4 no iniore inarchi ng . . . A1 S ijwu Dai1 Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Re-ordering student priorities____I aexa ecan.ady 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mustbe noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAV, SEPTEMBER 2,11970 Summer Supplement Editor: Sharon Weiner W MIKil!iM ll Mrwrf r l wir WrwWWwWrYYrtWWMr r il rM abrr. rri non- ... _-.. _YI.. r. r r-. irr . Supporting 'C ITH THE OPENING of the academic year, the nation's campuses renmain enshrouded in the spectre of violence and confrontation that descended upon them last May when U.S. troops entered Cam- bodia and Ohio National Guardsmen killed four students .at Kent State Uni- versity. President Nixon has been told by ad- visers of his own choosing that several campuses will probably not be able to open this fall. Quite possibly they are Scorrect. Increasingly over the past few years, college campuses have joined the nation's ghettoes as the battleground of our society. And there is nothing in the- national policies of the United States or in the mood of the nation's youth to indicate- that- the situation will soon be reversed. On the contrary, both sides seem more intractable than ever. While U.S. troops have left Cambodia (for the moment at least),air strikes have been initiated and, seem likely to reach the levels used to devastate wide areas of Vietnam in the, late 1960s. Likewise, the Chicago Con- spiracy trial is over, but will soon be . replaced by the trial of Black Panther Chairman Bobby Seale and, very likely, the retrial of Panther Minister of De- fense Huey Newton. And, more than ever, co'lege students seem prepared to r.e- spond to these provocations by their own display of force. CONFRONTED by the widespread acts' of rage on the nation's campuses last spring, the response of white middle class Americans was predictable. Tied to a "don't-rock-the-boat" philosophy which repayed them 'so handsomely during their economic rise in the forties, fifties and early sixties, middle America felt threat- ened by the disorder college students have so, successfully created. That the rioters and disrupters looked very similar to :their own sons and daughters in both skin color and societal background made the situation only less comprehensible. Recently, for the first time, polls showed American adults felt "campus unrest" was the nation's most pressing problem. More astute political analysts have attempted to locate the sources of unrest in the political and social ferment of the times. -For example. scores of college 'presidents,, including University Presi- dent Robben Fleming, have pointed to the war and the draft as major causes of campus disorder. ': Certainly there, is something to be said for this liberal analysis of the dis- ruption of U.S. higher education. Certain- ly the draft has forced many students to confront the realities of U.S. society. But, on the other hand, the superficiality of this analysis is rather striking. AT BOTH the paranoid conservative reaction to campus disorders and the liberal analysis have in common-and it is their major fault-is the insistence on dealing with dissent and violence as The Proble Even .Fleming, while arguing publicly that the Indochina War was a "collossal mistake", has instituted new disciplinary procedures--which ignore some very basic civil libertarian principles-in order to more efficiently repress dissent. The real problem is not the disorder in our society, but the societal order it- self, an order which serves the well-to-do at the expense of the poor, and whose institutions are numb to the needs of the people; a system which thrives on the basest of human emotions and relies on the grossest methods of social control for its perpetuation. For those who were 12 or 13 years old when the United States initiated massive military intervention in Vietnam, the war has become more than just an iso- lated, eaily correctable mistake-it is the status quo. Similarly, those who are entering col- lege this year were seven or eight years old at the beginning of the civil rights movement. Yet race relations in this Editorial Staff MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor STUART GANNES JUDY SARASOHN Editorial Director Managing Editor JIM NEUBACHER ..News Editor YJ T'nTN TW h~vr~A: Pp.+.