Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHQRITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS .;i and 6 ?r; by MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH t Y r t t.. .S.SSS SV:..:.:n.v is e Free 420 MAYNARD Sr., ANN ARBOR, MiCH. 1frevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 oriais printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. lY, NOVEMBER 22, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HEFFER i Building the New System: Some Suggestions IS IS A HELL of a time for Thanks- giving vacation. It unfortunately in- terrupts the momentum of that rarest of campus phenomena, a wave of real stu- dent interest. But, in one sense, it may be a blessing. Campus leaders can get some sleep, and the student body will have four days to think over what's been going on. There are a number of points that come imme- diately to mind: * THE MOVEMENT generated by the issues of class ranking and OSA rule in the area of non-academic affairs has snowballed into a movement with much broader objectives. It is a constructively- oriented movement and, as such, needs much more work in order to succeed than would a destructive one. Anyone who plans to influence or formulate the aims of the movement had better also plan to spend a lot of time working on it. The process of building a new system here is going to be a long and often dull one, with more headaches than glam- our. But it is obviously necessary that a large number of people keep interested and working. * PEOPLE ARE TENDING unneces- sarily to shy away from physical shows of strength. It is necessary to remember that we are not acting in a vacuum and that ultimately success or failure de- pends on the acceptance of our plan by the administration. Shows of strength, such as a picket or mass rally on the steps of the administration building or perhaps even that most loaded of words, the "sit-in," are not "overly militant"- they are, in fact, quite necessary to keep interest alive and to keep the adminis- tration aware of what is going on. This administration seems to act just- ly only when it is convinced someone is about to make waves. Through the proc- ess of constructing a new government we must keep continually aware that the ad- ministration will accept things on our terms only in the face of some sort of disruption. It may be necessary to keep things alive by having various, group dem- onstrations throughout the interim per- iod. * THE "VOICE-SGC SPLIT" isn't of much interest or significance. Any poli- tical action group which contains as many various elements as this campus does is bound to have differences about goals and strategy. But I am struck by the lack of really crucial well-defined differences so far. All groups must realize that they will have to consider in their actions the tem- per of the student body, and that, in or- der to accomplish any of their ends, they need mass support. Leadership will come from. who sells the best ideas, not who chairs the meeting and who claims the "rightful" place at the head. Differences are a good thing. If one group solely held the leadership, it could be dangerous. My own initial impulse was to favor SGC as the logical leader, but it seems now that the constituency involved is too broad to allow a structural leadership for that group. Its leadership instead can be a moral one, and while Ed Robinson seems the natural chairman for this se- ries of all-campus meetings, SGC now has to realize its role is one of providing ideas. To attempt to force a structural role on a body which neither requires nor wants it would be a real mistake. UNFORTUNATELY, after taking five hours to come to the above realiza- tion, Council managed to pass one of the most inane and meaningless motions ever seen anywhere. It stated, briefly, that "student power is a bad thing." What that is supposed to mean is not clear. What is clear is that after finally real- izing that the surge on campus was big- ger than they were, Council then pro- ceeded to shirk its responsibility by pro- viding only a piece of paper that reads like a scared little boy's apology for break- ing a cookie jar. Realize, Council, that this campus in- terest in student affairs is the goal of nearly every other student government council in the country, and now that it has been achieved at Michigan, it is time to provide the meaningful leadership for which you were elected. OW ONE REAL weakness in what is happening here is that we still,' after all the talk about responsibility and par- ticipation, have been unable to define exactly what we want. I would contend that the best way to define what we want is by actually constructing the govern- ment for which we are working. Platitudes such as "student power" and "responsible government" mean nothing until defined in structural terms. . Here is an idea of what we might want: An autonomous senate of students, like Student Government Council, but larger with equal graduate school repre- sentation, to make rules governing stu- dent conduct and student life. Such a government will also require a replace- .ment for Joint Judiciary Council with a revised system of appeal. " A system of autonomous senates of faculty and students within each college to decide questions of academic affairs. These senates will, in turn, form the larg- er senate which will decide questions of