I O~r irlgatr Bal 1 Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN - UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS AT-LARGE $55M and the Forgotten Under rad by NEIL SHISTER Where Opinions Are Free' 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEwS 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. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE SGC Elections: Nobody's Jumping on the Band. Wagon STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council is in trouble again. This time, however, the difficulty stems not from the University administration, alumni or the public in general, but from the apathy of the very people SGC represents-students. The number of students who registered as candidates for Council and several oth- er elective positions was so abysmally low -the lowest in several years-that Coun- cil was forced to re-open petitioning un- til tonight at 10 p.m. Among the positions that failed to at- tract a minimum number of candidates to allow the voters a choice were: -Four National - Student Association delegates to represent the campus at the summer convention and for the next year. Only three persons filed as candidates. -Three student seats on the Board in Control of Student Publications. Only two students have applied. -Five year-long SGC seats (and possi- bly three half-year seats contingent on possible resignations, and elections of present members to other posts). Only six students filed before the original dead- line. -SGC president and administrative vice-president; only one person has peti- tioned for each. IS POOR SHOW of student support for student government could have a profound effect on the stature of SGC for several semesters. By showing a lack of faith in the work of Council and by fail- ing to give voters a wider choice of can- didates, the student body is tempting SGC to become unresponsive toward campus opinion. This is most unfortunate, for Council is embarking on one of its broadest- based, most ambitious programs for the student body and University community. The quality of its programs cannot be permitted to diminish by lack of support and commitment by qualified candidates: " Council has, with Graduate Student Council, initiated the vice-presidential boards as liaison arms into the adminis- trative offices of the University. * Council and GSC have begun imple- menting the Knauss report recommenda- tion that they draw closer together. " Council's Student Housing Authority has a variety of on-going projects prob- ing into zoning regulations, rent controls and other aspects of off-campus student housing. * Council has also initiated a legal service which would bring a legal ad- visor to campus several times a week for direct consultation with students. * Council has forcefully pursued elec- tion registration drives which have re- sulted in the addition of over 200 eligi- ble students to voter lists for the City Council contests. " Council has set up a legal aid fund that would support court test cases on student problems. A program of speakers on all aspects of Council's work is being organized to go out to housing units and other groups and inform them of SGC's activities on their behalf. OBVIOUSLY, Council demands the en- ergy and attention of dozens of per- sons-from committee members to the President. But without the election-time competition for the available positions, SGC is in danger of becoming a farce. -DAVID KNOKE THE THING about the $55M Fund Drive is that it's a suc- cess, an overwhelming one. The talk around the administration now, in fact, is quite euphoric, and the new slogan is "$67 million in '67." But to most students the drive is an unknown, and to those of us familiar with it the results of the campaign are far more discourag- ing than encouraging. The two facts may seem at first to be contradictory or inconsis- tent, but they aren't. The success and failure of the fund drive re- volves around the more funda- mental multiversity concept, and that's why there are two different reactions. The truth is that in the multi- versity undergraduate students are treated like incidentals who are tolerated rather than encouraged. The fund drive illustrates this. The money is going principally into specialized institutes and re- search centers, places a student rarely enters. And an even sadder truth is that these centers are what makes a modern university 'great', that they really do "insure the vital margin" of quality under LAST YEAR I covered the fund drive for The Daily and spent an hour talking to national chair- man Paul Goebel. I remember be- ing impressed with his dedication and efforts, and yet unable to share his enthusiasm for the cam- paign itself. This puzzled me then but it doesn't now. The fund drive has increased the University's "multidiversity" and in the long-run the student loses. This might be an over-simplifica- tion but it's certainly not a dis- tortion of fact. The centers and institutes become the private bar- onies of especially talented re- searchers and administrators, drawing off money and personnel from other more student-oriented university activities - notably teaching of undergraduate