Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS here 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. PRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MEREDITH EIKER Hatcher's Speech: A Costly Mistake PRESIDENT HATCHER'S address yes- terday to the California Bar Associa- tion is a mistake and a shame. Rarely has there been such an out- standing example of public relations in- eptitude as President Hatcher's speech. He said yesterday that "the old and weary bitterness of labor-management strife and warfare should not be carried into the public service or into a modern uni- versity environment." Today, the Michigan AFL-CIO execu- tive council votes on a resolution calling for an AFL-CIO boycott of all University educational functions as punishment for University opposition to PA 379, which prohibits strikes but requires public em- ployers to bargain with unions represent- ing their employes. THE BOARD of the University's Insti- tute for Labor and Industrial Rela- tions, which would be crippled by any such boycott, has sent the AFL-CIO a letter urging against "precepitate" action and hinting that the University may com- ply with all the terms of PA 379 even while continuing its attempt to over- turn the law in courts as an unconstitu- tional invasion of its autonomy. Since key administrators, including Vice-President for Academic Affairs Al- lan F. Smith, are on the ILIR's board, the letter certainly has authority. But, as one source close to the ILIR commented yesterday, "Hatcher's speech makes our letter look awfully silly." It also makes the University look silly. In denouncing the concept of collective bargaining a day before the AFL-CIO votes on the proposed boycott, President Hatcher has virtually ensured that the boycott will be approved. PRESIDENT HATCHER'S speech was thus not only politically inept; it is also dubious labor relations. He claimed in California that collective bargaining is inapplicable to a public service or uni- versity context. But this comment ig- nores the Executive Order President Ken- nedy signed four years ago which estab- lished what is now a successful collective bargaining program in the federal gov- ernment. Moreover, the University's truck drivers and maintenance workers may be un- convinced by Hatcher's implication that they are somehow different from their colleagues in private enterprise-or that they should be denied the right of collec- tive bargaining. True, labor relations in a public serv- ice or university context are going to be somewhat different from labor relations in private enterprise. Hence the Univer- sity itself should seek adjustments which would apply collective bargaining to its own particular context. But there is no sign that this is going to happen. REGENTS IRENE MURPHY and Carl Brablec asked last February that the University set up collective bargaining procedures of its own while continuing to oppose the particular terms of PA 379 as an unconstitutional violation of Uni- versity autonomy. This is, in fact, the unanimous recom- mendation which the University's collec- tive bargaining experts-in the ILIR, the economics department, the business ad- ministration school and the Law School -have been making for a year. But the University administration, most notably President Hatcher, has ignored these recommendations, and have all but shunned the advice of their own experts have offered. There is thus a distinct irony-some would call it hypocrisy-in the University's announcement of Hatch- er's speech: "Lawyers and law professors were asked for fresh perspectives and new approaches to employe relations in the public sector in an address by Uni- versity of Michigan President Harlan Hatcher today... THE FACT is that President Hatcher's speech is inept in its approach to poli- tical realities, shaky in its knowledge of labor relations, and ungrateful in its studied disregard for the suggestions which the University's labor relations ex- perts have already offered. If all the University suffers as a result is an AFL-CIO boycott which would cripple its labor education programs, it will be fortunate indeed. -MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH Editor SOUND and FURY B to oge by Clarence Fantto Tehe Bo s G t mgFoggier FOR THE FIRST time, the This three-point program paral- IT IS RUSK who is the princi- son could ever make would be to search centers who made the early United States has made a els the U.S. offer announced yes- pal source of opposition within the appoint Robert Kennedy as Sec- 1960's so intellectually invigorat- clear, public declaration that it terday on at least two points. Johnson Administration to any retary of State. He would thus ing in Washington. . Thant called for a cessation of eliminate the principal source of is seeking to de-fuse the rapidly U.S. bombing over North Viet Nam flexibility in our position on Chi- his domestic political opposition by UNFORTUNATELY, all this is escalating Viet Nam war. and a phased withdrawal of nese admission to the UN. Fur- broadening the policy foundation probably no more than a pipe United Nations Ambassador Ar- troops. He also asked that all thermore, the State Department of his administration. dream. Returning to the bitter thur Goldberg's speech yesterday parties-including the Viet Cong is in such disarray and suffers It may sound fanciful, but world of reality, the horizon looks contained a number of hopeful -be included in negotiations. from such low morale that Presi-ghappened crimson with more violence and signs that the rigidity of U.S. Goldberg said nothing on thisdent Johdsnddto call ina t Not only would it be a sharp po- continued war because one man in policy in recent months-and the point-and it is to be hoped that ented individual from outside the litol move but the effect upon Johnson's