- deep greens and blues 4t4e fir ian Datly Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Confronting the amorphous They by rry lempert I 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, SEPTEMBER 9, 1971 SUPPLEMENT CO-EDITORS: SARA FITZGERALD, TAMMY JACOBS, CARLA RAPOPORT Taking a "hard look back at the movement's genesis "AND IN 1971, they rested." As historians, philosophers, and poets sit down to record the most recent era of campus turbulence, perhaps some of their works will end like this, with a wry reference to the Creation. It describes an atmosphere that has settled over academia for many months now. After years of social and political activism, of sit-ins, marches, and strikes, the nation's campuses appear to have grown tired; their students seem over- come by propensity for rest, rather than unrest. At the University last year, few at- tempts were made to organize potent campaigns against the problems that have so inflamed the campus community In the past. Where political activity did occur, it was carried out by small groups that lacked leadership and spirit. Elsewhere, things were pretty much the same. The invasion of Laos-coming only 10 months after dozens of campuses were forced to close in the wake of the Cam- bodan venture and the Kent State and rackson State killings - elicited only a march or two, and a few other sputtering responses that soon died. THIS LULL in the political climate at colleges and universities evokes images of the serene campuses of the 1950's. But coming in 1971, it seems oddly placed. More than ever before, students have gained an acute perception of the social and political decadence that character- izes the United States and the rest of the world. Few in academia today are able to completely escape the realities of pov- erty, prejudice, war, environmental decay -the expressions of injustice and inhu manity ring constantly in our ears. Yet despite their burgeoning social con- sciousness, students returning to their campuses this fall seem hesitant about channelling their beliefs into some kind of constructive movement. HAT HAS happened to foster this W paradox of awareness coupled with apathy? For most, perhaps, it was the .realiza- tion that for all the time and energy they expended on political activity in the last decade, few victories of any consequence were achieved. Over a six-year period, students rallied and marched and literally fought in the streets to convince the U.S. government to end its involvement in Indochina. But although they were joined, in the waning years, by masses of citizens that had also been moved to protest, the government's policy remained impregnable. Far from disengaging from Southeast Asia, Ameri- cans have mounted invasions into two more countries in this decade, alone. In the same way, other reform move- ments have failed to bear fruit. And de- spite all their efforts to raise the con- sciousness of the government, students still see their social awareness openly scorned by government officials-officials who are unafraid to pursue intensive campaigns against this type of conscious- ness. Last May 3, 4, and 5, District of Colum- bia Police Chief Jerry Wilson was ap- plauded for breaking the back of anti- war civil disobedience through indiscrimi- nate mass arrests. It is indeed frustrating to find that Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor after years of protesting the omnipotence of our self-serving oligarchy in Washing- ton, it can still stage a campaign against the most basic civil liberties without fear of diminishing its standing with the ma- jorty of the public. LOCALLY, A similar frustration abounds in University students, faculty mem-. bers, and non-academic employes who at one time saw a great potential in political activity at this campus. What, indeed, do we have to show for the strikes and dis- ruptions, the leafletting, rallying, and lobbying? Well, there's a relatively new under- graduate degree, having minimal course requirements, that the literary college faculty approved under pressure in April, 1969. But to gain admission to graduate school, most students taking the degree are forced to take many of the regular BA requirements anyway. And then there's the 10 per cent black admissions plan which the University adopted after a two-week class strike in March, 1970. But the black administrators supervising the plan now say the Uni- versity is not providing the supportive s e r v i c e sto adequately implement the plan. And finally, there's the year-old dis- count campus bookstore, an achievement that required a building takeover and 107 arrests in September, 1969. The students took over the building because they were angry that the administration could so easily disregard a student referendum that overwhelmingly supported establish- ment of the bookstore. But the referenda are still being disregarded. And the book- store is probably saving students no more than a few dollars a year. S0 WE COME to 1971, and find