classes. A good research institute, like the very good Institute for Social Re- search here, is a big plus for its university within the professional academic society. But to those stu- dents on its campus who support the institute indirectly by receiv- ing inferior instruction, and being treated in an unconsciously patro- whose banner the fund undertaken. drive was nizing manner by professors, the value of the institute must be ser- iously questioned. ARTHUR MILLER and Mike Wallace were at the University this weekend, participating in a panel as part of the alumni Ses- quicentennial program. T h e i r comments were quite revealing on why the modern American univer- sity has become ana amalgam of independent research-obsessed in- stitutes. Miller speaks truth in a quiet, off-hand sort of way. Listening to him, one has an errie feeling of what is must have been like to hear Plato or Socrates. In a vocab- ulary unencumbered by technical terms and with an uncanny ability to reduce problemsto basic human dimensions, Miller made some comments on the 'freedom of the university' which were quite con- trary to the 'modern mystique' of research. "God help us if the university isn't free," said Miller, and then he went on to tell why it isn't. Mostly, he contended, because it doesn't really know why it is doing what it does. "An organization starts re- producing itself as soon as it is formed, and after a while it exists not because of what was once its purpose but instead in order to perpetuate itself. It's an attitude that is bred in its administrators. They are there not to further the goals of the organization- but to advance and promote themselves. It isn't that they don't want to advance the goals-it's just that once a bureaucratic momentum begins generating they lose sight of them." He didn't cite the multiversity explicitly, but it is clear how ap- propriate his comments are to it.' The prestige and worth of a uni- versity and professor is based on how much money either are able to attract, and after a while money in the form of research grants and special endowments becomes an end in itself and not a means to another end-education. It's worth noting that Miller sympathizes with the plight of the student i the mass university, saying how it isn't like when he was in school and his prfoessor Erich Walter would invite him to go for a walk after class. "Who asks you to go for a walk now?" he wondered. AND MIKE WALLACE. the CBS News commentator, noted that student discontent at Berkeley was "much more intense" than at Michigan. Even though he is cor- rect from a journalistic stand- point - in the sense that Berkeley is more likely to attract headlines than Michigan--the ill-14ted stu- dent movement last semester showed how close to the surface student dissatisfaction here is. The point is that newsmen and administrators appear unaware that the multiversity provides a source for ever-present, though sometimes hidden, resentment, and that all it takes is a series of seemingly minor sparks to set off a student body. The fund drive made a lot of money for the University. But the school appears unwillingly to stop, look at itself, and reappraise its modus operanti. Instead, the mon- ey has been funneled into the re- search institutes in an almost un- challenged manner. There is no money going into something like the residential col- lege because, although everybody believes in it, it is not something that makes a university great. 4 Letters: Mayor Sets Record S traight To the Editor: j WOULD LIKE to clarify an ar- ticle by Mr. Roger Rapoport in The Daily's February 26th edi- tion entitled "Introducing 'Irre- sponsible Unacceptable'." Appar- ently his source of information and its interpretation is still as poor as it was when he covered this area's news in 1965. I am not the former mayor, but the present mayor of Grand Haven. I did not say that "the Michigan State Po- lice have 'banned Rapoport from the Grand Haven City Hall for- ever'." Grand Haven has a Mu- nicipal Police Department. I stat- ed that I would personally throw him out of the City Hall and that a former member of this State Police post said he had been tempted to throw him out of the post when he stopped in there for news. This action was not a result of the way his so-called "quotes" appeared in a newspaper, but in- stead a result of the twisted, dis- torted misquotes and his inten- tional use of same. -William M. Creason, Mayor Grand Haven, Mich. Editor's Note: The Daily re- grets prematurely ending May- or Creason's tenure in Grand Haven. Information reported by Mr. Rapoport concerning the po- lice ban was conveyed to him by a publications board member who had been contacted by the mayor. Sorry. -S.F. '[U' Ignores Values To the Editor: THIS WEEK the alumni re- turned to the University to cel- ebrate 150 years of quality educa- tion composed of intellectual in- quiry and free expression. The students were not here. It is un- fortunate that the exchange of ideas were one-sided because of this. We feel the responsibility to ad- dress ourselves to questions and conditions which no banquets, panel discussions, and not even the $55 million