deep greens and blues i EI1C S3rfd~an IkUII Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Failure No. 3: The return of the stranger by larry lempert1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michicon Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER The research referendum IN THE wake of Senate Assembly's decis- ion not to support the abolition of war research at the University, opponents of such research seem to be showing a disturbing tendency to consider the issue dead. And to many of the students who back- ed the anti-military research effort, the Student Government Council referendum on the issue has now become something of a moot point. One can understand the dejection which naturally ensues when weeks of organizing, fasting, and debating fail to give the faculty representative body the same. perception of classified research that its opoonents have. Yet it would be incorrect to assume that the 31 Assembly members who opposed an end to classified research have had the last word on this crucial matter. Such an assumption will only serve to pro- vide supporters of war research with a victory they have not yet won. OVER THE next several weeks, the class- ified research issue will continue to be investigated by two faculty commit- tees which will make recommendations to the new Senate Assembly that convenes in May. With 20 new and undoubtedly younger members being seated on Assembly at that time, it is quite possible that t h e political makeup of the faculty body may shift slightly leftward. This has parti- cular significance in light of Monday's close vote on the research issue: Defeated 31-26, supporters of an end to classified research would have won if only three of their opponents had changed their votes. Thus, even though it is unlikely the faculty committees will recommend any substantial change in the current Uni- versity guidelines on classified research, the new Assembly might conceivably be moved to do so. But such la move is un- likely without a clear indication that the views of their 31 colleagues in March are not representative of the feeling in the University community on the question of classified and military research. IN THIS LIGHT, the fact that over 30,- 000 members of the community will have an opportunity to express their views on the research issue in next week's refer- endum has not declined, but actually in- creased in importance by virtue of Sen- ate Assembly's actions. It is now imperative that all students who oppose military and classified re- search at the University clearly indicate their beliefs in the referendum, recog- nizing that the student body must give a strong indication of its opposition in order for that view to have weight with the faculty and the Regents. It seems fairly clear that a substantial majority of the student body bears an antipathy for the actions of American forces in Indochina and would desire -i end to University research which makes U.S. soldiers more efficient killers in that conflict. Nevertheless, a similar referendum on classified research was placed before the student body in 1967, and was defeated by a 4-3 margin, due to two major factors: The traditionally low turnout of voters in SGC elections (about 7,000 in 1967) and an intensive effort by conservative groups to mobilize all students not opposed to classified and military research to vote in the March, 1967, election. This effort was not matched by tl3e opponents of such re- search, and with less than a quarter of the campus voting, the referendum lost. If next week's referendum were simil- arly defeated, there would clearly be no chance for removing classified and mili- tary research from the University in the forseeable future. If the student body is unable to demonstrate a concern for the role of the University in the Indochina War, the rest.of the campus can certain- ly not be expected to. IN A SENSE, therefore, the student body is being put on the spot. This year, as in 1967, a minority of students with conservative leanings is attempting to gather supoort for defeating the refer- endum and thereby placing the student body on record as being in favor of class- ified and military research. Their attempts can only be blocked by a large turnout of student voters, com- mitted to the belief that their university should cease being an arm of the U.S. war machine. And only with an overwhelming pas- sage of the research referendum will it be nossible to prevent Senate Assembly's decision to continue classified research from being made permanent. --ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JUSTIN THYME was s i t t i n g behind his desk at The Daily when Rege walked into the office. Justin smiled at his skinny friend but Rege Just sat down, de- jected. His bearded face was clouded by worry, as if he had just destroyed an important exam or gotten back a failing paper. "He came back again," Rege an- nounced. "And I got back my coat, the one that was stolen." "You don't seem too happy about it," Justin observed. "It seems empty now. It's my third failure, Justin - I think, somehow, I've blown it again." Some words of explanation. As Justin knew, every few months the stranger parachuted into Rege's world. He would appear out of no- where t h en walk away, usually dropping a remark as he went to puncture Rege's confidence a