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FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN SCHNEPP The 'Occupation' Game, The Sit-In at Chicago ADD TO YOUR VOCABULARY on rad- icalism, under the heading "demon- strations," the word "occupation." That was what the University of Chicago stu- dents were terming their protest staged Wednesday at the school's administration building against the policy of sending class ranking and grade points to Selec- tive Service officials. And, rather than being just a sit-in as several news services called it, the action was an occupation: students did sit-in at some points, but also slept, studied, sang, played cards, had poetry readings, ate well and spent much of the time mill- ing around in a disorganized manner. There were no consecutive rounds of ex- hausting polemics, but rather small dis- cussion groups-just living. THIS IS NOT TO SAY that the stu- dents lacked enthusiasm for their cause. As one delighted demonstrator said, "It's -real, it's real!" Some flamboy- ant crowd inciters did step up a few times to build morale. Paul Booth, execu- tive secretary of Students for a Demo- cratic Society, tried rallying the crowd with, "The revolution-wait!" And, the call for strict organization was heeded when the demonstrators needed to block passageways and entrances to prevent the entrance of non-students. They were excited, yet kept a certain distance, not letting the issue overwhelm them. While they were dead serious about, fighting for their "cause"-opposing the Selective Service's demands-they were also playing a prank, and having much fun doing it, to those who had played many on them. Students gleefully shinnied down ban- nisters, unable to pass through stairwells packed with their compatriots, and "cap- tured" elevators in a part of the building that had previously been sealed off. No somber, "dedicated" teach-in faces there. A Chicago law professor very aptly said of the demonstration, "The Southern Ne- groes did it, now middle class whites can play the game too." The students were playing, yes, but not in the sense that the professor was talk- ing about. He meant that the demonstra- tion would be useless in inducing Selec- tive Service officials to change draft laws. Maybe their efforts will have been wasted. But, even if they are, at least the demonstrators will have made an ap- pealing case, because they were playing at demonstrating in a different way. Their tactics had not made them lose sight of the fact, as has happened so often, that demonstrating alone is not the ethos, even for a little while, for liv- ing. -SHIRLEY ROSICK God Lives! THE LATEST ATTEMPT to answer the much asked question of Is God Dead? is both humorous and somewhat dis- maying. Originally a subject of theologi- cal and philosophical debate among the likes of Pierre Teilhard du Chardin, Rheinhold Niebuhr, or Betrarand Russell, the question of God's state-of-health has, with the aid of a cover story in Time and other publicity, becone a matter of major national concern. WITHIN THE LAST few weeks, a bump- er sticker, loudly proclaiming "God Is Alive!" in orange on blue had made its appearance. Now, the bumper sticker is a handy little invention of the '50's, useful for advocating the support of the UN, advocating the abolition of the UN, en- couraging votes for one's favorite sena- tor, or eliciting support for the local po- lice. However, the use of bumper stickers to proclaim the existence of God seems to be carrying the thing a bit too far. It is generally acknowledged that the United States has become an automobile society. We seem to be well on the way to becoming a bumper sticker society as well. Bereft of the overhead signs and newspapers Indispensable -to riders on buses and subways, the motorist is lim- ited to perusal of these ubiquitous pieces of sticky plastic. Nevertheless, the back end of Ameri- can cars is a rather unsuitable place for one of the most important questions deal- ing with the faith and existence of man in the twenty-first Year of the Atom. E "GOD IS ALIVE!" sticker does have one small saving grace. As the driver's inadequate brakes fail and his non-collapsible steering column comes up to spear him, he can have the consola- tion of the declaration on the bumper of the car he has just hit. -STEVE WILDSTROM TIHE FRICTION and difficulties which have resulted in the legislature and the state in general apparently are not going to change the University's dubious policy of refusing to recognize labor unions. But-unless the University takes a more flexible and intelligent stand on its own shortly-there is every reason to expect that some potent pressures may force such a change. The University is currently in a court fight against Michigan Public Act 379, which puts col- lective bargaining at universities (among other public employers) under the jurisdiction of the state labor mediation board. Under the law, a public employ- er would have to recognize and bargain exclusively with a union receiving a majority of votes from employes in an appropriate de- partment or unit. The board could find the employer or the union guilty of unfair bargaining prac- tices but could not force them to agree on specific contract terms. THE UNIVERSITY maintains that putting the University, a con- stitutionally-established autono- mous body, under jurisdiction of the labor mediation board, a sta- tutorily-created panel, is uncon- stitutional. It insists that the court fight is solely a defense of University autonomy, and nothing else. While it has