9i4e 3iryigan Daily Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan the unreformed source Same old song... with a different meaning by jun nenuacher 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE KOPPMAN LSA governing proposal: A misdirected effort' EFFORTS TO ALTER the oligarchial character of decision-making at uni- versities have become almost an institu- tionalized theme of academia. Each year, the dialogue between stu- dents seeking a berth in their campus hierarchy, and those who comprise that hierarchy, continues, with new proposals, new debates, but a similar response from the institution: The input of student ideas is acceptable, but the final decision must be ours. Thus, the tone and orientation of aca- demic life has remained under the aegis of the faculties, and to a lesser extent, the university administrations. And one would be fooling himself if he thought this situation was apt to change in the forseeable future: T h e r e just aren't enough people a m o n g the faculty, or among the students, who feel any real antipathy to the status quo. HERE AT THE University, some sembl- ance of democratization can be found within a few of the 18 schools and col- leges. But that is all it is-a semblance. For while students have, over the past few years, been seated on a variety of com- mittees which were formerly composed entirely of faculty members, the ultimate power to legislate requirements, admis- sions policies, and other policy matters remains a function of the faculty. And the power to administer these decisions is usually held by the dean and, in most cases, an executive committee composed primarily or entirely of faculty members. Thus, the institution of bi-partite com- mittees has served merely to allow ar interchange of ideas; it has not touched the mechanism which determines wheth- er or not to implement those ideas. THIS TERM, however, the government of the University's largest unit, the literary college, will be the subject of an effort toward democratization, as the LSA More bad news for smokers CIGARETTE SMOKERS may be in for more bad news if they are the type who worry about the possibility of cancer. The fancy new filters made of exotic sub- stances such as asbestos, glass fibers, rockwool and diatomite-which supposed- ly take out harmful tars and nicotine- may themselves be toxic, according to consumer advocate Ralph Nader. Nader has accused the tobacco indus- try of trying to shield the public from knowledge of its jeopardy from the filter substances. Tests are presently being conducted on cigarette additives at the American Can- cer S o c i e t y and the Environmental Sciences Laboratory of Mount Sinai Hos- pital in New York City, where an official says, "it would be a devastating discovery" if Nader's claims that asbestos is being inhaled by smokers proves conclusive... . NADER HAS a reputation for being con- clusive. -L. C. faculty considers a proposal to grant a vague amount ,of legislative power to a college-wide assembly, which would seat equal numbers of students and faculty members. Although viewed by some students as a far-reaching inroad into the college's governing mechanism, the proposal con- tains a number of provisions designed to prevent it from undercutting the tradi- tional governing powers of the faculty. First, any proposal adopted by the assembly could be nullified by a simple resolution of the faculty. In addition, the faculty could continue to meet regularly, and take actions which would supercede those passed by the student-faculty body. Given these qualifications, the assem- bly's actions stand to become nothing more than proposals to the faculty, and the assembly itself becomes nothing more than a glorified committee - there to gather input, not to effect a decision. To be sure, the student-faculty body would allow for garnering a broad-base of support around a given proposal before it is subjected to the scrutiny of the fac- ulty. But by assenting to such scrutiny, the plan amounts to a half-hearted, and self-defeating attempt to democratize the literary college. IT SEEMS clear that any real effort toward democratization must address itself to the governing power of the facul- ty, and to the questionable rationale for that power. A major aspect of the faculty's govern- ing powers lies in the setting of require- ments for completion of a college educa- tion. Its authority to do this is often de- fended on the grounds that faculty mem- bers have a greater knowledge of what is required of one in order for him to live in compatibility with the rest of estab- lished society. Thus, they are best able to determine what should be assimilated by students prior to their entrance into this "world," - so the argument goes. But implicit in such a statement is the unfortunate assumption that education should be focused on producing individ- uals who will be able to function effec- tively under the existing order. THUS, THE existing order becomes a given, which directly contradicts the principles of academia, long valued as a means of continually questioning a n d evaluating what goes on around it. If indeed the University should not be a mechanism for insuring the perpetua- tion of the status quo, the faculty becomes shorn of its justification for governing academic life. And proposals which purport to