Seventy-Sixth Year ED EDD AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN -- UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD m CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, Truth Will Prevail 40 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 The Michigan Daily is managed, written and edited by students at The University of Michigan. Articles and editorial opinions appearing in The Daily are those of the indi- vidual writers or the editors, and do not represent the views of the University or any of its official representatives. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: ROGER RAPOPORT Feb. 1: The President's Commission? Eligible Students: Register To Vote! By LEONARD PRATT Associate Managing Editor "HELL MAN, we're tired! If you have got any ideas why don't you tell Student Government Council about them during Con- stituents' Time." The campus, two months after the Movement. I'm not sure why one of the originators of November's "student power" agitation are talking that way now, when the Movement's only result-President Hatcher's commission on University decision- making-is in its crucial formative stages. One thing I am sure of, though -he's speaking for a lot of peo- ple. Two meetings into the se- mester and SGC, for example, has done little but clean up the loose ends from December. Nor does it look like much more than that can be expected from it. SO WHERE does that leave the President's commission? Danger- ously out in the cold, ignored by everyone on campus who could either supply it with ideas or help press its final recommendations on the Regents. The commission itself may well not realize its isolation. In their private meeting with President Hatcher last week student mem- bers were passively given carte blanche to propose revisions in the University's decision-making proc- ess and guaranteed that their pro- posals would go straight to the Regents. This is talk guaranteed to re- assure people unsure of their au- thority. BUT THE COMMISSION should not be deceived about its influ- ence. It has none. What the President says to it is meaningless, not because he is in- sincere but because he won't be around when its members start coming out with their proposals. It's no skin off his nose if the commission proposes to burn this place down. He won't be the one to have to call the fire trucks. Instead, the commission's pro- posals will be faced with a gaunt- let far different from that sketch- ed for them by President Hatcher. They will be faced by eight Regents who will take a lot of convincing before allowing any formal changes in the campus power structure. THEY WILL BE faced with an administration headed by a man unsure of his political position on campus and composed of vice-pres-' idents who will be quite unsure of their jobs. This does not necessarily argue for the doom of the commission's proposals, but the caution it will lead to could easily do them in. Unless the campus changes rad- ically, they will be faced with a faculty and student body disinter- ested in their work and split over its meaning. The commission's proposals, therefore, could easily suffer the fate of last fall's Knauss Report, requesting greater faculty and stu- dent participation in University government. President Hatcher himself brushed off the report by noting that "the administration didn't have anything to do with it." No matter what the commission recommends the proposals are bound to ask the administration to stop trying to be the last word in campus affairs. That admission didn't come with the Knauss Report or with any of the many other similar reports of the past years asking for an in- creased faculty and student voice in campus government. Men with power just don't like to share it. THERE IS, of course, one way for the commission to make itself felt on campus. Essentially it's going to have to twist some arms. The members of the commission have got to realize that only half their job will be done if they merely present a series of well- considered recommendations to the Regents. In addition, they must as- sure those recommendations some sort of lease on life. They've got to play politics. In order to do that the commis- sion needs what all political bod-. ies need: some base of power. Without this to back up their rec- ommendations, the proposals will be so much shouting in the wind, THIS POWER lies with the same people whose frustration forced President Hatcher to create the commission in the first place, the University's faculty and students. Thus, the commission must in- volve as many campus groups as possible in the creation and pres- entation of its recommendations. There's several ways to go about this. Periodic all-campus meetings, frequent conferences with SGC and the Faculty Assembly, publi- cation of position papers either privately or in The Daily or fac- ulty-student referenda on touchy questions all can be used. The commission has been and will be urged to operate in secret. The campus can afford to have it do