that across the country, students have be- come bored with ineffectiveness, tired of defeat. And the growing apathy is becom- ing more and more noticeable to those outside the campus: "As a society comes to the point where there is negativism, defeatism . . . it is inevitable that younger people will give up," was the sanctimonious comment of President Nixon to a group of Midwest editors and publishers in July. Indeed, as the new academic year pro- gresses, it would be quite easy to do justice to that comment. But to do so, to suc- cumb to frustration and defeatism, would be an abdication of the ideals which, this year more than ever, the student body is likely to profess. There are only a few alternatives. One is to continue as before, with a decreas- ing number of student and faculty acti- vists attempting to organize support for limited reforms. Another and far wiser alternative is to make a concerted attack upon the en- trenched structures that have frustrated such efforts in the past, and have brought students to the point of apathy. AT THE UNIVERSITY, it is easy to trace the resistance to change to a govern- ing mechanism that has always operated without direct student involvement. As a state institution, the University is gov- erned by eight regents elected by Mich- igan voters to eight-year terms. The Re- gents, who have traditionally been busi- nessmen and attorneys, are required to be in Ann Arbor only for their monthly meetings, and have never developed the understanding of the University com- munity that is enjoyed by students and faculty members. For years, members of both groups have tossed around the idea of altering the government of the University so that it is headed by a body that directly repre- sents the community. There cannot pos- sibly be a more fitting time to seek such an alternative than now, when it has become clear that the current structure is forcing the social consciousness of the community to withdraw from the fore- front. Working t o w a r d a potentially far- reaching change in University governance is a far more viable approach than once again w .o r k i n g toward limited goals, which might only add further to student frustration and defeatism. Above all, too much is at stake for 1971 QUARE AND solid, the ad- ministration building sur- veyed the crowd gathered at its feet. Its slit-like eyes showed no sign of friendship but, at the same time, its glass-d o o r mouth breathed no anger. Its face, in fact, showed no emo- tion at all - only eminated a certain feeling of . . . condes- cension. A thin, bearded observer stood off to one side, watching the demonstration. His face, like that of the building, showed no emotion, but once in a while he would shake his head. He turned to a friend standing with him and commented, "It's a swell crowd." And sure enough, the crowd swelled and, in a sudden mo- tion, swept up to the base of the brick monument. A figure in denim broke away, grasped a megaphone in h is hand and shouted to the group. "This isn't a building," he chal- lenged, "it's a goddam f o r- tress. And locked up safe inside that fortress, armed to t h e teeth with budgets and records and files - that's where They are!" "That's right," yelled a sup- porter from below and reached up for a megophone. They're in there making decisions about us. And have They ever asked us about it?" "Just look in those windows!" "We can't," responded an angry voice from the crowd. "Aha, just as I thought! The windows are too small and too far away-we can't see in and They don't want to see out." talk with Them. Let's open those closed doors and yell in Their closed ears - "You represent the people? Well, this is t h e people!" The chanting wave pressed toward the door, surged through a line of security guards, flow- ed down the hall yelling, "We are going to talk to Them, now!" Ralph and Justin freed them- selves from the crowd, and, making their way to the side of the hall, stoodaback against the wall. "But are They go- ing to talk to us," Justin won- dered, as the people burst into the conference room and sud- denly became quiet. A gleaming wooden table ran the length of the room, s u r- rounded by plush, empty chairs. Portraits of past powers lined the walls, and flags of the na- tion and University respectively guarded the entrance way. And there They were. At the far end of the table the machine hummed peace- fully. Every few seconds the keyboard would clatter a n d tapes would whirl in response. Lights flashing, electricity pul- sing through the circuited veins, They waited. One lone figure in denim ap- proached Them. He looked at the silent crowd, turned back to Them. And his rage building up inside, he let loose, "You goddam honky fascist e 1i t e ruling class capitalistic pig!" The keys rattled for a few seconds, then there was silence again. Finally, a panel lit up and answered him quietly, di- rectly, without emotion. "That does not compute." 