I Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ;r here Opinsons Are Free Truth Will Prevail , 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH, 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, NOVEMBER 2, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT KLIVANS Two Keys to Success For the Budget Request No v., By LEONARD PRATT Associate Managing Editor SBE DIAG'S been a confusing place lately. That's partly because it's fall at the University, one of the most schizophrenic occasions that nature and the modern world have managed to create. But somehow, schizoprenia aside, the Diag's been providing an in- teresting and complex picture of the University for its denizens. Let me show you what I mean. Every Wednesday noon Voice po- litical party strings itself across the Diag to remind people there's a war on. That's probably one of the best ideas Voice has had in a long time, because the war's an easy thing to forget, YOU'D THINK that "television's war" would have made a greater impact on people. When, as James Reston has noted, we can turn on the television and watch Johnny get killed over dinner, it's odd the war hasn't taken on more of an immediacy than it has. Evidently the nation of voyeurs can't real- 2: The ize the pictures mean that more is dying than phosphorous atoms. They can't realize it, so they forget the war. And every Wednes- day, Voice reminds them of it. That's a part of the University. The dissidents remind them of it by standing on top of the Diag's Orange Moose. The people who cross the Diag must also walk over the Yellow Banana, and everyone headed into the Grad- uate Library passes that old stand- by, the Phantom Rabbit. NO ONE KNOWS, or will admit, who the Diag's stencil-chopping mafia is, and that's probably just as well. It's much nicer playing with the concept of the Mystic Moose than trying to figure out why its creator did. Behind the entire campaign is no doubt Super Goy, operating from a secret Idaho hideout. (If you don't know what a Goy is, by the way, you are one.) There's magic in calculated ir- relevancy. There's a lot of charm to a planned thumbing of one's nose at the world. That's a part of the University too. Diags ON THE OTHER HAND having someone care - or having them care and then changing their mind about it-has also been happening a lot on the Diag. The fall is best for either get- ting to know a girl or wishing you never had, and plenty of people have been using the Diag for both. Coming back to a campus full of beautiful girls-tradition notwith- standing-and trees for them to sit under in the afternoon makes doing anything else pretty tough. But people finding the time to do other things is a part of this place too. THIS FALL they've found the time to build more Diag booths advertising more concerts on more weekends than any fall has pro- duced in at least the last three years. A, lot of people complain that the weekends divert students from the serious issues they would be drawn to otherwise, but that's not quite right. In fact the students who take up their time on the ecstatic weekends probably would not be too interested in talking 4?eping about the future of American ed- ucation anyway. And if the seri- ious discussion groups are losing members to the weekends maybe they ought to try a little recruit- ing themselves. Which is to say the weekends are also a part of the University's na- ture: a large part of it is made up of upper middle-class students whose whole background has guar- anteed that they will be the week- end type. IF SOMEONE'S interested in changing that nature-which isn't a bad idea-that's on thing. But until he succeeds, the weekend types should be enjoyed for what they are-modern America on the prowl. The Diag also illustrated last week the University's continuing participation in the forefront of a basic element of American social change-the Great Sexual Revolu- tion. The American Broadcasting Company used the Diag to inter- view everyone on campus about the GSR who was guaranteed - with one exception-not to know anything about It. Diag-and-television influences could do a lot for the GSR itself. This way It will be about the only social movement of the 1960's which both centers on the cam- pus and gains some sort of uni- versal sympathy. Thank God for electronic journalism. AND THANK GOD for the Diag for all this to happen on. It's much more than the geo- graphical heart of the University. Anyone sitting there with a note- book over a period of good-weather weeks would come out with a pic- ture of the University's daily life substantially more accurate than he could gain anywhere else. He'd see the tops of most of the ice- bergs that make up this vast place. A lot of highly-paid and un- paid people around here talk a good deal about what the Univer- sity is in order to figure out what it should become. The problem is that much of their talk is very in- troverted, removed from the real- ity of the University. They could save themselves a lot of wasted effort by spending a couple of afternoons