anything but. THE COMMISSION'S final pro- posals should be as much the prod- uct of individuals outside the group as within it. That's the only way the weight of campus opinion can be united behind the recommendations, and such a unification is the only means of preserving the recom- mendations in anything like their intended form. I1 ALL ELIGIBLE UNIVERSITY students should register for the Ann Arbor City Council elections this spring. The registration process will probably not be easy for those who pass the resi- dence requirements. Several years of frus- tration on the part of Student Govern- ment Council, the Student Housing Agen- cy and various pro-student populations have shown that convincing the city's clerks to add another name to the voter rolls is tedious and time consuming proc- ess. But there are several very good reasons why every eligible student should put up with the process in order to vote in the upcoming election. THE UNIVERSITY'S symbiotic relation- ship with the city over the years has worked to the mutual advantage of the community fathers and the University power structure and to the disadvantage of the students. Because most of them are transients, because most of them have neither the requirements of residence nor the in- clination to participate in community gov- ernment and because the economic con- trol over student life by the city and University is too diffuse for individual ac- tion to be effective, students previously have not had reasons nor opportunities to make their desires heard. Now, however, the opportunity to make the student ballot really count has arriv- ed with the candidacy of Gerald Dupont, '67L, for council seat in the Second Ward. The Second Ward is predominantly stu- dent-populated, but apathy could put a pathetic end to his bid to represent stu- dent interests to the city. REGISTRATION opens Feb. 21 and closes March 6. During the two weeks every eligible student should make the effort to go down to City Hall and register. -DAVID KNOKE Redefining the Federal-State Relationship The Costly Air War AS THE CONGRESS comes back to work there is wide agree- ment that there should be a pause and a re-examination of the great collection of welfare measures which, first enacted by the New Deal under Franklin Roosevelt, have been immensely expanded under John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. The compelling reason for this pause is not that the country can- not afford to proceed with its good works because of the swelling costs of the war in Vietnam. The com- pelling reason is that, quite apart from Vietnam, the country, not merely the conservative right wing, is disappointed and unhappy about many aspects of the welfare pro- gram. The pause is necessary because the complex of welfare measures has become unmanageable. "There are now," said Rep. Gerald Ford the other day, "over 400 federal aid appropriations for 170 separ- ate aid programs administered by a total of 21 federal departments and agencies, 150 Washington bu- reaus and 400 regional offices, each with its own way of passing out federal tax dollars." IT IS HARD to believe that this administrative thicket can be pruned item by item. As a result there is a mounting demand for some kind of drastic change-for a reform which will reduce the role of Washington in the admin- istration of the civilian affairs of this country. Since virtually no one wishes to eliminate the services which these great federal measures are sup- 3osed to provide, a search is on for ways of dispersing the obli- gations among the states and the localities. No one wishes to stand up and say that he is opposed to schools, hospitals, aid to the -poor and the like. But there is a wide revulsion against the expanding and heavy- handed role played by the federal government. Thus, in the past two years, grants to the states and locali- ties for specific programs have increased 35 per cent. They are now $15 billion in this fiscal year. With the legislation already on the books, and without any new projects, the amount of federal money paid out to the states and localities will rise to about $30 billion in 1975. THE ONLY alternative to ad- ministering welfare through vari- ous federal, bureaucracies is to To a a n 'Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN OUR DAILY air attacks on Vietnam may be more trouble than their worth. For one thing, worthwhile targets are scarce. Secondly, the attacks have been costly in terms of men and materials. Accidents are frequent. And there is little substantial evidence that the bombing missions can bring the war to a halt any sooner. A U.S. pilot underscored the problem recently in Aviation Week and Space Technology. He reported that pilots are repeatedly, risking their lives and $2.5 million air- craft for such marginal targets as 12 foot dugout canoes, foot bridges and mules. Often a pinpoint bombing raid will only merely knock out a bridge that costs the enemy an afternoon of tree chopping to replace. The mules are worth perhaps a $100. And sampans come cheap in North Vietnam. MOREOVER, THE COST in aircraft loss- es is soaring. Military officials report that 618 combat-type aircraft have been shot down in the war. And for the first time yesterday officials admitted that they have not been reporting full totals on the number of supporting aircraft shot down. They indicated that at least 38 addi- tional "fixed-wing" aircraft have been shot down during the war. The Pentagon considers the total number of planes shot down a "classified" matter. ANOTHER BIG PROBLEM with air raids in any war--and especially this one- is misfires. As part of a new improved Mekong Delta offensive the U.S. is esca- lating its "firefly" helicopter raids. This tactic, used for night operations, employs one helicopter equipped with a powerful searchlight and two gunships, to rain fire on enemy boats. During a raid Sunday near Phuhuu the gunners accidentally opened fire on Viet- namese civilians, killing 31 and wounding 38 others. More than 40 American serv- icemen gave blood to the wounded after they were evacuated to a hospital in Cantho. Finally, there is little evidence from the North that the 150 missions flown daily have brought us closer to our objective. Since we began bombing in February, 1965, North Vietnamese troop infiltration has increased from an estimated 4500 a month to the current 7000 per month. WHAT ALL THIS MAY suggest is that the bombing is not the answer to the Vietnam problem. The targets are too trivial, the costs too high, the accidents too frequent, and the strategic value too dubious to make the air war the best path to either vic- tory or peace. --ROGER RAPOPORT transfer many of the functions to the states and localities. However, there is an obvious difficulty here. It is that the states and localities, relying' largely on property taxes and sales taxes. are not nearly so well able to raise revenue as is the federal government with its corporate and personal income taxes. This is not, however, an insurmountable diffi- culty. There are ways and means of overcoming the disparity in reve- nue, and there are at least two alternative plans already under discussion. ONE PLAN has been proposed by Walter Heller. It would have the federal government set aside and distribute to the states with- out conditions a percentage of the federal income tax base, say one per cent or two per cent. This would provide them with something between $3 and $5 bil- lion a year, a substantial contribu- tion which would give them much greater fiscal independence. Another device would enlarge the federal tax credit for state income taxes. One of the merits of this approach to the problem is that the states and localities which spend the increased revenue would retain the responsibility for col- lecting it. They would not be under the temptation which would arise if they could spend money while the federal government had to raise it. IT SEEMS PROBABLE that some scheme for sharing federal revenues with the states will be adopted, if not in this session of Congress, then later on. It will do much to remedy the imbalance arising from the fiscal power of the federal government and the comparative weakness of the state governments. But the federal government will, In any event, no matter what fac- tion of which party controls it, continue to play a very large, in- deed an expanding role in the na- tion's life. The re-examination of these fed- eral laws cannot be done once and for all. It will have to be a con- tinuing task, and it will need to be based on a more refined and accurate analysis than individual politicians and voters are compe- tent to make. TO MEET this need, a leading specialist in urban affairs, Prof. Daniel P. Moynihan, has suggested that "Congress might now estab- lish an office of legislative evalua- tion which would have the task of systematically evaluating the results of the social and economic programs enacted by it and paid for it out of public monies. "Such an office would be estab- lished as a separate agency, or it could be located in the Library of Congress or the General Account- ing Office. But the essential fea- ture must be that it will be staffed by professional social scientists who will routinely assess the re- sults of government programs in the same manner that the Gen- eral Accounting Office routinely audits them." Such an agency would help equip us for that re-examination which is so much needed. (c),1967, The washington Post Co. I at Letters: Hamilton Critical of Police Editorial Exams for the Examined WITH THE FIRST TESTS of the tri- mester rapidly approaching, Ed Schwartz, vice-president of the National Student Association, proposes a new rhe- torical pasttime: "Exams for the Exam- ined." The Hubert Humphrey exam: You start off with an original thesis, but end by repeating the lectures verbatim. The Bob Dylan exam: Good answers, but you can't read the handwriting. The William Manchester exam: You have to cross out half the essay. THE WARREN COMMISSION exam: Convincing at first