n d leave him confused and ashamed. The stranger came in different forms. The first time he was a jumpy young man from Detroit who broke up with his girlfriend and wandered into Rege's room looking for someone to talk to. But Rege failed that first test - he didn't trust the stranger and kicked him out of the room. So the next time, nearly a year later, the visitor transformed him- self into a mysterious crasher and THEN, AFTER his two new friends stayed over one night, Re- ge's coat was missing in the morn- ing. It was not out of spite, Jus- tin said, when Rege came to him bitterly. He preferred to see it as retaliation for Rege's initial lack of trust. But-Rege was disillusioned and started locking his door at home. And he thought the issue was set- tled until, several months later, Bill returned. "He came to the door at 6:30 a.m., hardly coherent and breath- ing heavily. My roommate let him in and when I came downstairs this morning, there he was. "Somehow, I looked at it as a third chance," Rege told Justin. 'But I just didn't know how to handle it. And worst of all, I felt my lack of trust coming back and even turning into fear." "Why were you afraid?" asked Justin. Rege toyed with a glue bottle on the d e s k, carefully avoiding Justin's eyes, and went on without answering. "I called home for some advice. My father put it pretty bluntly. 'You're a soft-hearted dope,' he said. 'Ask him if he took the coat and tell him you don't want him to come around again.' "SO I DECIDED to be brave. Making sure that at least two roommates were on call in the kitchen, I woke Bill up and asked him about the coat. "'Oh yeah,' he said in a matter- of-fact way. 'That was the other guy who took the coat. You want it back?' "I was totally thrown off guard "'I 'Let's4 get it "We went, but I insisted that my two roommates come too. We drove to a large house, not run- down but not in real good shape either. And the three oftus waited outside while Bill went in to get the coat. "Five minutes passed, ten min- utes. I paced b a c k and forth, wondering what we would do if he didn't come out again. "But he did, bringing the coat with him. It had been lying in a heap for a long time; it was all crumpled up, and there was a large tear where onepocket had been partly ripped away. "But Bill was still unabashed., He asked us for a ride back to main campus. We drove b a c k without speaking and, when Bill jumped out of the car, my room- mate said (much to my dismay at his choice of words), 'We'll see- ya.' "'Yeah,' Bill answered, looking at me wryly, 'now that you know I'm honest.' And he walked away. "He had no right to say that, Justin," Rege said defensively. "I had good reason not to trust him. Didn't I?" "Yes, you did." "But I still feel like I should have." "Well," said Justin, "at least you're not a soft-hearted dope." know where it is,' Bill said. go get it now. You wanta go now?' by his manner. There was a little bit of scorn in his voice but most- ly he was laughing at me. "'Yeah, I guess I do,' I said, almost apologetically. returned to take Rege's good win- ter coat. Rege walked in at 5 a.m. one morning and found him sound asleep in the living room. Once again, the immedidte reaction was mistrust. He felt guilty and tried to c o v e r up by welcoming the stranger. Oddly enough, the stranger ac- cepted the half-hearted welcome and came back several times. He brought a friend named Bill, an understanding seemed to develop' and Rege thought his meager at- tempt at trust had been well re- warded. 4 t ' Letters to The Daily Senate Assembly To The Daily: WE LEARN the same ,esson again and again. Working on the not unreasonable assumption that information will set us free, a sub- stantial body of faculty and stu- dents welcomed Michael Knox's confirmation of what many of us long suspected: despite the con- promise of 1968. the University of Michigan is still building up a body-count in Indochina. A.med with this knowledge, confident that only a tiny fragment of either stu- dents or faculty continues to sup- port the war, making ourselves visible through fast and red bend. we framed resolutions of the ut- most moderation and moved with no little grace through the chan- nels of the system. Last Tuesday night was chas- tening, but not absolutely disas- trous. The rigid unresponsiveness which characterizes "representa- tive" government at the national level was, not unsurprisingly, re- flected at the level of the Senate Assembly. Over 400 people watched as membersdebated fractions of phrases concerning another mat- ter, despite their 'certain aware- ness of what we had come for. And the Assembly adjourned befoi'e a vote could be taken. So we workedhardfor the next few days - more signatures (from faculty, for was this not a repre- sentative body?), more armbands. On Monday afternoon we were answered. The members of the as- sembly know that research direct- Ily related to the killing of human beings is conducted at this Uni- versity. They know this and, by sending the issue back to the old commit- tees, they voted to support its con- tinuance. Some of them will be able to hide behind sophistical ra- tionalizations, pretending not to have done what they did. Others, more honest, will affirm the duty of this University to aid the gov- ernments in its practices and poli- cies no matter what they may