0 T4r ir4igan Daul Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan rd St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 420 Mayna - v . . . . . , , . . ,,, . . , . , . , Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSC HMAN "For inventory purposes, Mr. President, what else had you traded for Judge Haynsworth's nomination.. .?" - / Thos By DREW BOGEMA EVERYONE had to take Government in high school as it was required by state law. One couldn't graduate without it. To not graduate was to be consigned to the living dungeon of the blue-collar w a g e slave, who couldn't have big cars, lots of money, or be happy. Ever. This, future his- torians will probably say, was the only im- portant aspect of the Fifties (which ex- tended by accident to 1965). Everybody knew this except the hoods, who had brand-new 409 cubic-inch GTO's, lots of money, and always went about put- ting on pretentious fronts mnaking it look as though they were joyous, carefree life- lovers. Maybe their parents, we thought, bribed them nottoraise hell. Anybody who was anybody in the student-nigger crowd knew that the grease would not be ade- quately prepared for adulthood, that their tight-pants, pointed shoes, slicked-down greasy ducktail hair would eventually make some girl pregnant, leading them, one and all, to the crushing deprivation of the wage-slave. They'd get their due, if we had to have a revolution. To avoid the oppression of the wage- slave life-style, our parents hammered away day after day, one had to pay atten- tion in class, make good grades, get into a good college, and acquire a well-paying position with a prominent firm. Along the way, one would pick up the styles, man- nerisms, and interests of the affluent. And, after a decent marriage, the final step was to move out to the suburbs so that you could experience the joys of growing child- ren and provide for the family as y o u r father had done for yours, living all the time in a hopeless state of anxiety for the two or three weeks a year when you could go on vacation, return to childhood and have fun again. This was the way middle- class dynasties perpetuated themselves. To do well in class, one f i r s t had to know what the limits of the subject-matter were. This is why if you go into any su- lurid drugstore novels burban school on the f i r s t day of the school year you will invariably see every- one desperately leafing through their text- books to see how much they are required to learn. The trick was to look at the last chapter and see if one could answer the questions at the end. If they weren't too difficult, then behavior for the rest of the year was predetermined - sleep - on the desks, in the physics books, in the library, on field trips, doing push-ups, waking only for the bell and for lunch when school really came alive. There were entirely too many lurid drugstore novels to keep up with if one was to find out how it really was in the world. EXCEPT FOR GOVERNMENT. Nobody could ever figure out why we had to take the course. One had to take Math because when you grew up you might be called on to keep your checkbook in balance, except if you were rich, then you didn't have to. One had to take English to become a liter- ate, well-read conversationalist, a talent that was supposed to be of value at cock- tail parties. The hoods took Shop so that when they became wage-slaves they could putter around in their shabby basements in order to pacify their hostility and ag- gression at being common proles instead of limosine liberals. One took History in order to be able to know what the holi- days stood for. But Government had the most elusive content. Everybody knew about the gov- ernment and nobody knew about the gov- ernment. The government was the Presi- dent and Congress and the Supreme Court except on the second Tuesday in November every four years when the Electoral Col- lege was the government. The government was Huntley and Brinkley, filling in the unused space on the tube after the five o'clock movie and the beginning of prime time at seven. The government was Super- man, the FBI, the PTA, the AFL-CIO, the local traffic cop. The Government was ev- erywhere, was everybody. How could we be expected to know everything? When you tried to ask someone why we had to take Government, they would al- ways come down with an attack of the mumbles-different mumbles of course for different people. If you asked anyone con- cerned with the administration of the school, they would say that it was to help young people handle their adjustment to authority. If you asked the teacher, he would solemnly tell you of the necessity for each citizen to know of the duties and obligations he must fulfill in return for the generous outpouring of governmental serv- ices that was said to make up these United States of America. If you pidgeonholed some hood leaning up against a wall in the corridor, he would say that Govern- ment's essential purpose was twofold: to tell the would-be crook which laws he could break without risking punishment and to advise hooligans on their rights and privileges so they couldn't be arbi- trarily pimped by a tyrannical govern- ment. We