mirtigan Datiy Sevent y-Fifth 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, Mic. 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. DNESDAY, JULY 7, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH A Prime Task of Education: Dlevelo Healthy Cynicism CYNICISM IS THE AIM of education, a kind of "idealistic cynicism" toward the armies of opinions and facts that make decisions difficult. A good liberal arts education should teach not only facts but also a curious and rugged combina- tion of irreverence toward, familiarity with, and respect for facts. The cynicism developed by a good education can have many practical ap- plications. Most important, an educated "cynic" does not believe everything he hears. In the furor a number of years ago over the American public's attitude as a "nation of sheep," the most serious dan- ger to the existence. of this country as a place where the people influence deci- sions was underlined: many Americans are fed slanted truths and swallow them as children swallow pablum. It is sufficient to point out a few of these slanted news sources to help out- line the danger. Time magazine is the first and probably the worst example. It is a handsome, brilliant magazine, but is slanted far-and subtly. THE BIAS BEGINS at the cover. artists can make anyone look Time fine, Buley For Mayor? AM RUNNING (for mayor of New York) qn a program that will seek to restore law and order by increasing the police force, encouraging it to do its duty and the city judges to do theirs; lower taxes by effecting efficiencies and introducing a resident requirement in order to qualify for welfare benefits;require work from able-bodied beneficiaries on relief who are not directly concerned with looking after their children; disavow and dis- courage those of their leaders who en- courage racism, lawlessness and despair among the Negro people; petition Con- gress for legislation that would permit New York to free itself of the binding hold on some of its vital functions, e.g., the newspapers and the waterfronts, now exercised by the monopoly labor unions; decentralize the city schools and substi- tute, education for racial integration as their principal function; and tranquilize the mania for urban renewal and city planning of the kind that is dehumaniz- ing the city. -WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY In a Letter to the Editor of the New York Times Second clasa postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Published daily Tuesday thrutgh Saturday morning. anyone look fatal. Compare the cover picture of Lee Harvey Oswald to the pic- ture of McGeorge Bundy. Time covers are a fascinating study in art as propaganda. It is the same on the inside. On the question of Viet Nam, for instance, the magazine clearly backs administration policy. Reading of a few issues and com- parison with other magazines makes that conclusion inescapable. A recent issue described the new gov- ernment of Marshal Ky in South Viet Nam, making him seem a brave hero straightening the mess of his country. Whether true or not the conclusions were prefabricated. TIME GETS to shuffle, cut and deal the cards and it is hard to get a really fair hand if you're playing against whichever side Time has decided to back. From photography (a gory picture of a man beheaded by the Viet Cong) to philosophy (Time's fact-laden essays) the magazine presents a picture of reality- readable, interesting, brilliantly drawn- that is dangerous because too many Americans are likely to accept it at face value. Other examples abound. Although one can argue that thoretically everything written by man is biased, some news me- dia avoid bias more than others. The As- sociated Press, for instance, is also often subtly biased. Although this slanting may merely be calling some states "regimes" and other "governments," it is there. And the Daily, in campus politics, has itself been guilty of this, particularly in years when it has been very involved in cam- pus issues. THIS IS NOT a diatribe against bad journalism. What matters-what edu- cation should be-is teaching people to be able to function intelligently on what information exists at the moment. In the outside community, the facts which the intelligent person must ques- tion lie in slanted news media. In the academic community, they lie in the frightening lack of perspective of some intellectual "specialists." Every teacher of every class should re- mind himself that critical, clear think- ing is imperative, and should reward orig- inal, critical and-if necessary--icono- clastic thinking instead of deft acro- batics with worn concepts. If more teachers did this, the college graduate would be better equipped to form realistic opinions himself instead of accepting the stock liberal and con- servative categorizations and the insid- iously slanted news often found in Amer- ican news media today. -ROBERT MOORE By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH Special To The Daily ASHINGTON - "Washing- ton," John F. Kennedy said, "is a city of Southern efficiency and Northern charm." Indeed. Washington's very lay- out proclaims its unique and per- plexing nature. The Capitol building is sup- posedly the center of the city, although geographically it is not. Emanating from it, gridlike, are two basic kinds of streets: alpha- bet streets (which run east-west) and number streets (which run north-south). ALARMINGLY, these streets come in pairs: a C Street (running east-west) north of the Capitol, and another (also east-west) south of it. The number streets are both east and west of the Capitol. Thus, a visitor wanting to go to 205 C Street had better know which C street