Pge 4-Sunday, January 14, 1979-The Michigan Daily 4 inV 3al 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom While Waiting for a New President By John Ellis Vol. IXXXIX, No. 87 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Cauti onon Iran -: ' HE TURMOIL in Iran has not slowed despite the efforts of a new government led by Prime Minister Shapur Bakhtiar. Shah Mohammad Riza Pahlevi is reported to be planning a "vacation" in the :United States. The National Front, a broad-based coalition of businessper- sons, workers, technologists, and in- telligenstia, continues to support a general strike. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the exiled religious leader, continues, along with the National Front, to press for the ouster of the Shah, although for differnet reasons. And rumors of a military coup daily become more believable. Tens of thousands continue to march in, the streets every day protesting the presence of the Shah. He is opposed for a variety of reasons; but one thing is fear; the people of Iran want the Shah .to leave permanently. The Shah may do just that. The Prime Minister has. said the Shah intends to take a cvcation in the Uhited States. There is .smne reason to believe that if he came Wtr this country-a logical place to seek :asylum considering it was the United -States CIA which put him in power in .1953-he would not leave. Much of the rest of his family has arrived and there zhare. been confirmed reports that the Shah was looking for a sizable chunk of California real estate on which to build aA1astle, complete with mote. Prime Minister Bakhtiar believes :that the Shah's absence will help defuse the situation. The Prime Minister also said that if his ad- ministration had one or two months, the country could be returned to - f~lative normality. Mr. Bakhtiar may be too optimistic. A former member of the National Front, Mr. Bakhtiar was ousted by the group when he assumed the position of Prime Minister in the Shah's government. There is little reason to think that the National Front and Mr. Khomeini will change their opinion of Mr. Bakhtiar and of what he is doing just because the Shah had taken a vacation. There is a great deal of reason to believe that if Mr. Bakhtiar fails to bring order to Iran that there would be a military coup. Mr. Bakhtiar has dismissed reports that military leaders, especially the younger of- ficers, are planning such a coup. "But if my government fails, a military coup is very, very possible--indeed probable," Mr. Bakhtiar said. Considering past United States sup- port for the Shah, it is extremely im- portant for President Carter not to say or do anything which could inspire Iranian military leaders to take over the government. The Iranian military leaders would be heartened by any statement from President Carter which said that a military junta in Iran could be supported by the United States. A few ill-timed, careless wor- ds-similar to President Kennedy's comments about South Vietnam's President Ngo Dinh Diem-could greatly alter the course of events in Iran. Prime Minister Bakhtiar's gover- nment must have every opportunity to succeed. But most important is that whatever transpires in Iran must hap- pen without foreign intervention of any kind. Whoever governs Iran should do so only at the will of all Iranians. When whatever number of selection committees meet to choose the next president of the University of Michigan, there are three sleeping problems here which the candidates might be asked about. The problems are called to mind by the following description of Americe which was written in 1962 by Paul Goodman, a social critic and activist who died ten years later: "But they never did anything I admired or was proudof. What a world to live in! There was almost never a subtle decision, an inventive solution, an ideal motive, a forthwright act. "One could die of inanition, of the deprivation of meaning. Yawning and hungry, people feel asleep." This description reminds me of the Michigan campus today: people look like they are sleep walking. Among the causes are conscience, community and competition. The University needs conscience. This would not be a single code of conduct by which everyone's actions are judged. Nor would it be mentioning moral considerations in speeches while making University decisions on other grounds. University conscience would be a sense that what is ethically good is paramount - not what is economical, convenient, or - olitically wise. Such a conscience would be the collective sum of the actions of individuals who chose to make ethical considerations the most important ones in the University. A president could set an example, not by preaching about values, but by showing that what is good means something in his or her actions. That would be the ideal motive of which Paul Goodman wrote, not the best motive based on ones ideals. It would also result in forthright acts which might wake us up, maybe even. in subtle decisions or inventive solutions. But even if people in the University were acting on ideals, how would anyone know it? The place is too large. We operate in units which are too big to know who decides, much less on what basis. We have no community at Michigan. There are exceptions, but by and large we are not structured so people can participate in the decisions which affect them or know each other well enough to care. Everyone knows this. A new president could