Sevenly-SixthYear EDITr AND MANAGED BY STUDEN'TS OF TVIF UNIVTRSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF SITUDENT PUBLICATIONS FETIFFER To STAY GODOQ.) V rv0h lrvArei Fre.420 MAYNARD ., ANN APBoR, MicH. Nrws 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. THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: LEONARD PRATT C I,' Win' -T OTA PARTY. New Strike Settlement Methods Sorely Needed GC- 0 Ml AFrhR 1R6 -FIFTH CQ~) ;1 SAV O IRIS, ~'IF IT XO65,13T PICKc' r k/N. - -.~ ,'ri- .t -: # A G~ THE'TTWEFWR) ~T; oYPICK~P T~~~iW AUOT , WR THE DEADLOCKED New York City tran- sit strike, now entering its thirteenth day, Illustrates the urgent necessity for the nation's major urban areas to insti- tute new means to prevent future crip- pling strikes of this type. Nqw York has been afflicted by several major labor crises in the past year. A teachers' strike, a newspaper blackout, and now a shutdown of the city's public transportation system-which normally carries six- million persons daily-have made life a daily tribulation for the fif- teen million persons who live in the me- tropolitan area. There is a law on the books to prevent strikes by public employes-the Condon- Wadlin Act, which is virtually unenforce- able and thus has not been invoked dur- ing the current emergency. On a national level, the Taft-Hartley Act allows an 80- day cooling-off period in labor disputes deemed vital to the national interest, but local and regional crises are not cov- ered by the law. The nation's sprawling urban areas- which now comprise 70 per cent of the total U:S. population-are faced by many problems-poverty, water shortages, "ur- ban blight," air and later pollution, transportation snarls, which are not as subject to workable remedies as the tran- sit strike. BUT A MECHANISM must be devised to prevent strikes which are so detri- mental to the public interest as to vir- tually cripple a great city. The total esti- mated financial loss for New York and its inhabitants now totals close to one and onedlalf billion dollars. The strike is beginning to have a national impact as well. Retail and wholesale orders from New York are being delayed; the garment' industry is virtually paralyzed at its most important period of the year; thousands of small businessmen are applying for federal loans to tide them over the pres- ent crisis, which shows no immediate sign of ending. In the future, the nation's cities must consider the institution of a process of binding, compulsory arbitration to han- dle labor disputes which threaten to erupt into a strike detrimental to the public Interest. Major cities should elect a permanent panel of arbitrators. The election process would be vital to ensure impartiality and the possibility of removing arbitrators who demonstrate bias during critical ne- gotiatiops. The elections might be con- ducted each year, with panel members running for re-election or bowing out according to their personal choice. High pay would certainly have to be an in- centive for a job as grueling as that of an arbitrator in disputes such as the New York transit crisis. THE PROCESS of collective bargaining need not fall completely by the way- side under this new system. Traditional methods of labor-management negotia- tion would proceed normally. Two weeks before a strike deadline, if the arbitra- tors decided tliat, no progress was being made through traditional procedures and that a strike seemed inevitable, the en- tire dispute would be immediately sub- Bookstore Beaus tlHE BEANS have been spilled. Vice-President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler will not recommend the establishment of a University sponsored bookstore but will advocate the rescind- ing of the Regent's ruling prohibiting eco- nomic competition between the Univer- sity and private enterprise. Many studentshave already displayed bitter anger over Cutler's intended rec- ommendations, but such wrath is prema- ture considering Cutler's reasoning for not recommending the bookstore is still unknown. At today's SGC meeting the students should pass a motion requesting that the whole bookstore report be made public. If Cutler's line of reasoning is cognent in the report, fine. If, however, it repre- mitted for binding arbitration. Labor would remain on the job while the arbi- trators' fact-finding studies are conduct- ed, and all settlements would be retroac- tive to the expiration of the previous contract. Naturally, city arbitrators would be ex- tremely powerful and thus must be chos- en by the electorate. Labor unions and spokesmen for management might sub- mit nominees to the public. Their quali- fications would be thoroughly debated, and the entire process would culminate in the annual November election. Naturally, there would be many diffi- culties in creating the permanent arbi- tration - panel necessary to avert strikes such as the transit crisis. The arbitra- tors would have to be empowered to make the decision as to which labor dis- putes constitute a clear threat to the public interest and which can be settled through traditional methods. THE COST to the city of maintaining an arbitration panel of, say, three men, might run to $200,000 per year. But this cost would'certainly be worthwhile if it could prevent newspaper blackouts and transit strikes which cripple the city's economy and seem likely to recur in oth- er cities as well as New York unless bind- ing