all-campus academic policy. " A general senate of students, fac- ulty and administrators to decide over- riding problems of the University as a whole, such as the building of residen- tial colleges and their place in Univer- sity expansion, or the extent to which low-cost housing will be supported. THIS IS ONLY the barest outline. It be- comes evident upon sitting down to draw up any kind of program for student government that there is an immense amount of law and procedure to be for- mulated. If it's going to be done democratically, as it must, then it's going to take a lot of time and work. And this year, for a change, things are worth doing. -HARVEY WASSERMAN Editorial Director NOVEMBER 22, 1963, was a rather dreary day in Ann Ar- bor. It started to rain at 7:05 a.m. and continued, off and on, until about midnight. At noon I went back to the dorm and had lunch, and then rode my bike, complete with notebook, books and bassoon (I was in the university symphony),"downEast Huron St. from Markley to the Frieze Bldg. for my one o'clock French class. As I walked through the door- way of Harris Hall for orchestra at 2:05 a number of people were standing next to a radio, going full blast. At the time it seemed rather odd, but I couldn't hear anything on the radio and, be- sides, I was in a hurry because I was a little late for the rehear- sal. We were doing "L'Enfant Prodigue," an early Debussy opera. I SAT DOWN and put together my instrument, and overheard the first clarinet player talking in- tently with the first flutist about President Kennedy, which seemed odd since nobody ini orchestra seemed very interested in politics. Then someone told me: "Presi- dent Kennedy and Governor Con- nolly were in a motorcade in Tex- as and they were both shot." I asked if that was some kind of music school joke, but it wasn't. Almost as soon as I heard the news, we began the rehearsal, which continued for two hours. Apparently the conductor still didn't know, and those of us who knew hadn't grasped it yet. In the middle of the rehearsal, I looked quizzically at one of the bassists, who was listening to a transistor radio. "Is he dead?" I mouthed at him. Yes, my friend nodded, he is. THE REHEARSAL ended at 4, and as I rode towards Markley it started to rain. I went to a friend's room and listened to the radio, hearing Paul Harvey de- scribe the leftist connections of the accused assassin. When The Daily's extra edition arrived at the dorm around five o'clock I cursed them for including two ad- vertisements in it. We then trooped into the din- ing room to eat-we all decided to wear suits and eat quietly-- and then I got into a cab to go to the bus station to take a bus home, a trip I'd been planning to take for some time. As the cab left Markley around six the cab- bie turned on his radio, and we both listened to the arrival of the President's body in Washington. After a rather quiet trip the bus arrived in East Lansing some- what before eight, and-to my sur- prise-my mother was already there. She knew from my face that I already had heard. THE EVENTS of the rest of the weekend are less clear. I do re- member the flurry of announce- ments from Presidents Hatcher and Hannah that their respective teams' football games would-or would not--be played; I remember thinking it would be a good idea to call up President Hannah to urge him to cancel his game; I remember not doing it because it didn't seem very important any- way. And I also recall talking long- distance with a friend of mine at Interlochen, where, she said, some conservative friends of hers were rejoicing; listening to a friend of mine address a Hillel memorial service; and hearing and seeing the boom of the drums on the way to Arlington. * * * PRESIDENT KENNEDY once said that he felt no great emo- tional shock when he heard that President Roosevelt had died. Per- haps because the event was in- conceivable to me, President Ken- nedy's death was no emotional shock for me or, perhaps, for others. Indeed, it often is surprising to compare today's myths about his presidency with the realities of his presidency as they were three years ago today. He said very little about the Negro revolution; and, despite his feeling that it was a great moral issue--and his affection for Roos- evelt's comment that the presiden- cy is "preeminently a position of moral leadership"-he also did very little. And while he campaigned hard in poverty-stricken areas of West Virginia and assailed economic myths at Yale, Kennedy failed to enact a progressive economic pol- icy. He abandoned the idea of stimulating the economy by in- creasing government expenditures for social progress and chose in- stead the easy but of a tax cut-- defending the tax cut in a speech which John Kenneth Galbraith called "the most conservative speech since McKinley." IT IS, IN FACT, justly said that Kennedy accomplished very little in domestic affaifs. But the other side of the coin is his remarkable record in foreign policy: the Test Ban Treaty, the honorable end of the Cuban missile crises, the Trade Expansion Act and the Peace Corps are some of his more sig- nificant accomplishments. And though Kennedy's tangible accomplishments in domestic pol- icy are few, he laid all the nec- essary educational groundwork and did all the political lobbying which-despite. his slim congres- sional margins - assured passage for