Middle Ages;h they effect the emergence and why did they change era progressed? How did the philosop Church authority change a did this affect the concept tion-states in later years? The same should hold in iology course. There sho some discussion here of c students will remember: transplants evolution andi ological causes of racial ences. These topics should cede the meticulous dese of bodily functions which s forget after a final. And lectures on conceptua 'in most any course-gi dents general material on that they can use to shap daily lives. TIHESE ARE, admittedl topic's about which to spea tmany lecturers are younge who are too busy publish spend time worrying about things--concepts. The blame for this must part, with our educational; which stresses publication exclusion of teaching stude It should be made clear t professor should spend as time teaching students a lishing. Surely, his studen to learn as much as do hisl sional colleagues. A university, after all, e develop better minds trai question and not just acc base decisions on human re and not on merely impuls ideally a place where the1 tive student can soak up1 edge and explore his inn self. But to develop such; ness students need some1 sional guidance. And this role of the professor. YET IN FACT the stude Admittedly, many of our liberal profes- sors served as officers during World War II. I am willing to take their word that they were more humanist-oriented than their academy counterparts. But universi- ties do not just turn out humanists. And I think 'that we have a different breed of student in ROTC programs today-essen- tially the same kind of student who would attend a service academy. ANYWHERE from one half to two thirds of the ROTC cadets on this campus are engineering students. I do not mean to imply that engineering students need be any less humane than other students. But it is certain, that a humanistic education is not a product of the engineering college. Despite growing attention by that school to the humanities, engineering students do not get the kind of liberal education that ostensibly builds civilian-minded militar- ists. The engineering curriculum (perhaps necessarily) seeks to furnish the basic tools necessary for that vocation, An en- gineering student's social conscience is not developed by his college training. But a liberal education-one that imparts a deep feeling for the tradition of western civilization and a humane world view- seems to be little to go on in the authori- tarian structure of the military. Especially in time of war, I fail to see how this liberal education is a meaningful way to combat military brutality, The ethos spawned during ROTC training seems more likely to have the deciding influence on more cadets than would their liberal ed- ucation. AND THEN, of course, we can remember one of the great humanitarians of them all, a winner of the Air Force's Medal for Humane Action, a great general who came from the ranks of Ohio State's ROTC pro- gram. I refer to Gen. Curtis "Bomb them back into the Stone Age" LeMay. Certainly LeMay isn't your typical college graduate, but it reminds us that the academies don't have the monopoly on fanatics, If liberals feel that the influence of the military is excessive and undesirable-I think they do-then let's hope that they combat it with something more effective than the weak gestures of infiltrating it with liberally-educated gentlemen. apa thy ows and But students must not allow the ts, stu- institution to manipulate them. d to in- They should realize that apathy laarn. is presently part of the university and they must set out on their intro- own to learn. They must burst urse, a their shells of indifference and ress lis submission and seek out their in- sted ex- structors. the Ro- al fiefs THIS IS A HARD task for many ?hurch's to undertake. Students have been taught from elementary school on- oo the ward to memorize what the teach- eXpl-in er says and to crank it back on Is. every Friday's test. An "A," they of run- are told, indicates intelligence and e; how intelligence means a higher classed nt day job. Few teachers seem to care did this whether students are absorbing empire? new ideas or questioning old hypo- man, theses as long as they fulfill the ier ian requirements. how did The first thing a counselor asks of fiefs you during appointments is how as the you have progressed toward satis- fying your distribtuon require- hy on ments. No matter whether you are nd how enthusiastic about taking a par- of na- ticular course; who cares if you have a unique method of fulfilling a phys- your requirement? As long as you )uld be ar-e progressing satisfactorily to- oncepts ward your degree, your institution heart is happy. the bi- Somewhere something is wrong, differ- with "diplomatized" students who super- camre more about grades than about riptions bettering their minds. tudents BUT THE BURDEN for improv- l topics ing this education rests with the ve stu- students. They must shake the in- n ideas stitution into caring. e their They should insist that they- the students-have some say in how the course is structured, in y hard what topics they will discuss. ak. And Maybetthere should be no final ;er :11cc examinations; petrhaps each stu- hi'ig to dent should choose his own topic --of all with his instructor. Prof. Abraham Kaplan in his lie, in Philosophy 331 class recently an- system, ounced that he wants the students to the to pick two representatives to plan eats. the final with him and a teaching hat the fellow. Asked if there should even much be a final. Kaplan replied that this s pub- was one topic that would be de- ts need bated. profes- THIS IS, admittedly, an unusual xists to case, but it need not be. ned to Students should press the pao- ept. to fessor for relevance, question the flection exam procedures if they believe e. It is them unfair, and set up individual inquisi- seminars with professors. knowl- For it is during this person-to- termost person setting that the student is aware- likely to realize his individuality. profes- He will be stimulated by someone is the taking an interest in him and w ill ask questions of a professor to nts get thrash out his own hliefs The 'our teaching fellow Will ask yott to recall d'tail anywvay. From there you wiii do what is expected: textbook markup, coffee plus overnigt i and blue book hail leCtrII'e wich maiv wel te i emnt to te sleet they htmeritpt el ocr :1as 1 What t he piot essor say 's hma : x tone]hes mainy. lit histOlry he hik1. 01 xoocet lecturts spiral note- ooks and( clocks in the corner. e ofeso should read his atidiene?'s elIot iOS,. grasp its i1Is-