glance, but 'tends to fall apart on second reading. The Stokely Carmichael exam: Most of the class flunks. The George Hamilton III exam: You flunk the exam, but get an "A" in the course. The Adam Clayton Powell exam: You get caught cheating. The Time Magazine exam: Your style Is entertaining, but your content is dis- torted. The Cassius Clay exam: You get side- The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. tracked by answers which have nothing to do with the course. The Ronald Reagan exam:, The same exam given in two different courses. The Dean Rusk exam: You repeat the same answers over and over again. The Robert Kennedy exam: Pretty good, but not nearly as good as the last one. The Johnny Carson exam: The profes- sor interrupts you every 10 minutes for further instructions. THE GEORGE ROMNEY exam: You de- cline to answer the most difficult questions. The Students for a Democratic Society exam: You attack the professor's sex life. The Bill Moyers exam: You shoot your bolt on the first two questions and leave early. The Marshall McLuhan exam: Returned with a large question mark. The LSD exam: You take 12 hours to finish it and two days to recuperate. The New York City exam: You can't pull any of your answers together. The Charles de Gaulle exam: You an- nounce to the class that you don't want to take it. The George Wallace exam: Your girl- friend takes it for you. The Berkeley exam: You rip up the paper three times and try to start again. The draft exam: You try to cut the class. THE MARTIN LUTHER KING exam: To the Editor: BECAUSE I HAVE no desire for notoriety, I asked that my name not be used by Mr. Rapoport in a news article he wrote fdr Satur- day's edition concerning a tele- phone call I made to police Lieu- tenant Staudenmeier concerning the Cinema Guild's presentation of last Wednesday. Thearticle, inso- far as it refers to me, is correct. However, the editorial publish- ed in the same edition and ap- parently referring to the same person written about in the news article makes unwarranted as- sumption and false statements. First, I did not ask Lieutenant Staudenmeier not to attend the Cinema Guild presentation. SECOND, the Ann Arbor police were not and are not, to my knowl- edge, willing to waive their con- cern for the law in this case or any other. No such impression was given me by the police or by me to Mr. Rapoport. Third, my phone call was not a matter of being "willing to break with tradition to keep the police off campus." As a University re- lations staff member I was inter- ested in determining what might occur and what the public reac- tion might be. The call to Lieu- tenant Staudenmeier was one of several I made in this connection. I try to cooperate with The Daily both as a University rela- tions staff member and as an in- dividual whose profession is jour- nalism. The effort often produces pain. I continue to try on the as- sumption that student journalism of the sort in question is caused by inexperience and immaturity which cannot be avoided. But I do wish you would try harder. -Jack H. Hamilton Assistant to Vice-President for University Relations Drug Fad To the Editor: THE MASS ARRESTS at the Artists' Workshop Society in Detroit, and the consequent waste of much talent, and even of youth- ful idealism, inspires reflection upon the drug fad. Young people who use drugs as a means of es- cape from social pressures make a bad bargain. I am not talking about the le- gal implications. If there is a conflict between law and serious moral purpose, certainly the le- gality of an act cannot be the INTELLIGENCE is the constant interaction between reason and emotional intuition. The absence of one or the other results in a monster. Since the cold, detached, unemotional thinking - machirie bursting with data is an all too familiar monster, let's talk about the other kind. The drug user's unconscious is laid out on the ta- ble, for any passerby to write on. He allows himself to be used for any purpose, and has only a minimal control over his action, or even his thoughts. One can say that this is also true of the social- ized. But why swap one form of slavery for another? The drug user disassociates acts from their con- sequences. The most dramatic example of this is a young man who, behind LSD and a few other' things, de- cided that he was indestructible and shot himself in the head. I heard the story from the per- son who cleaned up bits of his brains and skull from the walls and ceiling. What happened at the Artists' Workshop Society is a broader manifestation of the same kind of thinking, although per- haps less dramatic. I HAVE HEARD it argued that musicians have to use pot in or- der to improve their hearing. I be- lieve that any musician who can- not hear without pot should stop trying to fool himself and the pub- lic and go sell shoes. I have also heard it argued that alcohol and nicotine are worse than pot. Maybe so. I won't argue about the relative merits of dif- ferent kinds of poison. I'm against poison. The search for wisdom