key domestic planks in a broad program of social progress. Kennedy's lasting achievement, however, is not his record, nor even his famed "style"-though both help explain his appeal. For Kennedy was a great Presi-. dent not so much because of what he did for people but rather for what he did to them. IN THE DRAB Eisenhower years, like all the other years of politics-as-usual, the country be- gan to drift into an era when avoiding problems rather than meeting them became customary; when winning the next election rather than preparing for the next decade became important; when a kind of national astigmatism prevailed. Kennedy changed that; and he did it not really by changing poli- cies but by changing people. He sought a'commitment to solving national problems; he brought ex- citement to national government. He challenged all Americans to "ask what you can do for your country" in a "long, twilight strug- gle"-and he challenged the new generation in particular. THE PEACE CORPS exemplifies Kennedy's influence in America and on the new generation. It is small, and its quantitative impact Is relatively slight. But it challenges-and survives -the corrosive conventional ideol- ogy that buying more arms is the only way to gain more secur- ity. It challenges the new gen- eration to "help get this country moving again" and to "ask what we together can do for the future of mankind." It mobilizes the tal- ents and hopes of a generation in the strange cause of peace. Like many of his efforts, the full effect of Kennedy's Peace Corps will not be felt for a long time. But the Peace Corps, like its father, has already had an incalculable influence on the emo- tions and strivings of the new generation of which President Kennedy spoke at his Inaugura- tion. SHORTLY AFTER the inaugur- ation President Kennedy received ax note from Robert Frost saying. "Poetry and power is the formula for a new Augustan age." Wag- gishly, Kennedy scribbled back: "Power all the way." Kennedy dealt with power, and many will judge him on the way he used it. But Kennedy's challenge to the nation to help "get this country moving again" and the excitement about the struggle to govern which he instilled in the new generation transcend his accomplishments with power. The Kennedy challenge and the Kennedy excitement, indeed, form a kind of poetry, a poetry which resides in the hearts and minds of the new generation which knew him and which will help guide the action springing from it. It is the poetry on which his ultimate greatness rests. 4/ Letters: Students Discuss Student Power To the Editor: T HE "MICHIGAN REVOLT" that now seems to be moving with inevitable swiftness is a more sig- nificant social movement than the "Berkeley" that preceded it. At Berkeley, while larger issues did develop, the central issue was the right of students to solicit and organize for political activity sum- med up in the phrase "Free Speech." This ideal is already allowed and practiced at Michigan. Here, the central issue is more con- troversial: the right of people to take part in making those deci- sions that effect their own lives. IT IS IMPORTANT that ad- ministrators and students alike realize the depth of principle that motivates many of the activist students in this "Michigan Re- volt." Their rallying cry is not free speech but rather participa- tory democracy. Disillusioned by the rise of un- responsive bureaucracies in every segment of American life, horri- fied by the effects of impersonal and remote decision-making on the humanu spirit, these students have learned in the South and in the slums that exploitation and alienation can be ended only when people have the right to partici- pate fully in decisions effecting their own situation. These students claim this right to decide in the context of their own education, but they claim it for everyone else too. The college movement, of which Michigan is now the center, is part of a far larger concern. The deepest issue is whether democracy can survive the challenge of modern super- organization. HAROLD TAYLOR, the former president of Sarah Lawrence Col- lege, shows that he understands the student point of view when he says, "The new generation is im-. patient with a society that takes its knowledge and values at sec- ond hand. As a result, they are often misunderstood by those of the older generation, especially among educators, who have not themselves had the experience of direct involvement with the situa- tion of the world and who have not entered, either directly or in imagination, into the lives of the younger generation. "Were they to enter into them, they would discover how far be- hind they have fallen in under- standing the nature of contem- porary social change and the role of youth in bringing it about. "They would understand that the demand of youth for a share in the reform of the- universities is part of a larger demand for the achievement of democratic rights and the reconstruction of society through education." ADMINISTRATORS here and elsewhere should heed Harold Tay- lor's insight. For the "Michigan Revolt" is about more than just sandbox student government, or poor student housing policy, or monopoly bookstore prices, or an ignored draft referendum, or an autocratically dictated sit-in ban. Students are asking their elders to take seriously the ideal of de- mocracy, and to start here