already lost a re- quest for an injunction to pro- hibit establishment of bargaining units and conduction of elections, the University intends to continue its challenge of the constitutional- ity of the law itself up to the State Supreme Court. This is the legal issue, and legal minds are sufficiently muddled about it to make a court test of the law's constitutionality as it applies to the University worth making. BUT THERE ARE two other issues as well-although many University officials give little in- dication they are thinking on their own about either. one issue is the collective bar- gaining question. Public employe unionism is an increasingly im- portant area of collective bar- gaining, so much so that President Kennedy in 1962 set up in an executive order for federal em- ployes much the same regulations embodied in PA 379. At the University, over 575 em- ployes are presently union mem- bers, even though the University's policy of union nonrecognition means their unions can do them absolutely no good. Local union officials are eager to get recog- nition, and so are state union of- ficers. Michigan State University has already recognized a union under PA 379, which is not going to make union leaders more sym- pathetic towards the University's dubious policies. This sort of situation will not go away even if the legal issue does get settled, and it will not change even if the University tries to stall for time in the courts- which it obviously intends to do. "WE KNOW what we will have to do if we lose our fight against PA 379," says one professor, expert in industrial relations. "We'll simply have to follow it. But what if we win? The unions won't dis- appear. We'll still have to deal with them somehow." Whether or not this has oc- curred to University administra- tors, however, is doubtful. The administration asked not one of the University's collective bar- gaining experts in the law school, the business administration school, the institute of labor and indus- trial relations or the economics department for advice. It has also ignored by and large the pleas for reconsideration and flexibility these men-who have advised state and national gov- ernment on such issues-have made of their own accord. Doubtless, these experts con- cede in reply to administrators' comments, there will be problems. Contract negotiations, like nearly everything else that is important in the modern world, are not simple. But, as one key adminis- trator admits, such difficulties can all be boiled down to the observa- tion that collective bargaining isn't the best possible process from the standpoint of the em- ployer-something that is fairly obvious to even the most casual student of industrial relations but which has evidently escaped the administrators involved. THE LEGAL ISSUE and the collective bargaining issue, hence, are not similar, but-as even the administrators insist-completely separate. And yet, while it leans heavily on the legal issue, the Uni- versity has yet to face the col- lective bargaining question in a meaningful way, privately or pub- licly. - True, one of the University's Republican regents, who has con- siderable industrial experience- the sort of experience on which the University is not now relying -has commented privately that collective bargaining is necessary and inevitable. Regents Irene Murphy and Carl Brablec asked at February's Regents meeting that the University reconsider its position. But beyond that almost nothing has been done to face the collec- tive bargaining issue. The Uni- versity still has an ostrich ap- proach to the question, exemplified by President Hatcher's cold, tight- lipped silence-his version of a reply to Brablec's statement in February. President Hatcher's statement at April's Regents meeting was noth- ing more than a review of events in the legal fight, and avoided any mention of what will be done if the University loses-or, more im- portant, if it wins. BOTH THE LEGAL and collec- tive bargaining issues are complex and fairly subtle, which is perhaps why the administration-having avoided or ignored the advice of its experts-is having difficulty making much sense out of them. - Yet the last issue in the union controversy is a very simple one, and, when complexities of law and industrial relations are put aside for a moment, it alone argues strongly for University recognition of unions. This is the moral issue. ONE WOULD SUPPOSE that the men who run one of the most prominent educational institutions in the world would swiftly and cheerfully grant their employes the decency and self respect which collective bargaining affords. Yet it is ironic that University em- ployes unions remain unrecognized while the Regents put students on a panel to select the next Univer- sity president, and the adminis- tration pays heed to the voice of the faculty senate. Administrators say, and it is indeed true, that only a small proportion of University employes presently are union members. But this argument is at best ingenious and at worst vicious and hypo- critical-for the University's re- fusal to recognize unions means that unions can do absolutely nothing for their members. It is not surprising that so few employes are union members. It is surprising that over 575 em- ployes have "voted with their poc- ketbooks" and paid dues to unions which the University will not recognize. THE SITUATION is not hope- less, however, unless the University chooses to make it so. While the legal issue will be decided in the courts, the University could meet both the collective bargaining