Seventy-Sixth Year EDiTED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MTCHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Wheree 0pinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR..MICH. Truth Will Prevail Nrws PHONE- 764-05';-' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mus t be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN ELAN 'Black Power': Speaking to Reality "Power is the ability to make the, most backward, inhumane govern- ment in the Vnited States say 'yes' when it wants to say 'no'." --Martin Luther King Mississippi July 5, 1966 STOKELY CARMICHAEL drew a packed house in Hill Auditorium, and, no mat- ter what happened on Meet the Press, he and the crowd were there to get some- thing straightened out-Black Power. It's really not that hard: " When Peace Corps volunteers enter a village to organize local groups and de- velop community leadership, they do not consider their work a success until the villagers kick them out. When the villagers do kick them out, that means they are ready to expand and develop on their own. And so it is with the Negro movement. Whites have led the civil rights move- ment; it is now time for Negroes to take it over. They are ready. They have devel- oped their own leadership; they must develop more-that is one of the values of organization. It does them no good for whites to lead their struggle because the, struggle cannot be won until Negroes have picked up the skills to win it them- selves. And. further, it does the Negro no good to win anything until he establishes an identity for himself. The Negro in Amer- ica has been told, and has believed, that he is inferior because he is black. It is now necessary to establish the fact that black is, in fact, just as "good" as white. It must be obvious that no white person can do much about that. Thus one facet of the syndrome-black leadership, positive black identity, where it was negative before.- " Another facet is economics. Ghetto economics are not good for the people who live there. Stores are owned by people who live outside the ghetto and who take the profits home with them. What little' money flows into the area goes into local stores and markets and then out-it does not recirculate within the ghetto as it must. So Carmichael proposes that the ghet- to become a community, which it is not now, by taking over the stores which form its income. These stores would keep the profits from invested capital in the pock- ets of ghetto residents instead of suburb residents. That is. all he means when he says "we must turn the economic system upside down." The ghetto is still a colony-to end its poverty it must keep its resources cir- culating within its confines. It needs its own economic institutions. e The United, States has formed so- cial and political institutions that allow certain parties established access to the wealth of the country. The ghetto has had none of that access. The Democrat- ic party, the traditional fighter for wel- fare, has not brought a decent life it has bought votes. It has passed legisla- tion to guarantee constitutional rights; it has not shared the wealth it must. Politics dictates that only by forming distinct, active interest groups can those who have not get anything from those who have. The agrarians tried it for free silver; the workers did it to deal with management; the slum ghetto is doing it. It will take political and social power. You must organize for power. The ghet- toes are organizing. AND IN THIS COUNTRY, ghetto also means black. They are the ones who are (poor, they are the ones who live in the ghettoes. Blackness is an economic, geographic, and political fact. That is the way white society allowed things to develop-those are the terms with which ghetto society must deal.. That is what they have been doing. Only fow they have said it. SO "BLACK CONSCIOUSNESS" means that Negroes can have faith in their own race and color. They have not had it before.""Black Money" means that the Negro community will develop its own institutions so that they someday will not have to move out of their present areas in order to get decent housing, to take part in a working economy. And "Black Power" means that community will be recognized in the American poli- tical and social power structure as an interest group, like all other interest groups who are organized to be contended with. Announcing the program has discon- certed much of the white community-- that may be an immediate cost. But it is better there be misunderstanding now if there can be real understanding later. THE IDEA that that enunciation could have "caused" riots is absurd. Black Power works inside, not outside the in- stitutions of society-the SNCC tactic is, in fact, the most realistically non-viol- ent. It means to widen channels, not de- stroy them. It means enlarging institu- tions and creating now ones to encom- pass more people. Riots only occur when the means of communication, of dealing with the problems at hand, have proven inadequate-that structural weakness is exactly what SNCC is trying to rectify. POLITICAL REALITY, economics, iden- tity-those are the black problems. Black Power, Black Money, Black