~4a.t. fn x1mpUS unrest' country have only deteriorated over the past ten years, the U.S. legal system re- mains stacked in favor of the white man, and blacks, whose relative economic position remains unchanged, have been abandoned to live and die in the filth and dispair of our nation's cites. After 10 years young people have come to perceive racism as more than just a "problem" for America. It is a way of life. THE RICHEST 500 corporations in the United States control 75 per cent of the nation's wealth. The power of these corporations in controlling the lives of the American people and the policies of the U.S. government is staggering. The decisions about what to produce and where to invest excess productive capacity largely determine what kind of nation 'we will have. For example, the major means of transportation in this country is the automobile rather than a more coherent, safer mass transit system because the automobile and gasoline in- dustries have been able to prevent gov- ernments from creating such systems. That thousands die on our highways every year and that cars are the prime polluters of our environment is irrele- vant, because dependence on the auto- mobile means higher corporate profits. What's good for General Motors and Ford and ESSO may not be good for all Americans, but almost by definition, it IS America, nonetheless. Foreign policy is a key concern of the nation's economic kingpins. Surplus pro- ductivity in the United States makes it essential for American corporations to find friendly markets and new places to invest abroad-especially in countries where workers earn one-tenth of what they do in the United States. THE GROWING WAR in Indochina should be seen in thislight. If South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia fall to the communists, these countries will no long- er be available for exploitive investment by the U.S. corporations. It matters not that communist gov- ernments in these countries would in- stitute land reform and other measures aimed at lessening the plight of the poor. It matters not that the U.S. feels forced to support fascist regimes in these countries to prevent takeovers by popular nationalist forces. American men will continue to fight in the underdeveloped countries as long as the American eco- nomic empire is threatened. ' Just as U.S. corporations maintain their colonial control of the Third World, so, through the perpetuation of racism in our society, do they colonize the black people of this country, making them pay higher prices, paying them lower wages and, as much as possible, stifling their upward economic mobility. Like blacks, women too are victims of the fiercest kinds of channelling and dis- crimination. It's-a-man's-world, not be- cause women are any less fit or d'eserving, but simply because men, with male chau- vinist assumptions, control the economy, as well as the mass media necessary to perpetuate their ideas. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, like the government, is largely run to serve the needs of American industry in pro- ducing trained personnel and the re- search needed for technological advance- ment. Anyone with money can give it to the University with instructions on how it is to be used. U.S. corporations have done this very effectively, as has the Department of Defense, the ready-willing-and-able en- forcer of the American empire (VUniver- sity researchers do about $14 million of work annually for the DOD). The Univer- sity also reflects the racist and male chauvanist nature of the surrounding society-the preponderance of the non- secretarial, non-janitorial staff is com- posed of white males. Those seeking in the University some spiritual salvation from corporate Amer-' ica are bound to be disappointed. As U.S. institutions go, the University is about average. in its repressiveness, its racism, and its unresponsiveness to the needs of the people. VARIOUS STUDENT groups, each armed with its own issue or group of issues will vie for the support of the student body this fall. The relationship between the University administration and the student body will undergo revision as the issue of dis- ciplinary rules and the rights of the Gay Liberation Front are discussed, and, hope- fully, acted upon. The relationship between the University and the war will be evaluated as once again students try to investigate the Uni- versity's extensive participation in war re- search. Continued University support, through stock holdings, of such corporations as General Motors will come under increasing challenge from student groups. And the war in Southeast Asia will con- tinue to aggravate the relationship between students and government, no matter how much President Nixon tries to change his image. BUT OTHER than the war, University students will generally keep hands off many of the problems that, are of para- mount interest in the world that extends beyond the campus. Poverty, racism and human dignity will be. generally ignored by the student body. In response to criticism for not dealing with these issues, the student will reply that those issues are indeed important, but that they can learn more about the ways of political action by mainly dealing with issues that can be handled on the Univer- sity level. And that later, armed with this political knowledge, they will be able to at- tack the country's major problems. And so students spend a, great deal of time and energy on disciplinary rules and fights over student bookstores. BUT TWICE LAST year, students had an opportunity to deal with the