he has in mind - north or south of the Capitol- and if its 200 block is on the 2nd Street which is east or west of the Capitol. In short, NW, SW, NE, and SE are the four vital suffixes without which the visitor might just as well give up - although M. C. and U. S. S. sometimes help. TO MAKE matters worse, there are also avenues named after states-Pennsylvania and Massa- chusetts Avenues being the most famous. Starting at hub-like cir- cles, these avenues spread at varying angles across the other- wise orderly grid of the city, add- ing to the confusion. The idea for the avenues was that of the city's clever planner, Major Pierre L'Enfant. He re- soned that American troops could mass in the circles ,and thus be able to turn to fire down any of the avenues radiating from them to ward off advancing enemy troops. Alas, in 1814 the British not only captured Washington but burned the Capitol ,the White House, and most other public buildings as well. ANOTHER consuming dream of Major L'Enfant's was the hope that Pennsylvania Avenue would afford clear line of sight, stretch- ing majestically and uninterrupt- ed, all the way from the Capitol to the White House. In 1835, however, President Jackson, despairing of the bur- eaucracy that was already en- shrouding the city in a vast mist, ended bickering over the site of the Treasury building by putting it right next to the White House -and squarely in front of the approach to the Capitol. There are, however, more re- cent and picturesque anomalies. THE HOUSE Office Buildings, invariably, are abbreviated H. O. B. The Senate Office Buildings, usually, are not. The Carpenters Union building is made of gorgeous marble. The Taft Carillion, honoring the famous Ohio senator and perhaps reflecting his conserva- tive political outlook, rings the traditional hourly chime back- wards. THE SITE of government for 190 million people, the District of Columbia, has no self-government of its own. The city's bus system is so ter- rible that its director has been waging a campaign for "free-en- hideous new Rayburn Building, the Honorable Adam Clayton Pow- ell, member of Congress from Harlem, chairman of the House Committee on 'ducation and La- bor, and minister of the Abyssin- ian Baptist Church, paused, smiled benignly at the astonished group of visiting Girl Scouts beside him in the car, and said: "You're smart to visit Washing- ton. The New York World's Fair is terrible." A MAJOR exhibition of the city's persoalities occurs every year around this time at the con- gressional campaign dinners of each party, where the faithful spend $100 for a plate of bad food and an evening of worse speeches. At the Democrats' function re- cently, congressional luminaries such as J. W. Fulbright and Rep. William Dawson (D-Chicago), the THIS ANCIENT GUN near the White House hails from days when Washington was not the miasma of personality, power, bureaucracy and confusion it is today. Although everything has not gone as planned-especially as planned by the original Washington architect-the capi- tal remains a "friendly city, indeed a humble one." Washingon- Colorful, Unique. Negro captain in Mayor Richard J. Daley's political machine, gath- ered with lobbyists and others to hear the President praise his Con- gress for its consummate wisdom in passing so many of his pro- posals recently. In what was undeniably the height of the evening, a fight broke out at the bar after dinner, but it was quickly quelled. After that, the police concluded, the evening was going td be so dull there wasn't much point in hav- ing them around, so they left. THEN THERE IS the bureacra- cy. For example, the director (and his two assistants) of the Bureau of Locomotive Inspection in the the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion. The only GS-15's who must be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, the di- rector and his assistants oversee the inspection of the less than 100 remaining steam boilers in the country. The contest between personali- ties can sometimes be tantalizing. Last Monday the Senate listened to Paul Douglas (D-Ill), the high- ly-esteemed liberal, satirize Sen- ators Edward Kennedy (D-Mass) and Leverett Saltonstall (R-Mass) who want to keep an obsolete rifle armory in theirhome state. Pre- siding over the Senate at the time, in the absence of the Vice- President, was the junior senator from New York, Robert F. Kenne- dy. Yet in the last analysis, Wash- ington, is a friendly city, indeed, a humble one. A visitor shopping for shampoo recently in the Peo- ple's Drug Store off 15th Street here turned around to find him- self face-to-face (or eyeball-to- eyeball) with McGeorge Bundy. University P olitics: Conflict Idealism, Needs Yield Instability By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN Second in a Series THE STRIKING of a medium between ivy towerism and poli- tical animalism is not easy for a state university. On the one hand University administrators have a traditional loyalty to the ideal codes of aca- demia - freedom of thought, speech, and political persuasion- and an aloofness from the bicker- ing.of the everyday governmental process. On the other hand there is the practical realityhthat the state Legislature is where a good pro- portion of the University's bread is buttered, and in order to make sure that the bread is buttered well, school officials become in- creasingly immersed in political life. AUGMENTING the problem is a difference in attitudes about the proper balance in the University community. Administrators wary of costs and constantly in contact with budget requests and appro- priations are extremely conscious of this state university as an