had smart hoods. OUR FEARS that we would be required to know everythin'g in order to pass the course were somewhat soothed when we found out what Government class was all about. Government was the teacher wear- ing white socks, which means of course, that anything passing from his lips was not to be heeded. Even though he could force us to memorize the names of the Cabinet, recount the complicated process of how a bill became a law, or count the number of states Goldwater had carried on a single hand, he could never command out alle- giance and loyalty because of his white socks and clashing K-Mart clothes he wore day after day. Our parents had told us that proles were not to be listened to. But, still, nobody ever knew why. However, everything is now clear. Gov- ernment was required in order to make sure that we would accept the existence order of things and not change much-maybe the seniority system or the Electoral Col- lege, practices that even the elders said were antiquated. Government was required to make sure that we would be indoc- trinated to the sit-tight-after-the-great- struggle consciousness. Our parents had beaten back the deathly poverty of the Depression and valiantly crushed those Nazi devils who tried to steal wealth by take-over rather than make an honest dollar from their own labor, and had set up a political system in which success depending upon how much praise and reverence one showed toward these accomplishments. It was our duty to pick up where they had left off, to continue the crusade to make the world good for General Motors. WHERE TELEVISION and parental training failed to instill you with good ole' one-hundred-per-cent American greed, Government class would take over to show you a network of rules that favored 'the bourgeois, apathetic, unthinking existence where the private search for wealth and social isolation were the order of the day. Government would phrase all the impor- tant nitty-gritty of living with two-hun- dred-million others into dogmatic claptrap, that made you feel as though this was Sunday school so you wouldn't pay atten- tion and daydream instead. Government was described in such a life- less way in order to insure that in the future whenever a common prole or even a well-to-do man on the make began to read of government policy, the old, never- buried memories of boring days in Govern- ment class would make them throw up and quit thinking about the blind leading the blind. No dice. Some fool came around and because everybody was so bored with it all, people listened. The message was short and missionaries sprung up all over the land to carry the teachings of the prophet: it doesn't have to be this way. Or, maybe it was just that those luscious drug-store novels were too delicious. e r I 1 y'j j ! I i ..---' i i i r ' ...+ t LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ~~~4'L lAS kJ46 *.~ N~4.%. ~b9. Stop worrying about quaddie and Th, i Smdat L The Haynsworth defeat as a Nixon victory rrHE POLITICAL intrigue surrounding the defeat of the nomination of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth has served to obscure the essential nature of the conflict and to spotlight the Nixon ad- ministration's role in the losing battle. This, of course, is not necessarily bad since the results of the nomination a r e bound to have a profound effect on the President's immediate political future. Besides, it was heartening to see Presi- dent Nixon's stalwart fight to appoint Haynesworth end in disaster for the Chief Executive. For once it seemed as if the consummate politician had goofed and as if his strategy to coddle the South and coerce the Senate was crumbling. UNFORTUNATELY this apparent out- come of the fight is deceptive. The defeat of the Haynsworth nomina- tion in no way spells defeat for the Ad- ministration policies and may in fact be utilized to whittle away the energies and resources of the loyal opposition. Nixon may still win his crusade on behalf of the silent majority. Meanwhile, the President has yet to lose the war to make the court more moder- ate. Perhaps because it is interesting and important to speculate on how the de- feat reflects back on the new President there has been a tendency to discount or ignore the impact of the incident on the court itself. NEEDLESS TO SAY, that impact will be considerable. Although the high court is not, as some pundits contend, the prime mover of this society, it is the catalyst for significant and liberal social change. In the last two decades it has made a series of landmark decisions found al- tering the directions of change. Now the most consistently liberal mem- bers of the court (Justices Douglas, Mar- shall, Black, and -- sometimes - Bren- nan) will be outvoted by the more moder- ate and conservative forces (Justices Burger, Harlan, Stewart, White and the new nominee). Jdi/orial Staff HENRY GRIX, Editor SIEVE NISSEN RON LANDSMAN City Editor Managing Editor LANIE LIPPINCOTT ...,.. Associate Managing Editor JENNY STILLER..............Editorial Page Editor LESLIE WAYNE ArtE di, While it will prove impossible for the newly constituted court to reverse trends begun in the