notes from an undergraduate ilwe Sfidigan Daily Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan A prescription for pessimism 4v byv roitlaidiunlai 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. Wednesday, August 27, 1969 Summer Supplement Editor: Martin Hirschman A liberal's blueprint for U' student activism" MANY SOBER-FACED faculty members and earnest student radicals proclaim that it will happen this year. Ann Arbor has remained quiet for a devastatingly long period of time and now sits precar- iously with the only significant university whose tranquility has not been disrupted by violent confrontation. No one quite understands why. SDS organizers tell their regional bosses that Ann Arbor is irredeemably calm because of its select, bourgeois student body. Some faculty members blame the trimester, and the heavy workload that goes with it. A team of Detroit Free Press reporters investigating why Ann Arbor was "the quiet campus" concluded that the Uni- versity's responsive administration, under the adept leadership of President Robben Fleming, had kept things cool. But Flem- ing always insists that a confrontation might come at any time. In any event, the street disturbances on South University Avenue last June shat- tered the notion that Ann Arbor was the last university sanctuary around. And the myth of the university as a sanctuary from the law dies a welcome death. For although most argue that laws should be applied selectively on campus, it has long been clear that building seizures and vandalism will bring in the police. AT THE SAME time, if trouble erupts at the University this fall, it will be because the University remains a refuge of sorts for radicals who seek to begin remaking society by shaping the campus into a radical community. While one must sympathize with their intentions and the issues they raise, it is clear that the campus is hardly the arena for combatting and winning victories over social injustice. Although administrators - both Uni- versity and city-may demonstrate that they exercise power without conscience and restraint, campus confrontations in response to their actions reveal little and only divert attention from the more pressing problems of our society. While campus controversies absorb the energies of students, faculty members and admin- istrators, the Vietnam War, racism and poverty go unattended. It is no news that the worst features of our society manifest themselves at the University and should be eradicated here as elsewhere. But the protest of really significant issues does not demand build- ing seizures and violent confrontation. INDEED, ONE of the most impressive and admirable student demonstrations last year was the non-violent sit-in in the Washtenaw County Bldg. resulting in over 200 trespass arrests, but also in a badly needed increase in allocations to the area's welfare mothers. Meanwhile, violent confrontations were urged by some to kick the Reserve Officer Training Corps off campus, to alter ad- missions policies and to abolish course requirements -- issues which merit con- sideration and action, but hardly warrant the use of violence. There can be, it seems,.only two pos- sible explanations for the unrestricted politics of confrontation preached now by certain disciples of social change. One, deplorable, but more easily correctable, is that violence is provoked by a dissident minority which is totally ignorant of the political realities of effecting social change. The other, more sinister explana- tion is that violence is being used as an end in itself because it is felt to be the only way to salvage the nation from the depths into which it has fallen. Violence in this sense is merely a tactic in a total war against society. Indeed, it is an effective tactic. Vio- lence, non-ideological by nature, cannot be compromised. It allows police to ex- ercise their perogatives unchecked, leaves administrators languishing, and lures liberals into the radical movement. Tle power of this type of radical action is simple: violence polarizes and fragments a social system into irreconcilable camps. VIOLENCE CREATES a dilemma for the liberal, Civil libertarians committed to working with dissident minorities through the system are left without recourse to their traditional tactics of compromise and discussion by the introduction of vio- lence. They are left without allies and are unsure of which side to support. It is unfortunate, indeed, that well-in- tentioned administrators suffer most from campus unrest because liberals fail to rally to their aid. During last June's disturbances on South University, for ex- ample, liberal Democratic Mayor Robert Harris was attacked by both right wing- ers opposing his plea for police modera- tion, and by a coalition of student liberals and radicals protesting his use of the police force. MANY LIBERALS failed to recognize that the mayor is an ally struggling to check the unrestrained violence of Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Har- vey while, at the same time, trying to assuage critics from the right and left. This is not to suggest that Harris should be exonerated of all blame for the police and mob violence, but rather that advocates of social change should learn to recognize their allies and be willing to support them in crisis. With regard to the mayor's failure to stymie the local