Elr 3fricligan Dat Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan the jaundiced eye Shoveling news copy for the Establshment IIt by ri l aiidsm a 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. SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR JOEL BLOCK DlOWN, Down, down' AMID THE ECONOMIC chaos which is seriously injurying the state's system of higher education, the University is slowly losing its place among the nation's leading schools. Despite an apparently significant in- crease in 'average compensation for fac- ulty members, the University this year. slipped still another notch in the nation- wide salary ratings provided by the American Association of University Pro- fessors. Two factors explain how this decline could take place despite the seemitig in- creases. Inflation makes a significant dent in the purchasing power of the Uni- versity's increased expenditures, and, at the same time, the general level of faculty Humianizing the Navy . FOR A NAVY that self-rightously as- sumes that a captain must destroy and go down with his ship, Secretary of the Navy John H. Chafee's decision to over- rule any action against the Pueblo's cap- tain and crew is a relief but not unquali- fibly laudable. While everyone, except possibly for some die-hard Navy men, is pleased that Chatee voided the Navy's court of inqui- ry recommendation for disciplinary ac- tion against Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher and his crew,' one must examine the context in which Chafee acted. Chafee did not absolve Bucher. H i s statement was: "I make no judgment re- garding the guilt or innocence of any of the officers of the offenses alleged against them assuming that further pro- ceedings were had, and even going so far as to assume that a judgment of 'guilt were to be reached -,they have suffered enough, and further punishment would not be.justified." WHAT CHAFEE IS DOING is sweeping the case under the rug, refusing to make any moral decision. Thus the ques- tion of the validity of the Navy's code is unanswered. And Bucher and his crew. are not cleared. A navy that wants to deal in espionage, and without allowing anyone to find out should not hold a captain responsible for failure to do his duty if that navy know- ingly sends him out with an inadequately. equiped ship. A navy that signs a confession under pressure, as it did to get the North Ko- reans to release the Pueblo and its crew, in the name of humanity should not ex- pect a captain to act any less humanly. ALTHOUGH CHAFEE'S, action is a sign that our military is not completely inhuman, it would have been more sig- nificant had he completely cleared the men of the Pueblo. -JUDY SARASOHN salaries around the country is, rising rapidly. THE DROP IN the ratings - like the nose dive from 17 to 23 last year - comdes as little surprise to those who have watched the State Legislature short- change the University around appropria- tions time each year. And this year is unlikely to be much different. The Legislature is presently entertaining an appropriations proposal submitted by Gov. William Milliken which includes a provision for a seven per cent increase in faculty salaries at the Uni- versity. But the Legislature, more likely than not, will make signficant cuts in the gov- ernor's proposal, leaving the University with a minimal salary increase. And even Milliken's seven per cent figure is to some extent illusory. For some of this money will have to go for non-salary expendi- tures like an increase in the amount of money the University pays the city for police and fire protection. MEANWHILE, THE long-range picture for University financing continues to look bleak. With the continuing shortage of funds for all state expenditures, the University can eventually expect a fate like that which overtool Michigan State University this year. MSU dropped from 51 to 75 in the AAUP rating., If, as appears almost certain, the Uni- versity's decline in faculty compensation continues, the result will be a concom- mitant decline in the ability of the Uni- versity to compete with other schools for quality faculty members. And as the fac- ulty goes, so goes the entire school. Faced with this continuing decline, the University administration stands virtual- ly without the power to stop it. The power to arrest the decline of the University lies rather with the people of the state and with the federal government. Legislators argue, with considerable justification, that for many citizens of the state taxes are already too high and that an increase without a change in the tax structure would be intolerable. No significant increase in higher education appropriations - or, for that matter, in appropriations for the public schools and for welfare - can come until the state moves to a more equitable tax system, a graduated income tax. AT PRESENT, SUCH a move is barred by the state constitution, and the voters of the state have defeated attempts to amend the constitution. Hopefully, they will change their minds before the amendment next appears on the ballot. Meanwhile, the federal government could also aid the University by institut- ing a system of inrestricted institutional support and pouring large amounts of money into higher education. But, at present, the huge expense of the Vietnam War precludes this possibility. Hopefully, the Nixon administration will soon end the war. -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN DETROIT NOTHING MAKES ME hate newspa- pers and the journalistic trade more than returning home in the summer to suburban Oak Park, Mich., and reading the local journalistic fare. Most of what I find is in the greatest of the American know-nothing tradition, breeding on ignorance with an absolutely pathological resistance to any insight or thoughtful consideration of political ac- tions they dislike. The first item I c a m e