Seventy-Fif th Year EDrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Oinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MicH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Truth Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: KENNETH WINTER Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. Regents Struggle with Restricted Scholarships by U. Neil Berkson Auto Workers'Settlement Further Strengthens Union FRIDAY'S CONTRACT settlement be- twfeen the Ford Motor Company and the United Auto Workers was but an- other in a series of incidents in which auto manufacturers have unwittingly strengthened the union's position by help- ing to maintain an atmosphere of con- flict between the two sides. The settlement had all the earmarks of a traditional auto contract agreement: an aura of hostility whipped up by both sides, discouraging reports from negotia- tors on bargaining progress, a string of overwhelmingly favorable strike votes from UAW locals and. finally a dramatic settlement only 55 minutes before the strike deadline. THE ROLE OF THE UNION in these theatrics is relatively easy to under- stand. Since the late 1930's, steady prog- ress has been made through union ef- forts in improving hours, salaries and working conditions in the auto plants. Thus the worker is not gripped by a sense of anger at the practices of man- agement and has a tendency to view union negotiation efforts as merely an- other regular occurrence rather than as a struggle in which he personally is in- volved. Most workers are still pro-union, but not intensely so. The vitriolic statements of UAW Presi- dent Walter Reuther and other union leaders during the summer negotiations were made as much for the benefit of the union workers behind them as for the management negotiators ac oss the table. Sending men out on strike over complicated fringe benefit plans is not likely to generate a spirit of purpose among the strikers; the inflammatory statements were designed to make the is- sues seem vital and pressing to the men who might be going without pay for them. MANAGEMENT'S ROLE is more diffi- cult to comprehend. Its comments were equally vitriolic and made it sound as if management also had a "team" to arouse. Management negotiators seemed eager to play along with the union's game of trying to create an overpowering sense of struggle. The bargaining table is not the only area where management has been play- ing into the union's hands, however. In many plants a vast fund of resentment is being generated by ridiculous manage- ment procedures which artificially separ- ate union and non-union employes into two distinct classes. For instance, all union workers are re- quired to use specific time clocks to stamp their time cards. Non-union employes, many of whom have similar jobs in the same work areas, use an honor system to fill out their cards and can arrive and leave within a few minutes of their as- signed times without any questions being asked. UNION WORKERS HAVE assigned breaks, designated by a signal sound- ing throughout the plant. Non-union men walk out to the coffee machine or smoke a cigarette whenever they wish, although these informal breaks average out to nearly the same length as the union men's formalized ones. Non-union workers have doors on their toilets. Union workers don't. Thus management, by its policies in many insignificant areas, is making it easier for a union worker to identify himself as a union man rather than just another company employe. THIS IDENTITY IS precisely what the union is trying to foster by its at- tempts to create an aura of animosity between the two sides. If management would take a more rational and less hos- tile approach to the entire union manage- ment struggle, it would not only be mak- ing things better for the workers but it might find itself farther ahead in its dealings with the union. -JOHN BRYANT L AST FRIDAY'S REGENTS' MEETING produced a momentary stir when the body tabled a motion to accept a scholarship restricted to Negro students. The Regents had not registered any public disagreement, either among themselves or with the University admin- istration, since last November. At that time they voted 5-3 to approve Student Government Council procedures aimed at eliminating discrimination in student organiza- tions. The Regents have only recently adopted a policy against accepting discriminatory scholarships. This policy is primarily aimed at the type of bias evidenced in the very first scholarship in the University's award book: "Eligibility: Caucasian, Protestant women of American parentage'who need financial assistance." Nevertheless, if the Regents want to stop discrimination, they must stop it altogether. IN THE SHORT RANGE, discrimination in reverse might be justifiable. Certain classes and groups in so- cieties do have special needs, and the scholarship de- bated by the Regents would meet those needs. However, if the scholarship money goes into a general pool-and if that pool is as large as the funds now available to the University are-minority groups will not have to worry much about receiving necessary aid. The Office of Financial Aids declares unequivocally TODAY AND TOMORROW: that it can find money for any student who really needs it. More important, discrimination in reverse is, in the final analysis, as wrong as its evil counterpart. We must learn to stop categorizing people in terms of race, religion, nationality. Any attempt, however well-meant, which establishes criteria along these lines only per- petuates the barriers. * * IN THE MIDDLE of a political year, it is understand- able that Gov. George Romney has let a month go by without filling the vacancy on the Board of Regents caused by the death of William K. McInally. The gov- ernor would probably wait until after November 3rd if he could possibly justify it. Whether he names a liberal or conservative Republican to the board, he is certain to alienate some faction of his party. The rumor mill is currently grinding out two names: liberal Lawrence Lindemer, a former state Republican chairman who fell into disfavor