sheriff, it must be noted that radicals and revolutionaries took no interest in the election last year of the County Board of Supervisors which has the power at least to pressure the sheriff from acting as he does. Indeed the disinterest of radicals and liberals in political action is their most disturbing fault. For the rhetoric that revolution is imminent because of uni- versal dissatisfaction is pure myth. "I don't mean to tell you you never had it so good, but that's true, isn't it," Lyndon Johnson once proclaimed-and we must squirm and admit he is right. rTHE NATION is shifting right, not left, and the revolution will come only to enforce law and order. The mayoral cam- paigns of Los Angeles, Minneapolis, New York and now Detroit only attest to this phenomenon. The notable and immediate exception has been Ann Arbor, where Democrats swept the city elections this spring, oust- ing the Republicans who had ruled for 27 years. Liberals have won the city by a slim margin and now have the respon- sibility for coping with racial injustice, police brutality, pollution and the prob- lems of education. The aim of those truly interested in social change should be to seek the ear of this city administration and try to exert influence where the real power lies. The motive should be to create a better life for more people and to preserve the peace, not provoke violence. The student movement on this present- ly quiet campus should, then, fit into this scheme. The rent strike, led by a con- scientious and dedicated group of stu- dents, has had remarkable success in involving students in a worthwhile effort to drive rents down. And commendably, the Tenants Union does not intend to stop by organizing the campus, but seeks to work to improve housing all over the city, particularly in the largely black North Central area. Student Government Council should continue its work in the areas of con- sumer protection and academic reform. Now largely stale and irrelevant, Univer- sity academic life must, be enriched, not to radicalize students, but to politicize UNIVERSITIES ARE a nice target for protest. They are pliable, they don't hit back, and they are convenient for stu- dents because they're so close. But those obviously aren't good reasons for protesting against universities, and many of the reasons usually given simply don't hold water. On the other hand, American universities are ugly institutions and they do need a good deal of change. Their structure is feudal, their independence from the com- munity is illusory and their good intentions are deceptive. But from a wide angle, from the per- spective of the entire country, the fight now going on at universities is largely fu- tile. And where it is not futile, it is woefully misdirected. The University, for example, went through all kinds of contortions last year in a fight over academic requirements. Stu- dents petitioned and marched and sat-in. The faculty got annoyed and finally made some minor changes. They also approved a new bachelor of general studies degree that satisfied almost no one. BUT WHAT THE FIGHT didn't achieve was better education, which should have been its goal. Few students will be more or less educated because the new degree is offered. They will just be educated a little differently. There is also a fight developing over con- trol of tenure. Students are seeking to crack the feudal structure that allows amazing institutional and bureaucratic irrational- ity in determining who shall teach here permanently. But students really don't offer much as an alternative to the faculty in choosing professors. Their standards do not promise to be any more rational or intelligent, only more democratic, if that's worth anything in a decision of this nature. The reasons such internal changes would be futile is simple. Education and schools- are the product of the society that sup- ports them. This society demands produc- tion, output, so universities-students, f a- culties and administrations-for the most part, produce. THERE IS NOT, in education today, any deep and pervasive desire for knowledge. Instead, there is a strong desire for the tools of success, for certification of compe- tence in the form of grades and degrees rather than the substance of competence. In such surroundings, the minorities that seek improvement are doomed to fail. They cannot find relief in the stale insti- tutions they seek to change, but only in themselves. One good indicator is the problem of structuring academic classes and the solu- tions which have been proposed. Students have disliked lectures for some time now. They are often dull, impersonal, usually demeaning and hardly ever educational. The obvious alternative is seminars. There students could spar intellectually with their instructors, and the needed give and take of education could go on. So the theory goes. But a history professor here, one who' cares very much about students, warns that this is a myth. Before coming here, he taught at Yale, where seminars of eight to a dozen students were the rule, not the ex- ception. AND THE EDUCATIONAL setting in New Haven, he reports, is just as stulti- fying as in Ann Arbor. Almost every course ends up like a lecture. Students have noth- ing to say or don't feel like talking. The instructors take over and Yale ends where we are-no place. The underlying problem lies in the