across was a piece in the April edition of the Reader's Digest, a piece that would be funny if it were not so serious, entitled - a la True Confessions - "Our Son Is a Campus Radical." The author, coming forth to tell the truth about these dangerous mat- ters was, yes, Anonymous.. The story is the confession of two guilt-ridden parents. Their boy came out wrong. They didn't raise-him-right and they got what-they-deserved - a long- haired, wild-eyed, r u d e and unwashed Radical for a son. Oh, they cry between every line, The Shame. ANONYMOUS recounts the horrors when she visits her son at graduation, and the shock she has. (She apparently wasn't paying much attention for t h e previous four years.) He was among some protesters tormenting the commencement speaker. But there is something coming. Peter, the young Radical Son, really has a heart of gold (every campus rad should be so noble) -- his summer job after school was working with disadvantaged ghetto kids, helping them improve their reading. One of the virtues of the job Anony- mous noted, was that Peter was learning "t h a t the chronic ailments of society could not be healed by the magic wave of a protest sign," which they had been try- ing to tell him all along. Confrontation comes - Peter asks his mother to come with him to work one day. She is, needless to say, shocked a n d overwhelmed. She cannot believe the suf- fering and poverty she sees, and she ad- mits to him what he had earlier charged, "We (America) have run out of time." It is too late, she admits, for apathy. BUT MIXED IN within the admission of tguilt is the over-riding impression of the vileness, of the basic wrongness, of the Radical Son. She hopes Peter "learn- ed something from our battles last year," Anonymous wrote, and s h e concludes, "For everyone who cares, the t i m e is now to show the Peters of America that the greatest experiment of humankind (presumably the United States) can be, made to work." It's a nifty little piece. It takes all the wrong information and says all the right things. Good, clean America is making mistakes - and, let's face it, those dirty, obscene, Commie, pinko-radical hippies are the ones that showed us. Now we'll make it all right.' W h a t the piece says is stomachable (i.e., it does n o t induce one to vomit, though just barely), but its presentation is the key. A similar attitude runs through much of what one of the local papers, the Detroit News, does. THEY FEATURE, among other things, a two-column "ombudsmen"-type piece every day (copied from their rival, the Detroit Free Press) that answers readers' questions and lets them vent their wrath. One such "Soundoff" piece was much like the Reader's Digest atrocity. T h e writer told of her pleasant encounter with hippies - three bearded, bell-bottomed, long-haired guys - who helped change a flat tire for her, while all her social peers - had gone whizzing by, leaving her strand- ed. She was amazed at their kindness and helpfulness (God, they were almost Boy Scouts). The coverage of the blow-up at Cor- nell, which was largely the fault of the wire services, was in the same implicitly anti-student vein. Even the news sec- tion of the New York Times seems to have been guilty of nearly tragic distor- tions. All printed the same picture - vicious, armed, uncompromising black radicals forcing a pliant administrator into unconscionable compromises of their integrity. But to read Tom Wicker's "In the Na- tion" column of Sunday, April 27, is quite a different story. According to Wicker, it was the blacks who conceded by desert- ing their only tactically-advantageous po- sition on the word of one administrator, the man Wicker interviewed for the col- umn. Whether Wicker was right on Cornell or not is impossible to say from here. But there can be no doubt that the news- paper and wire service editors were re- miss in not entertaining then perspective Wicker brought out. It is bad, y e 11 o w journalism. BUT THERE is a more -distressing as- pect to the failings of the news media. They don't print the news, t h e y print what people want to hear. And if t h e newspaper-buying public doesn't agree, then its going to be tough kazatz for the newspaper. From what I've gathered from various places in the city, from the letters col- umns of the papers and from friends of friends, the view represented by the De- troit News and the Reader's Digest are what the people want to hear. They cannot understand students who want to have a voice in the institutions in which they are educated - students go to study and to listen to their professors, and that's all. Anything else is radical and uncalled for, and the kids should be booted out. It is that simple to the great- er readership of the papers in this town. The question of whether the newspa- pers lead or the readers do is difficult to ascertain right now. The example of Chi- cago and the Democratic convention seems to imply that the media just fol- low the public's lead, and when they don't they aren't believed. But that applies, it seems, only to the short-range roles. In the long-run, the media are in the driver's seat. Through subtle changes and a gradual redirection of their news cov- erage and editorializing (on front page and otherwise), the news media could go a long way in healing relations between classes and races in American society. That it won't is both unquestionable and regrettable, but a fact of life. Some healthy proselytizing on the part of student and black groups may -be what is needed. & 1~ 8 JAMES WECHSLER . m m The b affling masochism of Abe Fortas SUPREME COURT Justice Abe Fortas knew nearly five months ago that Life Magazine had learn- ed about the $20,000 fee he had received in early 1966 (and re- turned nearly a year later) from the dubious "Wolfson Founda- tion." He must have known because it was on Dec. 10 of last year, Bill