real prob- lems without even, leaving their campus. In one case they used the opportunity, the other case they turned down flat. In the Spring Student Government Council elections there was a referendum dealing with the construction of low cost housing in the Ann Arbor area. Although the students voted in favor of the con- struction of the housing, they showed a very narrow view of the housing situation in Ann Arbor when they also voted to exclude low-income people who were not students from the housing. The students refuse to be concerned that many low-income people who work in the city cannot afford to live here because of the exorbitant cost of living-a cost that is to a large extent due to the presence of large numbers of affluent University stu- dents. The students chose only to seek re- lief for themselves. A 19 70 primer of By ROB BIER REPRESSION IS LIKE fighting an en- raged lion with water. A few buckets will only make him madder, but enough of it will drive him away, maybe even drown him. So it goes with repression, and right now de are somewhere beyond, the bucket stage, on our way to the deluge. Last spring was undoubtably one of the stormiest on record for the nation's cam- puses, and governing bodies at all' levels have retaliated with a wide variety of measures aimed at choking-off student protest. But repression does not stop at the cam- puses. One of the most blatant examples of repression, political and social, is found in the history of the Black Panther Party. Any Black Panther leader,-If you can find one who is not in jail, can recite an endless. I litany. of trumped-up charges, violent at- tacks by police, mysterious shootings of Panthers and fire-bombings of Panther of- fices and similar harassments. But the trials of the Black Panthers is a story in itself, a long one, arid the concern here is what repression means to the University, and colleges in general. Repression can be defined as the elim- ination by legal means of any group which is offensive and ostensibly dangerous to the ruling class. In speaking of "legal means" it should be remembered that all the repression and other atrocities of Nazi Germany were done within the, "law," however perverted that "law" may have been. LISTING ALL THE repressive legislation pending and on the books is basically futile. Even the most inoccuous law can be used repressively if the police apply it ex- clusively to certain groups for the purpose of harassment. Other perfectly reasonable laws can become repressive when used in conjunction with more blatant ones. Finally, there is the growing list of legis- lation which is repressive in itself, so a few typical examples will have to suffice. Repressive legislation is fairly easy to spot. For instance, when people like Atty. Gen. John Mitchell speak glowingly of pending"'anti-crime legislation, but do not mention student protest, take a second look.- The Controlled Dangerous Substances Act, which is waiting for Senate approval, has been boosted by Mitchell as "giving police the weapons they need to fight the suppliers of heroin and other drugs," which does not seem too bad on the face of it. But the bill's "no-knock" provision does not limit its use to pushers. NOW, IN A COMMUNITY like Ann Ar- bor with its pervasive use of illegal drugs, there is no way the police can go around breaking down every door in town every night, no matter how much 'they want to. Forced to pick their targets, they will al- 'most alawys choose groups which are of-r fensive to them, such as the White Pan- thers. At the very least; it can be a matter of harassment and with luck, they might even be able to get some people locked up. John Sinclair, chairman of the White Panthers, is doing 10 years for possession of two marijuana cigarettes. It is legal, and on paper sounds at least" half-good. But in practice' the result is selective application-repression. That "giving the weapons" phrase is an- other good tipoff. When the higher edu- cation appropriations act of 1970 was pass- ed by the State Legislature, voices in Lan- sing were saying that the amendments A LITTLE LATER in the spring how- ever, the students did become involved in the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike to increase the number of minority stu- dents at the University to at least 10 per cent by 1973. But although, the students did partici- pate en masse, one couldn't help thinking that the participation was motivated not by a sense of what is right, but by an ex- treme sense of white guilt. ' But regardless of how the students have dealt with the issues before, there is now an opportunity for the students to define another very important relationship-that between the students, the University and the University's non-academic employes. WHILE THE STUDENTS sit idly by wrapped up in, their. own problems, the University is doing its best to take advan-. tage of its non-academic employes. The situation is clearly