d I 5 W r i . x . .. rr..w rr r r rr.r r "We have several honorary doctor of law Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan and order degrees to confer. l/ . . r A *Uu.. pqM mu f #U L s :p a ; k . i I e f 1 i Tlhe DARI JAMES WECHSLER 420 Maynard St., Anh Arbor, Mich.!, Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily exp or the editors. This must TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1969 News Phone: 764-0552 ress the individual opinions of staff writers, be noted in ol reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: HAROLD ROSENTHAL e _ i Intramural. facilities: Funin g and students THE LATENESS OF the .Intramural Ad- visory Committee's recommendation to the Regents concerning the IM build- ings it proposed in March revolves around one issue: A student referendum. The financing heart. of the buildings is in student fees, better known as the old -tuition hike. The original proposal for the new facilities included a $10-15 student fee allocation per student per term. But Student Governments Council and other groups objected. They feel tuition should not be increased f o r something like an IM building unless the students,, who are exclusively affected by the de- cision, approve the project by a referen- dum. B u t there is another group using IM facilities =- the faculty. A payroll deduc- tion comparable to a student fee for the faculty was discussed for about five min- utes by the committee and then was dropped. The reasoning was that this had' hever been done before and so shouldn't be attempted now. Besides, the faculty would have to be asked and that would consume valuable time, time that could be spent putting up the buildings. IRONICALLY, almost everyone on t h e committee agrees in principle t h a t students should h a v e a larger voice in University decision-making, particularly in cases like the new IM buildings pre- sent. But - there is always that but - the committee refuses to act. Athletic Direct- or Don Canham, chairman of the com- mittee, tells the 'members of the commit- tee that, "It is not the business of a rec- reation advisory committee to try to tell th9 Regents what University policy should be. Our job is recreation." . The committee's solution has been to duck the' entire question of funding. They want the Regents to take the hot "potato; and do the dangerous broken-field run- ning. The decision, hopefully, may be self- defeating. V i c e 'President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith, while n o t exactly telling the committee w h a t its recom- mendation should be, said, "If the com- mittee simply hands the Regents a rec- ommendation that the buildings are needed, they will likely get a thank you and everyone will go about his business and nothing will be built. I would give their project the best chance of success if they m a k e a funding recommendation. And, it appears, the most likely method of funding is student fees." This suggestion p u t s the problem squarely before the committee. By dodg- ing the funding issue they will probably destroy their own project. If the commit- tee expects to see a n y buildings at all they will have to act on s o m e kind of funding proposal. BY DEALING, WITH funding the com- mittee will have to lock horns with the idea of a referendum. Education Prof. Lo- ren Barrit has placed a motion before the full committee asking that a "program for involving the student body in the de- cision be developedin, conjunction with Student Government Council." But the committee is hesitant. For over an hour at their last meeting they argued Prof! Barrit's proposal without coming to a decision. They are ,unable to reconcile what is right with what they see as the politics of the situation. In their initial draft of recommenda- tions they veil their support of a tuition tncrease by declaring that the method be used only as a "last resort." Whether the Regents will take this to mean a recom- mendation for a fee hike is not certain, but it is clear that the committee is fail- ing in their responsibilities. The issue is now cle a r. It is the IM committee's business not only to speak to funding but to the question of student de- cision-making. Anything less t h a n full support of Prof. Barrit's resolution is a' moral cop-out. --JIM FORRfSTER Summer Sports Editor 0' Letters to the Editor and Al. Capp T HE FOLLOWING WORDS are quoted from the text of an address delivered by cartoonist Al Capp to the graduating class of Franklin Pierce College in Rindge, N. H., much of it devoted to the thesis that it was a thrill to be speaking on a campus where tranquility (defined by some as torpor) prevailed: I believe there are no underprivileged Americans; that even the humblest of us are born with a privilege that places us ahead of anyone else, anywhere - the privilege of living and working in America, of repairing and renewing America; and one more priv- ilege that no one seems to get much fun out of lately -'theprivi- lege of loving America. Although Mr. Capp did not explicitly endorse motherhood, he had spoken not many days earlier before the convention of the Daughters of the American Revolution and presumably his appearance before those matrons excused this later lapse. There, among