PAGE. TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1967 PAGE TWO TIlE MIChiGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1967 CRISIS LOOMS: Publications Board To Meet Tomorrow, Consider Editors Hayden Seeks Reorganization O f Ghetto Economic Conditions (uontinueo rrom Pag 1) attempts to solve the probl em. (Continued from Page 1) or six nuclei of faculty who would be interested in investiga- ting ... what the board was doing and why." He said that "various groups in various ways" might investigate, the board's reaction to the senior recommendation, but added that yesterday was too early a date to suggest how this might be for- mally implemented. Other juniors recommended for new positions included William Krauss, '68, as business manager. Recommended for the senior edi- torial staff positions were: Mere- dith Eiker, managing editor; Mich- ael Heffer, city editor; Robert Kli- vans, editorial director; Neil Shis- ter, magazine editor; Susan Schnepp, personnel director; Assistant managing editors, Su- san Elan and Laurence Medow; assistant editorial directors, Steph- en Firshein and Ronald Klempner; Wechsler, advertising; Jean Ros- assistant magazine editors, Carole inski, personnel; Dianne Smaller, Kaplan and Lissa Matross. finance; Sam Offen, circulation Recommended to the senior bus- and summer business manager, and iness staff were: Erica Keeps, as- Phyliss Levinson, freshman supple- sociate business manager; Steve ment. SGC Defends Right To Sho xeietlFilm years, according to Hayden. Yet Commenting on civil rights proj- the housing standard has not im- ects, he said, "Substituting Negroes proved, employment has not in- for whites will not solve the prob- creased and local economic ven- lem of program." tures I have not been initiated, he "As long as the Student Non- explaned. Violent Coordinating Committee explained. and other organizations were oper- Local Talent Employed ating chiefly in the South and "The poverty money is used to were working for Negro voting hire caseworkers and other pro- rights, he noted, everyone support- fessions from the outisde. Talent- ed them. Now that they have mov- ed local people are also hired, ed to the urban ghetto, it is a thus giving them a vested interest different story," Hayden claimed. in the status quo. The society Hayden suggests, as a strate- which provides poverty money gy, the construction of new, "peo- wants to maintain the existing ple's institutions. By taking over structure. It is hoped that, by hir- institutional control, the people of ing these local people, they, then, the ghetto can prove their own le- will not instigate any real changes gitimacy as a group with power to that would upset the structure," control their own affairs. Hayden said., "This does not mean that a dia- Hayden then discussed existing logue between the members of the existing institution and the people of the slums should not continue. But the dialogue is carried on from a position of power, power held because of local political and eco- nomic control. Toward this end, Hayden sug- gested: * Providing legitimate defense in the courts, thus using this out- let as a voice; * Raising tax money in the area; * Starting cooperative stores, thus insurancing the return of cap- ital to the community, and * Decentralizing police and wel- fare organizations and employing local citizens whenever possible. (Continued from Page 1) Martha Cook, '67, outgoing Pan- hellenic Association President, commented that "If SGC goes against Cinema Guild we are in essence going against the entire University. Since the individual student can choose not to see the films, he should also have the right to choose to see them." According to Bruce Kahn, '68, a council member, "if we give in be- cause of outside pressures we've given up our institutional freedom and there is nothing left to bal- ance against academic freedom." DIAL 5-6290 Savio Says No Justification For More Demonstrations r NOMINATED FOR4 ACADEMY AWARDS Ladies andi G'e ;-ztl ncn. This is Jd CCollins Q .Q , a). se.zgifokso tg Q ySat. Night Feb. 25 at 8:30 P.M. 7>ir/2Y NDIVDUAL TICKET SALES AC eMSNdaytFeb. 2,at 830 A SH ill Aud. BoxOf fi e UNION-LEAGUE $3.25," $2.75, $2.25 ii 4 , I I ir: .: "More demonstrations on the University campus may not be justified," even if the present pres- idential commissions fail to give anything but "vague platitudes," Mario Savio, former leader of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement, said recently. "Will you be justified in more deinonstrations? I'm not so sure," Savio said. "And I think every student must really ask himself," he told an interviewer from WCBN, the campus radio station, in Cali- fornia last week. Savio stated that "students who only take a part when it's excit- ing, " and who "aren't around to follow through," can lend nothing to the meaning of a demonstration. 'Vested Interest' "Your administration," Savio re- marked, "has a strong vested in- terest in commissions coming out with only the vaguest platitudes." He said, "unless students take in- terest at this point," nothing val- uable will come of the commis- sions. Savio referred to three commis- sions created by University Presi- dent Harlan Hatcher and imple- mented this semester to consider problems in the role of student decision-making, regulations ban- ning sit-ins on campus and coop- eration with the Selective Service. "Your Regents, like ours, are the worst sort of autocrats." Savio stereotyped them "as nothing but businessmen. "All they know is stocks and bonds." Savio contended that the ad- ministration, here, w will do as little as possible to open up chan- nels in governing the university." He said Regents and administra- tors will use "bribery, pressure, vicious conniving." 'Prevent Democratization' "The administration has a very keen interest in preventing what- ever democratization of university government can be prevented," Savio said. He felt there should be areas in which students "should have complete control." He cited the dorms as an example, and stated that it is not "inappropriate" that students share a large .part in the niaking of the university's aca- demic decisions. Savio claimed "there are appro- priate forms of student participa- tion in setting the curriculum, but faculty members are unwill- ing to admit this." He went on to say, "'It's been our feelings that there are prob- ably no areas where the adminis- tration should make all the regu- lations, and probably no areas which it should dominate." Savio called the presence of po- lice on campus a chronic problem and said that they "have come to be as common as deans." He said a necessary part of university gov- ernment is the insurance that a 'mechanism' be established where- by "police could be effectively kept from the campus." Savio placed little value on fac- ulty asistarice, saying that al- though they voted an 'acceptable resolution in Berkeley they never "follow through" to initiate it. "Unfortunately," Savio remarked, "we've discovered that many fac- ulty members who voted for it were voting for peace.' INCLUDING BEST PICTURE AND BEST ACTOR 1 I Cinema IU presents I JULIE CHRISTIE'S Academy Award Winning Performance DARLING Also starring LAWRENCE HARVEY DIRK BOGARDE I I , II FRIDAY and SATURDAY Auditorium A Angell Hall 7 and 9:15 p.m. 50e I.D. Required .--m.. I I David Hemmings Sarah Miles *Time Magazine.Newsweek, Saturday CO LOR Review, Lie Magazine, ETY.. The New Yorker, Commonweal, the A Premier Productions Co., Inc. Release New Republic, The Village Voice, Recommended for mature audiences The New leader. I I Tonight "BLACK FOREST" Boris Korloff and Lon Chaney STARTS THURSDAY "GOLDRUSH" Charlie Chaplin "THE GREAT CHASE" W. C. Fields SESQUIGRAS FILM FESTIVAL Union Ballroom 8:00 P.M. 50c I I i I Career Minded? ALL STATE I' Is Interviewing-February 28, IT E WALTER READE JR/JOSEPH STRICK PRODUCTION Everybody loves Georgy- she's staying for the 7th hilarious week! 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