notes and comments I On ' 'radicalization I 3, THE WORD 'radicalization' h a s fallen. out of vogue, though the idea hasn't, nor has the reality of it. Radicalization, as I understand it, us- ually means the personal experience un- dergone by some people t h a t converts them from son~e degree of liberalism or even conservatism to outright radicalism. The big deal here and on other campus- es last year was to do something t h a t would prompt administration overreac- tion, with kids getting hassled and beaten, bringing about a very authentic and deep- seated reaction against those directly - not indirectly - responsible. That scenario of radicalization is over- ly simple and the process can take place in other ways. Early in the controversy between the black students and the R e g e n t s last spring then-law student Dave Lewis (he is now U.S. District Judge Theodore Levin's law clerk and a member of the Board of Governors of Oakland University, no small pair of accomplishments) presented a pro- posal for tuition waivers for. minority stu- dents who couldn't afford the cost of edu- cation here.t Lewis had done a quite respectable job of researching the legal basis for tuition waivers. When the administration heard the pro- posal, Lewis recalled, they gave a quick answer: No. The reason was the fact that the Legis- lature in the previous appropriation bill had specifically barred the Regents from granting tuition waivers (or granting them only at the expense of i losing state appropriations equal to the amount of tu- ition waived). TO LEWIS, and to any reasonable per- son in his position, he was being slighted in a serious way. He was being lied to, the most degrading of all experiences when you know it's happening. There were in fact plausible reasons not 'to employ tuition waivers. To use them would require a legal fight over autonomy, the fourth in as many years. More serious, even were the University to win quickly, would be the bad political effect on the school's standing in Lansing. In light of the relatively painless ways to achieve most of what tuition waivers would yield - extensive use of scholar- ships and loans - there was no pompel- ling reason to go to court. But Lewis and the BAM leadership were not told that at first. They were given a superficial, deceptive answer that t h e y knew to be as much lie as truth. The result: Lewis was 'radicalized' and moved much more easily toward support of what BAM did. ANOTHER EXAMPLE. Last year during the bookstore controversy (small time compared to w h a t followed), President Fleming arranged a press conference in Detroit to give the word to the state about what was happening on campus. Now, that in itself isn't so bad, except that the result was that Fleming had a field of pliant and'unquestioning reporters who didn't know enough about the situa- tion to question him intelligently. The re- sult was great for Fleming and the ad- ministration and a huge black eye for the students' independent of the merits. What hurt was the failure of the admin- istration to inform, The Daily, which did have reporters who knew what was going on. The explanation was that it was just an oversight on their part, that it was eas- ier fo' Fleming to go to Detroit to accom- modate the media, and that there was no intent to avoid The Daily. At that time, I was managing editor of The Daily, so I felt most affected, and my reaction was one of simple disgust. That incident, more than anything else, turned me toward support of the strike. I was, in the terminology, radicalized. I Pad been unscrupulously shafted by the administration. THESE TWO TALES have a common and obvious conclusion. It is true that ad- ministrations must split radical from lib- lanidsiuan eral and moderate to maintain the func- tioning of their schools, but more than process or facade is involved. If liberal administrators want to keep their schools away from the terrors that have hit Berkeley, Harvard, Columbia and Kent State, then they had better be au- thentically liberal. That doesn't mean they must be sops when the pressure is on. It means a com- mitment to a certain type and degree of openness and honesty, honesty that indi- cates mutual respect. It also means a different state of mind for administrators. Standards of "follow- ship" among college students have chang- ed, there is a real campus constituency now. If administrators don't take them in- to account in more than a manipulative way, they'll find nothing but grief, for themselves and their institutions. The indicators now say the University administration is going in exactly the op- posite direction out of sheer