and moral issues by establishing a framework of union recognition and collective bargaining of its own and on its own, without re- gard to PA 379. As Regent Murphy has pointed out, this approach would fulfill and strengthen the University's tradition of autonomy and solve the important moral and collective bargaining questions which under- lie the issue of unions. BUT-as suggested above-the administration has given no in- dication it has the understanding or the creativity to try such an approach. Whether or not external pressures will force it to do so, moreover, is doubtful. The University is unaware that anti-unionism-which is what the University's stance on the moral and collective bargaining issues amounts to after it is stripped of all its verbal camouflage-is un- popular and unwise in a unionized industrial state with a heavily Democratic legislature. Administrators, who lunched secretly with AFL-CIO President August Scholle in March, add con- fidently that the University won't suffer. But the highest source, re- flecting on this, commented, "Hell, there's no point in threatening a budget cut-we'll just go out and do it." This reply indicates the ad- ministration's self -deception on state relations-President Hatcher was confused and upset in April when one of the Republican re- gents told him point blank that the University's relations with the state are at a dangerously low ebb -and such blindness shows no sign of ending. WHILE THE UNIVERSITY is thus unaware of such external dangers, internal pressures might in the end make the University change its mind-and, unless such a change seems to be forthcoming spontaneously, union officials here will and should be thinking about such ways to help foster such a change. One way suggests itself almost at once. Local union officials are bitterly critical of the University's e m p 1 o y e grievance procedure, which provides for no third- party arbitration but merely sets forth a chain of possible appeals culminatng at the top-the Re- gents. { An obvious form of union pres- sure would thus be for the unions simply to appeal every grievance case all the way up to the Regents. This would eventually immobilize the board, focus statewide atten- tion on the University's anti- union policy and put considerable political pressure on the Regents, two of whom (Brablec and Mrs. Murphy) must run for re-election in November. It is not a very appealing pros- pect, although it is probably in- evitable unless the University adopts a more intelligent and creative approach to collective bargaining. Such pressure would create a crisis here, it is true. That would be tragic. BUT THERE IS a quiet crisis presently-a crisis of realism, of sophistication, of knowledge, of morality-and that is fully as tragic. The spectacle of the Uni- versity administration, blindly and blithely ignoring common sense and common decency, gives the observer a sense of outrage and despair. If the University adopts a more realistic and humane attitude this quiet crisis will pass. Once in a great while, as the approval of the residential college indicates, the University will rise to the call of wisdom and greatness. But if it cannot or will not do so in this instance then power and force will enter the picture and will create a new and very different crisis. It is not an inviting prospect. 4 "Says He's An Expert On China And Wants To Testify Against It" .;~I-- R .% R.-uOA *,O ICOM ,= - - .. .--.t~m .. ". I + Editorial Staff CLARENCE FANTO..................... Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER ................,... Co-Editor BUD WILKINSON...............Sports Editor BETSY COHN ...... ............Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Meredith Eiker, Michael Hefter, Shirley Rosick, Susan Schnepp, Martha Wolfgang. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to the newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters here are also reserved. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail); $8 two semesters by carrier ($9 by mail). Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning. Direct Action and Respect for, Law ;, p / *2- I ;,111 " . f .ry , } /,-'-, I:; ^.y , .. 1 f .. r i; AGAINST SUCH direct action as the Civil Rights sit-ins, the student sit-in of Sproul Hall in Berkeley, and draft-card burnings, it is always said that they foment disrespect for law and order and lead to a general breakdown of civil society. Even -when it is granted that due process and ordinary admin- istration are not working, because of prejudice, unconcern, double- talk, or tyrannical arrogance, nev- ertheless, it is alleged, the recourse to civil disobedience entails even worse evils. THIS IS AN apparently power- ful argument. People who engage in civil disobedience tend to con- cede it but to claim that, in the crisis, they cannot do otherwise; they are swept by indignation or outrage, the situation is intoler- able, they act for a "higher" jus- tice or humanity. Yet is it true that particular direct action of this kind, which is always aimed at very specific abuses, in fact leads to general lawlessness? Where is the evi- dence-e.g., statistics of correla- tive disorder in the community, or an increase of unspecific lawless acts among the direct-actionists themselves-to prove the connec- tions? Such flimsy evidence as I have seen weighs in the opposite direc- tion: e.g., crime and delinquency have seemed to dimish where there has been political direct action by Negroes; and the academic and community spirit of Berkeley this year is