be. THE VOTE ON Monday was not by roll call. It would be good to know the names of those who feel death should be financed and pro- tected. I should like, at the very least, to send them each Robert Bly's poem, "The Teeth Mother Naked At Last". In the hope that some of them may read the Daily, may I send them this one stanza. to sweeten their days, , efresh their sleep: But if one of those children came near that we have set on fire, came toward you like a gray barn, walking, you would howl like a wind tunnel in a hurricane in a hurricane, you would tear at your shirt with, blue hands, you would drive over your own child's wagon trying to back up, the pupils of your eyes would go wild- If a child came by burning, you would dance on a lawn, trying to walk intothe air, digging into your cheeks, you would ram your head against the wall of your bedroom like a bull penned too long in his moody pen- If one of those children came to- ward me with both hands in the air, fire rising along both elbows, I would suddenly go back to my animal brain, I would drop on all fours, scream- ing, my vocal chords would turn blue, yours would too, it would be two days before I could play with my own children again. --Marilyn B. Young Lecturer, History Dept.. March 23 RIP on SGC To The Daily: I AM A member of the steering committee of the Radical Inde- pendent Party writing to express our viewpoint on the upcoming Student Government Council elec- tions. First of all we feel that the SGC election is important in the fight for increased self determira- tion of students and therefore en- courage everyone to vote. In evaluating the candidates we urge voters to choose those who are most radical, using our platform as a guideline. Finally, we strong- ly implore students to vote yes on referendums three and four advo- cating the end of classified and military research at the Uni- versity. -Tami Minnich Grad March 24 Peace Treaty To The Editor: U.S. POLICY in Indochina is an integral part of the global im- perial strategy of the Nixon ad- ministration, the Pentagon, the multi-national corporations, and their allies. As one means of ex- pressing our condemnation of the pattern of American foreign pol- icy, we have signed the J o i n t Treaty of Peace between the peo- ple of the United States and the people of South Vietnam and North Vietnam - the "Peoples' Peace Treaty".. The American and Vietnamese people ars not enemies. The war is carried out in the names of the people of the United States and South Vietnam but without our consent. The Americans must. agree to immsdiate and total with- drawal from Vietanm, and end the imposition of the Thieu-Ky-Khiem regime on the people of S o u t h Vietnam in order to insure their right to self-determination. The strategy for the political, military, economic and cultural domination of Third World people must be defeated. By ratifying the agreement, we pledge to take whatever actions are appropriate to implement the terms of this joint Treaty and to insure its acceptance by the U.S. government. -The Brain Mistrust March 22 JAMES WECHSLER. Moynihan vs. press' Ar Improving on Anew RETURNING TO HARVARD after his tour of duty on the good ship Nixon, Daniel Patrick Moynihan has drafted a lengthy indictment of American journalists, and especially those engaged in the business of covering Washington. His central charge seems to be that too many contemporary news- papermen are too damn educated. Writing in the current issue of Commentary, with a supportive ac- companiment by editor Norman Podhoretz, Moynihan observe's: "One's impression is that 20 years and more ago the preponderance of the 'working press' (as it liked to call itself) was surprisingly close in origins and attitudes to working people generally. They were not Ivy Leaguers. They now are or soon will be." The profession has be- come "elite," or "attractive to elites." And the "political consequence"- * so Moynihan tells us with some ambiguous logic- of "the rising so- cial status of journalism is that the press grows more and more influ- enced by attitudes genuinely hostile to American society and American government." As one who left the Washington press corps just a little over 20 years ago, I find it hard to recall any proximity to the proletariat among. those with whom I fraternized at the Press Club bar. Certainly most of the men who were considered the elder statesmen of that era there -Arthur Krock, Walter Lippmann, David Lawrence, Frank Kent, to cite only a few-were never accused of being "surprisingly close in origins and attitudes to working people generally." Nor was there any conspicuous number of correspondents who had made their way from the factory to the typewriter without pausing to obtain a college de- gree.: Funding student government TRADITIONALLY, THE impact which student governments have had on the student body and University community has been minimal and has come slowly. For e x a m p 1 e, Student Government Council's major accomplishment of the last few years, the establishment of a student-run bookstore, required months of pressure before the bookstore was ap- proved by the Regents. In addition, most of the student governments of the 17 schools and c o 11 e g e s remain seriously hampered and nearly useless because of a lack of funds, resources and student in- terest. Yet, with their