and crea- tivity on a silver platter, in the form of a pill, is a manifestation of the pathology of the privileged. A handful of drug users have been great. The rest have been junkies who died young after having wast- ed their lives. It's not easy to maintain one's integrity in the face of social pres- sures. It is a slow process, whereby you make the right choices, day after day, year after year, espe- cially when you mass the age when it is fashionable to be a young reb- el. YOU DEVELOP your mind, your critical faculties as well as your emotions, your perceptions, your awareness. You strive to develop a keen sense of reality so you don't follow every pied piper with a New York Times, and it quotes University of California biophysi- cist Alexander Grendon thus: "The Free Society Movement has always applied coercion to insure victory. One party 'de- mocracy,' as in the Communist countries or the lily-white por- tions of the South, corrects op- ponents of the party line by pun- ishment. The punishment of the recalcitrant university adminis- tration (and more than 20,000 students who avoided participa- tion in the conflict) was to 'bring the university to a grind- ing halt' by physical force. "To capitulate to such cor- ruption of democracy is to teach students that these methods are right. President Kerr capitulat- ed repeatedly." Kerr might fit into your plans nicely as president of the Univer- sity of Michigan. But do you sup- pose he really knows why? Some 200,000 Michigan alumni worldwide, plus the citizens of the state of Michigan, have rights of ownership in the University which transcend the chronic negativism of The Daily and a noisy minority of students. IN ADDITION to the fact that you abuse your editorial power to the University's detriment, you are old enough to know that anarchy doesn't work. You encourage an- archy by your slanted coverage of what's happening. In your news columns, the University adminis; tration, the police, and anyone else who differs with you are invari- ably the Bad Guys. As an ex-journalist I wonder whether you aren't seeing just how far you can push it before restric- tion is reluctantly applied - so you can bleat about "freedom of the press." Until recently I've felt that the Daily should continue to enjoy the hands-off treatment it always has received. But when you condone-perhaps encourage - unwarranted mass meetings and the puerile public use of gutter language (written and shouted), you alienate fair-minded liberal-thinking- people everywhere. Freedom is not license. Can't you be persuaded to pass puberty? -Whit Hillyer, '32 Evanston, Ill. California To the Editor: HE FOLLOWING is a copy of a letter I have sent to Gradu- ate Admissions Office of UCLA: On Jan. 7, 1967, I applied for admission to the graduate division of the mathematics department which is sponsoring the special logic year in 1967-1968. I also applied for a graduate fellowship or assistantship. I new feel that it is impossible for me to enter any of the University of California campus locations. I BELIEVE that in order for a university to achieve and'maintain the general level of excellence that your university has shown in the past it is essential that politi- cians take a "hands off" attitude toward the functioning of the uni- versity, for otherwise academic freedom, and with it the freedom of inquiry, suffers. Unfortunately Governor Reagan has shown that he is incapable of staying out of university affairs. When his budget proposal was released I was hopeful that Rea- ;an's surprisingly low university expenditure was based merely on his lack of knowledge of both the complexity and expense needed to maintain a great university. HOWEVER, with the firing of Clark Kerr, I am now convinced that Ronald Reagan is going to attempt to continue to meddle in university affairs. I find this situation intolerable, not only as a possible University of California student, but as a future member of the academic community. Therefore, I would ap- preciate ,it if you would disregard my application and refund by $10 application fee. -Stanley H. Stahl, Grad Loyalty To the Editor: WITH REFERENCE to the re- cent article written by Mr. Firshein (Jan. 27) I wish to clar- ify the fact that there are those who are proud and pleased to "pledge allegiance" to our country by signing the loyalty oath as required for new staff and faculty at the University of Michigan. It would seem that more people should take the positive approach and consider this the great priv- ilege it is . . . to affirm our belief in and loyalty to the United States of America. The trend seems to be on the negative approach wherein there is concern that one is subversive and disloyal if asked to sign the oath. -Bernita J. Knott Canned To the Editor: IF MR. MAYO (Review, Jan. 27) would take the time to learn correct critiquing procedures, or if he knew anything at all about Robert Flaherty and his documen- tary, this trite, sophomoric and inane review would never have p It-' I 1 11,11 ll ', A , M ,717RIN =I. I