quixotic quest E1ie £irligan Daitl Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Inside a grocery store: The price of life I rick perloff r 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. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: HESTER PULLING From Acheson to Nixon SOME TWENTY years ago, Secretary of State Dean Acheson and his cohorts formulated what became known as the cold war policy. At that time, that policy came under fire from right wing forces including Senator Dick Nixon for being "soft on Commu ism." Eventually, however, the Vietnam War brought home to large numbers of Ameri- cans just how calamitous the policies initiated by the Truman Administration actually were. So everyone, including Nixon himself, has now adopted a rhe- toric intended to convince the public that their hard line stance has been aban- doned. With the supposed decline in his poli- cies, Acheson became rather obscure, and his death last week caused little stir. But this was indeed unfortunate. For Acheson's death could well have served as a reminder to all of us just how little this country's policies have really chang- ed during the last 20 years. A BRIEF review of Acheson's career reads like a list of America's most important Cold War policies. Foremost among them, perhaps, i the Truman Doctrine, which asserts that, "it must be the policy of the United States to sup- port free peoples who are resisting sub- Candor ADDRESSING THE Blue Key National Honor Society of the University of Georgia recently, Rep. Wilbur Mills (D- Arkansas) showed unusual candor about his college career. Recalling that Blue Key was not estab- lished at his alma mater, Hendrix Col- lege, during his undergraduate days, Rep. Mills said, "I would have striven for re- cognition which goes with the confering of the Blue Key - on the other hand, I was spared the critical application of your criteria for membership. Looking back, perhaps it is just as well" -MAYNARD Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEATTIE DAVE CHUDWIN Executive Editor Managing Editor STEVE KOPPMAN ..... Editorial P-age Editor RICK PERLOFF .. Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY .... Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER .. .......Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT . Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE................ .........Arts Editor JIM IRWIN ......... Associate Art Editors ROBERT CONROW .. . ..s Books Editor JANET FREY........... .. .... Personnel Director JIM JUDKIS ...... Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Lindsay Chaney, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Tammy Jacobs, Alan Lenhoff, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapo- port, Robert Schreiner, W.E. Schrock, Geri Sprung COPY EDITORS: Pat Bauer, Art Lerner. DAY EDITORS: Linda Dreeben, Hannah Morrison, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson, Tony Schwartz, Ted Stein, Paul Travis. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Jonathan Glauser, John Mitchell, Beth Gberfelder, Gloria Jane Smith, Sue Stark, Marcia Zoslaw. Sports Staff MORT NOVECK, Sports Editor JIM KEVRA Executive Sports Editor RICK CORNFELD .. Associate Sports Editor TERRI POUCHEY......Contributing Sports Editor BETSY MAHON .. .... Senior Night Editor SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Bill Alterman, Bob An- drews, Sandi Genis, Joel Greer, Elliot Legow, John Papanek, Randy Phillips, Al Shackelford. jugation by armed minorities or by out- side pressures." Under this doctrine, $400 million in emergency military and economic aid was provided in 1947 to Greece and Tur- key-in the first place to counter "com- munist" insurgents and in the second to strengthen the armed forces. Now, Greece, that land vigorously de- fended against "communist subversion" by Acheson in the forties, has been hon- ored by a visit of Vice President Spiro Agnew. That dictatorship, despite pro- tests from all parts of the Greek political spectrum and many American liberals, thus receives continuing full U.S. support. THIS SAME doctrine.was used to legiti- mize our involvement in Southeast Asia, and remains the chief argument for our aid to military dictatorships and the maintenance of our bases abroad. In May, 1950, Acheson sought and ob- tamed economic and military aid for France in Indochina to battle the Viet- minh, thus paving the way to future U.S. military involvement. The secretary of state's Japanese peace treaty also contained provisions for American military bases in Japan, while in Europe the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization developed under his guidance. Thus, example after example could be cited where the guidelines established under Acheson are still followed today. The very agencies created in the late forties still exist now-the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and so on. In other words, Achesons ' policies, while blasted at their inception by the Republican Party and Nixon, have es- sentially remained in force to the present day. The man who "covered up Commu- nist conspiracy and