visible among the workers in t h e University hospital. There; workers are forced to live as far away as Willow Run, Inkster, Ypsilanti and even Detroit because the University is unwilling to pay a wage which would al- low them to live in Ann Arbor. And the attitude of the University toward these workers is no better than its pay. This spring, it got so bad that the Uni- eggsla fivei to the bill "give the universities the wea- pons they need to deal with student pro- testers." Sure enough, the bill included: -a measure requiring expulsion for stu- dents who damage university property; -a prohibtion against paying any Uni- versity employe for the purpose of edu- cating a student found in possession of an unregistered firearm on University prop- erty; -a measure cutting off state aid for any student convicted of breaking a civil law or university rule while involved in a pro- test; and, -a provision requiring all faculty mem- bers to spend 10 hours a week in "class- room contact activity." The first three are fairly obvious 'Is to their intent, and although legislators spoke of "increasing professor productivity," they meant the last measure to prevent profes- sors from taking part in class boycotts such as the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike last March. REPRESSIVE LAWS are usually vaguely worded. Take the language of the anti-disruption bill signed by Gov. William Milliken last June. It allows a judge to impose a jail sentence of up to 90 days and a fine of between $200 and $1,000 on persons who: -"Intentionally constitute a clear and substantial risk of physical harm and in- jury to other persons"; -"Intentionally constitute a clear and substantial risk of damage to or the de- struction of the property of th institu- tion"; or -Participate in the "unreasonable pre- vention or disruption of the customary and lawful function of the institution by o&u- pying space necessary (for carrying out the versity hospital workers staged a b r i e f wildcat strike. In some places in the University, work- ers are so afraid complaining will 1 o s e them their jobs that they continue work- ing in rooms where the summer tempera- ture is regularly about 90 degrees. TIllS IS WHERE the students should concentrate their energies. In dealing with the University over its treatment of non- academic employes - secretaries and lab- oratory technicians included - the stu- dents could gail a very practical know- ledge of how to solve the major problems. the unit of operation is small enough so that the students would not be swallowed, and the issue is important and universal enough - decent wages and decent work- ing conditions - to merit the students' time. This is not to say that other issues are not a 1 s o important, but if meaningful change is going to lie instituted, then pri- orities have to be established. And the problems plaguing the non- academic University employes - which are economic and racial are the most important issues facing this countrytoday. If students are sincerely interested in bringing about meaningful change, then they s h o u 1 d become more involved in helping to improve the plight of the Uni- versity's non-academic employes. 4ep"ression institution's functions) by use of force or by threat of force." Let your imagination run wild on this one. You cannot go far wrong, since each new maneuver by the forces of law and order evokes renewed expressions of amaze- ment from all concerned over its ingenuity. The provisions of this act either taken in- dividually or in combination, could be con- strued unreasonably to outlaw virtually every existing form of protest, excluding letters to your congressman. Lying somewhere between selective ap- plication and overtly repressive lawsis the exercise of what is called "judicial dis- cretion." The finest local example of this practice is the case of 14th District Judge Henry Arkinson and the Eastern Michigan University disruptions of last May. Arkin- son has been accused of placing excessive bonds on some students and denying the usual right of posting 10 per cent of the bond to gain release. CLOSER TO HOME are the interim conduct rules adopted by the Regents in April. They take the judicial system entire- ly out of the University community, l'eav- ing it up to an "impartial hearing officer," appointed by President Robben Fleming. The rules themselves, are somewhat similar to the ones already listed under the state bill, and, if anything, are even broader and more vague. To go back to the analogy about the lion, it should be understood above all that repression works. Enough of it will scare off all but the most determined radical and he will not remain on the scene very long. Meanwhile, the vast majority of peo- ple will c h o o s e inaction when action threatens ,their education, their freedom .and their future. 