a week on the Diag. Tom I WITH THE SUBMISSION of the Univer- sity budget to the state Legislature, the annual grab for an increasingly lim- ited supply of state money begins. Wheth- er or not the University succeeds in get- ting what it considers its fair share of state revenue depends on two factors - gubernatorial and legislative action on a tax increase and the state of University relations with certain elements and per- sonalities in Lansing. The University has asked for $74 mil- lion in state appropriations. Realistically, it knows it can never hope to achieve this figure, no matter what its pressing needs may be. Last year, the Univer- sity requested over $65 million in its original budgetary request. The governor requested in his overall state budget $57 million for the University. The Legisla- ture finally granted a little over $58 mil- lion, a $7 million increase over the pre- vious year. BUT THIS YEAR Michigan's fiscal prob- lems have finally reached a climax. The University cannot hope for an in- crease of any size in its appropriation unless the governor and the Legislature face the fact that increased state reve- nues must be obtained-now, through fis- cal reform. The large state surplus which has buoy- ed state budgets for the last two years has rapidly diminished. The state sales tax is providing the maximum amount of rev- enue that it can, but this is just not enough. A state income tax-to which both Republicans and Democrats have given lip service in the past-must be enacted if the University and other state institutions and agencies are to be prop- erly supported. Romney will, in all probability, intro- duce a "fiscal reform package" in Jan- uary. But, no matter what the package is, it will call for a tax increase-essential if there are to be any increases in the state budget. Although there is a prohi- bition in the state constitution against a graduated income tax, hopefully there will be some degree of fairness in the new tax through a system of deductions which will have almost the same effect. IN IT LAST SESSION, the Legislature balked at the passage of a state in- come tax. The Democratic majority fear- ed that such a move might jeopardize their newly won positions of power. ,This year, however, the House-which will certainly remain under Democratic control-may feel a bit more secure in its position and agree to the action. A state income tax has been part of the Michigan Democratic party platform for the last decade, and House leaders may finally respond to pressures from party and union leaders. In the Senate, on the other hand, pass- age of a state income tax may well depend on the results of the November election. If the Senate is Republican, it will owe its victory to Gov. George Romney's coat- tails and will be obligated to follow his leadership to approve the tax. If the Democrats retain control, a state income tax might have rough going with the de- termined opposition of Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint), chairman of the Senate Ap- propriations Committee. Lane has utilized all his power in the past to block passage of such a measure, but his position may be untenable. BUT FISCAL REFORM, while it is need- ed more than anything else to insure that the University's budget requests are met, is not the only answer. Assuming new sources of revenue are found, the share that the University eventually gets is a direct result of its public relations job with the members of the Legislature. The Legislature has final say over all budget appropriations. The public image of the University-as impressed on the in- dividual legislator by his associations with the University's lobbyists and officials-- therefore, is a vital determinant in his de- cisions. Unless relations are cordial and unless there is effective communication among interested parties, the needs of the Uni- versity are overlooked in favor of other hungry state colleges and universities. Public relations and effective political maneuvering are the keys to success in Lansing. N THE PAST, the University's image has been marred by its disagreements with the state over Public Acts 124 and 379. In addition, its public relations job has not been very highly thought of by a large segment of the Democratic majorities in the House and Senate. University admin- istrators have been charged with being aloof and not cooperating fully. Although the University has justifica- tion for its opposition to P.A. 124 and 379, there is no excuse for animosity to- ward public relations. WITH THE MANY new faces going to Lansing next January, hopefully the University will change its approach and more effectively communicate with legis- lators. Without this, the University can only dream of procuring the sizable and needed appropriation it has requested. -MARK LEVIN .4 vp Letters: Vivian Is No Peace Candidate To the Editor: SOME PEOPLE who have signed the Voter's Pledge (to support peace candidates) say they in- tend to vote for Weston Vivian in the coming election. In my opinion, Congressman Vivian