6 #1 As attention focused on the windows more carefully, faces could be seen, high up, glaring through the slits at the peo- ple below. A woman in t h e crowd shook her fist. "All we get is secretaries laughing at us!" "And we'll all be secretaries too," yelled another, "if They have Their way." The two observers moved closer to the crowd. "What are They meeting about today?" asked Ralph. "Nobody knows," said Justin, scratching his beard. "Nobody ~ knows what They meet about. Nobody even knows who They are, really." "I've seen pictures," R a 1 p h ventured. "Pictures are amorphous." "We get the picture," the me- gaphone asserted. "They sit on their uptight assholes around a big wooden table. The secretary drones out the motions, They nod Their heads, grumble Aye, Aye. They run through our lives like They run through a hun- dred other items on the agenda, thumbs up or down on our existence, thinking our future can proceed only with Their stamp of approval." The crowd stamped wildly in approval as she went on. "Has anyone ever seen those decision makers? Have you ever talked to Them and told Them what you want? Do you think They'd listen to you if you did? "You've got to go through the proper channels. They'll tell you. You've got to program the computer just right or it'll spit the information back at you, undigested." Another speaker jumped to the front. "It's time we had a 4' facing the wars that never end By TAMMY JACOBS Supplement Co-Editor IT's EASY to believe that when The War ends, everything will be fine again. After all, everything was fine when The War began, back when members of the Class of '75 were somewhere around two years old. We didn't notice any- thing wrong then. When The War ends, we will have time to straighten out the economy, end racism, sexism and pollution, turn our cities into gardens of Eden, and be human again. When The War ends, t h e government will no longer try to suppress printing of material which is embarrassing to it, be- cause there will be no more such material. The government will no longer jail 13,600 de- monstrators within a week, be- cause there will be no war to demonstrate against. And everything will be won- derful - when The War ends. The majority of us have long since rejected this sim- plistic view of What's Wrong With Our Society; but with that rejection, we stop. We know there's more wrong than just the war - in fact, it's the whole system - but at first' it's hard to find an alterna- tive to that system that suits one's personal politics. And if we find what we consider an al- ternative, it's even harder to think of how to turn America today into whatever socialist, communist, anarchist or collec- tivist haven we've decided on. It's easy to talk about "organ- izing the masses," or "forming a worker-student alliance" o r revolution in the streets," but how does one go about any of these things? A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step, the cliche goes, but where is the first step? None of the first steps tried so far seem to have done much good. Electing "good' congressmen is out of the question - no amount of g o o d congressmen elected by devoted youthful fol- lowers are going to outbalance the bad legislators in power, and besides, one begins to feel that there is p o s s i b l y something wrong with the very structure of congress. The other extreme, "stopping the government," is even less effective, if that's possible. We tried, one might say, and we ended up 10,000 strong in make- shift detention, camps, as gov- ernment bureaucrats continued working on the Machine that has caused all this. In the face of all these prob- lems, it's easiest to give up. School is to learn-study-g e t ahead, and not to play activist, one can say. "I can march against The War ten million times and it still goes on," one adds, even more logically. "And there's noth- ing much I can do about pol- lution, racism, sexism and the rest, either." Most people seem to take this attitude, these days. So many first stepshave been tried, and all the attempts have proved numbingly futile. Then, too, Ann Arbor and the University can offer a soft, safe womb to hide in. So, you prepare to sit it out. But sitting it ou" isn't easy. Because things begin to intrude on the class-work, on the slow Diag afternoons, on even the fragrant marijuana evenings. Things intimately connected with the University itself, at PolItics0 By ZACHARY SCHILLER When you arrive on campus, you will eventually be confronted with a clash be- tween cultures - the growing conflict be- tween what is commonly called the youth culture, and the more traditionalswork-hard, get a degree and go into business route. For the freshman, the choice he makes be- tween the two cultures will effect at least his next four years, perhaps the rest of his ' life, and the choice must be made. On the surface, the two lifestyle are very different-local "youth culturists" look with scorn on the time-worn, respectable way of going through college and many of them ' drop out along the way in defiance of