with the party because of his heavy participation in the Rockefeller campaign, and Goldwater conservative Ink White, a 'newspaper publisher who ran unsuccessfully for the board in 1962. Another candidate, former University Vice-President Robert Briggs, was eliminated when last Saturday's Republican state convention nominated him for the state board of education. I DON'T KNOW enough about either White or Lindemer to determine which would make the better Regent, but Gov. Romney does. The appointment should have come before the Regents' September meeting so that the new man could acquaint himself as quickly; as possible with the complex problems facing the University. It should certainly come well before the October meeting. Politics and education don't mix. * * * * THE REPUBLICAN-ORIENTED city council has tried to avoid any study of the potential parking and traffic chaos which multiple housing will bring to Ann Arbor. Republican Mayor Creal again kept this subject off the council table Monday night, but the Democrats did succeed in committing the planning commission to a study of the problem. The city has a year, perhaps two years, before "high- rise" buildings such as the 18-story monstrosity currently going up on South University, place the automobile problem beyond solution. The planning commission ought to take exception to its usual method of operation and move fast. Or at least move. Goldwater in South: Sets New Strategy + f J tti 't t . ^ Larcom's Housing Report Indicates Inspection Failure By WALTER LIPPMANN AST WEEK Sen. Barry Gold- water went campaigning in the South. His purpose, it appears, was'not so much to win this elec- tion, but to inaugurate the so- called southern strategy in order to lay the foundations for a radi- cally new Republican Party. This was made plain by the exu- berant welcome he extended to Sen. Strom Thurmond who has now joined the Republican Party. This new Republican Party, which was born in San Francisco, is to be built upon a Goldwater-Thur- mond alliance; it is to be a white man's party and not conservative at all, but radically reactionary. THE FORMATION of the Gold- water-Thurmond alliance explains what is otherwise madly inexpli- cable about Senator Goldwater's campaign speeches during the past week. There was, to begin with, his almost total silence about the civil rights act, though opposition to it is by all odds the main rea- son for his strength in the South. There was no need for him to mention civil rights or to take notice of the existence of a large Negro population when he could consort publicly with Senator Thurmond. Senator Thurmond is the most extreme segregationist and the most extreme reactionary in the United States Senate. SINCE THERE was nothing fur- ther to be said on the race issue, Goldwater devoted himself to the one thing still needed to clinch the kind of southern vote repre- sented by Thurmond. This was to be so boldly and extravagantly re- actionary on other issues that there could be no doubt that he was wholly free of the taint of any of that progressivism which is the tradition of the West. This was, I believe, why he chose Florida, where there are so many elderly people, to attack Medi- care, why he chose in Tennessee to renew his proposal to sell the TVA and why he went to West Vir- ginia to attack the poor. Some have wondered whether these are symptoms of a "suicide complex." I think they are the result of a decision to make over the Republican Party in the image of Barry Goldwater and Strom Thurmond. Here again, as in his demands for a weaker government, but stronger policies, we see that the senator is enclosed, as in an en- velope, in his private dream world. One of his persistent fantasies is that, since the poor are a minor- ity, a great political result can be had by arousing the rich against the poor. FOR THE PROOF of this we must look to his speech in Char- lestown, W. Va., on Friday Sept. 18-omitting the wild ad lib re- marks which were reported in the newspapers and using only the official text given out by the Re- publican National Committee. This speech was an attack on the ad- ministration's "war on poverty." The senator said that the Ken- nedy-Johnson objective is that "no one is to be permitted to fall be- low the average." This is obviously sheer gibberish, since there can- not be an "average" if no one is below it. What Senator Goldwater was trying to talk about is the fact that the administration regards as "poor" a non-farm family of four which has an annual income of less than $3000. This figure is not an "average." It is an amount of money which permits a f'aily of four to spend about 70 cents a day per person for food, to spend $800 a year for housing, which covers rent or mortgage payments, utilities and heat. After food and housing, there is left in this budget $1200-or $25 a week for the whole family to pay for clothing, transporta- tion, school supplies and books, home furnishings and supplies, medical care,rpersonal care, re- creation, insurance and every- thing else. SENATOR GOLDWATER sneer- ed at this budget as luxurious. And he went on to declare, em- phasizing his words by under- lining them in the text, that "a society in which no one is per- mitted to fall below the average (sic) is one in which no one can be permitted to rise above it." This sentence must be described as total nonsense. In his confu- sion he seems to think that the $3000 budget is the "average" and that President Lyndon Johnson is plotting to prevent anyone from earning more than $3000! Or what, in the name of sanity, does he mean? The more closely one examines the actual texts of the Goldwater speeches, the more apparent is the divorce between what he thinks and says and what actually exists in the real world. His feet are not on the ground. His head is in some kind of private cloud. It is truly alarming to think that the fate of this country and of the world could be in his hands. (c) 1964, The Washington Post Co. 0 t I r"1Y**" CITY ATTORNEY Guy C. Larcom's housing report to the Ann Arbor City Council Monday night said more than it intended