i e £ft1!an Bm Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan reporter's notebook 'U' PR: Case f or extinction? Jonathan miller . . 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 SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: CARLA RAPOPORT Raekiham referenda issues THIi REFERENDUM resolutions t h a t appear on the Rackham Student Government (RSG) election ballot sched- uled to be mailed to Rackham students early this week are oblique in nature and warrant a negative vote on two of the three issues. The first referendum resolves that graduate governments, through G r a d- uate Federation (GF) - proposed suc- cessor to the Graduate Assembly (GA) - be given the authority to make the nom- inations to Senate Assembly and other University committees foriierly made by .GA. This referendum ignores the m o r e fundamental issue of whether or not Rackham students approve the formation of GF, a question which itself s h o u l d appear on the ballot. An affirmative vote on the referendum as worded could be hastily interpreted as an approval of GF's formation. This could allow GF supporters to incorrectly analyze the sentiment of Rackham stu- dents. RACKHAM STUDENTS should oppose the referendum so RSG will realize the necessity for Rackham students to vote on the issue of GF itself - regardless of whether or not Rackham students feel that an exclusive graduate student body should be allowed to make faculty com- mittee appointments. The second referendum asks if RSG should be empowered to work with other graduate-professional governments in seeking autonomy from SGC and Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) in matters or representation, taxation, and governance of graduate students. Rackham students should cast a nega- tive vote against this resolution also since it is against their best interests to disen- gage themselves from the protection of some judicial review board. Since RSG has offered no alternative to CSC - ei- ther in their own constitution or in the proposed GF constitution -- achieving autonomy from CSJ would leave Rack- ham students with no recourse in the event of a complaint. The third referendum resolves that fif- ty cents per term from the University fees paid by each Rackham student should be used for the support of RSG. An affirmative vote on this issue would reinforce a similar referendum approved in the SGC campus-wide election last fall. Such a vote would serve as a well-deserv- ed vote of confidence for RSG. RSG's referenda, for the most part, are worded so as to confuse the voter. It is indeed regrettable that no additional ex- planation is included in the mailing and that there has been no active campaign to inform the voter about the issues at stake. -GLORIA JANE SMITH "The art of public relations is the prac- tice of strategic omission." Tom Rieke, Asst. Director, University Information Services AS THE penny pinchers in Lansing grow increasingly innovative in their efforts to trim the University's budget, students simply grow accustomed to the sights and smells of a decaying educational institu- tion. Thus no one really bats an eyelash any- more at the peeling paint son the stair- wells of Angell Hall; the chronic shortage of simple equipment such as test tubes in the chemistry stores; the growing discon- tent of increasingly underpaid faculty members; and lectures with 500 students in them. But that's just not the way things seem and that's just not the way they write it at the University of Michigan Informa- tion Services office. There on the sixth floor of the Administration Bldg., where the tapping of typewriters is muffled by the plush carpeting, everything is maize and blue rosy. For the coverage rattling off the type- writers of the three editors and five writers in the $200,000 a year office, distributed to some 3,000 media contacts on a variety of, mailing lists, is at best, to borrow the words of The Wall Street Journal: " ... a bland diet of pro-administration news and cultural announcements, seasoned at times with frothy features on students or image polishing awards to faculty members." Take, for example, the following two leads from recent University press re- leases. Both were widely disseminated to media in the state and each ran to three pages in length. They are somewhat typi- cal: BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Despite pro- mising developments such as improved design and attractiveness, there is no such thing yet as an industrialized hous- ing industry, University of Michigan Prof. Karl G. Pearson said Wednesday Jan. 19) in an address before the Real- tors Institute of Birmingham . ANN ARBOR - If language is the clothing of life, no child should be sent naked into the world. This is the essence of the educational philosophy of Daniel Fader, associate professor of English at the University of Michigan College of Literature, Science