per- sonality, as opposed to impersonality, of education. Education depends on the de- sire of the student to be educated as well as the desire of the instructor to teach. With either factor larking, there is no hope and there is no education. Coercion in various forms works and can replace desire. The draft keeps students in school, grades make students study for tests, and diplomas verify the four-year internship. All tend to force education along in small steps. What results is neith- er inspired nor deeply felt, but it manages to suffice. STUDENTS ARE hampered by coming from American high schools, the day care centers for the middle class. Harassed, browbeaten and generally discouraged, stu- dents coining from high school who really care about learning are indeed unique. The problem is compounded by the po- sition of college in a student's life. It is the hiatus between high school and work, sometimes only a place to stop over and sometimes a way station to higher income and top jobs. But undergraduates, especially under- classmen, really have no reason for attend- ing college. If the coercion doesn't get to them, the goals don't inspire them, or edu- cation at the University is not really related to those goals, what can a student do? He has no place to go, so he stays. And both heand the school suffer for it, There is a solution for the uninspired students, and that is inspiring teachers. But there aren't many. Good teaching is as rare as good politics. And where there's a shortage in either- and there always is-the solution is the same: hacks, educational or political. THE SITUATION at universities is abet- ted by the academic structure. The only iron standard for academic appointments is professional competence. A professor makes it not because he can teach, but be- cause he knows his field. Good academic work obviously should be, a factor, but it may. also be a factor to the detriment of good teaching. Incompe- tence in teaching is acceptable and accept- ed. Students lose, The dichotomy between teaching and re- search, the practice of a professional scho- lar, lies in the nature of all universities. It defines the function of universities-to create and transmit knowledge. That was acceptable when universities were purely academic institutions, when future acade- micians were the primary product of -uni- versities. But this is very much not the case to- day. Everyone goes to college now, and academicians are only a very small part of the product of universities. But while the functions of universities have changed, the practices have not followed and are not likely to. The result is dislocation. The clash be- tween goals and purposes of students and those of their universities is great, and it is behind much of the violence on campus- es today, whatever reason is given. THE PROBLEM is made worse by an un- inspiring society like ours, which fails to provide larger, long-range goals for stu- dents. Fifty-four per cent of last year's graduating class had not yet been able to choose a profession. That is an astounding statistic. It is the best measure of the failure of society, the failure to assimilate the young. It is punishment for a society that deserves it. But that doesn't help us, the students, at all. We are not cared about, not in a help- ful way, and so we must fend for ourselves. This is not to ignore the really under- privileged in our inequitably wealthy so- ciety-the blacks, Mexican-Americans and Indians. Rather, it is to note a sign for the troubles of the future. If and when the problems of inequity are solved, and if this society continues to be unable to supply anything more than material satisfaction for its youth, we will be the ultimate losers in an affluent so- ciety. The Graduate. / ., d J . 7 "r xx .J({ i r^ 'f sieve anizalonie Radicalism and "U' iniquiet desperation WHEN I RETURNED to Ann Arbor last fall, there was something in the air that smelled of radicalism. A noticeable tension after a year of frustration led me to believe that students here would swing over to confrontation politics. Everything pointed to agitation at the University. There was the siege at Columbia in the spring, the Kennedy and King assassinations, the police riot in Chicago, and two political conventions that turned deaf ears to the cries for change by nominating losers. It had been it very frustrating year. Almost immediately, my prophecy was borne out, Two hundred of the over 1500 students taking part in the welfare mothers demonstra- tion at the County Building were willing to be arrested in defiance of county officials. It looked like the passivity of the teach-in ethos that had been spawned in Ann Arbor was dying under the weight of a blos- soming radicalism. By election time, Ann Arbor had settled down to sylvan tranquil- ity. An SDS election strike attracted very few people into the streets to protest the election. Violence flared up elsewhere but Ann Arbor was quiet. That was the pattern for the rest of the year: Violence across the country, peace in Ann Arbor usually concerning the same issues. And it is funny, nobody is quite sure why. AN OBVIOUS REASON for the inactivity in Ann Arbor was the breakdown of leadership in the radical ranks. After the Eric Chester- Bruce Levine forces left the Voice-SDS organization to regroup as the Radical Caucus, SDS began to die on campus. The Ann