cabinet has become in- growiyin sistence on a military this point will not become a deter- department, Attorney - General Uii. oe but the ctupn fected with a violent obsession soltio ofth coflit-ay ave ret twar pacetals.Katzenbach, to fill the number- U.S. foreign policy would certain- two position in the department, ly be galvanizing, to say the least. ch has infed the President been reversed. UNFORTUNATELY, there are soon to be vacated by Undersecre- An TeEaFniEaiT - cials. The American offer to halt R ATh etary of State George Ball. AS THE FOREMOST practi- several factors which cause con- tioner of opportunism in politics, Perhaps a more pragmatic bombings of North Viet Nam and tinued pessimism about the U.S. This is another example of an Johnson should have no trouble choice to succeed Rusk would be begin a phased withdrawal of position on negotiations. The most acute lack of talent at the middl seeing thea tge e would Seretary o seene Mcaaa U..troops from South Vtiet Nam important of these is the contin- levels of State. not to mention gaeingbt anti geneyohiSewhoehasyofDeonsaedMfromatime if Hanoi takes corresponding ac- ued presence of Dean Rusk as the upper level. Much of the re- team. Not only would his renomi- to time a philosophical bent and tion on its side to reduce the Secretary of State. sponsibility for this situation must nation in 1968 be safe but his willingness to compromise which scope of the conflict must be rest with Rusk, who has failed to administration's image would im- would serve him well as the na- viewed as a constructive effort to Rusk, now in his sixth year on provide any sort of leadership or poeimaual nteee fto' o ilmt halt the rapidly spiraling hostili- the job, is a tired, disillusioned prove immeasurably in the eyes of flan's top diplomat. ties. diplomat with an uncompromis- guidance to the rest of the de- the nation's academic and intel- But because it is almost always ingly rigid view of the war. He to the fact that, as many Wash- lectual leadership community. futile to be optimistic in this FORTUNATELY, the timing of views it as a decisive struggle ington correspondents have writ- Seriously, however, the most im- world, I don't expect the war to our peace proposal was highly against "world Communism" and ten recently, Rusk is a man obses- portant reason for appointing end in the immediate future. In propitious. Diplomatic reports have continually links it with the Allied sed with what he sees as a holy Kennedy as a new secretary of spite of Goldberg's speech yester- cited signs of Hanoi's growing He seemingly looks upon any war in Viet Nam. state is that he is the most quali- day, the U.S. position still ex- gravitation toward the less mili- attempt to negotiate a solution fled on the American scene for cludes the Communists from any tant Soviet Union and suspicion to the conflict as a sell-out com- THE U.S. is thus in a position to the post. His Senate speeches on legitimate role in South Viet of Communist China as proof that parable to the Allied surrender to see its attempts to reach at least foreign affairs have revealed orig- Nam's political life. This is what North Viet Nam may now be Hitler of Czechoslovakia's inde- a preliminary understanding with inal, creative thinking, flexibili- they have been fighting for the more receptive to the idea of a pendence at Munich. Rusk is a Hanoi to start reducing the level ty and a willingness to explore past 20 years, and who is to say negotiated settlement of the war man devoid of -fresh ideas, wary of of hostilities in the war under- new avenues to peace which are they won't keep fighting to reach than in the past. any new diplomatic initiatives, mined and even sabotaged by its indispensable for the nation's top their goal? More specifically, there have and dedicated to the perpetration own Secretary of State. Rusk diplomatic position. Meanwhile, we are draining the been reports that Hanoi is willing of political cliches about Commu- should be replaced as soon as pos- Furthermore, Kennedy's appoint- life blood of our own nation and to accept a three-point peace plan nism originally espoused by Sec- sible. ment would help attract back to its democratic values. Does anyone proposed by UN Secretary-General retary of State John Foster Dulles By whom? Perhaps the shrewd- Washington the talented individ- in a position of power ever con- U Thant if the U.S. does likewise. in the 1950's. est political move Lyndon John- uals from, universities and re- sider this any more? Pblic Odds andEnds and Grp Occutrrences by Bruce Wasserstein NO 'COMMENT department. In September 20th's Ann Arbor News the following letter ran "Editor, the News. My husband and I heartily endorse the position taken by President Hatcher defending the University's action complying with the subpoena issued by the House Committee on Un-Amer- ican Activities--particularly his statement, "The University must obey the law. It cannot sort out those portions of the law which it is willing to accept and discard the others." Also as alumni of the Ohio State University, we feel it is a compliment to the University of Michigan to be compared with Ohio State. Ohio State's speak- er's rule, which I assume the writer was referring to, is mere- ly designed to prevent the spread of Communist subversion on United States campuses. There is nothing to stop someone who is a reliable authority on com- munism, such as J. Edgar Hoover, from coming to campus to give a true perspective of communism to the students. Linda Sue Siebert" * * * THE NATURE of the Universi- ty's counselling and classification system will never cease to amaze me. Although the chicken wire at Waterman gym makes students feel they are rats running a maze, that part of the system is at least relatively efficient. The really irk- ing aspects of