political nec- essity. It seems that Fleming, if he chose to, could continue to steer a middle-lib- eral course, meeting students' fair demands without throwing the Legislature into a political tantrum. But whether he'll choose to play, it that carefully is yet to be seen. The eventual cost will be great if he plays it wrong - either by Legislative repression or his own. 9 -0 lie M tgatt t Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan . JAMES WECHSLERW. Battle for control of Dems gets underway 0 I 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individuei opinions of staff writers or the editors.:This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE CHUDWIN Travels with Nixon: Ignoring domestic problems HE STRUGGLE for control of the national Democratic Party that became .inevitable in the aftermath of the 1968 defeat has exploded suddenly and irretriev- ably-and ahead of schedule. In the mellow absent-mindedness of a Labor.Day weekend, the begin- nings of the conflict evoked little notice. But the battle is on, and its outcome may determine both the identity of the next Demo- cratic Presidential nominee and the fate of a prospective fourth party movement (assuming that Wallace keeps his third in the field). The man who has triggered the confrontation is a conservative Texas Democrat named Robert Strauss. He emerged as Demo- cratic treasurerdcoincident with Larry O'Brien~'s designation as na- tional chairman. Strauss, in an action inconsis- tent with the traditionally ecu- menical role of party fund-raiser, told columnist Robert Novak that he was resolved to strip John Kenneth Galbraith, a major voice of Democratic progressivism, of any prestigious credentials in the Democratic structure. AS REPORTED b y N o v a k, Strauss complained that Gal- braith's maverick mind and in- dependent demeanor were-among other things-costing the Demo- cats money. "I blame people like me," said Strauss, "who-let Gal- braith and his type use the party as a podium." S t r a u s s' mini-declaration of war was provocative enough. But its impact was enlarged by Novak's assertion - still undenied,- that chairman O'Brien shared the Strauss view. The episode assumed even larger dimensions against the background of AFL-CIO president George Meany's surly lamentations on the decline of Democratic Party machines-"only Daley (of Chi- cago) has sort of held on"-and about the increased influence 9f Americans for Democratic Action over which Galbraith presided for two lively 'years. Galbraith, commenting on the Strauss surge program, described his detractor as a representative of the "rich tax refugees in the Democratic Party" and cheerfully invited full-fledged combat. Simultaneously, ADA vice chair- man Joe Rauh urged liberals to suspend contributions to the Strauss-run operation and give directly to liberal candidates. ONE IMMEDIATE result of the furor will be a decline in liberal contributions to the National Committee. The practical econo- mics of the Strauss plan may be as vulnerable as his long-range politics. Now it can be told that one regular donor to the Demo- crats-Jim Loeb, publisher of the Adirondack Enterprise and long- time ADA executive-privately in- formed O'Brien shortly after Strauss' advent that he would no longer help to subsidize the na- tional organization because of Strauss' identification with the anti-Yarborough forces in Texas. Now thatrthegissues have been publicly drawn, Loeb's example will be widely imitated and Strauss' will have to dig deep into the heart of Texas to compensate for even a fraction of the losses. But much more than fiscal mat- ters are involved. It is conceivable that the Strauss approach will touch the pocketbooks of some hitherto reluctant conservative moneybags. But what kind of Democratic Party is envisaged by, the right-wing -Texans for whom Strauss speaks-and who destroy- ed that decent, humane liberal, Ralph Yarborough, in their jparty's primary? That is what the argument is essentially about. PERHAPS IT IS dangerous for politicians to read a book - espe- cially if it is the only one they read in the course of a year. For nearly half of his term Richard Nixon's Administration has been intermittently paralyzed and dis- credited by its reverence for Kevin Phillips' discovery of a "Southern strategy." Now some Democratic eminences are said to be hypnotized by the Scammon-Wattenberg vol- ume on "The Real Majority," a Meanyesque analysis that echoes Phillips' disdain, for the political power of the young, the poor and the black and depicts a machinist's wife in Dayton as the voter to be wooed above all. But if the un-youpg, the un- poor and the