Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS April13:It ustAin't That BigA Thing 4. erv Opnioans Are Free 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR MICH. 1Y atb Will Prevail NEWs PHoNE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HEFFER It's What's Happening Baby' -Adults Only By LEONARD PRATT Acting Associate Managing Editor THE UNIVERSITY has another hand on the oars. President HarlansHatcher has appointed Gilbert Lee, formerly University controller, to the newly- created office of vice-president for business. affairs. There are, of course, Vice- Presidents and then there are vice-presidents. The question now is which Lee will be. THE DIVISION of Vice-Presi- dent for Business and Finance Wilbur Pierpont's old office of Business and Finance into the two new offices, one for business and finance and one for business af- fairs, was certainly a helpful one. Business and finance is one of the University's oldest executive offices and, with the institution's great expansion in the last decade, it has grown prodigiously. Before the reorganization, Pier- pont was in direct control of the most far-flung bureaucratic or- ganization within the University. For within any large organization, control over finances is control over policies. Being vice-president for business and finance, there- fore, meant being in charge of many diverse University policies from personnel to building pro- grams. Evidently what was happening, however, was that the work was simply getting to be too much for one vice-president to handle. So the Regents eased the work load by cuttingbithindhalf. That is the reasoning behind the shearing off of some of the OBF's functions and giving them to the new OBA. THE NEW vice-president is evi- dently very much a "Pierpont man." His statements are all that is needed to illustrate that: he emphasizes often that he is still working for Pierpont-who was, of course, his superior while he was University controller. Then too, he cannot operate without Pierpont's confidence and assistance. The areas of which he is to be in charge cannot be turn- ed over to him without Pierpont's assistance. The staffs in these areas are Pierpont's and, unless he lets them go, Lee will be help- less. In addition, Pierpont has kept all policy-making powers for him- self. A quick list establishes that. Lee is in charge of: the controller, personnel operations, building up- keep, purchasing and management services. Pierpont, on the other hand, is in charge of campus planning, building construction, investments, legal affairs, personnel policies, and financial auditing and anal- yses. It is clear where the real power lies. It remains with Pierpont. LEE DOES HAVE several po- tentially important areas of au- thority. His authority over per- sonnel operations can be a very important position when-as they surely will-unions are given col- lective bargaining rights with the University. Lee will probably be the University officer in charge of such negotiations. Moreover, his authority over "service enter- prises"-a vague area set up to assist University staff operations -can also be an important one. Yet all things considered, Lee's authority today is small compared with Pierpont's, or with Allen Smith's, vice-president for aca- demic affairs. From the stand- point of what major policies are made, and from the standpoint of who makes them, things haven't changed much. FR EXAMPLE, many have been using the creation of the Office of the Vice-President for Research-which was split from the Office of Academic Affairs- as an example of what has hap- pened to the OBF. Nothing could be more incorrect. For when the Vice-Presidency for Research was created, the office acquired functions entirely diverse from those that were being handled by the Vice-President for Academic Affairs. But the new vice-presidency, far from being split off the side of the OBF, has been split off the bottom of it. Pierpont has essentially gotten rid of the dirty work, leaving all major policy areas to himself. The real question about the new office is a question of the potential authority within the administra- tion. Even from this standpoint, the vice-presidency for business affairs, as it is presently constitut- ed. is not likely to become a major vice-presidency. ESSENTIALLY this is expressed by Pierpont's continuing control over financial analysis. Ever since the establishment of England's Chancellor of the Exchequer, the man with the purse has run ad- ministrations. Having control over building construction and person- nel policies adds to his' authority considerably. So the new vice-presidency is really nothing to get that excited about. It will be a helpful addition to the under-staffed administra- tion and will certainly help ease an immense work load. BUT AS FAR as policy or power goes, it doesn't change a thing. MAYBE IT IS, and maybe it isn't, but as long as the doubt lingers it doesn't really matter. Finals are that time of the year when the whole world goes mad, when the spring that wasn't here yesterday is ig- nored today, and panic is the name of the game. There is something tense in the air: the grade maniacs get a little tighter, the pre-meds get paler, the guys shooting for Harvard Law School get weak in the stomach, and the fellows hoping to stay out