Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ABOR, MICH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Truth Will Prevail 42MANRSTANA.OMC. NwPH E:7-05 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: NEIL SHISTER he Athletics Board: A Reevaluation of Power POWER U 7 oB r''n and Inatvtiuaatsm. A ayToEndBoe m kPOETRY by MARK R KILLINGSWORTH " :YS:r:{*.'S}}} }Y.X", }.,trx*. v.X.avW " vs,.,,.. . J.... A, ATHLETICS is a big business of vital importance to American universities -not only to the big state schools but even those in the academically prestigious Ivy League. Michigan is no exception to this trend, but indeed is an athletic leader. Last year the budget of the ath- letic department at this University was in excess of $1.8 million. The athletic department earns most of the money it spends, mainly by charging for tickets, but it still gets a sizable grant from the University in the form of a $5 per semester fee taken out of each stu- dent's tuition. This fee ammounted to over $244,000 last year. Thus the Univer- sity is supporting a sizable part of the athletic program. Yetit has relatively little control over it. The Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics has complete control over the functioning of the athletic department, and this board reports only to the Re- gents. Thus there is no participation by the University administrators in decisions of the Board except in the sense that an assistant to Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler sits on the Board in an ex-officio capacity. BIG TEN RULES state that athletics must be under faculty control, and in theory the organization of the Board at the University complies with this regula- tion. Ten of the 17 members of the Board are faculty representatives. Yet there has been strong question as to whether these members adequately re- flect the attitudes of the general faculty. In a study conducted in 1962 by a sub- committee of the University faculty Sen- ate, it was learned that many faculty members seemed to feel that the Board was too strongly controlled by its chair- man, athletic director H. O. (Fritz) Cris- ler. There was also a feeling that those faculty members chosen by University President Harlan Hatcher are not truly representative of the general faculty, but Ln fact are those with a disproportionate interest in athletics. Subsidization and "professionaliza- tion" of "student-athletes" is no longer the exception but rather the rule in inter- collegiate athletics. And the fact also re- mains that intercollegiate athletics, al- though they serve no more than a sub- sidiary role in what should be the true function of a university, are now con- sidered by many to be too important to abolish or even de-emphasize. The theory goes that spending this money brings home winning teams, and that winners keep the alumni loyal. Per- Subscription rate: $4.50 semester ny carrier t$5 by maill); $8 yearly by carrier ($9 by mails Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich. haps so, perhaps not-Harvard has never been much of an athletic power, and yet it seems to have established a rather im- pressive endowment. THE UNIVERSITY, in fact, needs a new perspective on its athletic policy. The Board, unlike those of many other schools, seems committed to having teams com- parable to those at any other school in almost every sport. The athletic director at the University of North Carolina rec- ognized this fact when he called the inter- collegiate athletic program at the Univer- sity "one of the finest in the country." Yet if it is, indeed, a good program in the field of inter-collegiate athletics, how does it stack up for the average student who pays $10 a year athletic fees from his tuition, $12 for football tickets which at many other schools are free to stu- dents, and a dollar a game for basket- ball, swimming and hockey? Further, intramural facilities at the University are grossly inadequate, as even Crisler himself admits. The IM building was designed for a student body about half the size of the current one. It is also worthwhile to note that there is no place on campus, with the exception of a small parking lot behind South Quad, where students can play basketball out- side. Vice-President for Academic Affairs Al- lan Smith seems strongly in favor of in- creasing the intramural facilities, as are other administrators. But at present there are no such plans pending with the Board. Instead, the Board is engaged in the proc- ess of building a new "all events" building in which basketball games will be played, and does not envision being able to ex- pand intramural facilities until the debt is paid off, which will be a period of many years. THUS THE STUDENT is supporting the brunt of the athletic program, and he seems to be only benefiting slightly from it except in the sense that there are often good home teams for him to watch. There are some schools-Minnesota is an example-where the administrators have a larger role in the athletic budgets. The faculty, in conformity to the Big Ten rules, is still responsible for deciding poli- cy, but the athletic department there has much less autonomy in running its opera- tions than is presently the case at the University. This organizational structure is less de- sirable from a competitive athletic view- point, but it does bring the athletic pro- gran into a role more consistent with the university's role as an institution for the education and general welfare of students. -NEIL SHISTER Special To The Daily CHICAGO, ILL. - "But stories about the administration or the Regents or university rules aren't the real scandals about education. The real scandal stories would count all the kids who sit in class staring out the window." This comment-from Kenneth Winter, '65, a Daily alumnus- summarizes a host of comments which came tumbling out at a