and the Arts. He explores the aspects of his philosophy on teaching and the public school system in his new book, "The Naked Children." published by the Macmillan Company (254 pp., $6.95) . . It is not just that the releases are bor- ing-or of dubious "news value" in the traditional sense. It is rather that Infor- mation Services devotes hours of time and thousands of dollars of general fund money to cranking out such puffery while the University is desperately in need of intel- ligent and discriminating coverage. WHERE, one might legitimately ask, are the stories about the University in conflict? Is there a press release detailing the current fight between Allen Smith Nor do Hamilton and Berger see any danger in the near monopolization of Uni- versity news which Information Services has acquired among local radio stations. Many of the local stations, especially WAAM and WNRS-WNRZ, rely almost to- tally for their coverage of the University- clearly the single most dominant influence on the city in which they are located-- upon Information S= rvices', ready for tap- ing telephone "news briefs." IT IS hard to assess whether Informa- tion Services is worth the money. To those who believe in the old maxim of PR, that "all publicity is good publicity," the volu- minous number of handouts manufactured on the sixth floor cannot be bad. To news- men who call them on routine inquiries, Information Services can often be of aid in referring them to someone who can help. But to those within the University community. Information Services falls far short of the performance which should be expected from it. And though its offices are ritzy and spacious Information Services is only a small fish in a larger sea of University public relations men. It accounts for only 10 per cent of the annual two million dol- lar budget of Vice Presid-nt Michael Ra- dock's University Relations office - the umbrella for countless publications, maga- zines and even television programs, 'and the sponsor of the two University FM ra- dio stations, WUOM-Ann Arbor and WVGR-Grand Rapids. But Information Services remains, in the words of Jack Hamilton,,"the heart of the University Relations operation." Could it be an artificial heart? 0 1 HERE'S SOME OF THE stuff that comes down from the sixth floor of the Adminis- tration Bldg. and the Program for Educational and So- tion Services is tantamount to a University cial Change? Or one announcing the ap- pointment of two homosexuals as program advisors in the Office of Student Services? Or anything about student government on campus? Has Information Services devoted ongoing, detailed and accurate coverage to the sexism battle between the Depart- ment of Health Education and Welfare, and the University? Or to the soaring inci- dence of sexual assaults in University dor- mitories? The answer, to all of the above, is all too often no. Thus the "other side" to Uni- versity life, the side not found in the multi-million dolllar research laboratories on North Campus and the offices of the Superprbfs, remains effectively obscured from public view by the University. PRIVATELY, many of the writers who work for Information Services will can- didly admit that they spend their* days churning out propaganda. They'll shrug their shoulders and ask, "What do you expect a PR man to do? Publicly, however, Information Services maintains a veneer of "objectivity" and officials deny they are simply a "good news" operation. "We probably should do a bit more with students than we do," says Information Services Director Joel Berger. "We do tend to be fairly faculty oriented. But we try not to be a one-sided administrative mouthpiece. If you talk to the media out- side in terms of our credibility you'll find we're pretty well regarded. This is one of the best news bureaus of any college in the country - which sounds like inter- nal PR but it's accurate," Berger declares. That credibility is, however, dubious. The biggest consumer of University press handouts is the Ann Arbor News, A scene in another newspaper office in the state might be more typical. "Have you seen the U-M news releases," asks a reporter. "They're in the trash can," replies a col- league. The voluminous use to which the Ann Arbor News puts the product of Informa- subsidy of that newspaper. Hardly a day passes when the News does not use the complete budget of stories prspared by Information Services, often with spelling mistakes intact. DIRECTOR of University Relations Jack Hamilton, who supervises the Information Services office from his desk on the first floor of the Administration Bldg.; sees no problem in this indirect support by the University of Booth Newspapers, Inc.' "The way we see it, we're getting valu- able information out to the community," he says * Extending wiretap privileges RECORDS OF FEDERAL surveillance ac- tivity for last year show Michigan, with 