the system are those which are not only inhuman but also inefficient. For example, why must the line in front of Window A always wind halfway around the lobby of the administration building during the first few weeks of school. IT WOULD SEEM that if the University can afford to hire all those sweet young things who check three times to see whether your IBM card is having an iden- tity crisis, it can hire some more temporary help to assist with win- dow A. This semester the administra- tion has thought of another bril- liant way of maintaining agony in the multiversity. Now one has to get the instructor's permission in addition to your counsellor's to drop a course. Although the rationale for mak- ing an instructor give his permis- sion before a student can add a course is pretty obvious - the course might be overcrowded - there seems to be little rhyme or reason for making a professor give you permission to drop. In fact, the procedure not only wastes the time of students and faculty but also can produce some em- barrassing situations. FOR EXAMPLE what happens in the case when a student is classified for a small class in which the teacher can actually get to know the student's name. And then after two lectures the stu- dent decides to drop for whatever reasons. The student ; under the present system must go to the teacher and ask permission to drop. The negative perceptions .in- volved in a drop procedure are apparent, and the present system makes the whole affair painfully personalrather than quick, clean and anonymous. A more efficient system would allow the student to make the drop completely through the depart- ment office. The procedure would be less painful, but would still get the drop notice to the profes- sor as quickly as possible. IT CAN BE argued that instruc- tors should know when their stu- dents decide in the tenth week of classes that the course is not for them. This argument can be re- plied to, however, by either requir- ing permission of instructors on drop slips only when drops are made after the first four weeks of school or trying to see that a gen- erally a student's counsellor had talked to the instructor before al- lowing late drops. In any case requiring permission of instructor for dropping during the first few weeks of school should be dropped itself. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Faculty View of HUAC Case Sororities: A Reaction from Within THE UNIVERSITY faces serious prob- lems of maintaining mutual trust among students, faculty and administra- tion." Someone has finally said it. It was the ad hoc committee of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs investi- gating the administration's decision to submit membership lists to the House Un-American Activities Committee in its interim report to the Faculty Assembly Monday.' THESE STATEMENTS by faculty com- mittees indicate that the question of trust within the University community can no longer be ignored or pushed into the background. The HUAC affair is not the only example of this failure to con- sult. The administration, in its accept- ance of the Highway Safety Institute failed to consult a single member of the SACUA advisory committee on research. SACUA members protested this neglect because it had been understood that they would be consulted on matters of this na- ture. Students and faculty lose confidence when the University fails to consult them on issues of major importance; issues which may affect them directly. What can be done to alleviate the prob- lem of no-confidence? THE FINAL REPORT of the ad hoc com- mittee which is investigating the HUAC decision presumably will recom- mend future policy for decisions of this nature. This report should contain a spe- cific outline for administration-faculty consultation. For example, on academic matters the appropriate ad hoc committee of SACUA should be consulted; decisions affecting the faculty such as library and parking privileges and budget allocations for sal- ary should be aired for faculty advice and questions which affect the student should j or questions of policy should require stu- dent and faculty consultation. THE KNAUSS REPORT on "The Role of the Student in the University" calls for greater student participation in the decision-making process at all levels of the University. Hopefully the ad hoc com- mittee's final report will call for this same type of participation and the ad- ministration will listen. -PAT O'DONOHUE Bucket Drive THE CHILDREN'S Community School is sponsoring a bucket drive today on the University campus. Their first bucket drive last year was well supported by students. Enough mon- ey was donated to see the experimental school through the remainder of the year. We hope it will receive. the same sup- port today. THE SCHOOL continues this year to im- plement its philosophy of unstructur- ed education, permitting its pupils from varied racial, cultural and economic back- grounds to interact and express them- selves naturally. This fall the school has expanded to include a nursery, kindergarten and first grade, and rising ambitions mean rising expenses. It has a great need for more trained teaching personnel and equip- ment for the classroom. Additional mon- ey will also make more field trips possi- ble. ALONG WITH THESE normal needs of any healthy growing school, the Com- munity School is trying to find a perma- nent home. The group would like to rent a place which would be used solely for the school To The Editor: "YOU ARE NOW going through going through the last hellish days of rush" opened Miss O'- Donohue's editorial. Needless to say this statement is false: it should have read, "You are now going the last hellish day of rush." How very convenient that this slight factor was overlooked-that one day of formal rush remained. Obviously, ignorance