arbitration is instituted.; In New York, Mayor Lindsay has al- ready proposed a similar mechanism for ending the transit strike. It may be too late to settle this strike through these means. But, for the future, it is impera- tive that beleaguered cities like New York immediately institute new processes for settling thorny labor disputes which make urban living uncomfortable at best and disastrous at worst. The traditional process of collective bar- gaining has been shown to be manifestly unworkable in many major labor dis- putes. Now, a new and radical departure in labor-management relations is neces- sary in order to restore some measure of sanity to New York and other, similarly afflicted cities. -CLARENCE FANTO -BRUCE WASSERSTEIN Reach Michelin' J EACH POLITICAL PARTY attempted yesterday to fulfill its first Campaign Promise by issuing Ann Arbor's own "Guide Michelin," somewhat less osten- tatiously titled "Ratings of Campus Res- taurants."' One can only hope that they're starting at the bottom of their of topics and researchers and will work their way up soon. The relative quality of campus res- taurants is, of course, a hotly debated topic and in that sense it is nice that Reach has issued this policy statement dealing with it. Moreover it is interest- ing to know that Reach feels Krazy Jim's Blimpyburgers (**) "Lacks somewhat in atmosphere." Indeed. Or that it feels Drake's Sandwich Shop () is "Lacking in variety" although "it's worth drop- ping in to sample one of the 40 brands of sandwiches and 20 types of tea." But of course all that is irrelevant, pri- marily because the report itself is ir- relevant. Yet doubtless Reach will run on the colorless issueless report in the next election as it did in the last. BUT CAN THIS SORT of meaningless report be that which Reach referred to as the solution to the campus' prob- lems during its campaign? For the sake of Reach's votes, one must hope not. This "report" neither solves a problem (which is granting the assumption, rather a lib- eral act in this case, that one existed there in the first place) nor raised stu- dent welfare. Reach must learn that "reports" and "research" are not necessarily synony- mous with campus issues, that toying with irrelevancies is not the type of ac- tion that boasts either aid or appeal to students. There are important forces bearing upon students on this campus, there are significant things happenifgt to them while they are here and as long AFTER THE TWiEWTY THIRP NOKF 1SAl P TO 1P1, 8N U%'U DI~VESTED TOO - MIUq4 OF OUR- jL)-J{ FIVE :FOE 1UNUE,, O F IT r)O&9QYr F-Ck' op . Q th -° - r :;=t ..... :j i" .,.,. ,,, K ' s.R ."Lf /Jr ; .!, Y it If 1 C/ , k IRS £'VT 17 M~6WF 2 >~ a 'I /1% 1-~ ~ A * Letters: Medical School Questions To the Editor: AS AN ASSISTANT professor at the Medical School, I read with interest the criticisms made by the medical students, and the replies on the part of the faculty. Both rather surprised me. The studentsrcomplained about the slowness in getting marks, and the rotation system which de- mands that students with different amounts of preparation take the same examination. These things are manifestly unfair and should be corrected, but do not seem to ime to be all that important. They represent a slipping of the cogs in the complex machinery of a medical school: so you get a some- what lower mark in a course than you deserved. In the course of years this will really not make much difference. Of infinitely greater importance is the generalrattitude of the faculty toward the students. These doctors of the future mentioned the obligatory signing-in a cer- tain number of autopsies in path- ology, and the like, in their ob- jection to being merely passive recipients of a lot of predigested information; but I think more could be said along this line. Our greatest asset-for both student and teacher-is the students' curiosity, his eagerness to learn. his desire to be challenged, to think for himself, and to form patterns in this thinking which will continue throughout his pro- fessional life. I wonder if we use these great resources to their fullest. Do we get great things from the students by freely giving of our knowledge, and then challenging the student to use this knowledge when we ask him questions? Do we judge his promise in the field of medicine on the basis of how he integrates his information and ideals. or on the basis of how well he can memorize things? Does the student ever feel that his standing in his class is judged not so much on the basis of his future as a thinking, feeling doctor, but rather an evaluation of his stam- ina at getting through a sort of traditional obstacle course, com- plete with a few oooby-traps? These are the sorts of questions which must be thought about con- tinuouly in all medical schools, and we must think of them here, too. THE ANSWERS from a mem- ber of the faculty rather sur- prised me too. Dr. Gosling could not have been a more fortunate choice as a spokesman, in answer to the students' accusation that thee- are not heard, for there is no one in the Medical School ad- ministration who is more ap- proachable than he. But Dr. Gos- ling seemed to not quite answer the questions. He said, if I remem- ber' correctly (I seem to have lost, my copy of the paper), that medi- cal school is hard: we have to sort of provide a kind of intellec- tual library with all the informa- tion now available, where the student can pick