Ir CAMPAIGNING WITH LOWENSTEIN Eighty years of editorial f reedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Searching for a leader with our ideals 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michiqan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE CHUDWIN The 'U' and discrimination: Time for some answers THE DEPARTMENT of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare has demonstrated that it is serious in demanding that the University end its. discriminatory prac- tices against women by hitting the Uni- versity where it hurts most - in the pocketbook. If ,past precedent holds true, the ad- ministration will now move faster, and we may see some affirmative action in promoting equal employment and treat- ment of women soon after next Tuesday's University-HEW meeting in Chicago. More than a month ago, HEW officials sent President Fleming the results of a. federal investigation of University em- plor men ir' aftice". Tt charged the Uni- versity with discrimination and ordered. that this be remedied. The University has done nothing. Flem- ing has not moved one inch. He claims that he has disagreements with the HEW report, and hopes to be able to convince them Tuesday that they are wrong. Since Fleming has refused to divulge the HEW report, or state publicly his spe- cific objections to it, we can only wait until Tuesday before judging the sub- stance of Fleming's procrastination - assuming, of course, that Fleming will then share his'thoughts with his "many constituencies." THEY HAD' better be good objections. Women at this University have demonstrated that they will no longer tolerate 'being treated as accessories and pleasantries in the academic setting. The HEW department has demonstrated that it is going to enforce the law, and cut off federal funds unless there is action. Fleming has kept his objections, and the report, secret. In this way, there can be no dialogue, no debate; Fleming's ar- guments to HEW officials will see no re- buttal from women. That leads one to suspect that Fleming is hesitant to de- bate. They had better be good arguments. Otherwise, when they do become public, as eventually they will, Fleming will find himself looking likeoa Southern s c h o o 1 board official trying to persuade c i v i I rights officials to lay off. -JIM NEUBACHER Editorial Page Editor By BETH OBERFELDER NASSAU COUNTY, L.I. POLITICS-1970. Students, apathy, interest, campaign, television, system, violence, es- tablishment,dconservative, liberal, Agnewehate confusion, ideals, rhetoric.' Four days after the election, where are we? It is impossible to find evidence of any "real" movement in the political arena. Many of the clowns applauded as winners Nov. 3 have given up walking the tight-rope of partisan politics and will now try to represent us all as a master of ceremonies. The whole circus becomes disillusioning, and so we wait, hoping for a candidate who deserves our faith. A WEEK AGO, sixty University students mixed their hopes with action and went to New York's 5th CongressionalDistrict to work for Allard Lowenstein, the Democratic incum- bent. A meeting was called, transportation ar- ranged, and Lowenstein's campaign committee wired $600 for expenses. And so, to work in that crucial election, students endured a 17-hour bus ride to Al Lowenstein's newly gerrymandered district. (While in Albany his opponent, a state senator,- helped replace Nassau County's liberal voters with blue collar workers.) The students were a diverse group whose political views spanned a broad spectrum. We endured the bus ride because they wanted some- one in the system who would represent them' and their ideals. There was no romantic illusion about "making the entire system work," only a simple but determined effort to elect a man in whom we had confidence to a position where he would have "legitimate" power. LOWENSTEIN'* STAFF welcomed us at 1:00 a.m. with fresh sandwiches, doughnuts and coffee. Al arrived at 2 a.m. to greet us. People were there to take us to their homes. We felt. good. We felt optimistic. In the morning we began four days of cam- paigning and canvassing for Al Lowenstein, knocking on doors and talking to the American people. It was, for the most part, discouraging. The majority were unwilling to eommit them- selves. Few pople seemed informed in any ra- tional sense. Some had read candidate's liter- ature, felt the media barrage, and seemed to know vaguely where the candidates stood (i.e., for or against the Nixon administration). But many did not even know who was run- ning-they had escaped the campaign alto- gether. Norman Lent, Lowenstein's opponent, smear- ed Lowenstein in the best tradition of Agnew- ism. His campaign was basically a negative at- tack on Lowenstein, rather than a positive cf- fering of solutions and ideals. Over the weekend