ap- pendage to the political system. One can point out that the Re- gents themselves, being publicly elected, are deeply involved in the political process. In addition, such men as Exec- utive Vice-President Marvin Nie- huss and Bob Cross, the Univer- sity's lobbyist, who spend most of their time in haggling with Lans- ing legislators, are naturally aware of the necessity of the University fulfilling the role of the political animal. ON THE OTHER hand,. faculty members and students advocate an intellectual isolationism from the "petty" in fighting of state politics. Backing a modified Paul Good- man "community of scholars" concept of higher education, these people long for the status of a twentieth century University of Bologna. Although politically active on such issues as civil rights and foreign policy these faculty mem- bers wish to personally sidestep the conflicts of the University on the legislative battleground. The autonomy of the Univer- sity strongly supported by such individuals, is, unfortunately, a myth. Despite the constitutional pro- visions of the new Michigan con- stitution supporting the inde- pendence of the University, the practical necessity of kowtowing to the Legislature, as perceived by administrators, when appropria- tion time comes around makes this clause about as valuable func- tionally as the paper on which it is written. FOR EXAMPLE, one of the cherished privileges of the consti- tutionally autonomous state insti- tution is the ability to budget its appropriations internally as it sees fit. Thus although the state Legis- lature may recommend to allocate the lump sum of the school's ap- propriation in a given manner, the school is under no legal ob- ligation to do so. But as one state legislator put it, "Sure they (University officials) are able to divide the money any way they want legally, but when they come back the next year for more money, they had better have complied generally with the wishes of the Legislature.' ACTUALLY the influence of the state Legislature is out of propor- tion to its share of the University financing. For example, the fed- eral government contributes about as much money to the University's budget as the state Legislature. But the overriding political issue at present is the relationship with Lansing and not Washington. Yet, it is forseeable that in the not too distant future national politics will weigh heavier in the considerations of University ad- ministrators than state politics. Already there are indications of this trend. For example, Rep. Weston Vivian (D-Ann Arbor), the University's man in Washington, recently complained that federal grants and research projects con- centrated around Cambridge and Berkeley and bypassed the mid- west. SUCH A TREND, if continued, could have major deleterious rep- ercussions on the University com- munity since it is becoming in- creasingly clear that federal mon- ey is what is going to make or break the modern American uni- versity, I A q eyeball) with McGeorge Bundy. 4 A j ... s1.4,) , ,, .,. , ' 4 ; r fi rv l M y 7 f ยข,i- 1L 1 .. 4i i r" ' .fi ;' ' r { ,ti " s " s j 1 t t t t ,,1 x a a' ' ' ' s ' ,.t C , ,5 ., . , ' 'p' ' rrbn ya, .. !j j r he t 4 ' , , y tj+.' ! ' ' + y. ', k ^r.. i y-, 1 . ,'J ;s i yk 1 TWO HUDSONVILLE, Mich., doctors, Norman Unema (left) and Robert Plekker, arranged recently for three million copies of an anti-medicare article to be available to the nation's junior chambers of com- merce on request. However, rumors from a Medicare lobbyist in Washington indicate that the Presi- dent has included Moneycare in the bill-making everybody happy. Moneycare and the Good Life By ROGER RAPOPORT A T THE RECENT American Medical Association convention in New York, president Dr. James Z. Appel told doctors he believed they should "actively participate in implementing medicare," the government's controversial plan for health care for the aged, ex- pected to pass Congress this year. This surprised many people be- cause in the past the AMA has been outspoken in its opposition to medicare. The AMA has spent millions of dollars for lobbying and publicity campaigns designed to defeat medicare over the years 1960-1964. Most people do not realize why the doctors are now rejoicing over the current medicare bill and sup- port it wholeheartedly. The fact is that the doctors have just won AS A RESULT AMA leaders drew up their own supplementary plan to medicare-called "money- care." Moneycare stands for fed- eral financial aid to doctors. Each year the lobbyists for the AMA approached congressmen and tried to get moneycare adopted as part of medicare. "It is a crime that the richest, most powerful nation on earth must have doctors who don't even have a 65 foot yawl, Rolls-Royce, or twin-engined Beechcraft to call their own," the AMA lobbyists would argue to sponsors of the medicare bill. THE FRUGAL congressmen were unimpressed. "Theaverage American physi- cian only earns about $22,500 a the country held a secret strate- gy meeting at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. A radically new plan for getting moneycare was adopted. The plan, known only by a few insiders, was called "Opera- tion Coronary Thrombosis." It was relatively simple. Dur- ing the height of the 1964 presi- dential campaign, the AMA had the President's personal physician pay a house call on his patient. The President was told that un- less he promised the AMA money- care in 1965, a physical report would be issued the next day showing the President had high blood pressure and a serious heart murmur. The President quietly agreed. AND TODAY, if you look at the current medicare bill, you will see that monevycre ha hn incnr- i i