different items to suit his individual appetite. I don't think the student is complaining so much about the number of books in the library- about how difficult it is in medical school. What he wonders about is how these items are presented on the shelves, and if he doesn't have to positively fight to get some of them. With our present system of medical education, I think we do have to have the library-full of ideas; but we tend to neglect our most precious asset, the student's wish to think and choose for him- self, as we force him to fill his briefcase to overflowing. In his last sentence, the writer says that there seems to have been a failure in communication be- tween student and faculty. Failure of communication? I really don't think we need more telephones; we might need an attempt at an earnest self-appraisal-always a difficult task-of what the student wants, and how we can best give it to him. -Thomas N. Cross, M.D. Viet Nam Protests To the Editor: 'INCE THE UNIVERSITY. pos- sibly out of political expediency, has come to the defense of our campus vietniks, it is time to ex- press an opinion that is probably more clearly representative of the majority of Americans: The boobs who sat in at the Ann Arbor Selective Service office two months ago weren't too con- cerned with the inconvenience their actions caused others, from paralyzing the functioning of that office to tying up traffic for blocks around. A violation of the law? A mere technicality! But now that the Selective Serv- ice System is trying to enforce its own technicalities the protestors, aware that they haven't got a leg to stand on, are frantically laying down the "my constitutional rights are being violated" smokescreen. This seems to be a good gimmick, and it has worked in the past, but General Hershey, thank God, has not been taken in by it and we are fairly certain that most other people haven't been either. IT IS TIME that some of these children realize that in the grown- up world one takes full respon- sibility for one's actions, whether or not those responsibilities, in all their ramifications, have been contemplated beforehand. It is apparent that the protes- tors were willing to accept jail and fines from the City of Ann Arbor' to make it all look good, but now that the Selective Service System is unexpectedly enforcing its code, they think they are en- titled to be selective in their acceptance of responsibility. As one who spent three years in the Army and disliked every minute of it, I would be interested in seeing some of these crybabies try their "constitutional rights" song-and-dance on the drill ser- geants they encounter at their basic training posts! --David Catron, Grad To the Editor: THERE IS one facet of the "End the War in Viet Nam" move- ment which we find quite con- fusing. In the past two years, a great deal has been spoken about free speech. Indeed, it is the cornerstone of the "End the War" campaign. Why then do those who advocate "Surrender in Viet Nam," Hannah: Fascist, Communist or Wrong? "U S. Out of Vt Nam," or the like, seem so eager to create a situation that would lead to the eventual loss of free speech in Viet Nam? It is only reasonable to assume that United States' withdrawal or a peace negotiated under the terms presently set forth by Ha- noi would result in Communist control of South Viet Nam. This domination would, in turn, deprive the Vietnamese of the same right to dissent that the protesters hold so dgar to ,their hearts. We would appreciate an ex- planation of this seeming con- tradiction. -David S. Miller, '67E John Sommella, '67E A Transit Solution To the Editor: A DAY hardly goes by which doesn't underscore the actual inferiority of . our unjustifiably snobbish East Coast countrymen. For several days, New Yorkers have been suffering from the ef- fects of a disasterous transit sys- tem strike and have been unable to find any solution to the prob- lem. Yet, using a little understood power of government, in the pro- cess of being affirmed right here at Michigan, that strike could probably be solved in a matter of hours. Certainly, it can be shown that the crippling transit strike has in- terferred with the normal opera- tion of more than one of New York's local draft boards. Almost as certainly, there are enough striking men liable for reclassifi- cation'so that the appropriate recognition of their deliquency would bring af swift reversal in the presently harmful transit situ- ation. Of course, the strikers will claim that their action was not primar- ily intended to disrupt the local boards. Specifically, they will claim that the purpose of their strike was not to avoid military service. The fact that the con- tinued strike was in violation of a court injunction and thus illegal, however, should complete the analogy to the Ann Arbor tres- passing case. MYOPIC NEW YORK authori- ties need, thus, simply follow the example of our pace-setting Mich- igan draft boards to find and easy answer to their current social problems. We can be proud that, here in Michigan, imaginative and courageous leaders are pioneering in an important use of the draft system. Lesser men would have been intimidated by some of the more subversive clauses of the federal Constitution. -Ray Segal, '67E 4 PRESIDENT John Hannah of Michigan State University sent the following letter to George N. Vance, Grad, in reply to an earlier letter from Vance:r I suppose I should be