other things, he disclosed that his current counsel to college students is to "get into the poverty business, son, and grow rich with it." NO ONE CAN ACCUSE Al Capp of being in the poverty business; it might be said that he has made the long journey from the realm of Dogpatch to the salons of the fat cats. A glimpse of this pilgrim's pro-. gress appeared in a New York Times story published last July: "Li'l Abner, Daisy Mae and several other Al Capp comic characters will soon become part of the burgeoning franchise fastfood roadside restaurant business. "Laurence Ellman, president of Longchamps Inc., announced yes- terday that his complny had signed an agreement with Mr. Capp for the use of the characters, graphics and special features of the inter- nationally syndicated L'l Abner strip. "Under the agreement Mr. Capp will be paid $1 million in advance against royalties over 10 years. Logchamps will operate and merchan- dise the restaurants, which will be called Li'l Abner. The agreenent also covers motels, and with renewal options covering 30 years." In the light of this transaction - only one of many fiscal coups in the life of Al Capp - his temptation to believe that "there are no underprivileged Americans" may seem crudely explicable. Yet so deter- minist a verdict is an industice to the intelligence of a man who would have laughed out loud if he had been invited to enthrall a DAR con- vention in an earlier time. IT IS NOT ENTIRELY clear from the faded clippings when Capp decided that William McKinley and J. Edgar Hoover had really been right all along. Certainly no one can accuse him of vulgarly "selling out;" Li1 Abner was a spectacular success during the years when Capp proudly identified himself as a liberal and often used the strip to cari- cature right-wing bigots and to taunt Joe McCarthy when many were silent and scared But now the same man is found telling the Franklin Pierce stu- dents: "When the president of Harvard proved that, in a crisis, he was the intellectual equal of the Mayor' of Chicago and called the cops, it was his finest hour." Someone else might say that this verdict was Al Capp's worst moment. Capp's "comic strip" has become an exercise in mirthless frenzy, primarily - and indiscriminately - aimed at student demonstrators. As one who has led no cheers for the rule-or-ruin enterprises of SDS and some other groups,' my quarrel is hardly with Capp's dismay over random, mindless violence. It is with his incapacity to differentiate be- tween the conscientiously concerned and the nihilists - and his total deafness to voices of authentic protest. WHAT MATTERS, OF COURSE - apart from his loss of wit - is the symbolism he presents to the youngwho seriously care. In private he may still be the warm, charming figure he once was; he may even be an unheralded supporter of worthy civic charities. But in public he has become a caricature of the disaffected liberal who pro'- claims, amid his ,own affluence, that the country is fundamentally sound and that we never really had it so good. Such complacent pieties are incitements to riot among kids who dwell in the slums or are en route to Vietnam, as well as those still on the campus. Perhaps a kindly friend will persuade Capp to get off the DAR lecture circuit and visit Charleston, S. C., where hundreds of oppressed Negro hospital workers are fighting for the elementary right of union recognition and a wage a little higher than $1.30 an hour while both federal and state officials remain coldly aloof. I, The Al Capp many once knew might even poncede upon close in- spection that they are "underprivileged Americans" - and even leave a contribution at strike headquarters. (C) New York Post 4 + A warning (The following letterwas sent to Norman Scott, director of stu- dents at the Dearborn Campus.) IT HAS COME to my attention through an article in The Daily that you were the frontman for" the administration there in con- calling the scheduled appearance of the MC5 and other community bands at a WABX sponsored free conceit June 8. It is in this capacity that I would like to address you here, as I have no other reason for ever bothering to speak to a man of your (tiny) calibre. It is time that people like your- self, college administrators a n d other goons of the miltary-indus- trial-banking oligarchy that h a s unsurped the power from the people here in Babylon USA, started to realize that you can't get away with denying the people their rightful culture any longer. If you think you have got some- thing to worry about with the "community's" reaction to the MC5 and some other true com- munity bands playing a free con- cert for the people, you'd better get ready for a reaction of the people themselves when they start waking up and realizing that you have no rightful power to deny them their culture. As you can see, you just lost 6 of your' top stu- dents from your student Govern- ment Council and the Student Activities office because they real- ize what you people are doing and that it isn't- right. YOU ARE OUT of order, mister and the people won't stand for their public servants being out or order much longer. I just want to tell you this so you'll know why they're doing it when it hap- pens, - and so you