Con- sciousness - those are the words that speak directly to the problems. In the long run, it is the best politics to do just that. -HARVEY WASSERMAN POWER S . and POETRY TUXEDO, N.Y. - Why don't bright college kids want to go into business? That was the translation of the formal title of a conference on "Crisis in Marketing Manpow- er" held here Sunday through Tuesday. Unlike most business conferences, this one had some students (including the present writer) as resource material, and the result was fascinating to watch. Although Milton Mumford, pres- ident of Lever Brothers, opened the conference with a speech which, in effect, doubted that any such manpower crisis exists, most of the other participants didn't think so. Perhaps business would have trouble coping with a deluge of bright applicants, Mumford suggested; but Thomas McCabe of Scott Paper Company express- ed the general reaction when he retorted, "I'd sure like to try." The general feeling here seem- ed to be that, while business isn't in danger of attracting fewer num- bers of graduates, it is already failing to attract the brightest graduates--the problem is one of quality, not quantity; they're not getting the bright ones. Paul Gerwitz, an English major at Columbia, astonished the con- ference when he said he couldn't think of anyone he knew who wanted to go into business; most of his fellow studentsnhere had the same story to tell. THE BUSINESSMEN sensed this is the problem, and they were all eager to find out why it exists. The "why" is long and involved, but the following considerations are among the most important: First, many bright college stu- dents find the goals of business irrelevant or unworthy. It is un- deniable that business techniques, particularly as practiced by men like Robert McNamara and Sol Linowitz, are intellectually excit- ing and challenging. It is equally true that the back-stabbing and boot-licking that go on in busi- ness are to a large extent dupli- cated in government and aca- demia (business has "The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit," but aca- demia has "The Masters" and government has "Advise and Con- sent"), But even if one accepts the fact that business' techniques are oft- en exciting, it appears to college students that its central goal is profit-and that is a goal which doesn't interest very many of them. HOW, FOR EXAMPLE, can one worry about making a profit when there are slums in Los Angeles? Why make money when you can help develop the underdeveloped? In a way. John Kenneth Gal- braith's doubts about the value of an increment to the Gross Na- tional Product, in the form of Toronadoes or thrust brassieres, fulfills J o s e p h Schumpeter's prophecy that the general ethos of America would sooner or later grow antipathetic or hostile to business' goals-and the reactions of today's bright college students fulfill that prophecy too. It is true, as a sophisticated businessman might point out, that business serves people while it makes profit. But that simply af- firms that profit is not business' only goal without affecting the observation that profit is its cen- tral goal. Are more automobiles really a "service" when they cre- ate more air pollution, cause more highway death, requisition more of our countryside for freeways, {' r create more traffic jams and in- crease the frustrations of the poor who cannot buy them ? McCabe's description of Scott Paper Company's "color explo- sion" promotion theme is likely to leave unmoved the large num- bers of college students who think the country faces somewhat more serious issues than the color of its toilet paper. Business may be the engine of the country, but these students are happy to let some- one else man the controls while they see what is happening to the rest of the train. YET, NOTEONLY are the goals of business and businessmen un- interesting to bright college stu- dents who are concerned with things as they are; so are the ex- tra-curricular activies, the tastes and the interests of businessmen. Kenneth Boulding once told a conference of businessmen that General Motors is the largest so- cialist state west of Yugoslavia: but nobody laughed when he said it-and nobody laughed when the present writer repeated it. For bus- iness is terribly conservative, and college students often find this ir- relevant and silly. It is. for example, astonishing that business can get so exorcised over so modest pieces of legisla- tion as the Truth in Packing Bill or the Hi.ghway Safety Bill when people living in Harlem and Watts can't buy business' packages or its automobiles. And, it is not at all surprising that there were no Negroes and only a few Jews and Catholics at the conference here. BUSINESS ALSO seems intel- lectually dead. Indeed, it is a par- ticularly damning criticism of bus- iness that one of its own, Robert McNamara, chose to live in Ann Arbor rather than Grosse Pointe or Huntington Woods-evidently because he felt a university en- vironment is far more congenial to the intellectual life than the atmosphere of the company cock- tail circuit.. Of course, one can always re- tort ,as businessmen might, that that's all the mainstream of