22,526 monitored conversations, to be leading the nation in wiretaps. And if a state wiretapping bill passed by the Souse last month passes the state Senate also, Michigan is likely to add a new dimension to that dubious distinc- tion. Presently, wiretapping warrants can only be obtained by state and local agen- cies in federal court, when a violation of federal law is involved. But the bill presently before the State legislature would permit representatives of the attorney general's office or coun- ty prosecutors to apply in circuit court for a wiretapping warrant when "probable. cause exists to believe" that a person "is committing, has committed or, is about to commit" a crime, and when normal investigative procedures either have been tried, or are deemed "too dangerous to employ." The crimes listed in the bill include such things as murder, kidnaping, gambl- ing, robbery, bribery or extortion, "ille- gal sale of narcotic drugs, marijuana or other dangerous drugs," perjury, riot, placing of explosives with intent to com- mit personal or property damage, or con- spiracy to commit any of the foregoing." Evidence obtained from a wiretap granted according to the bill would be admissable in court. THERE ARE several disturbing aspects to this move to extend electronic sur- veillance to the county and state level, not the least of which is the invasion of privacy caused by wiretapping of any sort, on any'level. Philosophic debates about privacy rights and wiretaps continue, and al- though legal electronic surveillance has long been a reality, that does not render objections to it any less valid. More pertinent, however, are the many controversies concerning certain aspects of federal wiretapping laws. The state bill, mercifully, spares us one of the more debated aspects of the fed- eral law - the provision for emergency tapping without a warrant - but for the most part, the state bill is modeled on the federal. THE DEGREE of privacy abuse in the bill is frightening. Much wiretap con- troversy has involved charges that wire- taps were being used to monitor known radical activists, and the state bill great- ly enlar/ges potential .to do just that. It would not be hard, for example, to prove that "probable cause exists to be- lieve that . . . a person is committing, has committed or is about to commit" a crime. For many judges, a record of radical ac- tivity may be enough. Equally vague is the requirement that normal investigative procedures may be circumvented if they "reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if diligently tried or reasonably appear to be too dangerous to employ." Add to that the inclusion of the "con- spiracy" clause on the list of applicable crimes, and the potential for surveillance on political grounds is complete. Wiretapping is already used on a fed- eral level in highly questionable ways - the attempt to extend it so that any cir- cuit court judge could give any county prosecutor permission to eavesdrop opens Michigan to a greater wave of possible police state tactics. THE BILIL is presently in the Senate judiciary committee. It must die there, or in the Senate, to prevent still further violations of the citizen's already violat- ed constitutional right to privacy. -TAMMY JACOBS 4 "HERE ARE NEWS briefs from the University of Michigan," says the recorded voice of Information Services Asst. Director Thomas Rieke. To hear Tom and his fresh daily pronouncements on life at the 'Big U' - as seen from the sixth floor of the adminis- tration Bldg. - just call 763-1300. It's rarely busy, there are five 'phone lines hooked up to the recorder in his filing cabinet, and radio stations find it saves them plenty of work. They can tape it right off the telephone. 1 Letters to The Daily Classified research To The Daily: MANY MEMBERS of the Uni- versity community are under the illusion that ,only those classified research projects which are scrut- inized and approved by the faculty and'students of the Classified Re- search Committee will be carried on at the University of Michigan. This is incorrect. The CRC does indeed scrutinize and vote on each, proposal. Some have not been approved although most are. The illusion is in the belief that proposals which fail to pass the committee's screening are consigned to the graveyard. On the contrary, they are sent for- ward to the sponsor anyway. Vice-President Geoffrey -Norm- an was quoted in The Daily as saying that he ."makes an inde- pendent judgment" on a research proposal "usually before the com- mittee even considers it." This is an honest admission but because of the ambiguity in the word "in- dependent," its significance may be missed. It does not mean that he examines each proposal and makes an independent decision on its merits. Instead, he follows a simple decision rule - forward all proposals whether they are ap- proved by the Classified Research Committee