does not qualify as a peace candidate in any sense. Vivian has ' made statements which can be interpreted as op- posingescalation, but he has not acted to oppose escalation in the one sure way a congressman can act-namely, vote against appro- priations specifically earmarked to expand the war. LAST YEAR, Vivian voted to spend $14 billion to escalate the war in Southeast Asia. If he did not know then how the money. would be spent, he knows now how it was spent. There is not a shred of evidence that the $14 bil- lion brought peace an iota nearer. On the contrary, it may have de- stroyed whatever prospects for peace there may have been a year ago. Soon after the election, the ad- ministration will ask for more, probably much more money, to expand the war still further. More blood will be spilled, more flesh will be burned, more rice fields will be poisoned, more people will be made homeless. Congressman Vivian has given sufficient in- dication that he will vote to so spend this money. He may regret the way it will be spent, but he will have no say in this matter. The administra- tion will decide this. The admin- istration is committed to contin- ued escalation. In voting for the appropriation, Congressman Viv- ian will be supporting the admin- istratiin's war. For this reason, I cannot assign any more weight to Congressman Vivian's regrets about the war thancanbe ser- iously assigned to similar senti- ments expressed by Johnson, Hum- phrey, or Rusk. PEOPLE WHO intend to vote for Vivian explain that Esch's position on the war and foreign policy is worse than Vivian's. They conclude that voting for Vivian is politically realistic. The politi- cal reality of the situation is that congressmen have next to noth- ing to say about foreign policy, except when it comes to voting or withholding money. On this is- sue, Vivian's vote will be exactly the same as Esch's. Elise Boulding, being a write-in candidate, will not be elected. Nev- ertheless, a vote for Mrs. Boulding, besides honoring the Voter's Pledge, is politically realistic. The administration, which has shown itself to be imperious to reason and callous to human misery, is sensitive to political pressure. A large vote for Mrs. Boulding will "4 -i,-. , s. ryr be politically significant precisely because the race between Vivian and Esch is likely to be close. If either loses by a small mar- gin, the peace vote will emerge as a politically significant factor. Therefore, for those who are in- tent to make their vote really count against the Viet Nam war, there ought not to be any qges- tion for whom to cast the vote. ALSO, there is the future to con- sider. A small vote for Elise Bould- ing will tend to perpetuate the present pattern: the voters will continue to be offered choices be- tween two evils. A large vote for Elise Boulding will encourage more candidacies of this sort, candida- cies that may one day make elec- tions truly significant events in our lives. -Anatol Rapoport Crand Flourishes To the Editor: , AND A FEW hundred others, witnessed a great if not un- common politically d r a m a t i c achievement; Governor Romney, with an enthusiastic stage crew, succeeded in transforming a Mon- day morning political rally on the steps of Hill Auditorium into a scene highly resembling a locker room football pep talk before the big game. Coach Romney, with his two less verbose assistants (played by con- gressional candidates Esch and Griffin) must be commended for his grand flourishes in prodding his team into the true spirit of the game. This process was high- lighted by his major argument AO against the opposition-that Cap- tain Soapy plays a dirty game by wearing a green polka-dot bow tie and a winsome smile to gain the fans' support. My hope is that either Coach Romney, in his earlier locker- room rallies, has made more con- crete objections to the tactics of the opposing team - or that his own team will refuse to blindly obey such purely meaningless ar- guments. IN ANY EVENT, it's good to see that the University still has the good old "rah-rah college spirit", even if it takes a bit of dramatics by a governor and twodcongres- sional candidates to insure it. -Ellen P. Frank, '68 When you drive a bike you have to drive on the assump- tion that everybody else on the road, in a car, is out to kill you. Not by mistake, but intention- ally . .. premeditated murder to wipe you off; collusion, all driv- ers. This is why there's com- raderie among bikies; bikies wave to each other. You know, like, here we are, we're fight- ing the mammoth. Robert Shellow and Derek Roe- mer, sociologists of the motorcycle clubs, also report this common bond. Regardless of their organiza- tion or status within the sport, motorcyclists agree on one thing -they all complain of police persecution. They also report be- ing victimized on the roads by car drivers. On the other side, the frustra- tion of being caught in a web of traffic while bikies zip by on all sides is well known. There is no need to disguise the fact that this practice is a major raison d'- etre