of the army, get, scared. The girls are out grubbing grades too, more as a matter of conformity than conviction, giving the atmosphere a semi-ludicrous flavor. BUT THERE ARE BIRDS out, the trees are about ready to make the big move forward, and there is a rare breed of stu- dent walking around more curious than concerned with finals, in a half-way zone where nothing seems so important as be- ing alive and knowing it; sensing that there is something more to life than a 3.4327 grade point and a house in Grosse Pointe. Being dedicated to discussing the real- ity of human existence, as are the editors of this newspaper, and saving editorial columns for only the most critical and gravest of concerns, it is high time that the proper perspective be given to this type of student. He threatens to topple the whole structure of the University in open defiance of the great American way of life. He must be banished lest he banish everything else. FOR A START, he is half in love, a bad state of affairs at any time, but one of inexcusable rudeness when the rest of the campus is staying up until three in the morning studying. Thus he sits in those applause-laden last lectures more bored .than- anything else, scornful of a profes- sor so oblivious to the whole wonderful makeup of the world that he would dare preach his pompous pontifications on a day made for Diag-sitting. Our hero squirms, and the squirms be- come contagious. Nevertheless, everyone else is so busy scribbling that the final will be 28.9 per cent objective short an- swer questions dealing with the introduc- tory lecture of the second section of the course and that the essay will deal with the first thousand years of human his- tory, that they don't realize they are up- set. And in the library, he has the unmiti- gated audacity to openly fall asleep, feet up on a table, eyeglasses dangling on his nose, peacefully snoring, while everyone else in the UGLI is secretly ripping pages out of overnight books. There he is, the object of widespread scorn and whole- some envy, content in his complacency, complacent in his context. MAY HE BE ALLOWED TO EXIST? Certainly not. It is the moment for the world to strike him down, and, if the world can't, someone else had better. Hap- piness is not the proper mood for the third week in April, and must not be per- mitted to continue. IT IS TIME that the administration ful- filled its responsibility to the good people of the state of Michigan (who, after all, are supporting this school), as well as those decent students of this Uni- versity (the ones who give it prestige and popularity), to rid the campus of this chronic malcontent who is out to destroy the school's image. If the collective vice-presidents and Mr. Hatcher lack the courage to take decisive action, then it is a problem for the Re- gents, those supporters of everything that is noble in man. If they too shirk their responsibilities, then the governor must intervene, and, if not him, then the Great God Lyndon himself with his own inimit- able grace and style must do it. In any case, something must be done rather quickly before the equilibrium of the whole University is destroyed. rHE NAME OF THE GAME is panic and the name of the world is push. As for our friend, somewhere along the line he didn't get properly socialized-the values were not adequately internalized, as the sociologists would say-and the problem threatens to shake up the world. The fact is that, "It's what's happening, baby," doesn't matter at all. What kind of mature person ever has anything happen- ing anyway? -NEIL SHISTER 's 4 The Draft and the Non-Cooperator EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of a two-part series on conscientious objection and non- cooperation. This article deals with the experiences of a non- cooperator-a man who refused to cooperate with the Selective Service. By ROGER FRIEDLAND Collegiate Press Service PAUL SALSTROM is a non- cooperator, an absolutist, a dis- affiliate, an anticonscriptor. He has spent 33 months of his life in jail for a belief, a commitment to his conscience. At the age of 20, Salstrom refus- ed to carry his draft card, sending it back to his local board. In con- sequence, he received an order to report for induction. Salstrom re- fused to comply on the ground that "any affiliation with the sys- tem is an affiliation, with mili- tarism." He was then arrested and sen- tenced by a Federal District Court to a three year sentence in prison. After fasting for the first 15 days of his sentence in prison, he was transferred to the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Spring- field, Mo. Salstrom got a "manda- tory release" after two years of good conduct. However, he was re-arrested and sentenced to an additional nine months in the Danbury Correc- tional Institution after violating the terms of his release by organ- izing an antidraft caravan. After his release in June, 1965, he was reclassified 4-F for his conviction on felony charges. PAUL SALSTROM is a case in point. He is an absolutist, whose commitment to conscience super- sedes all else, even his regard for personal safety. He believes that one's considera- tion of the draft must be set in "the context of beliefs about right and wrong . . . for I have exper- ienced morality as one of the truly precious