begin to change it. Competition is aided by keeping us in anonymous masses and is the result of many false assumptions. Competition results from the view that education is a commodity which you get by working on your own. It assumes that education can be measured by whether you got more of it than others. In the end, that' commodity must be marketable. Of course there is a commodity involved but it is not education. We are learning how to compete. There is a very marketable commodity. But it has taken the place of education. A new president could be appalled by this. These words, conscience, community, competition, are so familiar - who wants to hear No" Date_ Dear Professor_ I would like to request that you not write my grade on any of my papers or exams in this course. I would prefer not to know my grades, unless they are D's or E's and I am in danger of failing the course. Any written evaluations you can make would be welcome. Thank you. (signed) them again? But what they are about is what many want to hear, and not hearing, have fallen asleep, even while walking down State Street. Paul Goodman did not only point out problems. fie otten made simple, practical suggestions about what people could do themselves. The following idea is not Paul Goodman's, but it might well have been. This idea comes from a Michigan social work student and wwould not require any presidential action. It could be put into practice immediately by any student who chose to do so, and it would do much to eliminate the worst aspects of competition in University study. Competition is based on grading. If you want to avoid working for a grade, you might send the following card to your professor. "Dear Professor........... "I would like to request that you not write my grade on any of my papers or exams in this course. I would prefer not to know my grades, unless they are D's or E's and I am in danger of failing the course. "Any written evaluations you can make would be welcome. Thank you. "(signed).............. For the even more daring, the natural extension of this idea would enable you to waive the right to see your transcript. But not knowing your grades during the term would be a start. There is much to be done about conscience, community, and competition at Michigan no matter who is selected as the next University president. But the candidates might at least be asked about these issues. John Ellis is a frequent contributor to the editorial page. Copies of a card printed with the above request about grades are available from Mr. Ellis at Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State. =No STHE LOOKING BACK WEEK */IN REVI.EW 'he search for a president :" ,he University presidential selection process continued this week as the Regents and the student advisory commit- le tried to iron out the precise roles of each of the actors in yihat promises to be a long-running drama. While the students dickered with the Regents, it was revealed that some members of the Michigan Student ; ssembly (MSA) tried to persuade the Assembly to com- 4rmise with the Regents on the selection process in order to: gain favorable concessions on the Michigan Union renovation proposal. The faculty also took a significant step towards naming a maw University president when its selection advisory com- Inittee filed its "Needs of the University" statement. :-The Regents declined to be more specific about the Zrecise nature of student involvement in the presidential election. Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham) hid they had not yet plotted the full strategy of their own inVolvement. At a meeting Thursday night between four of the Regents an4d the student presidential advisory committee Nederlan- r said, "We have not gotten to these issues because we've ,een busy getting these committees together, getting the t;r eds (of the University) statements together." The student committee has been seeking assurances that it will not be substantively eliminated from the selection process as it moves into its final stages. Last semester the student committee made ardent demands to secure the right to interview all candidates for the University presidency. The student committee felt that all of the ad- 2 visory committees formed by the Regents in Oc- Stober-student, faculty, and alumni-should have the right to interview all candidates considered. The faculty passed a similar proposal last semester. ~.But the advisory committee guidelines passed by the Regents only made provisions for the Regents to interview the candidates. In November the Regents agreed to grant the committees active participation in the process "somewhere down the line." At Thursday night's meeting the student committee tried to clarify their precise role in . the presidential selection process. Student committee Chairman Jeff Supowit finally aked for specific assurance d that the student committee would at least meet with the faculty and alumni committees. Nederlander responded 'that the groups could meet at any time as specified in the guidelines. The Regents pleaded with the student committee to keep the names of their candidates for University president con- fidential. "The sure-fire way to lose one of the candidates is : to violate the trust among us," said Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor). Meanwhile, it was revealed last week that some mem- bers of the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) may