U.S. Student Press Association conference on higher education here this weekend. Everybody agreed that was the scandal, all right. But nobody could agree on what to do about it. The reasons for student bore- dom-and unrest, one might add -are many, which is probably why there are so many opinions on what they are. But one girl's com- ment-made in altogether another context-is particularly illuminat- ing: "I think we can present the issues on Viet Nam in our news- papers," she said, "but I don't think we have enough knowledge of what's going on to comment about them or enough wisdom and maturity to judge what's wrong and right." TOO MUCH of this attitude, it seems, is the root of the problem of education (if, indeed, the non- omniscient can still make judge- ments). Students go into class convinced that they don't really matter, that they don't have much business making comments or judgements. They become mere in- tellectual receptacles; intellectual inquiry stagnates. And so they stare out the window. "More and more you find stu- dents used to having somebody pass stuff out to them," said an educator at the conference. He has a very valid point: as much as some few students may protest about being, or becoming, IBM cards, it is perfectly clear most students couldn't care less about the prospect-or, if they do, sub- mit unprotestingly anyway. Yet where do students get this attitude? The faculty aren't en- tirely responsible: The lazy stu- dent, and there are many of them, soon discovers it's a lot easier to be a passive spectator than an active participant in education. BUT THE FACULTY must share a major part of the responsibility for students staring out windows, because while they have a lot to do with the possible alternatives students might look at, the faculty by and large simply reinforces the passivity and intellectual indolence of their students. "As you go up the educational scale the teaching gets progres- sively more authoritarian," a for- mer Smith College professor told the conference. "The faculty per- pretrates on students the idea that there is a Right Way-theirs- and if you shut up and follow it you'll find the way to paradise." Thus students are bored because many faculty don't expect them to be anything else, and merely "perform" for them rather than involving them in intellectual ad- venture. It takes two to !spoon- feed, and that kind of education prevails despite the fact that even at a large university like this one, something better is possible. SOME UNIVERSITIES, it is true, have made lame attempts to try to involve students in intellectual adventure, to reassert their worth as individuals and make thein participants rather than passive spectators in the academic process, The Muscatine report on curri- cular reform at Berkeley, for ex- ample, makes numerous sugges- tions along these lines. Ironically- because student unrest over the atttiudes of the Berkeley admin- istration set of a revolt there-the report said very little about the value of student contributions to the process by which such sug- gestions on academics are made. This is simply paternalism and anti-individualism once removed, and that-faculty, Regents and rules-is indeed a part of the greater "scandal." IN SUM, students have some- thing to say, and one of the im- portant tasks of education is to realize the full potential of each individual student. Students often express themselves ineptly, illogi- cally or foolishly. But students will stop staring out windows only when they can contribute in the academic process, and they will stop rioting only when they can contribute to the decision-making process. If a university wants, among other things, to develop individ- ualism and wisdom, it would do well to follow the moral of a story Dean William Haber of the liter- ary college likes to tell: The son asked his father, 'How do I become wise?" The father said, "By getting experience." "How do I get experience?" The father replied, "By learning things." "How do I learn things?" the son asked. "By making mis- tAkes," the father answered. AS A START, as Sister Patricia- Jean, a research associate at An- tioch, suggested at one session. perhaps next fall's orientation week should have students tell faculty and administrators what they expect from them and their years here-rather than vice- versa. If faculty, administrators and Regents-and students themselves, for that matter-realize students should have a say in their own lives and their own development; if they realize that individualism, individual expression and the im- portance of the individual and his views are vital in the classroom and the Regents room, for both the present and the future, and are not only the means but the ends of education; if they realize that an educational environment which recognizes and promotes in- dividual development where stu- dents make many mistakes is far superior to the usually authori- tarian situation where they don't; then education will have renewed and revitalized one of its magic strengths, and given new purpose to the work of its students. IF THAT doesn't happen in the classroom, students will keep on staring out of windows from bore- dom. If it doesn't happen in the Administration Bldg., they might riot from unrest. 