who was condemned as unfit to guide American foreign poli- cy, for the most part could still be sec- retary of state today. IT CAN ONLY be concluded, therefore, that despite changes in party and personnel, United States foreign policy has not changed signifiantly since the second world war. Perhaps it is for that reason that those who criticized the State Department then are not so critical now. -ZACHARY SCHILLER Bombs away "WHAT FATAL slip turned an air sup- port mission near the Cambodian border into a mistaken bombing trag- edy?" puzzled U.S. Air Force investiga- tors yesterday. Peeved because at least 18 South Viet- namese died in Monday's accident, when an A37 jet goofed and dropped two 50- pound bombs on a friendly base, sources pointed out that this time it wasn't as bad as last March, when U.S. bombs and napalm killed some 36 South Vietnamese participating in the Laotian campaign. Perhaps the Vietcong should cooperate and wear neon name tags so that these slips and other "unmentionables" won't keep embarrassingour firm foundations in Indochina. -MAYNARD I SHOULD LIKE to announce my en- trance into Life. You know Life, the majestic man of merchandise who sells at your corner grocery for a dollar a slice of dignity. You know that grand magi- cian - he has welcomed me to his quar- ters. And I am rejoicing. I say "Hello Life.' I hope I do the best I can, sir. I am for- mally announcing my appearance on your quarters, I am formally announcing my candidacy for a piece of the pie, a good ol' market price. I am formally at this moment onward and hopefully upward casting my membership as a loyal par- ticipant in Life. And I say "Hello Life." I am strutting about now admiring your machinery, look- ing up your suffering and I have detected that 45 people have cried today and the problem of evil has affected 35 tornadoes in southwestern Kansas. I inspect your locomotive, Life. Hmm. Looks all right, They told me there was supposed to be decency. Decency, Decency? I'm strutting up and down the aisles of your store, sir, and the inventory says, the inventory lists says dear sir, that you are supposed to - now wait a minute - that you are supposed to contain 45 pounds of rare hamburger steak and in addition youare supposed to hold in your stocks a lot of raw de- cency. You know, Good Cheer. Helpful Humans. There. I spot one. I SEE A Good Person. Now let's stock that up. Life, you mystical beast, you contain 45 ounces of suffering in the canned goods section to my left and there over to the western corner of your store along in the meat packing sectionuyou offer for sale a grand total of 35 pounds of decency. Not bad, Life. Not bad. Well, I guess suffering is down this year. Not a bad total for an experienced merchant. So here I am, Life. I am walking aroundhand admiring your merchandise. How much does that here piece of good will cost a friendly local personage? I should like to buy myself, yes, a better- how do they say it?-a tiptop personal- ity? How much, let me ask you this, how much would it cost that I could have a touch of romance, plus a tiny tinge of spontaneous joy at another baby's birth and some raw hurt feeling whenever someone breaks a toenail-how much would that cost, eh Life? I should like to purchase a better per- sonality and oh, over there I see I'm in the meatpacking section and you're pack- ing people's values. Fine. AND LET ME say this right here and now. I have given you the best years of -Daily-Robert Wargo my life in preparation, you funky faced clown, Life, and I am telling you what I have done that you should listen: I kissed one child when she was bounc- ing a ball from a rooftop and the view was she would fall into a fire down below, And I saved that child. And I was re- warded 56 points of intrinsic - say in- trinsic - compassion. Yessirree, and remember the time, re- member theahours well spent, dignity well earned, that the small man hobbled up and down the street, and I tossed him a shelter and I gave him the best moral instruction I could. I took him home, I did, and I fed him, and I gave him a bath and when we looked up, he was happy and soft again. So how about that, I ask? How about the value there? What about the return on that there investment? FOR LET me say right here and now that I did these things not for my health -you're darn tootin' - you think I help these folks for the betterment of my young age, well you have one more whistle com- ing, sir. I mean, you may be a magician but you cannot make people worry for others' welfare, now can you-you can- not and I did those acts, you understand, so I could enter this store one day and sit down near the counters and order: 56 slabs of dignity for every well-meaning act I performed. Such that I can sit down and get that piece of bread that I have earned-yes, let me tell you, compassion is well-earned- and I can divvy up that hard-earned bread ten thousand times to feed my- self. Such that I can give myself a bonus point, so when I march down a crowded city -st'eet I can hold up my head high and clear andsay "See, I breathe dig- nity. See, I have a legacy of moral brinks- manship