won't be able to blame your campus troubles on SDS or a militant minority or whatever your current media ruse will be. We're hip to you, even if you aren't. What's worse is you won't even admit that you're a fascist: you try to cover up your dirty work by blaming a "lack of facilities" for the cancellation. It won't work, Mister Scott. The people know what all of you are doing, and they are watching you very close- ly now. And you can't tell me I don't know what you're doing. I went to your schools and observed your type very carefully for over six years (A.B. University of Michi- gan, Flint College, 'January 1964). You obviously don't know what you're doing, but let ms repeat: You'd better find out FAST, or it will be too late. The people want free music outdoors, they n e e d free music outdoors, and the bands and the organizers know this and work free to provide for this major need of the people, but you punks who control the land want to keep the people, from get- ting their culture. The people have to have it, and if they don't get it now you can bet that they won't be stopped by these tactics much longer. Dig it. All Power to the People! -John Sinclair, Manager, MC5 Minister of Information White Panther Party May 26 The budget To the Editor: THE ARTICLES which Miss W e i n e r a n d Mr. Hirschman have published on the budget situation and their speculations concerning possible'fee increases may have created some erroneous impressions. Let me make clear: --The Senate Committee actual7 ly cut the Governor's recommend- ed state appropriations by $2.4 million, not $2.0 million. Although the actual dollar differences is about $2.0. million, the Senate Committee added an expenditure requirement of $400,000 for a pur- pose not included in the Gov- ernor's Bill. -Any speculation on the amount of a possible fee increase is specu- lation of the Daily authors, and, ,not of mine. Fees are not deter- mined without - prior discussion with the Regents, and no such discussion has taken place. -Mr. Hirschman is correct that the Committee on Budget Admin- istration is still working to find ways of reducing the budget level, -Any speculation on whether the state appropriation will be in- creased by the House (and the Conference Committee) is that of The Daily. While we expect to bend every effort to persuade the House of the need, we have no indication of possible success. -Allan F. Smith Vice-President for Academic Affairs May 28 4- Why not the Pentagon? k1 "WE NOW HAVE A military-industrial team," Saturday Review quotes form- er Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford as saying, "with unique resources of exper- ience, engineering talent, management, and problem-solving capacities, a team that must be tsed to help find the an- swers to complex domestic problems as it has found the answers to complex weap- ons systems." Continuing, Mr. Clifford tells us that, "these answers can be put to good use by our cities and our states, by our schools, by large and sxpall busi- ness alike." Unfortunately, Mr. Clifford, the most complex set of domestiq problems in the nation today are not the questions (as Eldridge Cleaver would tell us) of "what to do about the niggxrs," for that is one they will answer; nor campus unrest, in- flation, 'generation gaps, credibility, and the like, but rather the continued mass murder in Vietnam, the militarization off the nation, the rising specter of intoler-' ance affecting both left and right. The Department of Defense bears the major' responsibility for the existence of t h i s. barbarity. Today, we are confronted by a massive. Leviathan, feeding yearly on a diet of $80 billion to produce its agents of mass de- struction and societal turmoil, while mil- lions struggle to exist at a subsistence level of income. There is no possibility for peaceful existence with the beast, for its influences are felt throughout the na- tion; the monster challenges our newly- emergent ethics with its right a r m of public morality. Prosperity and Defense are inextricably meshed;' "why take one without the other?" we are constantly asked by our staunch and righteous up- holders of the existing order. A RECURRENT theme throughout Clif- ford's short tenure as Secretary of De- fense was his eager encouragement for defense subsidized armament-aerospace industries to move substantial portions of their rapidly expanding physical plant to economically deprived areas of the na- proceed as t h e hard-core unemployed, with an elaborate training program to develop skills, made the transition from antagonism to contented bread-winning. The old proletariat, or so they say, will become the new bourgeoisie. This new "social gospel" preached by the fejrvent and zesty liberal predecessors of Mr. Nixon and incorporated into his, reorganization, this attempt to foster a deep and abiding social conscience within the nation's industrial elite, represents, of course, more of an effort to appease urban threats to Mr. Nixons reputation by outraged and indignant blacks, stu- dents and poor than any repentant hu- manistic guilt. Conservatives as well as radicals generate ideology through strug- gle, and as the long unarticulate and le- thargic conservative minority has cap- tured the