Arbor SDS chapter was not able to remain a significant student force on campus. SDS lost its two most important leaders Bill Ayers and Jim Mellen, who became regional SDS travelers and spent little time in Ann Arbor. Leaderless, SDS was plunged into inactivity, only able to muster small turnouts to harass military recruiters on campus. The scene on other campuses was highlighted by the leadership of cadres of militant black students-noticeably absent at the University. The Black Student Union on campus showed themselves averse to mili- tant action last year and found that they could be successful in pur- suing their goals by working peacefully with the administration. No coalition of white and black radicals was forged on this campus last year-a telling point in keeping the campus quiet. The radical leadership at the University has fallen to the Radical Caucus, which built itself up last year around the issue of the literary college foreign language and distribution requirements. Last spring, Radical Caucus chairman Marty McLaughlin and member Marc Van Der Hout captured the Student Government Council presidency and vice presidency, respectively, Caucus member Shelly Kroll also won a Council seat on the victorious Caucus slate. THE PEACE-KEEPING forces of the administration have also found an unexpected ally in the trimester schedule. Short semesters make it difficult for power movements to gain thrust. The abortive Student Power Movement of 1966 ended quickly as final exams ap- proached in December. Also, most campus violence in the country has come during the months of May and June when this University is deci- u- mated for its summer session. of The trimester has been an effective cooling device for the Admin- ns istration. But as conditions on campuses become more volatile, con- frontations can erupt and be carried on with very little momentum. d The effects of the trimester may become irrelevant this year. to And in any analysis of the campus calm, the role of President Pt Robben Fleming must not be underestimated. Fleming has shown him- rk self to be a shrewd damper of campus ferment. He has been able to k convince most students that the door to his office is indeed open and i coming in to see him is the way to solve problems. c- The administration and the faculty have shown themselves to be n- responsive to student demands without force. An end to such things as t- women's hours and driving regulations was adopted with comparatively - little student pressure. Similarly, a literary college Afro-American con- rs centration program was adopted without student agitation. Last year, it 'was clear to students that ROTC would be handled by the faculty 1- without any student pressure. Now, the faculty seems to be dragging he its feet on ROTC, and a real issue could develop as Filling a vacuum- Afro-American Center ct Editor MIARCIA ARMO PIIP BLOCK'K 'TEvE ANZAO OHN GPA YI ANDY SACKS ANIE PPINCOT MARY RADTKE GRIX. Edito (r RON LANOSMAN Managing Editor As-ocite Managing Editor A ocit te Manr ;ging Editor Editorial Page Editor U itorial Page Editor SArts Editor Literary Editor Photo Editor Contributing Editor ..Contributing Editor (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author is president of the Black Student Union at the University.) By RONALD HARRIS Daily Guest Writer r'HERE IS A vacuum in Ameri- can society, the lack of aware- ness of the Black presence, which has existed since the arrival of Black folk in America. This vacu- um must be filled and the racially oriented problems it has created must be expunged. It is the purpose of Afro-Ameri- can study centers to provide a means of filling this vacuum and solving the racially oriented prob- lems it has created through edu- cation, research, and the develop- ment of constructive solutions. This vacuum in American soci- tween whites and Blacks. This syn- drome has caused increasing pol- arization within American society. Providing positive educational ex- perience concerning Black folk would be a long step in the right direction and would destroy the myths and syndromes that plague this society. There is also a great need for more research concerning the Black experience. While it is true that many of the fears polarizing Blacks and whites resulting from omission of facts, distortions and misinformation can be erased by research, this must not be its sole concern. An Afro-American study center must concern itself with studying the causes of the most pressing problems in the Black community ism. Paternalism creates the att tude that Black folk are lesser hu man beings and thus incapableo defining and creating program to deal with their own problems. Everything which has occurre in the civil rights movementt date has been designed to co-op a small minority of Black folk. TI date the masses of Black fo have been neglected by the Blac middle class and white commun ties. As a result, there is a wide spread rebellion in the Black com munity which has manifest i self by the emergence of organ zations like the Black Panthe and the Republic of New Africa The ultimate goal of an Afr( American study center is to deve up a Black perspective on th needs of the Black communitya NIGHT EDITORs; N' di Coodas, St uart Ganne s, Martin n111n Bil L'ely, Jim Neubacher, Da'.id Spurr, Chris Steele, Daniel Zwerdling. COPY EDITORSM .m Beatte. Robert Kraftowitz,