or not. This rule does indeed make his decisions com- pletely independent of CRC deli- berations. What evidence is there for the above conclusion? Since I have been on thesCRC, it has acted on 30 proposals. It has approved 26 of these and four failed to receive the seven votes (out of 12) neces- sary for approval. All of the ap- proved proposals were sent for- ward to the sponsor. Of the four that failed to be approved, one was withdrawn by the investigat- or; the other three were sent for- ward in spite of the lack of CRC approval. It. is logically possible, of course, for Vice-President Norman to re- fuse to forward projects that are approved by the CRC. The Com- mittee takes, in my opinion, an extremely permissive stance tow- ard what kind of research vio- lates the guidelines. Recently, for example, it approved a project aimed at identifying different types of helicopters from t h e i r acoustic signals. THE SITUATION is dramati- cally different when the Com- mittee fails to approve a proposal. A particularly interesting c a s e concerned a project entitled "Op- timized Air-to-Surface Infrared Sensors." The proposal took a great deal of Committee time. It initially received only three votes for approval. Subsequently, it consumed three additional meetings. For one of these meetings, committee mem- bers were called at their homes on Sunday evening for a special meet- ing at 8 a.m. on Monday morning. Four Willow Run officials, includ- ing the director, William Brown, and Associate Directors Porcello and Legault were on hand. Com- mittee members were subjected to considerable pressure to recon- sider their earlier action. All of these machinations still failed to produce seven votes for approval in this case. Neverthe- less, the proposal was forwarded to the sponsor by Vice-President Norman who told The Daily that the proposal failed "for reasons that related only to absenteeism." It is difficult for me to avoid the conclusion that the CRC is involved in a charade. Its function is to give the appearance of gen- uine screening. As long as it con- tinues along the amiable path of approving virtually everything, it provides convenient window dress- PETE HAMILL ... it's thePresident calling in the plays- "When the phone rang at that hour, I thought it might be some nut calling." - Don Shula, coach of the Miami Dolphins. THE HOUR was 1:30 in the morning and the "nut" was Richard Milhous Nixon. Now Nixon, as every schoolboy and drug addict knows, is the President of the whole United States, the mightiest military nation on earth, if we can believe Joe Alsop, a nation of several hundred million human beings, the richest nation, one of the more fortunate nations. He is also the President of Brownsville and the President of Newark. Out in the wind-ripped wastes of the Indian reservations, he is the President; he is President among the lettuce pickers in the Salinas Valley, President of Watts, President of the 6 million unem- ployed and the 14 million on welfare. He is President of the bankrupt cities, and corrupted air, the poisoned rivers and streams. He is the only President we've got. AND SO one question arises: What the hell was Richard Nixon doing walking around at 1:30 in the morning, figuring out football plays? This is the same guy who came down to the Washington Monument at 4 o'clock one morning during one of the moratoriums and tried to talk about football with young people who were there to stop killing. That was the morning that he and Ma'nolo, the Faithful Cuban Valet, drove around Washington looking for a place to have eggs, while those kids sat on the grass wondering what sort of character was actually running things. If you or I called Don Shula at 1:30 in the morning, we would be considered certifiable; this guy, however, is the President of the United States. Now there are several ways to think about all this frenetic noc- turnal activity and write it off. We could tell ourselves that it really isn't happening, that it is actually,Ron Ziegler on the phone, and the guy who went to the Washington Monument was actually Vaughn Meader, working on a comeback. Or we could pretend that Phillip Roth sneaked into the New York Times during the night, wrote another chapter from "Our Gang," and that his astonishing mastery of the Nixon style convinced the editors that the story was genuine and they went ahead and printed it. ,BUT THIS isn't the case. This is really Nixon. the genuine article. "The President alerted me that the Cowboys are a real good foot- ball team," Shula said. "But he told me, 'I still think you can hit War- field on that down-and-in-pattern against them.' " A* A! I A ,F6W (4r YAJU D ~ 9THC I Am WtO(L -012AY M05F OF U5 OPRos6 -rH6 WAR - / 7/ S+ e(OLP' 1~ -Ht tY -Vjt' /LC rx 367 r I 4M? ACCORMP)a 0f 7H6{~ PO1UAs TM3K (P5 IMMORAL-. b IQ {HN(TL- " HORAUWV 4 T~fOQkT UE&SWAT (MCMbkA AO6OW(~~ Ay WTT I / I