cannot be used to explain this evident er- ror, for the article was written by one who is well-acquainted with the rush calendar. It must be de- duced that the editorial was in- tentionally printed on the last day of rush-the day of preferencing. This unethical journalistic tech- nique made it literally impossible for any intelligent debate to have been published prior to the rush- ees' decision. IS IT THE objective of an edi- torial to close debate on an issue or is it to stimulate thinking and intelligent response within the University community? There is no need to respond to Miss O'- Donohue's comments. The timing of the editorial speaks for itself. How very convenient that one fac- tor was overlooked! -Martha Cook. '67 President, Panhellenic Association --Mary Wetzel, '67 Coordinator Panhellenic Rush . Hazy To the Editor: PAT O'DONOHUE'S 'View from Within' her sorority house (Sept. 22) seems a bit hazy. Per- haps it is because she is too "spir- itually and mentally" taxed to look beyond the rush weeks. She seems to feel that feeding a soror- ity preference card to an IBM machine is tantamount to selling one's independence to a time-de- sound to pledge" in "most cases." The general sorority scholastic average equals that of independ- ents. Of course a sorority will 'not help get you to graduate school." No one promises that it will. But the point is that it need not harm you either. MISS O'DONOHUE'S major complaint concerns the sorority system's confiscation of "individ- ual freedom." We admit that many sorority girls may seem to fall into a preset pattern. Anyone who feels categorized by a pin and charac- terized by her sorority sisters does not have either the initiative or the ability to make her own way. One point we will concede to her. She has every right to hate rush; most sorority girls dislike it. But we have reconciled our- selves to it until a better system of getting new members is .invent- ed. In short we have found that sorority life is what one makes it. If a girl wishes to preserve her own independence, no sorority is going to stop her. -Esther Goodstein, LSA, '67 -Sandra Eakins, LSA, '67 One Opinion To the Editor: THE EDITORIAL 'Sororities: A View from Within,' presented an opinion of sorority life. It suc- ceeded, however, in coming across more as doctrine than opinion, and as such, made accusations which were flimsy because they were not supported by more than the rantings of a disillusioned member of the "sisterhood." I don't intend to provide that i support, but neither do I want to wave the sorority flag. There are certain points, though, that should be clarified if only for the sake of this year's rushees: As you girls go through each house, you find yourself on display in the midst of what appear to be sophisticated epitomies of the sophisticated epitomes_ of the more and more like Franny Farm- girl alone in a world that knows how to deal with your kind. You are so sensitive to the feeling that you are being judged, that you elevate your judges to the status of Goddesses of Poise. IN THIS self-conscious atmos- phere in which you travel, you fail to notice that your active tripped up the stairs, that she has to squint to read your nametag because she's not wearing her glasses, or that she's worn the skirt to cotton suit too many times without the top, and it has faded. In short, you get a picture that is devoid of many of the true aspects of the girls. We don't always smile like Ches- shires, we swear when we get mad, and we worry about the impres- sion we're making on you. You are not the only ones who are trying to impress. We get just as nervous about your, dropping us as you do about getting dropped. We have our favorites, too, and are disappointed as individuals, not as a house, when they drop us. In that sense, we are rushees too. BUT MOST of that is over now. You have two important decisions to make. First, is sorority life, in general, for you. And secondly, if it is, which house will you be hap- piest in. For some girls, the "sis- terhood," the sense of belonging, the social in, and the living condi- tions are the best way of life on campus. These girls are happy be- cause the sorority is the kind of situation which supplements their are most suited to your particular individuality-not just girls you like, but girls who are like you. For some girls, there is no such house. These are the girls who must chose between maintaining individuality outside of the Greek system, or compromising it within. Now is the time to decide, your own answer, to both questions. -Barb Elliott, '69 Assumption To the Editor: [N HER Sept. 21 editorial, "Sor- orities: A View From Within, Miss Pat O'Donohue implies that sorority life is not for everyone; this assumption is correct. Sorori- ty life doesn't, however, seem to have stifled Miss O'Donohue's in- dividual growth. Perhaps a mistake was made in assuming that sorority.life is all parties, fun and candlelight. It is not. As in any other worthwhile way of life, sorority living has its problems and pressures. THERE IS one point, however, that Miss O'Donohue fails to men- tion; there is no pressure on the dissatisfied sorority woman to re- main in the system. -Joy Burrouoghs, '67 Invitation To the Editor WE ARE in the United States Navy writing you for the pur- pose of exchanging correspond- ence with your students. As Weap- ons Fire Control Technicians aboard the U.S.S. Arcadia (AD-23) we work with the latest defense mechanisms of the Navy. In the near future we are scheduled for a tour of duty overseas. Seeing that some of us were former college students we would appreciate hearing from the kids to find out how college life is now- adays. Our decision to write you was based on the fact that you - {°? '; ,. %- t : .f'' ,. >: 7r ,.. = IEND- ,: bfENr ;,; , , : ,: y 4* I 0 I 1' 1