American life, of which business is a prominent part. But when the mainstream of American life is polluted, as McNamara's "voting with his feet" seems to indicate, and when business is partially re- sponsible, then this reason is scarcely going to persuade active, aware college students to go into business. Hence business' goals and extra- curricular aspects do not encour- age bright students to get into business; rather, they are deter- red and repelled-or attracted by far more interesting and appealing jobs of other sorts. That was the message six college students (Co- lumbia, Swarthmore, Pennsylvan- ia, Princeton, Berkeley and the University) gave the businessmen there. SURPRISINGLY ,it was what the businessmen wanted to h'ar, particularly because it was artic- ulated fairly well, "That's just what my son tells me," one said after the students spoke. "My kids have been saying that for a long time,' 'another commented. Whether the businessmen were jolted enough to do something about this feeling is another ques- tion. Each student was careful to say he was simply explaining his view of the truth about business, True to their interest is market- ing, most of the businessmen here concluded the students' views were so negative simply because busi- ness isn't being "sold' well enough. But perhaps not only the im- age but also the realities of busi- ness could use a touch-up and some improvement. Exaggerated though the image may be, one sus- pects there is more than a little justification for it. WHAT CAN BE done to change the realities of business, as well as convey them more effectively? The central criticism the students made here-that business' goals are irrelevant and unrelated to our most urgent foreign and do- mestic priorities--suggest business ought to tackle some of these problems which have concerned the younger generation so much. Reston. Virginia, for example. is a striking example of the model town - handsome architecture, careful planning, inclusion of housing for all income levels in all areas-and it is completely a rz'i vate-enterprise product. Gener- al Eletric is going to try a urban planning comnlex in conjunction with other companies. Thf possibuities a re exciting, for thav would turn business into a servant of society and give busi- 'v'ss a s^~"s' of public resnonsibil- 4v it has -ot usually displayed. TIlsinessmrn always gripe about the superiority of private enter- prise over state control: they thus ought to vet together and think up programs of their own for urban renewal, race relations, foreign economic assistance and so on. WHEN THIS germinal manifes- tation starts to develop and when it percolates down to the campuses-then business may, someday, finally face the on- slaught of bright, aware students McCabe said he'd be happy to try to face. .................. ................... .... .............. ................ . ....................... ....... ......... ......................... ........................................ __ _.. tudents and Business: Conflicting Aims ------------- by MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH .., :::t :t ,,.4 :.k:: . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: SA CUA Didn't Approve Knauss Report 0 To the Editor: AS A MEMBER of SACUA I have read your articles con- cerning the Knauss report with great interest. I am pleased that you have chosen to give the re- port wide coverage. It is an im- portant document which deserves the kind of publicity which will cause students and faculty alike to familiarize themselves with its contents. However, your reporting of the action taken by the Senate As- sembly at its meeting of Septem- ber 19 is misleading and erron- eous. Contrary to the headlines which appeared next morning in The Daily, the Assembly did NOT approve the report. In fact it was clear to those who attended the meeting that there was substan- tial opposition to many of its pro- posals. The. only action taken by the Senate Assembly was the passage of a resolution which approved the philosophy urged in the report and which charged the Subcommittee on Student Relations to draft rec- ommendations for clarification and for proposed action on vari- ous portions of the report after further consultation with various interested bodies. In my view this action was intended to specifical- ly withhold approval for the time being until each item in the re- port is reassessed. WHILE I personally regret that the Senate Assembly did not ap- prove the report promptly, never- theless it seems to me essential thai th TThe Uniar.ci ^r"n t, h accurately informed of the action taken. I am concerned that your reporting has failed to make clear that simple approval of the report is by no means assured. Much op- position to it centers around the belief that some of the wording regarding the student role in var- ious matters is so loosely drawn and all inclusive that reasonable limits tothis participation will be impossible to define. Fear has been expressed that irresponsible students will seize upon certain statements to sup- port their claim to extensive rights by implication which are not real- ly intended by the authors of the report. Unfortunately