0 4 News Control: Two Views and an Out $I By HARVEY WASSERMAN Acting Editorial Director ANY REPUBLIC which claims to have a largely democratic base must keep the democracy informed of what the men at the top are doing. The general public has no access to governmental reality other than what it reads in the newspapers and magazines and sees and hears on the radio and television. A government that can control the news and suppress the items unfavorable to its workings may thus be in a position to perpetuate itself beyond "democratic" recall. That our government can and does to a certain degree control exactly what the people can and cannot know thus represents a potentially dangerous situation- an on-going power which is sus- ceptible to exploitation for par- tisan reasons, On the one hand any adminis- tration does have some power to suppress corruption and ineffi- ciency within its own workings, major domestic policy decisions, by the very nature of the legislative system, cannot be kept secret. But on the other hand, the power to suppress information dealing with foreign affairs is quite broad. It is the government, which has the power of "agenda making"-deciding what shall and shall not be told to reporters. Further, however, in many in- stances it has the power merely to lie-about the U2 incident, the Bay of Pigs invasion, Hanoi peace feelers (in an election year), bat- tles (in the Korean war, military officials leaked stories, complete with casualty lists and burning narratives about battles which never took place), general military disposition, and even enemy at- tacks. A RECENT opinion poll showed that 67 per cent of those tested felt Vietnamese casualty lists were "sometimes" truthful, 15 per cent felt them "always" truthful, and 13 per cent found them "almost never" truthful. When a major act (such as the Tonkin incident) "occurs" and the government finds itself in the po- sition of either needing or wanting to go to war, are only 15 per cent of the people going to think they are certain of what is going on? "If a government repeatedly re- sorts to lies in crises where lies seem to serve its interests best, it will one day be unable to employ the truth effectively when truth would serve its interests best." The overall effect of such a "credibility gap" is not good. On the one hand you have a public clamoring for information about a war which is putting it through internal fits, on the other hand you have reporters being lied to by generals and being kicked out of Viet Nam for photographing Marines in action. The natural re- action is then a sense of cynicism on the part of the voting public- a cynicism which somehow just doesn't quite fill the gnawing void of uncertainty when it comes time to vote. YET MANY CLAIM the problem as bad as all that. "Only two, to three per cent of government business involves any secrecy. And only a tiny fraction of that re- mains secret." Further, however, is the classic argument of the necessity of keep- ing certain items of information secret for military reasons. That this is a "classic" argument might well indicate that it is time for a re-evaluation of that sacred cow. "THE AMERICAN PEOPLE have a right to know but they also have a right to have dangerous prob- lems handled properly by respon- sible officers, and not by the press. Nobody elected the press." But if the government keeps getting caught with its lies, no- body is going to believe it any- more. Then our system will find itself divided into a bureaucracy on one hand, and a constituency skeptical and mistrustful of that bureaucracy-though with no con- cret recourse to get rid of the source of that skepticism-on the other. Though one might wish to look on this skepticism as an inherent check on the government's ability to centralize power through in- formation control, I would say that the power is inherent in the administrative system itself, and not subject to any electoral check. The one ill is in a somewhat dif- ferent sphere than the other, and, thus both the problem of con- centrated power and of general dissatisfaction remain. WHAT IS NEEDED is some sort of institutionalized compromise check whereby no administration will have such strong news con- trol powers, the people will have a professionalized nonpartisan news agency, and yet the national security will not be endangered on military issues. I therefore propose an official governmental "News Board" to consist of military experts and reporters, appointed on a strictly nonpartisan basis, by the Supreme Court. The board will have complete access to all vital intelligence such as true casualty counts, our mili- tary disposition, and so on. This agency will then judge what news should and should not be given to the general press, and will then advise the appropriate executives as to its judgement. Recognizing the need for speed in some instances, the board, when unheeded, will choose a certain time span depending on the in- cidefit involved and will then break the "real" news to the press-at which time it will also disclose its own record of advisory opinion. Congress may then call for defense from the President. THIS IS, of course, not a perfect solution-its chief weakness lies in finding an effectively uncor- ruptable, nonpartisan board. But it would at least establish a long- needed institutional check to loosen from the executive branch a power whose potential for use on partisan issues in the name of national security is dangerously uncontrolled. And in so doing the "credibility gap" will have a rea- son to narrow by one step of ob- jectivity and expertise. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The Arab-Israeli Problem 4 i i To the Editor: AN EDITORIAL appeared in The Daily on March 25th by Mr. Aaron Dworin dealing with the Palestine problem. This editorial is a shallow treatment to a com- plex question, whose solution re- quires a deep and thorough under- standing of its nature, as well as its historical background. Mr. Dworin's editorial does not contribute to this purpose. It is a mere distortion of the very truth and will not serve to give the read- ers of this newspaper a better un- derstanding of the Arab-Israeli conflict. It is necessary that some of the points, which have been raised in the above mentioned edi- torial, be discussed. 