aspects of life. "But morals cease to be morals and beliefs to be beliefs to the extent that they are set to stew in a pot of random concerns about one's personal comfort or the fate of one's skin.' "It's taking the C.O. position a step further than those who take a legal position, alternative service or noncombatant military duty," he said. THE NONCOOPERATOR overt- ly breaks the law. He is a radical pacifist who refuses any form of conscription by the government in an effort symbolically to disaf- filiate himself from the United States government. Salstrom feels that nonconscrip- tion is a Ghandian method of campaigning to end war. The statutory maximum penalty of five years imprisonment and/or $10,000 fine is relatively mild com- pared to past U.S. draft policies. During World War I, noncoopera- tors were either executed or sen- tenced to life imprisonment, he said. The sole exception was for the Quakers for whom the am- bulance service was created in France. Referring to the possibility of a C.O. draft status, Salstrom said, 'I've infinitely preferred even a comparatively long period in pri- son to the legal choice of applying to a draft board or its supervisors for permission not to engage in the massacre of my fellow human beings." For Salstrom, the "life and death of innocents in Viet Nam is a paramount concern, and must not be "relegated to secon- dary status." EXPRESSING MUCH dissatis- faction with the peace movement does not go beyond the street or beyond a few easy years in jail- beyond the confines, that is, of liberal consensus-oriented civil lib- ertarianism just barely defensibly labeled 'protest' the movement will not become credible and not be- come significant," Salstrom said. "One's location in the conven- tional political spectrum is mean- ingless. The challenge of imperial- istic and aggressive counter-insur- gency warfare on the part of the U.S. government has not yet been: met by any authentically radical response," he said. DURING HIS STAY in prison, Salstrom said that he had no dif- ficulty making friends. "The average convict seems to me as honest and straightforward as the average unconfined American," he said. Beyond friendship, "There are plenty of illegal excitements avail- able to individuals in prison so inclined, ranging from delivery of contraband cigarettes (Ciga- rette packs serve universally as money behind bars) and the smuggling of contraband papers and mistreatment reports to out- side contacts, to the harboring of jack breweries, homosexual ren- dezvous and marijuana stashes to name five of the many I personally adopted in the cause of freedom," he commented. Salstrom reflected that he was pleased with his "social results behind bars." "The fasting period automati- cally resulted in limitless respect- ful curiosity from other inmates, about nonviolence and the antiwar position . . .," he said. He noted that there were col- lege-educated convicts in prison, so that "informed and civilized conversation isn't sacrificed by the act of draft refusal." During his confinement in county jail, he said that physical attacks and threats on noncoop- erators were not rare, but almost nonexistent in federal prison. ALTHOUGH he found corres- pondence and visiting privileges severely restricted, he emphasized that he preferred federal prison to the "harassment and irrational regulations" of a military prison. He felt that no emotional pre- paration for a prison sentence was necessary, just continued physical and mental activity before arrest. Salstrom also took a trial fasting period in preparation for his pri- son protest. Of the trial fast, he said, "This is one of the several respects in which fasting resembles the LSD experience: the best results never come the first time." HE REMARKED that academic pursuits were possible in prison, if one can concentrate with the noise of "the vocal chords of one's fellow cons." Quiet hours, which start at 10 p.m., afforded him the only real solitude for studying. Salstrom said he easily learned how to write in the dark. Besides the libraries, correspon- dence, and evening -courses, he said that "many privileges not covered by the rules are dished out at random to quasifriends of the guards and civilian personnel, to stool pigeons and to inmates with key jobs, and thus a small, neyer indispensable, degree of influence." IN RETROSPECT, Salstrom termed his prison experience "edu- cational." "Prison shows one extremes of bureaucratic stupidity and rigidity, extremes of human degradation and listlessness, extremes of dig- nity and self help, and pure as well as pathological forms of every conceivable human impulse," he said. In addition, he noted that pri- son makes one aware of "how wonderful and significant is direct contact with the entire feminine . . . authentically feminine . . side of life." SALSTROM BELIEVES that in one or two years, protest against the Viet Nam war will be similar to that seen during the U.S. inter- vention in Korea. Twenty noncooperators are now serving their jail terms in federal prisons across the nation. Thirty- five more are presently undergo- ing the legal process that will lead to jail terms. And in their prison cells, non- cooperators bitterly sneer at Presi- dent Lyndon Johnson's support for the right to dissent-hardly a reality for these 55 men committed to their consciences, these men who are social deviants to a ma- jority of the American people. (Friedland is a staff writer for the Daily Californian at Berkeley where this series originally appeared.) 