have voted in December against boycotting the University presidential selection process with the hope of securing the Regents' support on other issues, especially Michigan Union renovations. Assembly Vice-President Kate Rubin Immm" LSA-SG sparks controversy Two leaders of the Literary College Student Govern- ment (LSA-SG) came under fire this past week in two unrelated developments. First, Robert Stechuk, the Advocacy Coordinator of the student government, was attacked by the Union of Students for Israel (USI) and an unnamed group of LSA students concerned with freedom of speech for lending the gover- nment's endorsement to a group protesting the appearance of Israel's former Prime Minister Yigal Allon on campus in mid-December. Stechuk lent the student government endorsement without the approval of the body. Stechuk said he felt he was "authorized to represent" the government and he wan- ted to protest Allon's visit because the University did not provide a Palestinian spokesperson to offset Allon's com- ments. Victor Kay, leader of the USI, said Stechuk's endor- sement "took a lot of nerve. He may be overstepping his limits and abusing his power. Advocacy Coordinator, by its name, implies some sort of process." Kathy Friedman, vice-president of the LSA-SG said she did not know the issue was being considered by anyone on the body. She said she would have argued against the protest endorsement if it had been debated. Second, Talib Abdul-Musquit, a newly elected member of the LSA-SG is being taken to small claims court by Xanadu Cooperative, a member of the campus' Inter-Cooperative Council. The suit accuses Abdul-Musquit of leaving the coop after one month without paying his bills. Abdul-Musquit had been living at the coop with aid from the Washtenaw County Department of Social Services. But because the department can only pay for boarding services with food stamps and the coop does not accept food stamps, Abdul-Musquit was told to leave by the department. He now claims that the $177 in unpaid rent should be paid by the department. *But Abdul-Musquit also oes $130.66 in unpaid phone bills. He claims the department should pay for all his living ex- penses while at the coop. Gov. William Milliken delivered his annual State of will have been governor of Michigan for longer than any the State message Thursday. The speech was totally other person in history, mentioned the need for devoid of any substantive plan of action by the state's austerity, he revealed no programs or trends his executive branch in the face of voter passage of the administration will pursue. Headlee Amendment in the November election and the Milliken said nothing about state expenditures for pervasive tax limiting sentiment of the electorate. higher education. Michigan currently ranks 33rd among Although Milliken, who if he completes his third term; all states in the money.allocated for higher education. U' housing rates may rise Arnson said he couldn't remember all of the Assembly's discussion on the day of the vote, but that "there was some concern about relations with the Regents as a whole. It (the Union resolution) might have been on peoples' minds." The Assembly voted 12-10 in December not to boycott the presidential selection process and to carry through with naming a student presidential advisory committee. While the Regents and the students bickered over their relationship in the process, the faculty submitted an 11 page "needs of the University report." The needs statement is the faculty's appraisal of what problems the next president of the Univesity will have to cope with. The faculty statement said that the successor to interim President Allan Smith will have to fight what faculty mem- bers perceive as a continual deterioration of certain University programs, so the University can reassert itself "as a world leader." The statement also pointed to the The Single Student Rate Study Committee, made up of students and administrators, has recommended a 6.89 per cent average increase for all University housing next year. The recommendation was passed on to, Housing Director Robert Hughes and, although the increases must be ap- proved by a chain of University administrators before final approval by the Regents, the housing increase is generally consistent with the recommendation of the rate study committee. The Committee also recommended weekend con- solidation of food services at several central campus dorms starting in the fall. If approved, the policy change would mean West Quad residents would eat weekend meals in South Quad; Mosher-Jordan residents would eat at Markley, and Alice Lloyd residents would travel to Couzens Hall.' cording to the study committee, will save each University housing resident $12. The recommended average dollar increase for all studen- ts next year will be $141.21 per student. Dormitory resident fee increases will be 6.4 per cent, Oxfordhousing 8 per cent, Fletcher Hall 5.1 per' cent, and 9.5 per cent for Baits Hall apartments. If the increases are approved, dormitory doubles will cost $1868.21 per year, an increase from the present $1759.50 rate, while singles will cost $2215.52, an increase from the present $2047.50 rate. The study also recommended that resident advisors be allowed to live in University Housing for free. This was the first year in which the RAs had to pay any fee at all. The study recommeded revoking the $141.75 room and board fee