of the cycle. But then neith- er is there reason to deny that much of the animosity of the motorist toward the cyclist is a. direct consequence of these frus- trations. IN AN IMPORTANT sense, a cy- cle ordinance is on battle in the conflict of generations. This is especially true in a university town. As long as the average mo- torist resents, and envies, the in- creased mobility of the cyclist, the war will continue. The major ques- tion is, will it take place in the halls of the City Council or on the streets and highways? -David L. Angus School of Education 'Fre ks' To the Editor: SUNDAY NIGHT, I saw the Cin- ema Guild movie "Freaks" at the 9 p.m. showing. I would like to address this letter toucertain members of that audience. Your reactions to the movie showed so pitifully that you eith- er missed the point of the movie entirely or got it very well. Your raucous, boorish laughter at scenes of people denied their full human potential can only be looked on as signs of half-humanness on your part. Just as those unfortunate people were denied, through circumstance, fully normal human physical qual- ities, so it seems you have been denied the fully human mental qualities of identity with, and com- passion for, all other human be- ings. In this regard, your appar- ent inability to see beyond phys- ical appearances to the essence of a human being is very saddening. TO ME, your laughter was tell- ing: it betrayed great fear. One of the tenets of the psychology of laughter is that laughter is a very handy way to lessen feelings of fear. I think your laughter be- trayed a great fear of the ab- normal. Your laughter seemed to be loudest during the written pref- ace when the history of the fear of, and the non-acceptance of, abnormal people was being outlin- ed. What a telling place for you to laugh! It said to me that you have not learned to live with the fear of the abnormal, and the abnor- mal itself, which is always with us and even within us. To bring it to concrete terms, what would you do if you married and gave birth to an abnormal child? Would you laugh then? I hope not. YET PERHAPS I am overstat- ing my point. Perhaps your laugh- ter is only a sign of growing up. It may be a necessary thing for you. If so, I hope you outgrow it soon. I say this because your laughter is tonly a small sample of of the history-long tendency of men to fear those people whom they see as different from them- selves, in any way whatsoever. Only as we learn, as individ- uals, to outgrow such insular feel- ings and develop a feeling for the essential oneness of mankind will the human race collectively accom- plish such a task, so necessary in this age with the Bomb staring us in the face. -David G. Klucko, Grad Rah, Raht To the Editor: STRONGLY agree with Mr. Hartranft's letter that there should be at least six attractive coeds on this campus and thus qualify Michigan for a coed cheer- leading squad. In fact, I'd even stick my neck out and say that there are probably seven attrac- tive coeds on this campus. How- ever, Mr. Hartranft bases his 4rgument upon premises which should be reevaluated: 1) While Michigan has an en- rollment three times larger than Cornell,, Michigan also has a larg- er percentage of its enrollment in graduate school, thus, one of those six coeds would probably be in grad school. 2) One of the six coeds would probably be married. Do we want married coeds on the team? 3) Would all six coeds want to be cheerleaders? CONCLUSION: Only three of the six coeds would make the team; therefore, I think Michi- gan, like Cornell, should abandon the project. -C. J. Summers, Grad w I Germany:o Arms or Economy AS THE FOUR-DAY OLD government crisis in West Germany continues, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's attempts to make a go of his miority government appear doomed. Erhard will probably be forced to resign within the next three weeks. Last week, the shaky coalition between Erhard's minority Christian Democratic Party and the Free Democratic Party col- lapsed over the question of increased taxes..The government now seems to have no place to go but down, and no one has yet offered to help. THE BREAK was precipitated when four Free Democratic Party cabinet mem- bers disagreed with Erhard's plan to hon- or an ,agreement to buy military hardware to compensate for the foreign exchange America spends on troops in Germany. Under the current agreement, West Ger- many is to buy $1.35 billion worth of mili- tary hardware in the next two years, but the appropriations for these purchases by the government are $900 million short. The four cabinet members-opposed to the whole plan-refused to support the additional taxes needed to raise the $900 million, and resigned from the coalition when Erhard insisted that they support them. The rub is: Germany does not need much of the equipment it will be purchas- ing. Its military leaders are wary of the quality of American equipment after a l'ong series of crashes of U.S.