better than ordinary. ON THEORETICAL grounds, indeed, the probability is that a specific direct action, especially if it is successful or partially suc- cessful, will tend to increase civil order, since it revives the belief that the community is ours; whereas the inhiibtion of direct action against an intolerable sit- uation inevitably increases anomie and therefore general lawlessness. Pail Goodman (Add to this the increasing ar- rogance and lawlessness of the re- pressing forces, as in the South, or among the northern police, when they feel they are "mis- understood" or are being legal against their own moral con- sciences.) The enforcement of "law and order" at all costs aggravates the tensions that lead to explosions like those at Watts. I have not yet read the book but I think that this is the thesis of Arthur Waskow's "From Race Riot to Sit-In": "creative disorder" increases civil order and diminishes anomie. THE CONVENTIONAL argu- ment, that general lawlessness is increased by specific disobedience for political purposes, depends on the sociological proposition that law and order are by and large maintained by deterrence and penalties. But in normal civil- so- cieties this is not the case. People who don't pick pockets refrain, by and large, not because of fear of arrest and jail but be- cause of their upbringing, social- ization and sense of themselves; and in these, fear and anxiety us- ually have an anti-social rather than a social effect. Many criminologists and peno- logists would agree, rather, with the anarchist proposition that there would be less crime, espe- cially serious felonies, if there were no jails. Since jails are schools of crime, most serious crimes are committed by repeat- ers, and fear triggers panic be- havior. . AND, IN MY opinion, contrary to the conventional argument, anarachic incidents like civil dis- obedience are essential parts of the democratic process. They are indispensible in the endless vigil- ence required for liberty, to keep the system of power approximate to the evolving moral and political sense of the, community. Diret action is part of the process by which law is made. That was, of course, JeffersoWi's contention, for instance when he argued to free the rebels disarmed after Shay's Rebellion. If they were punished, said Jefferson, others would be discouraged from rebellion against what they judged to be tyranny, and this would be fatal to democracy. GIVEN THE berserk arrogance of contemporary nation-states in their military-industrial combina- tions, their stock-piling of arma- ments, and the wars they wage, I do not see any future for democ- racy except in widespread civil disobedience. The chief hope is in the young. Copyright, Paul Goodman, 1966 The Ups and Downs of the Economy By PAT O'DONOHUE T HERE IS A black cloud over theReconomic horizon; Wall Street has become frostbitten in what has historically been one of its sunniest months. A profitable Stock Exchange is a panacea to economic fears while a sliding market sends even the most so- phisticated economist in a panic- stricken run to his broker. These worried wanderings only succeed in painting the picture blacker than it may in reality prove to be. There is, however, good reason for the lows reached in the last week. This speculation, while the im- mediate cause, was hardly the only one. The more basic causes of the market's skittishness were -the inflationary trend of the past few months has built pres- sure within the economy; the un- certainty among top governmen- tal officials as to how to curb this trend; the threat of a tax increase; and the open endedness of the Viet Nam war, The panic over the lows recently hit is understandable when one considers the past highs. The "Great Society" is one of unpre- cedented prosperity. The greater the height the further there is to corporation profits. With the threat of inflation ever present in such a situation stocks seemed like the best investment one could make with the unstable dollar. In the wake of the speculative fever came restraining measures aimed at the investors of modest income rather than the profes- sional traders and sophisticated investors able to accept risks. The anti-speculative moves called for investors to do more of their busi- ness in cash because of the fed- eral government's requirement of a 70 per cent down-payment on purchases of shares bought on credit. The hope was that self- and large expenditures-was with- in our midst; the stage was set. THE PLIGHT OF the stock market is one of a viscious circle. The original stock boom has con- tributed to inflationary pressure, and the recent collapse is due to these same pressures of stock- building and rising prices. Further escalation is expected to come from the war in Viet Nam. Few people, particularly economists, rely on the Adminis- trative budgetary figures outlined in reports to Congress. The gov- ernment, while verbally deploring the situation, seems to be direct- ing the economy in only one di- year for the Exchange. May of 6'6 has hit the low of the year. THE PREDICAMENT of the U.S. economy is a dangerous one. So many solutions are needed and so few have been offered. The ob- vious answers, aimed at slowing down -the economy - a tax in- crease, a tighter monetary policy, and reduced spending have "gone in one official ear and out the other. The result of such remiss atten- tion to a grave situation may well be that the government will find itself paying for such pet projects as the "Great Society" and the war in Viet Nam with worthless dollars. 1