there was a three-way gathering of the can- didates (the third got 500 votes running on an anti-abortion platform for the Right to Life Party, whose symbol was a fetus.) Lent declined to appear, and sent a stand-in. The stand-in blasted Lowenstein, and then was asked: "If you tell us why we shouldn't vote for Lowenstein, then why should we vote for Lent?" The answer? "Because Lowenstein only ap- peals to a minority." Lent, who likes to style!himself "the moderate choice" said "Lowenstein crawled out from under a rock to vote against military appropri- ationsbecause he places his faith in the Rus- sian and Chinese governments" . . . . "He's coddling the leaders of violent confrontation .... He's the darling of the New Left, .....He's the voice of Hanoi . . ." And so on with Lentism. MEANWHILE, LOWENSTEIN calmly tried to emphasize that he has always opposed violence. While SDS calls him their worst enemy, the people of the 5th Congressional district let Lent pamper their fears and prejudices. "We cannot do things if we must impugn people to have scapegoats and call names," said Lowenstein. But he ended up fighting a polit- ical campaign against his own image as distorted by Lent. Lent, too, ran against the image he created, rather than against a concrete person with a concrete philosphy. The real Al Lowenstein lost the election. The mood of the country toward the future is one of uncertainty. The mass of the people are not only unfamiliar with the facts, but unable to listen with much,'understanding. They feel their security is being threatened, and are turn- ing to conservative candidates who capitalize on constituent emotions. Lowenstein did not campaign on this level. He lost. Yet neither he, nor his staff, nor his thousand of volunteers have become embittered by this defeat. In his concession speech, Al Lowenstein seem- ed most concerned about the students who work- ed for him. He said he hoped they would continue to work peacefully for change. "I hope they have the courage to realize the future is in their own hands." And so we wait, hoping for a man who de- serves our faith, a candidate who shares our ideals. This seems to be a period of anticipation ... of waiting for a credible leader who shares our ideals and desires. Whether he works in or out- side of the "system," he will be a leader who has the ability to actualize those ideas. He will be a man who will make his ideas work! 0 4 l *1 s .... I , f . 11 Fans dismantle goalposts after Blue dismantled OSU' in '69 Go Mammoth Blue Wave! Drown the Bucks. -Daily-Brad Schram How a college faces student disruptions By RICK PERLOFF NELSON BARGED into the president's. office. "Sorry to interrupt, sir," but have you seen the latest report of the Commission on Campus Unrest?" President Reynolds said he had not. "Then you'd better look. We're mentioned. The Commission said that the most likely targets for violent disruption this year are colleges with over 10,000 students, low admission standards, and ROTC pro- grams on campus." "By golly", Reynolds gasped, "by golly." He paused, looked at the ceiling, then spoke. "Come to think of it, Nelson, we have over 10,000 students, low admission standards and a ROTC program." "That's right, sir," said. Nelson. "What are we going to do?" "Now don't panic, boy", said the president. "Other colleges are eligible too. Ol' Central downstate has the same criteria, but they have poor curriculum too. Maybe they'll be hit." "I don't know, sir, I don't know. It says right here in the paper that colleges with these criteria are going to be hit." "Don't know why they always pick on us, these protesters. Why can't they pick on schools with more than 30,000 students, high ad- mission standards and say, classified research programs?" "They have," replied Nelson. "Well, then," said the president, a bit chagrined, "why can't they pick on schools with less than 10,000 students, ,open admission stand- ards, no grades, student control - and no ROTC programs? It doesn't seem fair to protest schools like us. If those students were really fair and open-minded, like they say they are, they'd pick on all the schools, not just the schools whose policies they don't like." "You're right, sir," replied Nelson. "It's discriminatory to pick on schools like us. Open discrimination. Just because we don't admit the brainiest students and just because we have ROTC on campus doesn't mean we should be hit. "Or why should Central be disrupted - just because they have bad courses," he continued. "Or Southeastern, just 'cause they don't allow women in men's dorm rooms and the students want them to. "I KNOW, NELSON," said Reynolds, reading the Commission's report. Then he stopped. "Hey, look! It says that universities may also be faced with black student demands. We're safe there, Nelson..We don't have any blacks. That's one