SSir44ich gan Datj Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ralph Ginzberg: Not giving your Moneysworth bydaniel zwerdling..-.. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LARRY LEMPERT1 F 1 t Virtually every time you spend money, whether at the supermarket, depart- ment stort, drugstore, or gas station, you're being ROBBED! You're being duped, hoodwinked, and swindled out of the full value of your money by a combination of deceptive selling tech- niques that include Madison Avenue double-talk, mendacious salesmanship, and insidious labeling and packaging ploys. MONEYSWORTH, the new consumer newsletter published by Ralph Ginz- berg, doesn't come from Madison Avenue but its offices are nearby on West 40th St. Ralph Ginzberg is the fellow who pub- lished Eros and the Housewives Handbook on Selective Promiscuity from Blue Balls and Intercourse, Pa. I was intrigued when I first saw the ads back in June because Moneysworth sound- ed hip and clever and because I wondered whether Ginzberg was really taking a lead in the grand consumer crusade. I knew that he is waiting out innumerable techni- cal appeals on an obscenity conviction w h i c h the Supreme Court upheld in a landmark decision, and which might even- tually land him in jail. From reading the one-half million dol- lars worth of publicity which Ginzberg has plastered since spring on the pages of ev- ery major newspaper and magazine in the country (the ads are s till running) I learned that Moneysworth is a pragmatic authoriative biweekly - created "as a partial antidote to widespread fraud and deception. Moneysworth, as its name im- plies, aims to see that you get full value for the money you spend. It rates com- petitive products as to best buys . . . it offers ingenious tips on how to save money (they will astound you with their inven- tiveness); and it counsels you on the man- agement of your personal finances . . . in short, Moneysworth is your own personal consumer crusader, trusted stockbroaker, and chancellor of the exchequer - all in one ...." WHAT MORE COULD ONE ask? The ads e v e n listed 103 tantalizing articles "the kinds of articles it prints" (including A Consumers Guide to Marijuana, Pro- viding your Teenager with Contraception, and Low-Cost Psychoanalysis). And they mentioned that "the editors of Moneysworth are a team of hard-nosed, experienced journalists with considerable expertise in the fields of consumer inter- ests and quality periodical publishing." So I was surprised when a friend in Washington, D.C., Dave Sanford of The New Republic, told me in August t h a t Ginzberg was bugging him with phone calls and letters offering him the editorship of Moneysworth. Sanford was a little sur- prised himself since he had been reading the same ads. He asked what the news- letter is all about. Actually, Ginzberg told him, the iewsletter didn't exist; Moneys- worth was still waiting for enough sub- scriptions to finance a first issue. The only newsletter that existed was a brainy idea in Ralph Ginzberg's mind and a v e r y flashy ad all over the country. Where was the team of hard-n o s e d journalists writing this "hip, trustworthy financial mentor?" The whole newsletter was a two-man job, Ginzberg told Sanford; well ,it would be if Sanford accepted the job and if they could find 'some smart chick out of college." Who would write and research all those "dispatches, analyses, and product evaluations" which the ad promises will originate in "New Y o r k, Washington, and any other place where consumer news is likely to develop." The newsletter would be a rewrite job, Ginz- berg said. About 40 publications already do enough research to keep any Moneysworth staff busy cutting and condensing. "You have to realize," says Ginzberg, "that we are guilty of many of the mer- chandising practices we'll be writing about. I make no apologies for that, because the marketplace is thoroughly corrupted. You've got to do certain things if you want to stay in business." Sanford already has a cushy job at New Republic, so he declined Ginzberg's offer of $20,000. Then he wrote a column for Newsday in August about his conversation with Ginzberg, who wrote an incensed re- ply, insisting that Moneysworth does have a competent staff (he mentioned a Mike Silverstein as editor); it is doing its own research; it is going to rewrite and con- dense other articles, but what's wrong with that anyway? In August when Ginzberg wrote the reply, his claims were difficult to refute, his newsletter still didn't exist. "The most likely explanation for San- ford's hatchet job," Ginzberg's reply con- cluded, "is to be found in a fact that he craftily- omitted from his article. David Sanford applied for the job as editor of Moneysworth and was not accepted." All this from the man who had written San- ford several weeks before, "I certainly hope you'll decide to take the job. Your doing so could be historic." Ginzberg finally has his editor, but it isn't Mike Silverstein. He got the ax. In the brief life of Moneysworth, Ginzberg has already run through four different edi- tors. He started with one Ted Townsend, whom he quickly discarded as inadequate for the job. Then he failed to entice San- ford, ran a blind want ad in The Village Voice, and found Silverstein. After Silver-. stein left, Ginzberg hired as editor a re- porter named Lee Rutherford. Rutherford started work on Monday. On Thursday Ginzberg told him he had never seen a better editor. On Friday Rutherford was fired. Now Moneysworth lists an editor named Warren Boroson, an old c r o n y whom Ginzberg has resurrected from his old Fact magazine. No one knows how long he'll last. As for the others - Ginz- berg writes them off as "part of the tur- moil that accompanies any magazine in its formative stages. "I don't like to see the word fired in print," he told me yesterday in a phone interview. "Why don't you just say they quit." He added before hanging up that all the pre-publication flap about Moneysworth being a rewrite job was