Sesquicentennial Fund Drive can solve. If this is an educational institution that is sup- posed to develop people responsible to themselves and to the values o: a democratic society. why has the University taken the following courses of action: efforts to inst - tute a student bookstore; the HUAC investigation in August; ranking and the SGC draft refer- endum; and the recent crisis be- tween the Daily and the Board. POLITICAL ACTIVISM and dis- content come out of concrete problems here and not out of a desire to be different or foment pointless rebellion. It is because Wisconsin Woes NO MATTER HOW many mistakes ad- ministrators make, no matter how oft- en they are raked over the coals, no matter how bungling they might seem, one thing is clear. A university needs an administration today. But apparently the U. of Wisconsin doesn't have one-at least not in the normal sense. The state legislature has begun what high .,officials in Madison call a drive to seize control over internal university affairs. Fldor Majority Lead- er J. Curtis McKay didn't even need to think twice when he told The Daily, that "there is no question" about the lack of administration power over students and faculty at Wisconsin. No one really likes this state of af- fairs. The student senate is bewildered, the student paper has gone berserk and demonstrations have no effect on an ad- ministration already impotent. The stu- dent senate has asked President Harring- ton to clarify and explain his policies on demonstrations, building regulations, sit- ins-and everything from campus police to janitors. AND NOW A BILL in committee at the state capitol would raise out-of-state tuition at Wisconsin to $1500, a hike of $450. Ironically, students, parents, taxpayers and the legislators are united in their de- mand to know exactly what the admin- istration's future plans are. Unfortunately the legislature has more power than either students or parents. Thus, it is entirely possible that the uni- versity may soon be run by legislators. QNLY ONE dim possibility appears able to save Wisconsin from excessive poli- tical interference. A resolution passed by the state legislature last week asked Har- rington to submit an approval of the so- cial climate at the university. If he can read the legislature's hint of a last chance between the lines he will begin a campaign to solidify an apparently cha- otic, unfunctioning administration. -JIM HECK of the inadequacy of the present structure to reflect students' in- terest that we feel that it has be- come almost impossible to ef- fect changes through institutional channels. The petitions, referenda, and le- gal arguments of students have been based upon the concept of a democratic university. In its refu- sal to abide by overwhelming man- dates from its student body, the Administration has failed in, its obligations to perpetuate a demo- cratic heritage. It has sacrificed progress and human value to the preservation of a stable, autocratic system de- voted to providing personnel rath- er than people, information rather than truth, status rather than dig- nity. We cannot accept such a University. German Chacin Susan Chacin Skip Taube Steve Daniels Bobby Kaufman Funny Thing 'Bout That To the Editor: QUOTE FROM Big Brother in George Orwell's '1984': "War is Peace ." Quote from The Daily, Febru- ary 28, 1967 (courtesy of the As- sociated Press) : "In the after- math of naval shelling of ground targets in North Vietnam, the mining of rivers, and the use of long-range artillery against targets north of the demilitarized zone, Johnson told a news conference he believes he is pursuing the course best calculated to lead to peace." Hmmm. -Steve Nelson, Grad Kahnweiler Reply To the Editor: JT IS APPARENT to me that Mr. Osmer has not carefully read my letter of February 26, and is a victim of a misunder- standing. As a former student' of engineering (three semesters in the naval architecture program), I feel that the charges of being "severely bigoted" and "incredibly ignorant" are quite unfair. The purpose of my letter was more a condemnation of the en- gineering educational system than of the action of the faculty. To have stated that all engineers were "politically apathetic" and etc. would display bigotry and ignor- ance. Unfortunately, this is the impression.society has of the pro- fession. No place did I say this was my own image of the engi- neer, but rather, always of socie- ty's. My complaint was that the action of the faculty only served to reinforce this impression. I would also like to apologize for equating the Engineering Council with the engineering fac- -ulty. However, it seems strange that a body of learned men should base a resolution on the contents of a film related to them by such an obviously biased source as the attorney for the city of Ann Ar- bor. From this disclosure it seems that the profession has again strengthened its impression on so- ciety that I have stated. I WILL NOT, however, apologize for the remarks I have made. As a former student of engineering this was the way I felt society was regarding me; this is one of the reasons I am no longer pursuing a degree in naval architecture. Too