Lambert, Life's enterprising in- vestigator said yesterday, that Lambert interviewed Paul Porter, Fortas' long-time partner, and ob- tained corroboration of the essen- tial facts about the initial pay- ment and belated reimbursement, along with Porter's rationalization of the episode. Indeed, in one of those freak journalistic accidents, the ebullient Porter may have revealed more than Lambert knew at that mo- ment. THE CRUEL, baffling human mystery is why, during the long interval in which Fortas realized he faced this exposure, he did not choose to resign gracefully from the Court. Such an exit, coin- ciding with the end of the Johnson regime, would have seemed wholly plausible, dignified, and well- timed; it would also have spared Earl Warren the agony of this final chapter. On the other hand, the fact that Fortas accepted such a fee from a manipulator whose extensive troubles with the government were so well-known suggests that the moral climate of the Johnson era dulled the senses of many wise men. Dept. so soon after the Wolfson indictments were handed down? Had he resisted pressure to block them? The questions may, be unfair. But it is precisely because such questions now arise that the "ap- pearance of impropriety" is the crucial test of judicial conduct. Fortas may feel aggrieved that so few of his friends have rallied to his banner in the current ordeal. But he should have contem plated last December-or in the long ensuing period- Ae pain to which he was exposing those who stood by him valiantly during his earlier battles. When he spurned the option of resignation, he placed not only himself in jeo- pardy. Perhaps there is still an untold story; if so, it is Fortas' obligation to seek a Senate forum promptly and tell it. No one can allege that Bill Lambert didn't give him full chance to do so. (C) 1969 New York Post "it is my duty to inform you of your, constitutional rights . .. 1 a s t 1" ^"^"._ . 4 ...^ ' I } y tht Rcpasrr "M Tr e nv yndRaw ' 91MfS. 1 $. ,a a Letters: Defending the sociologyv de pt. BUT IN LATE 1968 Fortas had no reason to believe that Lambert had been talked out of the pursuit even by so skilled an advocate as Porter during the December meet- ing (initiated when Porter heard that Lambert was working on the story). For he and Lambert had met and jousted before. The time was the campaign of 1964, when the same magazine and the same reporter were preparing a critical report on the Johnson financial empire. When rumors of that inquiry reached the White House, Lambert received an invitation to a seance with, LBJ. Upon arrival, however,J he was asked by press secretary George Reedy to proceed to Fortas' law office. He did so, and there ensued a long, somewhat ran- corous confrontation between him- self and the President's unofficial but ubiquitous advisor. Finally Lambert won his point; he got his interview with LBJ. Perhaps a recollection of that meeting explains why, when Lam- bert had finished his researches last month and asked Porter to arrange a pre-publication audi- ence for him with Fortas, the an- swer was negative. Porter told him he had discussed the matter with Mrs. Fortas and they agreed that "they didn't want to bother" the Justice. LAMBERT thereupon wrote For- tas a registered letter-dated April 21-telling him that his inquiry indicated "there might be some impropriety" disclosed by his find- ings. He also told him that his editors had ordered him to begin writing the following weekend. A letter from Fortas, dated two days later, (marked "personal" and containing no secretary's ini- tials) rejected the overture and, to Labert's astonishment, contained no reference to the $20,000 fee. At thatspoint Life decided to publish the story. When he was named to the court, he was presumably accept- ing a large financial sacrifice. But the going rate of $60,000 a year is hardly a sweatshop wage and, for men who care about the traditions of the law, elevation to this tri- bunal is the ultimate triumph in life. THE HEARTBREAKING enig- ma is why anyone who had achieved this eminence would risk everything by the tawdry Wolf- son involvement. His defenders wil lsav that norta must have martin lnirsekman Regental reactio 'HERE HAS GOT TO BE some relationship between discipline and disruption. If there's no discipline .. This is the voice of reaction, the voice, in fact, of Regent Robert Brown speaking privately with Regent Lawrence Lindemer at, last week's special meeting. Brown was apparently upset by the wave of student disruptions which has hit innumerable college campuses over te past months. Or, alternatively, he was trying to-create the feeling that the existenoe of these disorders necessitated firm regental action in the area of student discipline. Fortunately, Lindemer did not appear to be impressed by Brown's empty rhetoric. While the question of discipline still remains unsettled, it is one which the majority of the Regents no longer consider over- whelmingly significant -- at least as long as Ahe campus remains calm. Liberalism, even of this nebulous nature, is of course, rather new to the Regents. It is the happy result of the Democratic sweep of the state last November and the appointment by Gov. William Milliken ,of Lindemer, instead of a more conservative Republican to fill the seat va- cated by the death of Regent Alvin Bentley. But Brown is not alone in his political views and his attitudes to- ward University students. He still has company in Regents Paul Goebel and William Cudlip. Goebel is perhaps the most conservative of the Regents. He was the single dissenting voice, for example, in the vote last January to give the senior editors of The Daily the power to choose their own successors. In addition, he was the only one to oppose the abolition of freshman women's curfews. The moderate-liberal majority is a shaky one, of course. It is sub- ject to a