-built F-104 jet fighters. In addition, the tax hike still would not cover the cost of the equip-, THE CABINET MEMBERS who resigned had a valid argument: making purch- ases to compensate for American expen- ditures to defend Germany is only fair; but disrupting the German economy to buy goods of marginal utility is totally impractical. But, now the entire affair has been lab- elled a plot-two cabinet members of Er- hard's own party have been accused of trying to remove the aging-Erhard will be 70 next February-chancellor from of- fice. It is obvious that Erhard is not going to accomplish much with a minority gov- ernment that is not even backing him. His attempts to put through the tax-hike have failed miserably. Yet, Erhard still hopes to serve his full term, which does not expire until 1969. His opponents say that they will shame him into resigning with a no-confidence vote in the Parliament. Although such a vote does not mean that Erhard must resign, there are indications that he will shortly after the important elections in Bavaria on November 20. In this state %election, his Christian Democratic Party is expected to lose all its seats. The political crisis would then, theoret- ically, end. However, it is still not clear which new coalition would form. And, whatever it may be, that new government will still be bound to an agreement to go into debt to buy unneeded military goods. THE UNITED STATES has not demand- a ,nv+ 'rinM ' ntl it rnnd1rn not hP MotOrcycles To the Editor: ROBERT BENDELOW'S editorial on the cycle ordinance over- looks the main issue. He dis- cusses "passing stopped cars along the curb"' as if it were merely a matter of traffic congestion. In fact, the problem is the psych- ological impact of this practice on the "stuck" motorist. 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(N: i:.:{i: rr..:: v+"t« .t :. :hi:.}i. rx..,...r ... .it 1. :' n": 'i:r 't:..F ". ::...... ?...:::. r........:. :., .::9. :, .:x.:nJ. :>a t ,.. ... :"...Yr. ti.,.t.:r ..wY?.: ._. .r... ,..+:. ... r t... r .. ..Y:.4.:.d $f..' k. ....__.. ...,. .\.:f; . 1 fit:.: : m ... .. .. ....:... . .. w%.3. (... ;y:'{ :koY.....:::;.",,::.."a". nF (.xuaw{:twwr.:.....{a....ahwauY:w h.ttixa..rx5.uroa:..war.":.",.l..a."..a :+r.:... ......h w in / 7 .j .. : ,Y ..... ........ .r...... ...... ...... ., :. ... ...r .vY ....... f ...... h. ..... r....... } ..:.... .. ..r }.U .: " " -t Im"Im, a n t: A FF 11/0 watts is Decision + By RON KLEMPER U THANT'S extended term as Secretary-General of t h e U.N. comes to and end Dec. 31. He has announce(z his intention to resign and, despite a multi- lateral effort by' powers which have found little else to agree on in the UN's twenty-one year his- tory, he has not changed his mind. U Thant took the helm of the United Nations in time of crisis. Shortly after Dag Hammarskjold's death in a plane crash in the Congo, the U.N. involvement there was successfully ended. Resistance in Katanga died down and, with the aid of various U.N. agencies, a stable government was formed under Moise Tshombe. But the involvement had been Onnnoed hv the nviet Tnion .and posture in Lebanon-he qualified as an impartial and objective source. Further, as a Burmese he was neutral representing the key emerging bloc in the United Na- tions-the ever-multiplying na- tions of Africa and Asia. But further U had proven him- self patient and able arbitor-and it was an arbitrator his position would require him to be. WHEN TRYGVIE LIE thought it was in the interest of world peace to throw U.N. forces into the breech against North Korea, he met stiff opposition from the USSR. The Soviets refused to sup- port or respect Lie's office, and Lie was able to act only by Rus- sian default. Had Lie - stayed on after the Korean crisis, Russian J:_ ......... - .1-- - ;,+ . era- sian displeasure with U.N. inter- vention. U THANT WANTS to intervene in Vietnam, but this time it is the United States which has refused to limit its maneuverability. The war in Viet Nam dominates world affairs and, as Thant says, makes progress in other areas virtually impossible. Trant's desire for admission of Red China has been hard to push through, and the tensions and polarization surrounding the U.S. position there has not helped. A meaningful solution to the prob- lems of weapons controls has also been made more difficult. And Thant's plan for a strong and effective U.N. army seems further doomed by tensions arising from f a lh n Mnff and the prospects for its getting any stronger don't look like they are getting better. WINSTON CHURCHILL once said that he was not appointed Prime Minister to sit over the liquidation of Her Majesty's em- pire. So U Thant feels he need not be a Secretary-General whose de- creasing power is the most frus- trating of world developments. Should U Thant leave in De- cenber, the United Nations will be deprived of perhaps its greatest leader, and will subsequently be involved in a power struggle that could deal the organization its death blow. We would urge him to stay- and as long as the framework of the United Nations exists there is a hope for it. And it is not totally