last 20 years, the judicial branch will surely not break ground. It may be taken for granted that t h e President will eventually appoint a con- servative whose integrity is beyond re- proach and whose nomination will be confirmed. The President has vowed to swing the balance of the court to the right and no one doubts he will succeed. ,THE STRATEGY w h i c h defeated Haynsworth then, was aimed n o t primarily at changing the complexion of the court (although the single most im- portant reason for the defeat was un- doubtedly Haynsworth's questionable anti-labor and anti-civil rights stands) but was designed specifically as a slap at the President. Such an outpouring of energy to fore- stall the inevitable is understandable on the part of the opposition party: the tougher they can make life for the Presi- dent, the better their own prospects for future victory. But that so many prestig- ious Republicans-17 in fact-voted against confirmation was somewhat stunning. The party leadership deviated from the Nixon line because of ethical commitments (held over from the Fortas affair) and political commitments (pend- ing in upcoming elections). BUT IT MUST not be forgotten t h a t Nixon has made efforts to entrench his power not on party lines alone. If tle Nixon strategy is to lure the South into the Republican camp, he can still do so. Despite the stinging criticism of some southern skeptics, Nixon can justly claim that he tried valiantly to get their man into office. It was really those northern liberals who messed up the whole thing. In the end, the President will compel the Senate to buckle down and appoint his man. After all, Nixon is the only one who can make the suggestions. And the lesson for the South will be that it can rely on Nixon; the lesson the liberals al- ready learned is that they cannot. Hopefully, liberal members of the Sen- ate will not jump to the conclusion that this President is really inept and quite vulnerable. Although some optimistically claim that the administration bungled the whole thing and can't even dominate its own party, the President is merely proving himself to be his own man. To the Editor: NEWS ARTICLES which ap- peared in the October 22, 1969 and November 1, 1969 issues of the Michigan Daily cited incidents of posible food poisoning. T h e first article w a s entitled "Food Poisoning Likely in Barbour Sick- ness." The second article was en- titled "Residential College Stu- dents Hit by Outbreak of "Quad- die Disease'." Reports from the Department of Environmental Health and Safety have now become available to' our Office which after thorough in- vestigation there is no evidence available to indicate that f o o d poisoning occurred in either case. This fact has been communicated to the residents of b o t h Betsy Barbour and East Quadrangle. Those residents and other inter- ested students are encouraged to discuss these reports w it h Mr. Lynn Tubbs, Assistant Director of University Housing - Food Ser- vices. WE ARE VITALLY concerned about possible cases of food-borne or other sicknesses. Any suspic- ions of such possible diseases should be called immediately to the attention of Food Service per- sonnel in the specific building and/or the Department of Envir- onmental Health and Safety in Health Service. -John Feldkamp, Director University Housing Nov. 25 Great aspirations To the Editor: WITHIN THE SCHOOL of Edu- cation, either the majority of un- dergrads are silent or there is a "silent majority" (if you'll excuse the expression). It it difficult to believe that the latter is true- that the majority of ed. students don't "agree in principle" (as the faculty did) with the ideas pro- moted by the students who are trying to effect a change. Neither possibility says very much for the majority of undergrads who haen't shown interest in the Ed. School's Cinderella movement. The problem here, is that it's going to take a lot more than a wave of a wand to transform the Ed. School into a progressive and worthwhile institution. The students who are working toward the long overdue change, are progressive and innovative in their thinking. They are unwilling to passively melt into the mold which the structurally inflexible Ed. School offers them. This type of undergrad student will be best qualified to benefit from and prove the merits of the Ed. School of the future because of his ability to think independently and creative- ly. The discussion and plans, thus far, seem to indicate that the new Ed. School will promote and en- courage the development of this kind of thinking. It is also this type of student who will become a teacher who is capable of helping students develop in this way. IT IS UNFORTUNATE that the majority of undergrads in the Ed. School is unwilling or unable to look critically at its program and take action to improve it. There are many who don't care if they are getting a good education. To them, the importance of the Ed. School is only as a means toward the end of receiving a teaching certificate. There are also those students who are serious in their aspirations to become teachers. but they are not capable of think- ing more independently. The un- willing