levers of power, the new rhe- toric to sustain popular toleration of "do- nothings" in government emerges. Face-saving gestures and token re- forms enacted without scope serve merely to keep popular liberals within the Re- publican\ whole. The alleged earnestness and integrity of Republican social zeal represents no more than stark Orwellian functionalism. NP, MR. CLIFFORD. The expansion of this institution will not result in any social good. Its talent and skills have been tested over and again by ever-tolerant liberals, and its performance h a s been found lacking to say the least. We must trample this aberration of a democratic institution into the ground with men who will not be anxious to launch great right- eous crusades to free the world from illu- sionary threats. All ties between the Joint Chiefs of Staff, t h e military-aerospace interests, and political decision-making must be broken. We are past the stage where a critical examination of its resources and the pos- sible benefits that qan be made available to the ghetto is of any utility. We are past the stage where e v e n an admission of 4 Local Democrats and open. meetings By TOBE LEV THE DEMOCRATIC Party is now undergoing a severe crisis of conscience following the sham- bles of the Chicago convention. Prominent Democrats, sensitive to the torrent of unfavorable criti- cism following the Chicago de- bacle, are re-examining the power structure of the' party and the issue of party openness. A reform committee is barnstorming the country in an attempt to extend grass-root participation in the party and thereby loosen the grip of political hacks like Mayor Daley. This crisis of conscience is now visible in the local Democratic Party. The Democrats of Ann Ar- bor have long been proud of their "open" party meetings, quickly pointing out that policy-making in the Republican party is con- fined to closed sessions of their executive and platform commit- tees. At the party meeting last Wed-/ nesday night, six hundred people jammed the auditorium of Tappan ,Junior High to elect officers and discuss issues in the best tradition of an open, town meeting. But ap- pearances are deceiving. What seemed to be a hotly-dis- puted factional battle for party chairman brought the largest turn- out in recent party history. How- vere, in spite of the high attend- ance and the traditional fanfare, the party meeting was really only show-case democracy. Election procedure provided insufficient time for a meaningful discussion Most of the ignorant left after Scheider's victory was announced. Only 100 people remained to con- sider the resolutions for support of the Tenants Union and the grape boycott. 'Many people at the meeting, in- cluding a group from the Tenants Union, wished to find out the dif- ferences between the two candi- dates. Peter Denton presented a motion that the partyamendits standard procedure to allow a ten- minute question period following the speech of both candidates, which would be still insufficient but an improvement. Apparently this common democratic practice had never become routine proce- dure at party meetings. Denton's motion was greeted by a chorus of sighs and "Oh no's." Yet the audience, conscience- stricken at their own apathy, pass- ed it by a narrow margin. . Tom Murray, the defeated can- didate, entered the election with an unholy alliance of the Wash- tenaw County Building and Trades Association and the, New Demo- cratic Coalition. The association is a local construction workers union noted for . conservative stances on the Vietnamese War and civil rights legislation. The New Democratic Coalition is a newly-founded nation-wide group, of left-liberal Democrats. WALTER 'SCHEIDER, the re- elected chairman, had the support of most of the old party regulars, the UAW, and the Young Demo- crats. Scheider has been outspoken for almost every liberal issue to der replied it would needlessly embarrass Graham and the party. There the issue died without fur- ther discussion, leaving everyone with questions about the Graham episodes. THEN, DURING Murray's ques- tion period, David Goldstein, a member of the rent strike steering committee, accused' Murray of representing the Building and Trades Association in their at- tempt to prevent the County Board of Supervisors 'fromlicen- sing non-union blacks as appren- tice operators. Murray denied the charges and Goldstein later retracted his state- ment, asserting he had been de- liberately misinformed by a mem- ber of Scheider's team. Why? Who? When? But again the issue died and the truth never emerged. Apparently, the Graham in- cident explains Murray's support from the construction union. But why the New Democratic Coali- tion aligned itself with the con- servative union and supported Murray was another in a long series of unanswered questions. Actually, Murray's comments on party openness had some valid- ity, at least with respect to that election. The election framework precluded full discussion of all the points of contention between the candidates. Scheider stressed the party is completely open. The party holds weekly "issues luncheons," several executive committee meetings, and three ,or four open party meetings annually. Anyone can '4 Getting rid of Daleyism? I