un-black are to be- come the chief objects of both Republican and Democratic soli- tude, one thing is virtually certain. There will be a new party in 1972. In a four-way contest it would al- most surely doom the Democrats and it could just possibly win with the support of those vast numbers of independent voters who do not wear any party's collar. This is not a wholly pleasing prospect because the task of governing that would confront a victorious minority party would be full of peril (as it would be if George Wallace some- how came in first). No Democrat dare delude himself, however. about what will happen if the Strauss doctrine prevails in the party's top councils. Of course that machinist's wife is important. But as Joe Duffey is showing in Connecticut, no iron law makes her inaccessible to a liberal Democratic voice if its tone is at once rational and dedicated. What spells sure death for the Democrats is an attempt to become so "respectable" that they lose all identity and spirit. A Demo- cratic Party that tries to exile Ken Galbraith will be such a party. (c) New York Post AMERICAN PRESIDENTS have a pecu- liar fascination w-i t h foreign policy. They love to ignore troublesome domestic problems and concentrate on manipulat- ing other countries. The Nixon Administration, like almost all of its predecessors in this century, is no exception. Later this month President Nixon will leave the country for an eight-day Euro- pean tour. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler says the trip will "afford the President an opportunity to undertake 'a full exchange of views "with his respective hosts a n d with our officials in an effort to strength- en the structure for peace and give im- petus 'to the President's efforts to bring about an era of negotiations." But the excursion also has political im- plications because of its proximity to the 'November elections and raises questions about U.S. fpreign policy. From the beginning, the President will appeal to the Catholic vote by landing in Rome and promptly seeing Pope Paul VI, the second such visit in 18 months. To suggest there is some hope in the stalled Paris peace talks, the chief execu- tive will get together with Ambassadors David Bruce and Philip Habib, U.S. rep- resentatives at the talks. This pountry's strong support for the repressive regime of Generalissimo Fran- cisco Franco will be shown again when Nixon visits the Spanish chief of state. Spain has requested political incentives for the continuing use of its territory for U.S. air and naval bases. As a result, the United States has pushed for Spain's en- try into NATO and included Spain on the itinerary of a Presidential trip while Franco continues to stifle his native op- position. Nixon's biggest coup of this foreign ad- venture is his stop in Yugoslovia. No oth- er American president has visited this re- bellious Communist nation and Nixon hopes it will be a good follow-up to his enthusiastic reception in Rumania 1 a s t summer. MEANWHILE two of the President's key domestic advisers I e f t yesterday to Editorial Staff MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor STUART GANNES JUDY SARASOHN Editorial Director Managing Editor NADINE COHODAS .... .. Feature Editor JIM NEUBACHER A E ditorial Page Editor ROB BIER........Associate Managing Editor LAURIE HARRIS ... .... .... Arts Editor JUDY KAHN .. ... . Personnel Director DANIEL ZWERDLING . ...... .... Magazine Editor ROBERT CONROW ... .... ...... Books Editor Rucis.... Cs . check on things in South Vietnam, Japan and Hong Kong. John D. Erlichman, head of the Domestic Council, and George Schultz, director of the Office of Man- agement and Budget, will discuss post- war economic development in South Viet- nam, Japan's economic development and Hong Kong's public housing complexes. Schultz's participation in -this trip may be necessary to examine economic condi- tions in other countries, but Ehrlichman's inclusion is inexcusable. His job suppos- edly consists of coordination of domestic programs and a foreign trip can only re- duce the Administration's already weak efforts to deal with social problems here at home. Also questionable is t h e inclusion of Daniel P. Moynihan in Nixon's entourage on the European extravaganza. Now holding the title of counselor to the Pres- ident, M:oynihan's field of expertise has always been urban studies in the United States. FURTHER EVIDENCE of the Nixon Ad- ministration's failure to comprehend the seriousness and urgency of domestic problems has come from Vice President Spiro Agnew's cross-country campaign trip and the President's speech at Man- hattan, Kan. By