40 it The Guardian Angels: A Tale of Two Cities New 'Generation Blooms in the Spring TWO STORIES in Monday's New York' Times concerned the recent political strife in South Viet Nam. One ran con- spiculously on the front page; the other, humorously, ran on page four. Both were concerned with the attitudes of U.S. of- ficials toward the current conflict be- tween the military and Buddhist forces. Here all similarity ended, however. In the page four story Undersecretary of State George W. Ball was quoted as say- ing in a CBS television interview that the position of the U.S. in the current crisis was, ".. . we are supporting the govern- ment in South Viet Nam. We are not try- ing to dictate who should be in charge of that government." Mr. Ball calmly went on to say that the struggle between the military and the Buddhists was part of a healthy process by which the Vietnamese people were "groping" toward an acceptable form of government. He conceded after question- ing, that there was great concern in some circles about the conflict. MEANWHILE, back in reality, the Times' Saigon correspondent in his page one story reported in exquisite detail the tac- tical advice American officials were giv- ing to Premier Ky to help him maintain his shaky government. Among the earnest suggestions they offered, was the advice that firmness in dealing with the Buddhists would win for Ky the !support of the powerful 10 per cent minority of Catholics in the country. They astutely observed that the declara- tion of war made by the Buddhists against the military junta showed that the month-long crisis had reached a lished under this Buddhist leader, they felt, would be "unamenable to American influence." OTHER MEASURES were suggested in- volving specific action, but the point is clear from the examples above. Either George Ball likes to give irrelevant speeches or we have had a serious com- munications breakdown between Saigon and Washington (or is it between Wash- ington and the American public?). Nevertheless, Americans can sleep well again tonight, secure in the knowledge that, whatever is happening over there, the current Vietnamese crisis will not precipitate disaster. Their government is right in there managing the situation: managing Ky, managing Buddhists, man- aging the news .... -CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER Acting Associate Editorial Director Intermission ON MAY 9 at 10 p.m. President Johnson will guide the nation on a tour of the darkest reaches of the LBJ Ranch in an NBC news special entitled "Lyndon John- son's Texas." According to a story in this week's Newsweek, NBC followed the President around for two afternoons with one cam- eraman and soundman "clinging to the, back of the President's Lincoln Conti- nental, another crew tagking along through the dust behind them." LBJ, it was reported, "fretted about the slant of his hat, mumbled that it might make him look like a Mafia character. He also insisted that NBC's cameramen shoot all the wildlife within sight. de- By L. F. McNAMARA THIS APRIL'S GENERATION comes gratefully to hand, bearing blossoms well in advance of the hard little buds the bushes are putting out against Ann Ar- bor's confused and wretched wea- ther. There is a fine harvest of fic- tion and a deal of intriguing verse and less than the usual ration of angst. More grain than stone, in all. It is true that the proofing and printing have not been perfect; but where are roses without thorns? And who knows what of felicity in some of the more opa- que poetry may be owing to a lucky fault? THE BEST GIFT offered in the issue is, I think, Rob Poutasse's "The Dog." Mr. Poutasse dis- covers to us in this story a com- ic power to make one rejoice, a keen eye for the right thing and phrasing that flashes and surely snaps, like a bear trap. There are such in the horrid den of his story's antagonist: "A pair of snowshoes dangled next to a massive curled con- traption of rust-brown steel. It was a bear trap, the heavy old- fashioned kind and its jaws were clamped shut. He had nev- ver gotten it open, but you could see how large the teeth were, and how thick the metal. He liked to tell how it could cut a cocker spaniel in half. Beside the bear trap hung two others; a wolf trap and a beaver trap. A little one, for rabbits, hung be- low them, for irony." The owner of this room is some- thing of a dog, named McGraw, and between him and the wolfish if melancholy Peter there is to be a savage confrontation. "Peter was facing away from the bar, but in the back of his head he felt his host was look- ing at the girl's buttocks. Mc- ..r ahair vsa -n the is not, I think, quite so well man- aged, and one might say that the story builds overlong to its crisis. But overshadowing all is Mr. Con- ron's brilliant realization of his characters and situation. His prose is vivid, precise, and full; he sets the thing before us in writing that has moments su- perior to anything in the issue. Here are distinct achievements, this story and the first. There will be readers to whom Sophia Steriades' "Imitation" will speak more than it