and now by taking students seriously. --Robert L. Olsen, Grad Resident Fellow Hinsdale House, E. Quad A Resignation To the Editor: Enclosed is a copy of my letter of resignation from the Students for Responsi- bility and Rationality on the Campus (SRRC). It is addressed to Arthur J. Collingworth, chair- man of the SRRC: Dear Art: I FIND MYSELF co'impelled to resign from the Executive Committee of Students for Re- sponsibility and Rationality on the Campus. This resignation is ef- fe'tive immediately. As the Chairman of SRRC, you have, I believe, been using the group- more for your own political ends than for the benefit of the students and University Commu- nity. You have consistently over- emphasized the importance and support for Students for Responsi- bility and Rationality on the cam- pus, while ridiculing responsible student organizations. Rather than being broadly based, SRRC is more a group of right-wing partisans attempting to disguise themselves in a cloak of moderation. As a liberal, I cannot add credence to such nonsense. -Robert R. Simpson Treasurer Students for Responsibility and Rationality on the Campus I'm Excited! To the Editor: FOR THE FIRST tirme in four years I've gotten excited about something. Harlan Hatcher and his wife have held some very fine teas. But they didn't excite me. Filling the Engine Arch with snow was really wild. But it didn't excite me. I enjoy listening to Doc Losh at pep rallies. But she doesn't ex- cite me either. I even get a kick out of those Michigauma maniac initiations. Hardly any excite- ment, though. DR. CUTLER excites me. It's been a long four years, and it feels good to finally be excited. Don't misunderstand me. It's not what Dr. Cutler is that excites me. In fact he bores me. It's what he isn't. He isn't very clever for one thing, or far-sighted for another; he doesn't believe in the students, doesn't give them much respect; it's rather obvious he holds little belief in even the most rudimen- tary forms of democratic thought and action, i.e., if the students are affected by something it would "seem" that they should have a strong voice in the decision mak- ing process. SGC had the right idea when they broke away from OSA, not to disassociate themselves with the University community but to be- come a meaningful part of it. HOWEVER, at this point it is only fair for me to say that I start to get unexcited again. I attended the Friday afternoon Voice meeting and was extremely happy to see such a large turnout. The discussions brought out some very good points, the debate was lively and so were the people. And even some kind of definite action was planned. There was only one drawback. It was rather obvious that differ- ent people want to go in different directions. Ed Robinson and Fred Smith are pushing for reform. Mike Zweig (and I think Voice as a whole) is pushing for an entire- ly new structure. The drawback is that it, is very unlikely that anything will be accomplished un- less some compromise is made. Unity of purpose and unity of action and all that stuff. BUT, DAMMIT, I don't, want a compromise. I don't want to settle for anything less than what is right. What kind of reforms are we going to get? We'll go from weak advisory committees to strong ones? We'll be able to de- cide one out of six decisions af- fecting students instead one out of 10? That may be all right for you, Mr. Fred Smith who is so worried about "outside pressures" but what about me? I've got plenty of in- side pressures to contend with. And they're not going to quiet down and they're- not going to stop making noise even if I'm the only one that can hear them. TK MIKE ZWEIG put it beautiful- ly Friday afternoon when he said that, "This meeting has power. And we're scared of this power . . We must declare our power over everything that concerns students." I'm not scared of that power, I welcome it. I'm not scared of making decisions that affect me, all the decisions.. I don't have to be and I don't want to be given the rules. I don't have to be told this is the way we do it here. As a student you're supposed to act this way, you're supposed to be this, and do this. As a student let me decide. I'm sure there were plenty in the room that feel this way too. And I'm also sure there were plenty in the room that don't. They'd rather kind of make a decision and then go to Daddy Cutler and say: "DADDY, I appreciate you kind of letting me make this decision. This is the decision I've reached ... What do you think of it? ... I really want your opinion on this . . after all, I don't feel I'm mature enough or brave enough to have the final say ... I want to act like an adult but I don't want to have the responsibility of being one. And, of course, there are so many matters over which I would shudder to even think about uttering an opinion." By not asking for a completely new structure are thy not, in effect, expressing this attitudes THE MOVEMENI' has the arou- sal and the backing, and it's go- ing strong and fast. Let's remove the need for a compromise among ourselves. Let's get something worthwhile. Look, it may be an- other four years before I get ex- cited again. -Jack Cohn, '67LSA SGC Support To the Editor: THE EXECUTIVE BOARD of the University chapter of Al- pha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, in its meeting of No- vember 20, approved the follow- ing