Page 4-Saturday, October 7, 1978-The Michigan Daily Why not Vorster for University president-? Vbrster By Andy Feeney oAnotherstack and totally avoidabl campus, and what's worse, it's just at the time when most of us would like the place to settle down and be mellow so the folks will have a nice time when they zip in from the "Motor City'" for Homecoming. When I say "most of us," I mean me, of course. I don't care what your folks think of Homecoming. In fact they can stay in Royal Oak for :he rest of their lives, for all Icare-and sunless you stop messing with the thermostat when you come in at night, you can join them. My folks are going to enjoy the Game. THE PROBLEM IS, they aren't going to enjoy it half as much (well, let's say 'h ree-quarters as much ) if some f y damned student loonies are marching around handing out leaflets or maybe even chanting (God forbid!) about who in the hell is going to be Fleming's successor-when the Silver Fox retires to do a number on the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. I mean, my Mom doesn't care about Fleming. My Dad doesn't care about Fleming. I sure as hell don't care about him, and I'm sure most of us feel the same. Including you, Bunkie. I'm sure most of us are going to be damned glad when they get whoever in the hell they're going to get to re- place him, no matter how big a jerk he (or she, of , course) is, just so long as they don't mess with the TG's and the football and just so long as they don't get people's Mom's upset with a lot of talk about democracy and academic freedom and so forth. BUT SINCE THIS THING may be an issue (are you following me so far? I hope so.) and since I am a member of the responsible (i.e. apathetic) community around this place, I figure I have a duty to come up with a solution that most of us can live with. So here goes: The question (as most of us see it) is whether thenext University president should be partly chosen by the MichiganbStudent Assembly (MSA), a tiny grou )p of campus politicos responsible only to the relatively few students who voted in the last election (this would be undemocratic, right?) or whether on the other hand he (or she, of course) should be entirely chosen by the Regents, a tiny group of campus politicos responsible to the people of Michigan and enjoying widespread popular support among the broad masses of voters. LOOKING AT IT this way, it's pretty easy to figure out who's on the side of the angels. Regent Baker even knows a few angles. But that's another story. Still, when you dig a little deeper, you find out that everything . you first thought about the problem was wrong. (This always happens when you dig deeper, and I for one am sick of it. Do you hear me, Econ 201? Fed up!) In fact, the University is not merely responsible to the students, not merely responsible to the masses of the people of Michigan, but is on the contrary (and so forth) an arena for Different Constituencies. THERE ARE LOTS and lits of these constituencies. The broad masses of voters, of course, Graduate Employees Organization and the clericals and the janitors-a very important constituency which Fleming has been top-level bureaucrats ambassadors-right? And it's Enterprise which makes this University possible. and Free great (To demonstrate for yourself, just how possible, take a sheet of paper, a pencil, a straight edge and a compass over to the Administration Building and look at the plaques on the wall outside the Regents' meeting room. Throw the compass away. Eat the paper. Observe carefully. All those gold signs marked "General Motors," "Ford" and "American Electric Power" mean contributions, Bunkie. Those are the people who paid for the place.) He's available; he's about the right age; he has a keen interest in Sports, and he's definitely' popu- lar with the free enterprise system. Johannes Vorster is the man (or woman, of course). As retiring Prime Minister of South Africa, he's done a tremendous job of guiding his institution through politically troublesome times. A stronger administrator is hard to imagine. He's available; he's about the right age; he has a keen interest in Sports, and he's definitely popular with the Free Enterprise system. IN FACT, most of the companies whose gold plaques hang in the Administration Building already are working with him, and this should ease the period of transition as the new president takes over. sound good? As University president, Vorster would be in a fine position to evaluate the University's multi-million-dollar investment in businesses in South Africa, since he has that inside knowledge about the situation which Fleming tried so hard to acquire through the U.S.-South Africa Leadership Exchange Program this year. Vorster . would also bring a perspective to University affirmative action problems that some Regents. would find refreshing. He has long' experience in handling Homelands governments very similar to MSA and SACUA in terms of autonomy and power; and he's hell on labor. As far as tuition increases are concerned, Vorster will do just as much for students as Fleming did. I don't think this needs any further explanation. THERE IS A LITTLE conflict of interest problem. So what? Vorster has been selected State President of South Africa, but it doesn't have to interfere with his other duties. Fleming sat on the Chrysler and John Deere boards of directors while he was president, and he found it "educational." Harlan Hatcher, president before Fleming, was honorary head of the Ann Arbor Bank, which he found very educational !/ .. ,.w- Fleming anxious to please. The students, of course. The professors. The Ann Arbor merchants. Bo Schembechler. Mrs.' Schembechler, of course. And so forth. And as Watergate should have shown us, the most important constituency of all is not some tiny miserable little bunch of politicos-anywhere-but the Free Enterprise system itself. I mean it. It's Free Enterprise which pays for' state and federal elections-right? It's Free Enterprise which brings us most of our interesting issues like PBB, the eil embargo and so forth-right? It's Free Enterprise which provides training and also retirement income for GIVEN THAT THE constituencies have to be placated, then, the Regents and MSA might as well stop fighting with each other over who gets to choose the next Fleming and start working to come up with candidates who will be pleasing to (a) the broad masses of Michigan voters, (b) the other constituencies like labor and students and professors and stuff, and (c) Free Enterprise'. To save time, they should skip (a) and (b). Furthermore, all candidates should be strong administrators, middle-of-the-road or conservative, politically astute, and able to balance a lot of constituencies. This narrows the field at once. The bank learned a lot, too. Anyway, my Mom won't care, and I'm sure most of us will agree with her. Vorster would simply be upholding a long University tradition. If MSA will only get off its dead you- know-what and nominate Vorster