does to me. A picture in prose, it is carefully wrought, but the care is more evi- dent than anything I care for in fiction. Of more interest is her contribution, "Quarte Cartes Pos- tales." These four etudes, if a little too tired for jeux, a little to light for engagement, do "fizz out rather nicely." They are wry and pre- carious. THESE LAST ARE in a section of the issue called 'The Line', which indicates, I gather, a con- cept to be played with, more or less seriously. JudytStonehill's three verse pieces run the gamut in this section from the quite suc- cessfully controlled "The Poem Defines Itself" to the grotesquely pretentious "The ModerndLine". Her poem "To Susan, Aged Ten" starts nicely, then dribbles away Revolution, IN THE CONTEST that divides the world today and in which so much is at stake, those will probably win who understand re- volution, while those who still put their faith in power politics in the traditional sense of the term and, therefore, in war as the last resort of all foreign policy may well at the end, hinting all too clearly at the reasons for the disaster of "The Modern Line." ALSO IN THIS section is Mae- vernon Varnum's "The Young Girl Passenger," a story recounting in alternating passages an automo- bile trip enfamille and, presum- ably, the unspoken thoughts and desires of the young girl passenger. We are not very interested in the automobile trip, but then we are not, in a way, supposed to be interested in it. We are supposed to be interested in the other thing, the girl's unspoken wish, and we are, up to a point. There is a charm in the evocation of the girl: "The light was failing, the air of the room hung heavily about the brocaded drapes. Martha, in a patient lethargy, moved to- ward the window, her white lace gown and petticoats gathering around her legs." The trouble is that Miss Varnum lets us down, badly, too often with the choice of just the wrong word. We are unhappy when we find Martha, "very enervated by the day," or later when, running, "her progress was thrown into chaos." THE ART OF poetry is mani- fest in its variety in this issue. The virtues of the craft are nobly dis- played in two poems by Alvin Fritz, "Michelangelo's Pieta" and "Detroit: Christmas 1965." Konstantinos Lardas contri- butes "Xypnotic", in his own pow- erful idiom Incantatory and cun- ningly woven, it deserves (and needs) repeated readings, prefer- ably aloud. Mr. Lardas rewards, as nearly always, the efforts of close study. It must be admitted, though, that such unlikely and unlovely words as "extractorless" and "baneingly" need mighty oc- casions to justify them, and here they mar what is mostly a fine and long and sometimes fetching and mostly unclear. During a pealing of bells celebrating an Easter Rising anniversary, William Butler Yeats collared a navy and asked whether he did not rejoice in the occasion. The poor fellow strained to catch the bardic query bleedin' bells." There is a line in but had to confess he could not hear the poet "on account o' them Mr. Vitiello's poem that says "it's no so bad, my man." It may be so. Less ambitious but more' en- gaging are Steven Kagle's brace of poems, "Passion" and "Knowl- edge." Mr. Kagle is no devotee of discursive tissue in poetry, and this presents problems in "Pas- sion." Both poems do, however, immediately attract eye and ear. THERE IS IN this issue, for whatever reason, a lengthy review of two books by the New England divine, Jonathan Edwards, "Free- dom of the Will" and "Religious LETTERS: Students 'The Dregs To the Editor: THE MICHIGAN DAILY on two recent occasions has used an expression attributed to me. The most recent use was by Roger Rap- oport and the expression, that I never said, "students are the dregs of society" is vile in its use and absolutely without foundation. The very fact that this was well cleared up when Councilman Weeks used this political ploy on the Council floor March 28th should have been enough to put it to rest. The fact that The Daily never checked with me at any time is appalling, Affections. These were republished within the last decade by Yale University Press. The review seems to me turgid and tedious and rather unenlight- ening. It may be, for aught I know, an apt reflection of the thought of Jonathan Edwards. If, it is the purpose of the review to attract readers to Edwards, it is a failure, which may be a pity, or again, may not. There is at one point the happy misprecision "Re- ligious Affectations" where "Af- fections" is meant. The art folio is attractive with drawings and etchings by Marina Farkas, Florence Rohn, and Joan Rosenstein. Fifteen plates invite the eye ever and again, and yield pleasures in their several ways. THERE ARE, indeed, many good things in this issue. Editor's note;:L. F. McNamara is an assistant professor in the English Department. Are Not of Society' of that society. A phrase, such as Roger Rapoport used, is ridiculous in its contrary context. IT IS PERHAPS understandable that Mr. Rapoport used this after hearing Mr. Weeks, a clever gen- tleman in the field of engineering the English, express this on the Council floor. What is so unfortunate is that Mr. Rapoport did not elaborate on my rather forceful rebuttal to Councilman Weeks. -Paul H. Johnson Councilman, Third Ward EDITOR'S NOTE: Council- ep 6 14