4 4 4~ quixotic quest Notes from an undergraduate rick perlof By RICK PERLOFF ANN ARBOR as Om, as the union of all into one: of sideburned students, devoted professors, life- searching freaks; of existential patterns, protest-parties, of sex, of wisdom, of fun. Two years ago the University was introduced to me and those were my thoughts, The University was mine to be conquered and the spoils of vic- tory promised freewheeling en- joyment, easygoing misadventures and perhaps some knowledge along the way. Four self-sufficient years separated from time-fraught reality. I have 'been at the University two years now, have reflected on its purposes and absurdities, and I sadly must conclude that my vision as a freshman was correct, Not, of course, in the holy terms I portrayed things, but in the con- cept of the University a a place where pleasure is the password and insouciance the byword. Universities, I learned, are not places where curious people. find easy, friendly assistance with their questions. They are the s to r e- houses of information geared to train students for service to their employer, dedicated to producing things which fill jobs. The job of the University is to certify., All revolves neatly around that goal. We are tested in every course we take, no matter whether an exam is relevant to furthering, the person's understanding of the concepts. We are required to pass-fulfill is too generous - certain require- ments, and it is unimportant if the student believes the courses ir- relevant to the education he, him- self, wishes to pursue. And well-rounded one may be- come, but not necessarily around knowledge; rather one may be a knowledge; rather one becomes a for aceing the tests, securing ,the grades, in short submitting to the expected that enables society to measure and assess one's perform- ance. When you're done, the Univer- sity certifies you with a diploma', and you are expected to use the information you've garnered in college, not to fulfill yourself, but to perform efficiently in society.u ALL THIS is attributable to this country's belief that life revolves around a job, working 9-5 a day, and the duty of a university is to :prepare you for that. The problem is compounded by the very reason that most stu- dents attend college. We do not ask whether a uni- versity, in today's society or in any society for that matter, con- stitutes the best method to be educated. We do not query whe- ther, given individual differences, .irhr~ T..% a.A...id'.& VIi+ one anthropology course. To boot, one is urged to take the required courses first and then there's the pressure and mechanization of g r a d e s and tests. As a result one's first years here are often filled with insipid nonstimulation. One soon finds that much of what one learns is not coming from classes, but rather comes from raps with friends, from protests, from squeezing in Cleaver between calculus and French. As a result, the stimulation one awaits is no longer \classes-t h e University quickly loses the initial awe and respect it may once have had. Students must look elsewhere for ways to fulfill themselves. You have to stay because you need the degree for the future, but you develop other reasons to persuade yourself that your pre- sence here is valuable. Your friends are here, so you won't drop out, you are enjoying t h e year; it would be a hassle to work and read on your own at home. SO WE remain here, because there is no better place to be. We spend our time freely; we needn't attend classes because they're bor- ing and we're lazy. Who wants to live in the cities and deal with the Establishment? It's much easier this way, so we persist. We become Dobie Gillis, trapped in the contentment of Ann Arh.nr 1Whe n *4VQ n,,ar nr reading courses. He can, through such independence, secure the personal attention and freedom one needs to develop one's abili- ties. He can spend his four years, if he really wishes, in constant contact and stimulation by the decent professors we do have here. Or he can speak with no pro- fessor during his time here. He can become discouraged easily, and accept it all: accept the lec- tures, the requirements and adopt a fatalistic view toward education here. He can waste much of his time muddling through the stand- ardization and incompetence in- herent in any major network, like the University. He can lose sight of the educa- tion that, with effort, can be at- tained and essentially escape into easy wisps of pleasure and con- tentment that he will sometime find'stagnating. Stagnating because it is only so long before people, students in- cluded, can e x i s t on hedonism alone, before one yearns for more, but doesn't find it, before the self gropes for challenges, for new satisfactions and finds none. THE tragedy is that many stu- dents, by the time they reach the university level, are so accustomed to accepting that they are unable to explore and try the new meth- ods, outside the normal univer- sity channels, that will lead to an 0: }ter' \ Yi ~ \ a r M31LU" A I U .PJF 7 Jkl* III