election day, Agnew may have re- vived more words than any other vice president, but in the process he will have revealed only his -own inflexibility. Constantly the vice president condemns his opponents in the most vile language he can imagine. Speaking yesterday it' Michigan, Agnew called U.S. Sen. Philip A. Hart "a radical liberal." Even more disturbing to Agnew were the jeers of hecklers and demonstrators, the first the VP has encountered on his six-state campaign swing. In desperation, Agnew responded by promising that "the carpers, the complainers, t h e runners- down, will not run this country." Such expressions of overconfidence about the United States ignore housing shortages, the breakdown in public trans- portation, racial tensions and other ur- ban problems and swell the ranks of Ag- new's opponents. Speaking at Kansas State University yesterday, Nixon himself said that a "cancerous disease" was spreading across the country and added that "no cause justifies violence in the name of change." To halt this movement Nixon called on "responsible university and college ad- ministrators, faculty and student leaders to stand up and be counted." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Soistis School doesn't intend to lie To the Editor: IN REPLY TO Kathy Loeb's letter of September 10: The Solstis School spokesmen have conscientiously tried to keep their statements free from in- nuendo, rhetoric, and falsehood. The "lies" Mrs. Loeb mentions are certainly not intentional. When University inspectors re- viewed the condition of 706 Oak- land recently, one of them remark- ed that the furnace was at most no more than two years old. Per- haps he was mistaken; I regret Mrs. Loeb's impression that we lied. As for the other building de- ficiencies that her letter men- tioned - we are uncomfortably aware of these. We do feel, how- ever, that if the University had, $1460 to demolish the building, it might be able to find at least that much to contribute toward its re- quired renovation. . MRS. LOEB FEELS that Solstis "owes the University a great deal of thanks" for letting it use the building (although members of the administration neglected to tell us that a fire could have start- ed any time from exposed wires in the attic). In addition, she tells us that we ought to again thank them for preventing us from oc- cupying "a potential fire trap" (after they accepted $200 in rent for that firetrap). Gratitude is difficult at the present time. It's hard to reconcile the fury of Mrs. Loeb's accusations with her purported concern for t h e welfare of the school. The insin- uations of her letter appear far out of proportion to the inaccura- cies she wishes to correct. -Paul Keenan Staff Member, The Stoistis School Sept. 16 Strike support To the Editor: WITH THE ADVENT of the auto workers strike, I am writing this letter in hopes that the ideas expressed will be disseminated among the student community. My aim is to propose a student-work- er understanding that, instead of trying to woo American labor to the cause of the student left, at- tempts to enlistsstudent support for labor's efforts. It seems the left has embraced the widest range of struggles, in- cluding the various liberations (Black. 'women's, Vietnamese, gay), the fight against pollution, repression, militarism, etc. But in all this we have somehow over- looked the problems and aspira- tions of the American blue-collar worker. Perhaps the reason for this - something which students must try to change-is the very mental image we have of Amer- ican labor. We accuse organized labor of being limited in outlook and guided only by self-interest. Yet, when analysed, the several causes of the left have originated from self-Interest, only to be made into a crusade by white, middle-class youth. And if labor sees its enemy as only the em- ployer, not the entire- American system, that should not n e g a t e the validity and justness of labor's demands. Workers, through union- ism, are simply trying to improve their situation through means that are understandable and relevant to them. AS STUDENTS, we should also drop the notion that we have a monopoly on radicalism. The his- tory of labor in America is the most violent, continuing struggle our society has known. Perhaps the blue-collar worker today is not aware of his historical back- grou nd.bt the nrinrinl mannn 1\\ I4 \ \ { \% - - '4 "It's good to see someone working within the system !" conditions for himself and his fel- low workers. This kind of immed- corporation's products might also be effective. And we should go FINALLY, I am proposing all this not for a self-gratification,