grateful to you for your letter of Nov. 19, imputing a Fascistic atitde to me.It arrived in thesame mail as a letter, from Beverly Hills, Calif.. accusing me of Communist sympathies, again for what the writer gathered from news reports about my position on civil rights. These, two together encourage me to believe that my position must be a tenable one, attacked as I am on both sides. Said Vance in a letter to The Daily, "If President Hannah is being imputed to be both a Com- munist and a Fascist, this does not mean that his 'tenable' position is somewhere in between. It means something is wrong." -George Abbott White Refugees Blast Castro Airlift By BETSY COHN (Third of a Series) DURING THE WEEK of Jan- uary1 (the seventh anniver- sary ofyCastio's victory) 500 dele- gates to an "anti-imperialist" par- iey of a group called the Tricon- tinental Conference on African, Asian and Latin American Revolu- tionary Solidarity m e t a n d harangued the United States, with Castro sounding the keynote. At the same time as Castro was denouncing the U.S., thou- sands of Cubans were waiting to be airlifted to an "imperialist" haven in the United States. To many Cuban exiles in Miami Castro's airlift means trouble. To Jose Gonzalez, an ex-senator in Cuba, the airlift is "another means of infiltrating Communists to the United States. These people have been penetrating the country for years; they are mostly active in universities, and minority groups such as civil rights movements in which they work to gather sympathizers. They work also to weaken the free enterprise sys- tem and to eventually destroy the productive wealth of our nation," Puente said. TO RAOL MENOCAL, an ex- mayor of Havana, "the airlift can only mean something bad; any Alfredo Gonzalez, an ex-fighter in the Bay of Pigs, said "Fidel did not calculate the dimensions; he thought only few peaple would want to go out," (since the air- lift began in December, 3,351 Cu- bans have entered Miami; it is predicted that during 1966, 40,000 to 50,000 will be flown from Varadero to Miami. As the air- lift continues, so do the clan- destine small boat escapes. Eighty five Cubans, mostly draft-age males, escaped the island in eleven small boats during December.) "Now Castro is trying to put a stop to these airlifts as they have demoralized the country. He did it as a show for the free world as well as for the Cubans who were beginning to become apa- thetic about their fates in Cuba." Gonzalez said. GONZALEZ, who has traveled to various American universities, explained how he believed Com- munists get into the various revo- lutionary groups causing dissen- sion by taking legitimate gripes and creating conflict among the group members themselves. "They are able to create the most dissatisfaction among civil rights groups since many Latin American are of Negro or Indian blood." Gonzalez was quick to uoint ouit the imno1'tancP of ing them to rebel and helping them to come to America. At the present time, the Cuban refugees are strongly in favor of President Johnson's policy in Viet Nam and see it as "the only solu- tion." Cubans at the present time also support President Johnson strongly. One Cuban political science stu- dent summed up a popular refugee outlook, "Americans must pay a price for being world leaders; they must be able to back one faction completely, they must have a leader who is a statesman as w'ell, one who can make a decision and stick to it. So far the only statesman the United States has produced, is President Johnson." Tomorrow: Exile groups in Miami Schutze's Corner: Come as You, Are T HE DAILY'S insidious Wash- ington gossip reporter, Jimmy Foobah, crashed an exclusive White House costume ball last night and sent back the following report to his incredibly extensive readership. President Johnson and his first lady welcomed guests at the door in their splendidly recreated cos- tumes as Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Their daughters. Luci and Lynda Bird performed the Watusi in the East Room while wrapped together in a heavy metal chain. President Johnson later explain- ed that they were dressed as a chastity belt. Luci was escorted by Pat Nugent, a GI, who wore only reddish brown grease paint, MARTIN LUTHER KING, who refused to speak to Vice-President Humphrey, arrived clothed in a spare loincloth with a large wood- en cross strapped to his back. President Johnson greatly anger- ed King by stealing his cross and adding it to his own Louis XVI suit, but the two were later recon- ciled when both joined forces to throw Cassius Clay into the al- most completed White House swimming pool. Guests were at first confused by Gardner Ackley's somewhat bizarre costume-he wore a mega- phone glued to his face and an on-off switch pasted onehis ear- but Ackley later admitted that he was dressed as a mechanized and the last to leave was the gre- garious entertainer, Sammy Davis Jr., who crawled in on all fours portraying an underdog. Davis greatly angered President John- son by stealing his cross and adding it to his underdog suit, but the two were later reconciled when both joined forces to throw Martin Luther King into the almost com- pie ted White House ;pool. Entertainment for the fete was provided by the famous Unctuous Brothers with Walter Jenkins singing lead, backed up by Rock Hudson and Johnny Mathis on guitars, Liberace on piano, and Pat Nugent on drums. At party's end, almost all guests ik