1) One of the myths which the editor tried to sell to the readers is that the refugees' problem is thei. own fault because they left their homes willfully against Is- rael's bid for them to stay and bind the country together! In his opinion also, the Arab govern- ments share the blame because they refuse to settle the refugees in Arab countries. The editor is apparently unaware of the cam- paign of terror and mass murder that was directed against the Arab majority by the Zionist military organizations in Palestine that time such as the Irgun, Stern and Haganah, which later became the regular Israeli army. The massacre of Deir-Yassin may not mean anything to Mr. Dworin, but it details would stir any alive conscience. Mr. John Kimche the editor of the "Jewish Observer" which is the official organ of the British Zionist Or- ganization gave the following ac- cout of the Deir-Yassin tragedy: "On Friday April 9, 1948 a com- mando force composed of Irgun and Stern soldiers raided the vil- lage. There was no obvious oc- casion for them to do so. Nothing they have said has explained or can explain away, the murder of only the false claim that the refu- gees left on their own free will is accepted . . . aren't they entitled to return back to their homes and land? Israel's refusal to allow them to go back is a violation of the simplest human rights of people to their property and their free choice of their place of living. 3) The Arab governments do not oppose the absorption of the refugees into their countries. All refugees who had skills quickly found employment. These were mostly town people, whereas the people living now in camps were the country people, who could not be absorbed in countriesuwhich already have a surplus of people in their rural sectors. In 1948 Palestine was seventy per cent rural. The same views were ex- pressed recently in an article by Mr. Thomas Brady of the New York Times, March 21, 1966. He also mentioned that the refugees numbered over 800,000 when they left and they are now over 1.3 million (and not 500,000 as Mr. Dworin claimed). The only solu- tion for their problem therefore, is to return to their lost homes and land. 4) The present armament race in the Middle East is a direct consequence of the repeated Is- raeli aggressions, which, as would be expected, led the Arabs to seek arms anywhere in order to defend themselves and to prevent another Palestine from taking place. Fur- thermore, the excessive flow of arms to Israel is a major cause of the present arms race. This is always done under the so-called maintaining the balance of power in the Middle East. The talk about the balance of power between Israel and the Arab countries is, like maintain- ing such a balance between the tiny island of Cuba and the Con- tinental United States, an un- realistic notion, whose sole effect would be the augmentation of the present tension there. It suffices disqualifies' any such claims and should clearly indicate who is the aggressor. JUST BEFORE the Suez War, and while Israel was preparing for it, Mr. Ben Gurion the then Prime Minister of Israel announced that he was ready to meet President Nasser to negotiate peace. The Suez events showed, however, that this was a move to detract at- tention from his country's military activities, rather than a real ae- sire for peace ... any genuine plea for peace cannot go along with secret preparations for war. The Arabs are more sincere than Israel in their desire for peace. But, peace will come to the Middle East through justice, which did not find its way yet to the more than a million Arab refugees. Is- rael can show her peaceful inten- tions by complying with the United Nations resolutions, which ascer- tained the rights of the refugees to return to their homes and urged Israel to allow them to go back. UNFORTUNATELY, Israel did 'not contribute to lessening the world tension and to the restora- tion of peace to the Middle East by her refusal to execute these resolutions. -Dr. Hussein Z. Barakat Psychology To the Editor: "U.S. SHOULD Eliminate Chi- nese Nuclear Threat" "U.S. Must Remain in Viet Nam" . . my country right or wrong- my country . . . Better dead than Red . . . the ends justify the means , , , Manifest Destiny . . . Bari Communist Speakers . . . The house un-American activities com- mittee . . . Senator Joseph Mc- Carthy . . . huey long . .. Father coughlin . . . Adolf Hitler--only forc ul .. the nonense of Responsible nations . . Strategic. Hamlets ... Concentration Camps ... mass extermination .. . Jap- anese-Americans . . . Adolf Eich- man . . "I was only foliowing orders .. ."; No meaningful peace feelers . . . God . . . a wolf in a chicken coop . . . Chinese hoards ... Godless atheists . . . Domino theory ... Containment ... Bay of Pigs ... Taiwan... The Green Berets . . . General Westmore- land-man of the year ... Gen- eral MacArthur ... Nuclear Holo- caust . . . 50 megatons . . . peace .. .brotherhood . . . Selma . police dogs . .. support your local police . . State's Rights . . . The State .. . The jewish problem .. . sheepdog - beatnik - bearded-com- mie . .. Virility . . , Master race .. WASP ... Bolshevik ... flori- dation .. . precious bodily fluids ... hate . . . KILL.. . Uncle Sam Wants you .. . women and chil- dren first . .. air raid shelter-. victory in the cold war . . . get tough policy... brinkmanship... Total destruction . . no escala- tion . . . consensus . . . lyndon Johnson . . . apple pie . . . the great Society . . cut domestic spending . . . war economy United fruit company . .: Cuba . . . 90 miles . . . Viet Nam-x miles . . . Lebenstraum . . con- tested territory . . profit . bomb villages .. . freedom for the people . .. kill for peace . . 2000 dead .* . escalation ... 4000 dead . dead ... .a4-7 year war ... DEATH! . . . Destruction . ,. a man is a man for 'a that. "Fathers and teachers, I pon- der 'What is hell?' I maintain that it is the suffering of being unable to love."-Doestoevski. 4 --Martin Kane, '68 I c4 I 51 574i. u r + V J7 J l. ~ $