your head- line of September 20, because it is so clearly a contradiction of fact, will be cited as an example of student irresponsibility. It will serve to strengthen the belief of those who feel that students are not really in a position to act with the degree of responsibility which important decisions require. -Thomas McClure Professor of Art Bible Not Dull To the Editor: IN THURSDAY'S Daily I am quoted as saying about the re- cently completed field trip to Is- rael:, "Biblical history can be pretty dull when studied from a purely academic context . . . But when it can be seen and really experienc- ed, if only vicariously, it comes alive." I wrote this letter simply to assert that I have never consid- ered Biblical history dull under any circumstances, and did not say so. The quotation appears to be the interviewer's misinterpre- tation of a number of statements I made during a long conversa- tion to the effect that ancient history is most advantageously studied in situ. A bit later in the article the interviewer characterized the dif- ficulties the class experienced with the heat and travel conditions as "major drawbacks." I spoke of them as hindrances to work, but in no sense do I feel that they constituted a serious loss of ad- vantage or value to the, students. something which the interviewer's choice of words suggests. -Louis L. Orlin Associate Professor of Ancient Near Eastern History and Literature Nothing Said To the Editor: ITHINK that the students not wholly emotionally enthralled with the hooray-for-the-underdog image of "black power" who saw Stokely Carmichael Tuesday at Hill, left with a profound sense of uneasiness-not because of the LETTERS All letters to The Daily must be typewritten and double- spaced, and should be no longer than 300 words. fear of "black power" as such (since the students are too far re- moved from its possibilities of viol- ence, and too willing to cheer the underdog), but rather because Mr. Carmichael insisted on saying . . nothing. The ironic thing about it is that one comes to realize that Mr. Car- michael has a vested interest in doing just that because he is a demagogue with a catch-phrase, not a leader with a program. As a demagogue, he employs the usual standard equipment, which he displayed so well on Meet the Press and at Hill. He is entitled to speak only in plati- tudes ("All I care about is educa- tion," "Stop the oppression and exploitation of the blacks"), never on specific programs; he is en- titled to dodge every question with a clever retort; he is entitled to coin phrases, such as "black pow- er," and use them, but never be forced to define them--full well knowing that "black power" is use- ful only as a rallying cry to con- jure un violent emotions. and loses its value when it is pinned down and defined: and he is entitled to speak with passion ("electric," as Mr. Shister's ridiculous article notes about "charmine Stokply" the appealing gut-reactions which are, in fact, conflicting in their logical conclusions. MR. CARMICHAEL has insti- tuted his own "double-think." He wishes to say "I am born, there- fore I am equal," but he also hastens to remind you that he will not let you forget the color of his skin. He wishes to keep the whites away from his people so he can teach them race "pride," but this is not racism. As a typical bigot, he will not reject you as an individual, but only what you, as a white person, "must" represent. He says the present system is bad, but will harden it along its present color line. In short, he is "not a rac- ist." but will institutionalize rac- ism. AS A NOTE to Mr. Carmichael's demagoguery, it was interesting to note the frequency of his allu- sions to the Viet Nam war. Though I do not doubt his belief, the forced and unnecessary references were mere attempts to win audi- ence support. It seemed to work, b-caus those mindlessminds, so thrilled to find out that a big, important man doesn't like the IT°t Nam war, clapped on cue like swals in an intellectual zoo who are fed the fish of their own re- inforcement. -Laurence Kallen, Law, '69 A TYPOGRAPHICAL error ap- peared in yesterday's editor- ial, "I- S," by Bob Carney. The fourth paragraph should have read: "Any freshman who shows 'satisfactory' progress dur- ing that first semester will receive a II-S when the semester ends " I-S was mistakingly substitut- ed for II.S. -Ed. What Did Hather Say? TrHE ASSISTANT to the vice-president for University relations, in a letter published in these pages yesterday, claims that President Hatcher's speech to the California Bar Association says nothing about questioning the, rights of public employes to bargain. Thus, he says, phraseology to this effect which appeared in stories by The Detroit Free Press, The Associated Press and The Daily was in- correct. Yet what, indeed, did President Hatch- er say. in California? The University's news release-as a Daily editorial noted- said that "lawyers and law professors 0 ism Editorial Staff MARES R. KIILLI1408WORTH, Editor BRUCE WASSERSIN. Executive Editor CLARENCE FANTO HARVEY WASSERMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director LEONARD PRATT........Associate Managing Editor JOHN MEREDITH . ... Associate Managing Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER .. Associate Editorial Direette ROBERT CARNEY ... Associate Editorial Director RO3ERT MOORE........... Magazine Editor GIL SAMBERO ............Assistant Sports Editor BABETTE COHN ..... .....Personnel Director NIGHT EDITORS: Michael Hefter, Merle Jacob, Rob- ert Klivans. Laurence Medw, Roger Rapoport, Shir- ley Rosick, Neil Shister: CHARLES VETZNER ............ . Sports Editor JAMES TINDALL . . .Associate Sports Editor JAMES LaSOVAGE Associate Sports Editor SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Grayle Howlett, Howard .Kohn, Bill Levis, Bob McFarland, Clark Norton, Rick Stern, John Sutkus, Oretchen Twietrneyer, Dave Weir. 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..." SINCE PRESIDENT HATCHER asked lawyers and law professors in Califor- nia for new perspectives (he has been ignoring the advice which lawyers and' labor relations experts here have been offering), one is forced to wonder what is wrong with the old perspectives on em- ploye relations, most notably the tech- niques of collective bargaining. And President Hatcher gave a very clear answer: He said that "the old and weary bitterness of labor-management strife and warfare should not be carried into the public service or into a modernI university environment." Now, it is an undeniable fact thatj Michigan's amended Hutchinson Act gives public employes at the University and elsewhere the right to bargain collective- ly; and one can hardly conclude anything other than that President Hatcher called that right into question. Hence The Daily was completely accurate and fair in re- porting that President Hatcher was ques- tioning the rights of public employes to bargain collectively. INDEED, that The Associated Press and The Detroit Free Press arrived at the ( Lamb Llle u w ver6i v curnmunny ae CiaKills Las t Ally i 7T 'T M. By DAVID DUBOFF T HE APPARENT defection last week of North Korea to the So- viet side in the ideological war between Moscow and Peking rep- resents the loss of China's last major ally in the Southeast Asia- Pacific area. North Korea's change of favor was made public Sept. 18 by Ro- dono Shinmoon, the North Ko- rean party newspaper. which call- ed Peking's refusal to cooperate with Moscow the work of "traitors to the proletarian revolution." Though the Peking doctrine un- doubtedly still has supporters in Communist party splinter groups, New Zealand is the only remain- ing country in the Asia-Pacific area in which the Communist leadership remains faithful to China. ASIDE FROM the Sino-Soviet ideological dispute-heightened in the past few weeks by Russia's claims that the militant Red Guards show that China is grip- ped by internal class warfare and that a renegade Chinese leader- ship is embarking on a wild course of T nfcr .im!-nrsm- a n- Indonesia has annihilated its Communist party, ending its tense confrontation with Malaysia. ALL OF THIS shows that the presence of the U.S. in Southeast Asia, coupled with the express-d aggressiveness of Communist Chi- na, has served to lessen the tirs -th4se nations to China and give them hope of achieving secial anc r olitical progress through mutua1 e operation and Western econom'c aid. Yet, it is this same nationalistic drsire for political independence which may very well turn the na- tions of Southeast Asia against the military presence of the U.S. Indeed, the U.S. is already said to be reveahig its intention to withdraw militarily from the area as soon as the Viet Nam conflict is settled. Time magazine of Sept.. 23 states that: "Once it has healed the wounds of Viet Nam, the U.S. hopes for an Asian future that will be more and more mastered by the Asians themselves . . . Its goal !is a com- mnnity of nnn-Communist thoumxh military strength ready to crush any "act of aggression" immedi- ately. Thus, the possibility of an- ether Viet Nam is still danger- ously present. The recent trend away from the mi litant dogmatism ofthe Peking line does not seem to indicate, however, that with economic aid from the West the Southeast As- ian nations may be able to insti- gate needed social reforms and establish a sense of cooperation 'mong themselves. But this can occur only if the U.S. government carries out its professed goals. We cannot continue to ration- alize our presence in Southeast Asia on the grounds of China's militant foreign policy. Except for the brief Indian. border incident, China has committed no armed acts of aggression, which the U.S. is doing in Viet Nam. Peking's threat to Asia is merely ideolog- ical, while the U.S. military pres- ence presents a much more im- minent threat to the political free- dom of the area. THE FATE of Southeast Asia, therefore. lies in the hands of the 4 A attracted the emerging leadership of these countries to Peking's side. NOW, HOWEVER, with the mil- itancy which China has shown by the India border conflict and f4- infa -arP np i n rna-an hp tiveness of the militant Red Guards . Many of the nations of South- east Asia have shown their fear of China's aggressive policies by swinging over to the side of the TR 'T'llnon rl ho 'ivon i>c tha 47