policy I'm going to keep constant now. We don't 'admit any blacks. If you don't have any, then they can't protest." "Good thinking, sir. But what about now?" "Yes, we must deal with' the problem. What does a college do when it has low admission standards and ROTC programs on campus. What is our course of action?" "We should go to the core of the problem," Nelson said. "Yes, the core of the problem," mused Reynolds. "We don't want to get hit this year. We could increase communication between students and the administration." "Ah," said Nelson," the old communication, rational dialogue trick. It's been used before." "Or," said the president, "we could call in the National Guard." "The o1' police brutality syndrome," commented Nelson, nodding. "That's been used too." "Or we could tell the students they're wrong about the university and there aren't any problems here." "The best of all possible universities angle. Not bad." "Not at all," said Reynolds. "After all, we are right. I am the best of all possible presidents in the best.of all possible universities. The stu- dents may see some problems here - like ROTC or no open admission standard - hut that was the wav it had to he This is the best univer- "THEIR (OHIO STATE'S) scores are almost as big as ever and their yardage continues to stretch down the Burma Road, but they DID lose to Michigan a year ago in a game that only meant the world. Why? Over- confident? Maybe. Peaked too soon?" Maybe. Got behind and choked? May- be. Poorly prepared? Maybe. Michigan had superior athletics? Not likely." -Sports Illustrated, Nov. 9, 1970 Sports Illustrated has really done it this time. Last year those so-called writers went out and crusaded for Ohio State's right to the national champion- Editorial Staff MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor ship. They called them the super team of the d e c a d e and a whole lot of other things which frankly made us sick. None- theless, we bided our time until that fate- ful November day when Bo & Co. went out and showed them just who was the team to beat. Alas, SI was not convinced and so once again, at the beginning of the grid season those masters of the jinx went out and proclaimed for all the world the glory that is Columbus. They conceeded that the Wolverines were good-but not good enough. YESTERDAY was the last straw. Both major polls have dropped the Buck- eyes to number three, but the boys at SI just won't give up. This week's cover story builds up Hayes' team as one of the three teams, along with Texas and Notre Dame, vying for the mythical national championship. The polltakers have been duly unimpressed with OSU's perform- ance of recent, and no wonder. Two weeks ago Illinois led them late into the third quarter and last week Northwestern led them at the half. SI, however, sees it dif- "The television spending curb unfairly endangers freedom of discussion . .. Letters to The Daily A To the Daily : THE CONTINUING battle of the Administration with the Gay Liberation Front bothers me. As a Christian, I must disagree with many of GLF's statements, but neither do I dare to make homo- sexuality the central issue in any sphere. But it also seems to me that the principle of "equal jus- tice under law" is a good one for societiesrand one which should also be applied to organizations. This is clearly not being done. From two and one-half years spent as an officer in student or- ganizations on t h i s campus, I know that "educational value" is sions. To strengthen the Univer- sity's position in answering ob- jections from outside the Univer- sity, I would suggest the Adminis- tration have one of their lawyers attend the sessions, so that they can definitely state that Regento By-law Sec. 8-11 (1) (a) has been observed by all speakers from out- side of the University: "The speaker must not advocate or urge the audience to take action which is prohibited by the rules of the University or which is illegal un- der federal or state law . . " (Or else take action against GLF if it 'isn't observed.) A side effect of this controver- sy could hopefully be that SGC majoring in Special Education held a Halloween Party for the' children of the members of the Association for Children with Social and Learning Difficulties (ACSLD).? Mr. Blackburn of Domino's Pizza contributed both pizza and bever- ages forover eighty children and students. His donation helped make tle party a great success. -Students in Special Education The Faculty ACSLD Oct. 26 Automation To the Daily: MAY I SAY you do yourself proud! Your article was just out- STUART GANNES Editorial Director NADINE COHODAS JIM NEUBACHER ROB BIER .. LAURIE HARRIS JUDY kAHN . DANIEL ZWERDLING JUDY SARASOHN Managing Editor . .. Feature Editor Editorial Page Editor Associate Managing Editor Arts Editor Personnel Director ..... Magazine Editor 6