for University president, we can have this whole thing settled peacefully by next week. So go to it, PAC, Go SABRE! If you can take care of, that and maybe do something to guarantee nice weather, I'll buy a keg for each of you at the Rose Bowl. But don't mess me up with my folks just to talk about democracy. That would be tacky beyond belief. Andy Feeney is a University alumnus, a 1966 Angell Scholar, and former missions chairman of Michigan Christian Fellowship. He now works for a living. . Eighy-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LIX, No. 27 News Phone:'164-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan m6C MORE IfJ71H( - !?A1II,}G rris1. Tb tn I VIJT t tA A7-IUs THE MORE.1 w Cl(Tl5 -a)i cv OW~ f4W~ A*k) A Ftft WOtc~vqM" Open course evaluations WNW Each professor at this University has a unique style of teaching. One may stress student participation in the classroom while demanding little out- side work, another may give long reading assignments and lecture throughout; class, and yet another will not require class attendance at all. Each student at this University has a unique style of learning. Some students learn best through lectures but get little out of readings. Other students fall asleep during lectures, no matter who the speaker, but can pick every 'nuance intended by an author. Yet rother students can only learn by :hashing things out during class recitation. The problem is how to get students together with those professors with whom they can learn best. A partial solution to the problem is an open, student course evaluation program. Though the University' already distributes class evaluation forms, the completed forms are rarely seen by students. The forms - which judge professors on preparation, grading, understanding teaching ability and other qualities - are kept in depart- M-Go C ATT LOOKS AS though University Ath- i:Lletic Director Don Canham has been had. On Tuesday, Mr. Canham and Governor William Milliken posed ifor publicity pictures to introduce the ,incumbent gubernatorial candidate's o'new "M-Go Blue" bumper stickers. It was a jovial occasion for the two =back-slapping pals. Sporting off-white, 'patent leather shoes, the grinning _ .J. a . ... _ .. . mental offices where they are of little aid to anyone, especially students. The Student Course Evaluation Pro- ject was established to make those critical analyses open and available. But the coordinators of the project have encountered some opposition from the faculty and the administra- tion. Complaints seem to vary in range from: "They're not relevant" to "Why should I do it if I don't have to?" Poor excuses if ever we've heard one. It appears that professors are just plain afraid of what. effect the open evaluations would have. Open evaluation of professors could only have a positive effect. It would allow students to find the professor with whom they could learn best. It would also, of course, make clear which professors consistently receive bad student reviews. This, possibly, is what has fostered so much faculty resentment of the process. But basically, professors' fears are unfounded. A University study of winter '78 term class evaluations determined that 90 per cent of the students rated their courses as excellent. With marks like that, it appears that we only lose. by keeping the system closed. C " U(lc MY FA 2 ~m rr The Young Socialist Alliance Affirmative action under attack it was "reverse discrimination." Weber uses this racist label on a program that attempts to overcome a hiring practice that effectively barred blacks and women from skilled crafts such as machinist, electrician, carpenter-painter, and repairman, because of Kaiser's requirement of a number of years of previous experience. In the opinion of black Kaiser employees, the company was not just a passive accomplice of this societal discrimination. Kaiser's own system of favoritism and patronage actively served to keep blacks out. "It was a question of who you know in the parishhwho had connections with the plant manager," said employee Sam Thomas. "If you know the right person, you can get a job." OTHER WORKERS CHARGED that favored whites were given help or even advance copies for tests that supposedly show "qualifications" for skilled positions. Blacks who went to college would fail the test, but whites who can hardly read or write would pass it. A federal district court and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals have Tuled in Weber's favor. The courts held that Kaiser never discriminated against blacks or blacks in both, skilled and unskilled jobs at Kaiser "constituted a prima facie case of discrimination." IF UPHELD BY the U.S. Supreme Court, the Weber ruling would be a devastating blow to equal rights for blacks and i'omen in industry. It would prohibit unions from negotiating affirmative action plans. It would also nullify the effect of Executive Order 11246, the strongest affirmative-action order ever issued by the federal government. We of the Young Socialist Alliance feel that unions, the black, Chicano, Puertoriquenno, women's and student movements all have a stake in fighting what Weber is trying to do. The precedent of a pro-Weber ruling by the Supreme Court could have an effect much greater than the Bakke ruling. The effect would be one -that could maintain the institutionalized racism and sexism that divides the workin class, perpetuates higher levels of unemployment ' among opressed nationalities and discriminatory hiring practices towards women. Students must get the word out about Weber, because this ruling anham'? same time he is promoting "M-Go Blue" here, in East Lansing the same plan is being executed. The bumper sticker circulating there is dressed in Michigan State green and white. It says: "Milliken is Magic, too" referring to Spartan hoop star Earvin (Magic) Johnson. Perhaps it is Milliken's affinity for the University's football team and MSU's basketball program that Affirmative action is under attack once again. On the heels of the Supreme Court's anti-quota Bakke ruling is a "reverse discrimination" case that may have more far-reaching effects on the gains won by oppressed nationalities and women than the -Bakke ruling. Weber vs. Kaiser Aluminum and United Steelworkers challenges the rights of unions to negotiate affirmative-action programs to overcome employer discrimination in hiring and advancement.' At issue is an on-the-job training program for skilled jobs was reached based on the proportion of minority workers in the area of each plant. Kaiser's Gramercy, Louisiana plant had one of the highest goals-39 percent. At all plants the goal,for women was 5 percent of the skilled jobs. When the Kaiser plant opened in 1958, it followed standard practice in the area-segregating blacks into the worst jobs. Blacks were hired for two job categories-laborer and porter. Black workers started out at $1.07 an hour, while whites started at $1.25 an hour. Inside the plant, segregation remained the rule for