much of the world is ignored by the engineering curriculum and only through a liberal education can a real, objective, and complete knowledge of people and life be achieved. _J. F. Kahnweiler, '69 'Condescending' To the Editor: IN THIS his debut Roger Rapo- port makes a quick tour of the University. He starts off with a little vignette about the trivialities of fund raising, which I suppose is meant to be clever. Then comes the image-shattering reminder - very appropriate on this weekend of !eulogies-that the notorious Dr. Duvalier once attended the Uni- versity. From here Rapoport moves to those philistines on the City Council who fail to find art in "Flaming Creatures." Naturally this leads to everyone's favorite fool, Richard Cutler. And to fin- ish this ironic piece, there is a sarcastic aside about those in- competents on the Ann Arbor News. THE SAME old straw men -- Hatcher, image-building, Culter, and philistines-are attacked In the same old monotonous way - mockingly, condescendingly, with a lack of tolerance and Insight, and in a tone of superiority I find insufferable. -Peter Gibbon, Grad I w ", ; 5 - _ , 1 E G ; _ , 1 1. /, 1 ,. , t! ' -fs . ? _ t -r n T; 1 + v Y / -7 {Ct) L;}. "THA MY , ABY. TgI~tS T A BETTER CgA}RJ ANYWAY." $ Getting Along 'Swimmingly' ANN ARBOR'S City Fathers, long noted for their begrudging admittance of the very existence of students in Ann Arbor, did an about-face at the City Council meeting Monday night. They signed an agreement to be presented to the Regents that would permit the building of an Olympic-sized swimming pool, an Ice skating rink and tennis courts at a site on Fuller Road. The terms of the lease call for the joint city-University sponsorship of the project, with the latter paying up to 40 per cent of the estimated $550,000 con- struction costs. The contract also stipu- lates that the "University" be allowed ex- clusive use of the facilities for up to two- fifths of the time; the "residents and citizens" of the city are allotted the re- mainder. But, quite admirably, the Coun- cil will not prohibit students from using the pool during "city" time. -. . ..W...X1 ,. "Excuse me! ... This is a life and death matter!" .. .,.,":ti..:.".".:v :: .... .................................." . .1. ...,1,J. " :.Y. " ..:1: : ":%VJ.":r::.{{i""t:':":":":::!.. . . .}'{{.. . . . . . . . . . . . ....., ,. ,J. r ROGER RAPOPORT- 'Stop Sucking Your Thumb, Shape Up!' ....;.:. ". ".:" ."JJ.Vn1:""::: J.:Y JJ . ..........:*;..:...::.*.t* **.:.YJ J:: *.:*,'. :J .:.;: :....*. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........n::.....J. ....,.,.,.:""::::lYy ... . .*........,. .V.*.r:::......:.J. n.. 1... .V: J. . . .... ......,...,........y "; I .THIS IS A STEP in the right direction The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail; $8 yearly by carrier ($9 by mail). Published at 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich., 981I04. Owner-Board in Control of Student Publications, Bond or Stockholders-None. Average press run-10,000. Second, class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48104. Arir r.naa tnf for a community that has witnessed a 300 per cent growth in the size of the University student body, without a cor- responding increase in recreational facili- ties. Council's gesture of good will should be accepted; the Regents should approve the lease and allocate the funds imme- diately. -GREG ZIEREN .tea Party A C ONSIDERABLg ATTENTION is being focused on. President Johnson's new plan to draft 19 year-olds first on a "Fair and Impartial Random system of selec- tion (FAIR)." Unfortunately everyone is ignoring my new plan to change the draft based on a "Fair and Reasonable Classification Evaluation (FARCE)." The FARCE study, which included extensive consul- tation with Selective Service Director Hershey, students, draftees, college administrators, and parents concludes that 10 year-olds should be drafted first. The average 10 year-old would make a great soldier. Unlike his soft older brother, the average 10 year-old is Taking the 10 year-olds away from their homes and sending them to Vietnam would provoke less hardship than it does for today's soldier. There would be far less disruption of family and professional life. With their sharp reflexes 10 year-olds would make good pilots. Certainly the young fliers with their acute sense of timing would be less apt to bomb civilian targets than today's pilots. Also there would be no need to fly soldiers out to Hong Kong or Hawaii for "rest and relaxation" trips. The 10 year-olds would be satisfied with a show by Soupy Sales and Batman. The new troops would also help curtail black market activities. Many PX items like razor blades and shaving cream would not be sold any longer. Besides who would want to buy hot copies of Mad Magazine and Superman? Bubble-gum incidentally, would of course replace beer, although the 10 year-olds would have to be careful not to chew in the field. The pops could give them away 4fn l at}9 afl,,, 4 Even if there were would stil be the best relations standpoint it occasional misfires, 10 year-olds men for the job. From a public would be much better to blame