resolution: Alpha Phi Omega has had an amiable relationship with the Of- fice of Student Organizations and hopes to continue that relation- ship in the execution of those existing regulations with which our organization is specifically con- cerned. Nevertheless, we recognize Stu- dent Government Council as the legitimate representative of the student body in decisions affect- ing both student organizations and individual students. We believe that the actions of the Office of Student Affairs have mitigated against this representation and therefore we support SGC's mo- tion suspending formal association with that office. --The Executive Board of Alpha Phi, Omega Gamma Pi Chapter LETTERS All letters must be typed, double-spaced and should be no longer than 300 words. All let- ters are subject to editing; those over 300 words will gen- erally be shortened. A Looking at Ann Arbor DOUBTLESS, you don't realize that you now reside in what could be one of Look's All-America cities for 1966. Think of it. Ann Arbor is basing its case for the award, from latest news reports, on its success in civil rights and its civic beauty. KNOWING LOOK magazine, though, no mere presentation will convince them of a city's worth. Hopefully they'll do a little grass-roots investigating. Here's a proposed check-list: 1) Dr. Albert Wheeler, state NAACP Business Staff SUSAN PERLSTADT, Business Manager JEFFREY LEEDS.........Associate Business Manager HARRY BLOCH...........Advertising Manager STEVEN LOEWENTHAL......irculation Manager ELIZABETH RHEIN ................ Personnel Director president. They might ask him about the makeup of the city's housing commission. How many of its members reside in the ghetto? That would be straight to the point. 2) The patrons of the Ann Street pool hall--the 'ones Stokely stopped by to talk to when he was in town. 3) Private city planners in'the area. They'll describe the excellent use of land along Stadium Blvd. 4) A few of the occupants in U Towers. Might just test their opinions on the Ann Arbor building code. 6) The one Negro on the Ann Arbor police force. 7) A patron of the Ann Arbor bus fleet (seven buses for 100,060 people). 8) All the Ann Arbor building inspec- tors. It shouldn't take too long (Ann Ar- bor has less of them per dwelling unit than Ypsilanti) 9), A randomly-chosen out-of-town. driver in search of a place to park. .......... .. ....*. ..-. ;.. e.,, :W4-..74s.-.°T?.- . f R t4?".. R r --'-..------"- -. - - '.-'-----l-'7^-'--T9...4r 4 i. --*, .' - --' ' 3 s -- - '.-. -. ----0 I::x4::.4~.::::x: . ,~ 4 '4 AMan* By ROGER RAPOPORT "The Vice-President for Stu- dent Affairs (should) serve as a vice-president presenting the student interest to the Regents and the President," Cutler ex- plained." -The Michigan Daily July 1, 1965 TMMES CHANGE, men change. And so it is that Richard L. Cutler's great expectations have changed. When he became Vice- President less than two years ago he was heralded as the messiah- the man who could really get things done for the student body. In fact many now view him Working for the Administration fracas over shutter-happy Ann Arbor police, the sit-in ban, and the draft referendum have forced Cutler to spend almost as much time scraping mud off the univer- sity image as Vice-President for University Relations Michael Rad- dock. Cutler, a former quarterback for the Western Michigan University football team, has a rugged con- stitution and seems to thrive on controversy. He has served well as official pacifier for the adminis- tration. As Voice chairman Mike Zweig puts it, "Cutler is there to smile, be nice, and hold the stu- dents' hands." Thus, when Voice members and is necessary about University is- sues. Thus when the students asked Pierpont a question he would turn to Cutler for a hurried conference. Then Cutler would turn to the stu- dents and say "I'll answer that." The frustration of the Voice representatives grew as Cutler kept answering questions addressed to Pierpont, for it is Pierpont not Cutler who maintains control over the University plant and the cam- pus policy. Finally, in disgust over Pier- pont's refusal to answer questions, one student sarcastically asked Pierpont if he would define his job. "Can you tell us what you do allr~cu M Psr ,,f. 1 -iipi +Ath against student critics. He is also a proponent of new administra- tive policies-many of which often go against the will of the students and faculty. Even before students voted down class ranking 2-1 in the draft referendum, Cutler said emphatic- ally that he would "not accept the results of the referendum as binding." He reportedly told the Regents that "the students argument on abolishing class ranking is in- valid." Cutler told the Regents that the ranking issue affects the "entire university community" not just students. Harlum p thsat + '+ mnt a reml group of all college students" in- stead of ranking. TO CRITICIZE Cutler in this fashion may seem unfair to those who see him as a well-meaning liberal caught up in an alien ad- ministrative bureaucracy. Others, who view Cutler as one who hopes to quash the seeds of a Berkeley rebellion here in an effort to prove to the Regents that he is the University's next Harlan Hatcher, may find such criticisms too mild. But such a negative view misses the point. Richard Cutler is not an evil man, nor even an ill- meaning one. He is a funny. per- 10