and the unable students are not the kinds of students who will make the future Ed. School a successful one. The progress which the minority of students has made to accom- plish the necessary change is both exciting and encouraging. It is un- fortunate that more students, es- pecially undergrads, either because of unwillingness, inability, or a third possibility, laziness, haven't given thought, time, and support to a movement as important as this one. -Carolyn Koppy, '71 Dec. 1 Agnew's mandate To the Editor: FINALLY! Now we know what Nixon meant after his defeat in California when he said the press would not have him to "kick around" in the future. He was not, as the facts have born out, refer- ring to his retirement; but, rather, prophesying the end to freedom of the press in this country. How else are we to .interpret Agnew's selection of the New York Times and the Washington Post for criticism when he leaves un- mentioned such fanatically anti- communist rags as the New York Daily News or the chain of Hearst papers? The Daily News with a circula- tion about three times that of the Times, went as far last sum- mer as to encourage editorially an all out war between Russia and China in the name of freedom. PERHAPS THE portion of the media under attack should take seriously Agnew's mandate for "objectivity" in a way he never suspected. Indeed, we might all profit from more exposure to the "facts" about our tragic involement in Vietnam, our presence in Latin America, or our distorted national priorities. -Margo Mulvehill, Qrad Nov. 21 Impounding fee To the Editor: RECENTLY my stolen bicycle was recovered by the Ann Arbor Police Department. I was appalled to discover that I was charged what was in effect a service fee for its return. I was charged a $3.00 impoundment fee. Apparently people have b e e n paying this fee from time imme- morial without ever understand- ing the underlying principle. I was being charged for services that the police department should have rendered free. The return of stol- en property is their tax-supported Job. IT IS NOT incidental that something like this should ocur. If one examines the law under which this impounding was au- thorized, he will find that an ex- treme degree of legal w o r d- stretching was necessary to im- power the police to act in this manner. It would be ideal if the City Council of Ann Arbor were to take steps to rectify t h e appallingly outdated, ambiguous, and unsat- isfactory bicycle ordinances. -Laurence R. Kamins Nov. 16 Capitalist crimes To the Editor: THE DAILY -- like the national press - constantly plays up the Weathermen as the "militant" or "leading" faction of SDS. This group of crazies and police agents who split away from SDS at the Convention in June have since then' gone around attacking the people and in general discrediting SDS. It is no surprise that they sought a $20,000 pay-off in Washington in exchange for remaing non- violent. So much for t h e i r "principles." What is strange is that the Moratorium refused the offer, es- pecially since their friends t h e Mobe leaders helped to bribe SDS with the offer of a headquarters and accommodations if we would call off our rally at the Labor Dept. Maybe they reasoned a few more attacks on the people in the food name of SDS would further turn off students and workers to radi- cal alternatives . . . WHAT THE Mobe leaders, the politicians, the administrators. and the Weathermen all fear in common is an antiwar movement that rejects them and sides with working people, who have the good reason and potential strength to smash imperialism. This is why they refused to grand a permit for the Labor Dept. rally. We understand why T h e Daily chose not to report t h a t rally. By spreading Nixon's myth about a great silent majority (read: the working class) who are responsible for the war, The Daily attacks those who are striking against the very warmakers even when the government cries the strikes are sabotaging the national interest (the Vietnam war). The Daily has ignored the G.E. strike in Edmore, Mich., which SDS'ers from Central and Alma have supported, and where work- ers have bei busted for keeping out scabs. The Daily ignored the campus workers' strike at Wayne State, which SDS mobilized students to support. The Daily neglected to report the militant demonstration led by SDS at MSU to block a G.E. recruiter, which resulted in two SDS'ers being arrested f a r assault and battery. DESPITE THE Daily and the rest of the liberal press - both of which push student power -, stu- dents led by SDS are increasingly allying with working people in a common struggle against racism and imperialism. We are allying particularly with campus workers to expose the uni- versities for the racist bosses they are. The ruling class and its press fear this alliance becausa they know it threatens their power and profits. -Roger Forman, SDS Peter Ostrow, SDS Nov. 19 PART of WH Y RE P~ ART OF ThU iF OUP PAR of WA 600[4E PAk'T IF 'VUF PARTCOF CQIcT PART OFT0 ThU SOW"17TOP~ 7W ~ p G"PMFO OF YNCU~~ ORRPART PATOF T tE~PkC F'AQTofJ 4lui2 I'YOU' PATOF ThE %uVBI-fot. 50 ARTCF THU p26.mo (5 7THU SOL-UOM . -"W- =