possible sudden reversal should one Regent drop off the board and be replaced by a conservative. But, in addition, even the liberal majority is populated by a few Regents who seem too ready to com- promise their principles to suit the political mood of the time. The sensitivity of the Regents to the mood in the State Legislature is apparent in the board's discussion of almost any issue. The possible legislative response was of paramount concern, for example, in the de- bate a year and a half ago over abolishing curfews for freshmen women, and in the attempt of several Regents to attack the moderate stance taken by President Fleming in the obscenity controversy over Dionysus in '69 last January. In the Dionysus controversy, at first only two Regents, Gertrude Huebner and Robert Nederlander, supported Fleming. The anxiety over legislative disapproval felt by Regents like Democrat Gerald Dunn is exemplified by his argument that The Daily should never print an "ob- scenity" - no matter how relevant to the news - because it might up- set the Legislature. Gerald Dunn is indeed a liberal, but he is also a former state sena- tor, and his familiarity with the mentality of the Legislature is per- haps too intimate for the good of the University. In fact, there was little legislative response to the production of "Dionysus" and none over the abolition of freshmen women's hours. The idea that the Legislature cuts state appropriations to schools that are too liberal is, on the whole, an empty myth. Some legislators talk much about things happening on college campuses, but these rantings are not so much a reason for appropriations cuts as they are an expe- dient excuse for the inadequate funding the University would have re- ceived in any event. The politics of those like Dunn is hurting the University more than it is helping. For example, with the high level of tuition, the Regents should go to a system, as Michigan State University has done, under which students pay fees based on their parents' income. Thus more low- er income students could afford to attend the University - long noted .- - _-- f--- - kz .u 1ihawai..hA wkh-wamnheralm of the To the Editor: MARC VAN DER HOUT'S in- temperate and defamatory letter about my colleagues, David Segal and Marcello Truzzi in The Daily, April 2, was as demeaning to your editorial page as was your choice of a headline' "Sociology Students Plan Attack." I would like to comment on a number of the issues: 1. Professors Segal and Truzzi were carefully selected by our elected executive committee (not by the chairman alone) to repre- sent us in discussions with student representatives in developing pro- posals for change which the fac- ulty and the students organization can consider with the deliberation and care they deserve. These colleagues -have our re- spect and backing. They were chosen as men who have a vital interest in teaching and in stu- dents, and because we believe that' they canconmunicate effectively with studens if given an oppor- tunity to do so without harass- ment. MRTV AW mmIT UT nT y',,m, _ which Mr. Van der Hout espouses. The fact is that the department has made many innovations when appropriate as a' response to changing situations and needs. For example, a completely re- vised doctoral program is now in operation following intensive in- ter-action with the graduate stu- dents over a period of time. 4. THE TERM "bureaucracy" is used in a pejorativeusense by Mr. Van der Hout as if it were an in- cantation against evil. Any ra- tional organization for a complex goal by a large number of people ' can be called bureaucratic; that doesn't make it undesirable. Of course, there must be an orderly division of labor in a de- partment as large as ours, subject to general staff review of the major decisions made by special faculty committees. Our executive committee is elected by a secret ballot by the whole staff. It always must include/ at least one staff member of non- tenure rank; often, as this year, it includes two. The executive committee, in University school To the Editor: THE DECISION regarding the clos- ing of the University School is a complex one, involving the financial squeeze, space, importance of re- search, and so on, for the list of fac- tors affecting this decision can be continued indefinitely. Because the ultimate decision de- pends upon the priorities given to these issues, and this is a matter of ,opinion, it'is impossible to argue with the intent of your April 16th editorial in which you favor the closing of this facility. It is however possible to ar- gue with the substance. 'A significant portion of your edi- torial is devoted to the thesis that the University School h a s lost its place as a research facility because its size is too small. You have an ex- tremely narrow view of research. You seem to believe that all research is statistical in nature, requiring x number of students randomly select- school could have rightfully argued that its students should have greater assurance that they were going to learn something. This was exploratory research - the major goal was to see if a larger study might be feasible. (Why begin a large study if the idea is shown to have no merit with a small group?) Because of the results, we decided to go through with a larger project this year, a project which involves 1000 students and 15 schools. (The closing of grades 10-12 of the school has precluded continuing t h i s re- search there, and in fact, in order to continue my explorations, it has been necessary to travel 80 miles to Adrian each day to teach one class in geo- metry. It is not easy to find public schools that will agree to such re- search.) There is little question t h a t the University School could be more ex- tensively used in this t y p e of re- search. We can always do better. But great use is being made. I have chos- _ __. . .. ii