an educational system they find irrelevant, op- pressive, and bureaucratic. And the more traditional scholars accuse the marijuana smokers of being irreverant and irrespon- sible.1 However, looking at the picture from afar, there is a shocking similarity between these a apparently dissimilar ways of life. This overriding similarity is that neither 1 campus lifestyles first glance far from pollution, sexism, racism and The War. For example, at North Hall, tucked away in a corner of campus, ROTC cadets learn to shoot and march and fight. And all professors don't j u s t give dull 9 a.m. lectures - some are instead developing re- mote sensing devices that will be used to seek out the V ie t Cong so that they can be de- stroyed. And there are the Univer- sity hospital workers, who come in from Ypsilanti because Ann Arbor's too expensive to live in, and who have to pay someone to care for their children while they work for the University. Then there are the place- ment offices, where companies offer you jobs with the military- industrial complex itself - with exciting opportunities for work in racist South Africa. Or Mis- sissippi. There are the professors, most of them male and most of them white. And the professional schools - are there no women who want to be doctors and lawyers, or has it something to do with admissions policy? All this and more intrudes upon your consciousness, press- ing until you realize that it's all part of the same problem, the same things that won't get any better even if The War does end. And you think painfully that the problem is as insoluable on the small scale as it is on the large one. Protests,tsit-ins, rallies, marches, letters to the Daily, talks with administrators, class strikes. Probably none 9f them will help, you think. But they might, as they have sometimes in the past. And so they're worth trying, again and again, as you simultaneously search for newhtactics. And it might be that t h e trying and the searching for solutions at the University level is the first step of the endless journey. 4 &, challenges the existing system. Although certain "liberated" organizations maintain that marijuana is revolutionary and will bring down the American way of life, it is hard to see how dope could cause cracks to appear in the America edifice of world power. Although Robben Fleming may occasion- ally feel morally outraged by the effects of dope on the student populus, he and other administrators know that one studept smok- ing dope in the dorm is one less student standing on a picket line with striking Uni- versity employes or organizing other stu- dents to demand a really good education. And although one can spend hours idealiz- ing the peaceful spirit of the "youth culture" at Woodstock, one can also look at a more recent rock festival, the Festival of Life in Louisiana this summer, where promoters of the affair employed motorcycle gangs to bloody countless heads rather than allow people in without their $28 tickets. Dope as a way of life is not revolutionary, but rather the opposite. It is no threat to the existing order, and can therefore be tolerat- ed or even approved by that order. It is equally self-evident that student who 6spend all their time studying, swallowing whole the values handed to them by exist- ing society, are doing nothing to challenge, the existing system. Thus, the choice that one must make is. not between lifestyles, it is between adopt- ing a studious-or a "youth eulture" life style or challenging the educational system in a political way. For when there is a sit-in or a picket line, it doesn't matter what ex- cuse you have, it just matters if you're there or not. You may argue that by not participating in the educational system you are challeng- ing the legitimacy of that system; but does the University, by not taking a stand on matters of national policy, thus challenge those policies? Only by acting, not by sit- ting passively, can you challenge anything. And it will be those who act who will change the University and the rest of so- ciety as well. To act or not: that is the decision you must face. k JIM BEATTPIE Executive Editor DAVE CHUDWIN Managing Editor STEVE KOPPMAN ........... .. Editorial Page 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 ROBERT CONROW .....Books Editor JIM JUDKIS. .... .. .....Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Tammy Jacobs, Jonathan Miller, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Robert Schreiner, W. E. Schrock, Geri Sprung. COPY EDITORS: Lindsay Chaney, Art Lerner, Debra Thal, DAY EDITORS: Juanita Anderson, Janet Frey, Jirn McFerson, Linda Dreeben, Alan Lenhoff, Hannah Morrison, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Kenneth Cohn, Mike Grupe, Jim Irwin, John Mitchell, Kristin Ring- $ CR T PAER5 l 60V6C)MHJ .16 HARVAW 15 t HOAP- RASSEp 6Y K)6A- Ik) A COPWAR (i)T t 1A - F&I. 1K CA, PA.~ P,0 FVo0 C?0 ks-j A IF SOU WOVT VW LOR TI~K NES O6- TAIW$ S6C~f PAFR FRcH 1/ O2f'JMiJ l Y'OU §GTEAL T b x I j