seek the democratization of college govern- ance, yet fail to recognize this are devoid of any real, lasting significance. ONE MIGHT still welcome the creation of any college-wide assembly of stu- dents and faculty - if only as a forum for debate and interchange of ideas - and such a proposal in the literary col- lege should indeed be accepted, but with the recognition that it would do little to alter the undemocratic and inappropriate mechanism for governing the college. -ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ WASHINGTON 20,000 STRONG, they marched last Sat- urday. They carried signs calling for a military victory in Vietnam in one hand, and the Bible in the other. They want a Holy War against the menace of atheistic Communism. The mood of the entire weekend was closer to a Billy Graham revival than a political rally. But to say it was full of Christian love and brotherhood and con- cern for humanity would be far off the mark. It was a collection of sacred, angry, hateful Americans, afraid of the Red Men- ace, afraid of dirty hippies, afraid of any- one who isn't a fundamentalist Protestant. Friday evening before the march. the vanguard of the "Win the War" movement gathered on the back steps of the Capitol, looking out across Capitol Plaza. The speeches and prayers that followed were punctuated by "Amen" and "Yes, Lord." And one found himself thinking of the striking similarity between this gathering, and many other gatherings, on the steps of the General Library or in Regent's Plaza. TAKE AWAY THE "Win the War" flag, a lovely white cloth with a field of maroon and a bright red cross in the corner, and substitute the banner of the National Liberation Front. The rhetoric in Washington was all based on the premises that 1) this is the best country on earth and 2) only the Commies can take it away from us; sub- tory", for winning the war. Now, the "V" sign with two fingers, that's been taken away from us. I think we should all use three fingers, in the form of a "W", for Win the War, see?" Calmly, patiently, Mclntire said, "My dear, we've been trying to take the ;,V' back." He turned to another of his ad- mirers. Saturday morning, it was bright and beautiful. There is a long sidewalk which leads down the steps from the Capitol, out across, the lawn toward the Mall. Two freaks, tote-bags at their feet, sat on the concrete ledge along the sidewalk, talking to a couple in their early twenties. The couple was in town for the victory rally, and was attempting to turn the freaks on to the Bible. The gulf between the pairs was enorm- ous. The Jesus freaks did not believe in anything except the Bible. Evolution? A myth. Drinking, smoking, homosexuality? Sins. Thou shalt not kill? Wait, there is chap- ter and verse that qualifies that command- mnent. You not only can kill, but you have to kill sometimes. See, it's right there in the Bible. The other side did not even have the Bible. Personal 'freedom, love your brother, that's all. It was all too simplistic. Ready-made re- sponses for the same challenging questions. Little was communicated, except a true understanding of the great distances which separate segments of our population. 0- stitute rhetoric based on the premises that 1) this could be the best country on earth and 2) only the oppressive system can keep us from making it so. Punctuate that new rhetoric with "Right-on". For "Victory over the Com- munists," substitute "Smash the State." And there you have it. It doesn't matter which side you're on, the formula of crowd pleasing, self-gratifying rhetoric is nauseating. After the Friday evening service, about 50 people gathered around Rev. Carl Mc- Intire, the organizer of the "March for Victory" to shake hands and get their Bibles autographed. "Dr. McIntire," said one woman, with a note of anxiousness in her voice, "I have an idea." McIntire listened politely. "I think we need a symbol tomorrow in the march, a symbol that stands for "Vic- *' In response to ugly bomb threats By STUART GANNES Dear Bomb-caller, I DON'T EXACTLY know how to begin this letter, except by saying you frustrate me. Why do you want to close the UGLI with your verbal bombs? What do you hope to achieve? Do you want to shut the University down? I can understand your being fed up with much of this University's activities. Certainly, the few research projects we still conduct for the Defense Department are intolerable in a moral sense. We should do everything we can to stop them here. Do you want to end ROTC on campus? Certainly the ROTC pro- gram - in any form - is both intellectually offensive and morally repugnant. As an institution dedicated to training men to fight and command this country's unjust wars, ROTC is more than a military symbol on campus; it is directly identifiable with the War in Indo- china. We should do everything we can to end this University's legi- timation of a military institution. Do you want to restructure the academic orientation of this Uni- versity? As time passes it becomes increasingly clear that universities are out of touch with the needs of society. Aside from the intolerable exercises in tedium students are forced to accept as necessary for their "education," universities continue to produce graduates incapable of dealing with the most pressing questions in our society: war, racism, poverty, destruction