that covers me until I die." And that is why I present my body into your store now, sir. I'll do anything Asir, I'll do anything if that means I can get a little - well, you know how it is when times is tough - a little profit from this here life. I'll tell you right, and I'll even be straight with you. I will rob banks. I will kill a little Raskolnikov woman. I will cook organic meals. I will do most any- thing if when the dues are counted, and the money earned is stacked high and mighty in the lonesome store we call .the bank which stores every value there ever was-if when things is done, I can come out of this battle with a slight profit, well things are fine and dandy. I am talking straight with you sir. Now admittedly, I am a youngster. Am not denying that. I am not denying that my experience on the market' place, and pertise of an old time dealer who has sipped every straw from every genteel wine cellar containing every last slimmer of dignity; I am not denying here and now that my experience is admittedly quite slim, and that my -- how do you say? - savoir faire with the rest of the folks who trade their selves is not par- ticularly admirable. But nonetheless, sir, I am willing to go to most any extreme to buy a slice of the pie. YOU SHALL SEE, for that is a promise. I shall work hard. You think for one lone- some moment I am going to sit around and pluck my toes while some other slob is racing away with compassion. Let me make it A-1 obvious that I am going to tolerate no slipshod performance in this business. I Will tolerate no cavorting with the enemy; no, let me say there will be none of that smiling with folks who are at- tempting their doggone best to buy an- other's slab of honor. You think for one moment I am go- ing to let my competitors get away with plowing away the suffering that exists; do you think I am going to let him strip down the land for me and eliminate its sour and foul odors? You think for one soli- tary slimmer of a moment that I can allow my competitors to help these folks -why what kind of innocence are you spraying? That stuff went out with Don Quixote. I am in this for myself and don't you forget it. Okay, let me make one final promise before I quit-that by the time my tenure's up we shall have bought out every value around. Decency. Spontaneity. Good Cheer. Loyalty. Name one--- dare you- and it will be on our shelves selling at a lower price than you would have dreamed. Yessirree, you name it. Sensitivity. In our stocks. Empathy. Can't be beat. Dig- nity. Best in town. Anything a man could ever want sitting on these here shelves.' We'll have them, sir. That's a promise. Now, I've talked long enough. I know it. I know I must be boring you stiff now so let me only say I am once again announcing my candidacy ' for the posi- tion of lower stockboy such that I can enter your store and manage it properly and (you know me too well) decently. OKAY. Here I am. Take a look. Wave your wand a couple times and shout at me. I'll listen. I'm here to learn (and make some sly mistakes too, kind sir). Yes, Life, I shout out to you. I'm here. I'm ready. Start the ball bouncing as they say. Start your suffering and your love and all they Vld me in the storybooks-and if .there's a lovely lost dragon too, I'll pay extra. Okay. I'll stop, Life. Now it's your turn. 0 Ai the market place of ideas, ularly stringent nor have formulas for, compassion is not partic- I tested out with the ex- Letters to The Daily: Lessons of Write-on To The Daily: THE PRESENCE ON campus of "Write-on" affords the oppor- tunity to comment on the malaise of an institution which engenders such destructive entrepreneurial activity. How distorted education has be- come when production of papers has a higher priority than human growth and learning. The empha- sis on large quantities of narrow- ly defined written work not only dissipates learning time and ener- gy, but provides, at best, a very limited basis for evaluating a stu- dent's knowledge and ability. The enforcement of such work pro- grams by academic authority pro- duces students who have not ex- perienced self-direction and self- definition, who are consequently alienated from their own intellec- tual capacities, and who then view the University in the cynical terms of merely having provided them with another entry on a job application. As objectionable as the Uni- versity's priorities is the capitalist ethos which teaches to exploit ar- tificial needs created by the sys- tem rather than to change the system itself. A paper writing "service" at $3.50 a page serves only to perpetuate distorted val- ues by enabling those who can af- ford it to "buy their way out" rather than confronting their op- pression directly. Further, this "service" increases the already blatant inequities between those students, of the upper and mid- dle classes, who can afford to pay and those of the working class who cannot. A real service to students in this regard would be to help them smash the power that educational institutions hold over their lives, and to change those institutions so that they serve human needs. Education