to. Itsintent was to report to the council the poor condition of housing inspection in the city and to propose means of cor- recting the problem. But in addition to this, the report was a statement of an ad- ministration's failure to uphold its com- mitment to its constituents. Ann Arbor has had a separate housing inspection office since 1955. Provisions for housing inspection existed long be- fort that. Yet the very essence of Lar- com's statement was a report that these ordinances were not being enforced. It is very tempting to ask what sort of a municipality passes laws only to ignore them because it either costs too much to enforce them or because it 'is convenient to ignore the matter for the time being. THIS IS NOT a theoretical question, to be dealt with abstractly and at leis- ure. It is literally as close and as vital to Ann Arbor's citizens and student resi- Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. dents as the buildings they live in. In 1955 it took a student's death by fire to wake the community up to the necessity for a separate housing department with- in the city. It almost seems that the councils and officials who have come and gone since 1955 have been waiting for a similar tragedy before putting that housing department to work. It is very probably impossible to as- sign this blame to any particular person or group of persons. And it is unfortunate that this is so, because such an assign- ment might tend to allow the rest of Ann Arbor's residents to assume they have no responsibilities in the matter. This is far from the case. Anyone who has had even the remot- est connection with the housing inspec- tion program since it was begun, must share the responsibility for the absurd state of affairs that inspection is now in. When the city administrator can stand before the council and say that less than half of Ann Arbor's recently constructed housing has been approved for occupancy, it is time that something be done. -LEONARD PRATT 6 14G 1 f 1J , C M1 c l9t-w. 'S 4r . "s". i yt.irAM MOVE OR I'LL LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Reasons for, Rockwell Speech FEIFFER IF FVMR I THINK'MX~ FINALLY MATLR6 izz it f ACID UT,E I'LL C-0 PiC1MYS ANDMY - IAOTt4FR LOST' HAPPY AND MY FA111R WILL. TELLMe I SHOVLa2MT 13E SUCH A SMART 600 AND~ [WRY PONT 1 GIVE C vc M-ONEY. UOM To the Editor: DUE TO recent confusion, the Michigan Union would like to explain the rationale for its speaking invitation to George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi Party. The war is not a memory to the majority of the students of this campus; even fewer know the goals and philosophy of present- day Nazism. This is the primary reason for our initial steps in inviting Rockwell, a purely in- formative undertaking which dem- onstrates the rationale behindtour whole speaker program. I want to emphasize that this rationale dif- fers in no way from that used in the past nor from the one we will use in the future. Our role is to present an unbiased program with ample opportunity for each stu- dent to form his own opinions and conclusions about the issue of discussion. We feel that the goal of knowl- edge, endorsed byka college com- munity of any kind, is reason enough for the appearance of an advocate or antagonist of a con- troversial issue or creed. Knowl- edge of any subject is not com- plete-nor adequate-unless that subject has been viewed from its various possible angles. A univer- sity community has the oppor- tunity, even the duty, to present these different viewpoints to its students. The active involvement of a university or its members working against the presentation of a more adequate knowledge of a subject is totally against any enduring concept of education. tributes are not exclusively Nazi, and Nazism is of course not the exclusive danger. Any creed em- phasizing these traits is a men- ace, and one meriting awareness to guard against its proven in- fluence on today's mass mind. A great deal' of consideration preceded{ our invitation, and most of the criticisms raised recently were discussed months ago. Ob- viously, a value judgment had to be made, and the result of that judgment is not yet completely, ED McCURDY: Sophisticated Balladier BY FOLLOWING that brilliant bluegrass group the Kentucky Colonels with the sophisticated man-of-the-world balladier Ed McCurdy, Ann Arbor's only true coffee-house, the intimate Golden Vanity, maintains its consistently high level of entertainment and simul- taneously offers the community a good contrast in folk talent. Claiming ". . . not to be a 'message singer' because I don't know the answers," the articulate and undeniably witty McCurdy proves, despite the current emphasis on folk instrumental virtuosity and group singing, that an outstanding balladier is no less highly satisfying and entertaining a performer. * * * * WHILE INTERESTED primarily in "the gentle erotic lyric of the Elizabethan Era" (Tom Jones would have really dug Ed McCurdy!) exemplified by the delightful "Lusty Young Smith," Ed mixes in numerous other ballad types, such as the classic "Who Killed Cock Robbin," "Colorado Trail," Jimmy Driftwood's well-known "He Had A Long Chain On," and Ed's own haunting commentary on the perpetual instability of our planet, "Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream." Ed McCurdy is a disciplined musician and possesses a superbly trained and far-ranging bass voice-a refreshing change for those who may be frankly dismayed with the gravel-throated deliveries of "ethnic" folk singers. visible. However, we feel that the possible dignity and stature ac- corded to Rockwell by his being allowed to speak from a University platform is small in comparison to the positive effects of remind- ing the campus of the ideology which once threatened the world and which is still present in some sectors. -John W. Warren, '66 Chairman, Special Projects Committee Michigan Union ,-- t MD( MY MOTHER WILL. ASK ME WY I M NOT EATIN6 AND fif,e . r urn l / , a AND MY( FA THR WILL. 1-TM ~ Ml' f7~ AN 0TH OF THEM WILL THEY DONT IfTQ AND IF I CAN THAT WI4OL-6 M'AN! f. I