of our environment, injustice, hypocrisy, indif- ference, manipulation, and passive collusion with all of the above. Stu- dents should be disgusted with the inadequacies of American universi- ties; we should do everything we can to change them. HOWEVER, WHY THE UGLI and why a bomb? With all that is wrong in this University, how could a library possibly become your target. Listen, man, libraries are for the people! Nobody tells you how to use them. No book oppresses you. And while the UGLI, I grant you, is not a carpeted living room with a fireplace, it is a place to go. Furthermore, like I said, it's we, the students, who go there. The UGLI cannot be construed as a symbol of any type of injustice. No military research is conducted in the library, and no soldiers are trained there. We don't have to restructure it: it's already ours. If you want to win people to your cause, then don't alienate us by depriving students of the one facility at this University that is untainted by the injustices of society at large. AS FOR A BOMB threat. I can only believe that you will never place a bomb in the UGLI. You know your threats are just as disrup- tive as any bomb could be. How can anyone take a chance of ignoring you when people's lives are at stake? What do you think when you make these calls? Does it give you a feeling of power to know you're responsible for the evacuation of a building occupied by hundreds of students? I can see how Grayson Kirk at Columbia or S. I. Hayakawa at San Francisco State may have felt that way at certain times. But not you. Or is it that you can't tolerate the functioning of any institution in society as long as injustice continues. If this is the case, then I hope you would try to end social wrongs in the quickest possible way. And from my point of view, this involves convincing sufficient numbers of people of your position. There are numerous tactics for spreading con- sciousness of the need for change-including confrontations when they are productive. However, whom do you convince when you remain un- seen, your motives unstated? Whom do you confront beyond a lone telephone operator? If you have something to say, say it in the open. If you have a problem, there are good people in this town to help you. By all means, join the ranks of those trying to change the functions of this University. But do it in a meaningful, productive way. Don't close the UGLI. Death to the Pepsi Generation: Things go better with baloney. I By LARRY LEMPERT "Robert S. McNamara, presi- dent of the World Bank, painted a somber picture today of the out- look for poor countries and, hence, for the world at large," intoned the T.V. newscaster. With a coke in one hand and a piece of baloney in the other, Jus- tin scanned the New York Times in front of him. This was the half hour of luxury he allowed him- self each day, catching up on the world in an easy chair, with a handful of decent food and a soft- ly mumbling television.' The newscaster droned on - "'It is inconceivable to me, Mac- Namara declared, 'that the Amer- ican people will accept for long a situation in which they - form- ing 6 per cent of the world's pop- ulation but consuming almost 40 per cent of the world's resourc- es - contribute less than their fair share to the development of the emerging nations'." Justin shook his head, folded up the paper and scowled into his Coke. Forty per cent - almost half the world's resources, piped in to sustain the American dream, General Motors, and Justin N. Thyme (who munches on baloney while he reads the paper, waiting for dinner). That was the trouble with the United States. "The trouble with the United States." said Ralph, "is that it's an acquisitive society, but only in an individual sense. Pass the but- ter please." Justin passed him the butter. "You see, our success symbols ple in the world who could use that food you're wasting, you know." "I had enough baloney before dinner." "Overpopulation is one of the most serious problems of the de- veloping world,' Ralph continued. "The death rate has gone down, thanks to improved medical care and technology. But the b i r t h rate has remained at the same level. All the gains these coun- tries make in improving their eco- nomic condition are eaten up, lit- erally, by the population boom. We have to persuade these people that having more children is not to their benefit, you see." "No," said Justin. "What's hard to believe is that we - you and I and the United States of Ameri- ca - are unsuccessful vampires. Read this . . Ralph looked at te paperback, The Andromeda Strain, by Mich- ael Crichton. A section in the mid- dle of the book was underlined: . . . Both man and bacteria had gotten used to each other, had developed a kind of mutual immunity. Each adapted to the other. And this, in turn, for a. very good reason. It was a principle of biology that evolution was directed toward increased re- productive potential. A m a n 4* 5A CJ HAS IW 50CQ(AZ I HAVE STZ)HACH PA tMS FP-ON Tek)S(O&) " / I; , 4t WM THEWI FAGt- tXrMVY~E KIS -AU IVE 607- OW MY H'( D WIJMP WHO;I16'- tMY MJRVE5ARE Oi Mil SOBS UFFR,5- IM M~AR HY - B3AL. ,.G Y 1G5.60X0 w IUENVY YOU. I. OU)T YOU KW7S- fl W& ClOO C~ff1Yl (k) ISE 11W LOA t . 1 .1TMC CA I . I t Y 1 I r * r 1 I - "I see," said Justin, "that it is easily killed by bacteria was