is struggle. -New University Conference Oct. 19 Racism To The Daily: WE ARE ISSHO YIGONG, an organization of Asians and Asian- Americans. We strongly object to the repeated instances of racism in the Daily's coverage of us. On September 29, you printed pictures of members of Issho Yi- gong in a guerrilla theater done jointly }with Vietnam Veterans Against the War. The caption read, "Vietnam Veterans Against the War strike . . . morbid poses." We Asians, not the Vets, were the ones striking the "morbid poses." On September 30, VVAW sent you a letter pointing out the inac- curacy and the racist implications of what you had printed. You buried that letter until October 12. On October 13, Issho Yigong and VVAW repeated the guerrilla theater. An Asian introduced the performance, emphasizing Issho Yigong's role in it. After the per- formance, an Asian spoke about racism against Asians in the war and in the antiwar movement. Again, we made it clear that As- ians and Vets participated equally in the performance. That day, a Daily reporter is said to have apologized for your previous in- accurate coverage. On October 14 you printed an- other photo, and you once again misrepresented our joint guerrilla theater as a VVAW action. We emphasized and re-empha- sized the two organizations' equal roles, and then yousfalsified that equality. We Asians made our- selves obvious to all, and then you denied our presence. You were given every opportunity, and were even urged by every party, to be unbiased. And then you failed again. That was no accident. Your be- havior toward Asian people con- sistently follows a white racist pattern, and your repeated dis- tortions of the guerrilla theater are but one example of your ra- cism: We expect this letter to printed with no more inaccuracies, no more omissions, and no more de- lays. -Issho Yigong Oct. 18 Movie calendar To The Daily: I DO NOT UNDERSTAND why the Michigan Daily does not pub- lish if not in every issue, at least periodically, a rationally present- ' WWI .4, .' f hi re , ~ fri3,j in"'fi, , ' j \\ _<. ) ', ,; .,.:,. \ reporter's notebook Sundry bits and pieces jonathan miller "I think we've got him right where he wants us!" A REPORTER called the Sheriff's Department last week to ask when one of the guests at "Harvey's Hotel" had been released. "I'm sorry," replied the records clerk, "but I'm not allowed to release that information. You'll have to try the .newspaper." "But this is a newspaper." "Sorry sir. I'm, not allowed to re- lease that information," insisted the clerk. Them's the breaks. * .* * JERRY ROE, executive director of the Michigan Republican Party, was on campus this week to address a political not political, said the newsman. "That," Roe said solemnly, "is a lead- ing question." UNIVERSITY STUDENTS returning to school next year may well find that their old piece of yellow plastic will no longer be accepted identification. Plans are afoot in the administration building to issue a new, "improved" i.d. card to all students, staff and faculty members. The .cards will include such details as the holder's birthdate and a color photograph. Reliable administration building sources indicate they will be issued for the winter term. There's one under every bed, Brad. * * * UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Robben Fleming was flabbergasted when in Korea attending an educators confer- ence the other week, when a Korean came running up to him with glee, shouting in English, "we won." "That was how I found out about the Michigan-Michigan State game result," explained Fleming on his return. "There's a lot of our alumni over there." A REPORTER visited the medical school the other day to check out ru- decided not to run an ad. After all a table arranged by column for days would take little space and save us all some trouble. -Prof. Marcel Muller Dept. of Romance Languages Oct. 18 (Editor's Note: The Daily plans to institute such a list. Starting Nov. 2, The Daily will have an entertain- ment calendar of sorts. Check the Arts Page (2), for further details.) Research To The Daily: IT IS UNFORTUNATE that the Director of the Willow Run Labo- ratories does not seem to under- stand the basis of the Assembly's recent action with regard to classi- fied research. His letter to The Daily talks about the right to publish; the Assembly a'ction was not concerned with that, but rath- er the obligation to publish. A could then carry on classified re- search. If its employees prefer to be associated with the University, they must then accept the obliga- tions that go with that association. -Prof. Eugene Feingold Dept. of Medical Care Organization School of Public Health Oct. 11 Court appointments To The Daily: I WONDER IF any of your re- porters has latched on to the real and hidden reason behind the re- signations of four SGC members. Has anyone considered the cryptic coincidence of their resignations and the recent openings on t h e Supreme Court of the U.S.? Ob- viously Haas, Higgins, Schnelker, and Teyn are all being considered by President Nixon for justice-, chi. hav faol 1that thp~v oualifv Soon to be a memory