constitutencies' support, student governments on this campus need not remain stifled. With student approval of a funding proposal appearing on next week's SGC ballot, Council and the stu- dent governments of the schools and col- leges will be able to meet several impor- tant student needs. One of five referenda placed on the ballot, the funding proposal asks that a $1.85 per term per student assessment be allocated SGC and the college govern- ments. Under the plan, SGC would receive 85 cents and the remaining dollar would go to the student government of the voter's school or college. While students may rightfully balk at any proposed increase in their already sky-rocketing expenses, they should real- ize that the projects toward which their funds would be directed are in their own interest. SGC PLANS TO begin work on a student- run food co-op which would break the c a m p u s food merchants monopoly on campus food priJces. In addition, the add- of the depths of student commitment to the issue. The m o n e y the .college governments would receive, if the referendum is passed, would also increase their effectiveness. Many of these bodies do not presently receive funds and, according to many members of these councils, their effec- tiveness is reflected accordingly. Some governments r e c e i v e "discretionary" grants from their deans, a system which further limits their autonomy. According to a plan proposal at a re- cent intergovernmental symposium, the new funds to the school and college gov- ernments would be used for direct and quicker services for students, recruiting projects a i m e d at attracting minority student groups to the school, new courses lecture series and course evaluations. OPPONENTS OF the proposal have dis- agreed with SGC's $1.85 allocation, saying SGC is not able to wisely use its present money. They point to instances when the council has given sums to po- litical p a r t i e s, and to radical groups which they say are not in the interest of the majority of students. However, along with the funding ref- erenda, students will also be voting for a new group of SGC members. Students should vote for those candidates they feel can maturely handle the added funds. A vote against the added money can only limit the new council's effectiveness. Opponents to the funding plan also claim that some students who are re- ceiving financial aid or supporting them- selves are strictly unable to bear any new assessment. To resolve this, SGC can arrange to loan money to these students. Yet Moynihan's view of modern journalistic history is blandly ac- cepted by Podhoretz in his prefatory remarks: But if Mr. Moynihan is right in stressing the influence of the adversary culture on the reporting of public affairs, he is also right, I think, in seeing the growth of this influence as a relatively recent de- velopment-a consequence of the entry into the journalistic profession of increasing numbers of highly educated people." Such characters, Podhoretz and Moyinhan agree-and especially those exposed to Ivy League training-are prone, in Podhoretz' words, to be "actually at war with the values and premises of bourgeois or middle-class society." An initial reaction to the Moynihan-Podhoretz duet is to wish that much of it were true-particularly with respect to the scope of journ- alistic skepticism and independence. A second thought is to wonder whether they have lost the capacity to differentiate between Tom Wicker and Tom Hayden or between Ed Morgan and Jerry Rubin. * . Ir , P--- 7,-- - RZ I , ice. :, .. ,, , , yt a , ANYONE WHO witnessed the most recent Presidential news con- ference (in which, for example, not a single question was raised about the oppressive censorship blanketing the Laotian operation) will find it hard to reconcile what they saw and heard with any portrait of cru- sading journalism at war with the government. Certainly there have been instances of irresponsible reporting in this and other Administrations; The Times will have to speak for it- self with regard to Moynihan's two isolated allegations of coverage in which he contends the Administration's racial policies were unfairly treated. But the crucial fact about the last six years is acknowledged by Moynihan himself. "How is it then thet this relationship (between President and press) has lately grown so troubled? The immediate answer, of course, is that war in Vietnam. An undeclared war, unwanted, misunderstood or not understood at all, entailed a massive deception of the American people by their government . . . the essential fact was that of de- ceit . . " But, having further asserted that a measure of secrecy was "en- demic to the cold war" long before Vietnam, Moyinhan proceeds to a lengthy discourse on other aspects of the Presidential-press problem. Too often "leaks" are promoted by rival bureaucrats and indiscrim- imately transmitted. Too often Senatorial speeches (as in the case of the late Joseph McCarthy) are overplayed 'long after the veracity of the orator has been exploded. Too often government officials fail to answer back when unjustly criticized. Much of that is as valid as it is unoriginal. But it muddles the transcendent ract he has already conceded-the massive rrauds e- bodied in the Vietnam war. WAS JOURNALISM guilty of excessive exposure of those frauds? ----__ -* ._ W-414001itA