wrong. The first 3 issues were 75 per cent original research. He said the newsletter. pays independent contractors to run tests on myriad pro- ducts but added "I'd rather not say who the contractors are." Let's give Ginzberg credit: His new ven- ture is doing quite nicely. He claims he has 170;000 subscribers, and there's no reason to doubt it. Some people will buy any- thing. Only three issues of Moneysworth have actually come off the presses (Ginz- berg says five are in print) four-pages each of quicky consumer news items which you could probably read better in something like Consumer Reports. Ginzberg candidly notes that after only three issues, more than 200 subscribers have taken advantage of Moneysworth's unconditional guarantee that it will "in- crease the purchasing power of your in- come by at least 15 per cent - or we'll re- fund your money IN FULL." The ads have promised that, "as you can see, a subscription to Moneysworth is an absolutely foolproff investment." Sub-i scribers are learning different. As the ads say: "Stop being robbed and start getting your Moneysworth." '9 in the mother country 'U'f gossip: Through a looking glass miartin hirsehmuii- - There are certain things which must be said There are many issues we deal with each day on these pages, each of vital concern to a segment of the University community. But today, it is time to ad- dress to that overriding issue, to make ourselves clear on a matter w h i c h transcends petty factional interest. We must make clear what our real priori- ties are. It is not easy to be so frank. Yet, there are times when even men of established principle must march to a higher tune than that which motivates their day-to-day struggles. There are times when those standards must give way to something loftier. There are times when we can no longer remain silent. So, today, we push our editorial pre- rogatives to the outer limits, and speak out on what is certainly the key issue of our time, for today is not a usual day. Today, the future of our Western civilzation may well hang in the bal- ance. President Nixon himself has spoken out on the issue many times. Only a year ago, in the midst of the largest anti-government demonstration in the nation's history, the President felt it necessary to give this issue his un- divided attention, Hardly a week pass- es without some news from the White House concerning the President's in- volvement with this matter of unvary- ing public concern. With a deep breath and a heartfelt sense of confidence, we solemnly a s k our readers to consider carefully our tersely and unequivocally stated posi- tion: The Wolverines must and will beat Ohio State. -THE MICHIGAN DAILY A NUMBER OF administrators are voicing serious fears that the faculty may begin considering unionization as the only method of protecting themselves against the effects of the University's growing budgetary problems. And the emergency one per cent cut from the University's appropriation an- nounced by the state this week isn't likely to help. Administration fears may play a key role in the current negotia- tions with the local branch of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes which represents some 3,000 non- academic Univeristy employes whose contracts expire this Dec. 31. The possibility that asettle- ment favorable to the union would promote a drive for unionization of the faculty may well give ad- ministrators added incentive to hold out for a small pay increase for AFSCME. One indication of growing facul- ty dissatisfaction is the emergence of the Faculty Reform Coalition, a large and growing group of pro- fessors who have banded together largely to prevent uneven hand- ling when Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs Allan Smith starts subtracting funds from the bud- gets of various University units. The coalition is unhappy with the series of across-the-board cuts that Smith has instituted over the past two years, preferring t h e complete elimination of some pro- grams to what they see as a gen- eral reduction in the quality of the University. The administration is apparently pegging most of its hopes on the possibility of giving the faculty an average 10 per cent salary in- crease next year. But with t h i s week's emergency cut and t h e generally gloomy financial picture, budgetary officers are not over- whelmingly optimistic. And with the faculty at Eastern Michigan University already lead- ing the way, unionization of the faculty here may well be in store for the not too distant future. BOLSTERED BY THE results of this week's elections, the radicals on Student Government Council are planning a number of moves to aid University employes if they go on strike in January as expect- ed. One method of bringing real fi- nancial pressure against the Uni- versity administration would be to organize students to sue the Uni- versity for tuition and dormitory fee rebates. A similar suit in New Y o r k City by students who lost class time during a student strike was recently resolved in favor of the plaintiffs. Another likely SGC move in sup- port of striking workers may in- volve an organized effort to con- vince students in the dormitories not to cross picket lines or to take jobs left vacant by strikers. During the 1967 strike in which AFSCME won recognition from the University, students were not generally cooperative with the un- ion especially when the admin- istration raised the spectre of in- creased fees resulting from a big pay boost. SGC will be hard at work to avoid a repeat perform- ance. MODERATE-LIBERAL SGC member Bill Thee has been :hard at work lining up support for his candidacy for SGC president in the March elections. As part of what he describes as efforts to improve communications with his constituents, Thee has been a frequent speaker at dormi- tories and fraternity houses. Con- tacts he has made there are ex- pected to help with his electoral' drive. Thee, who supported Phil Hart in the recent Senate election, has voted with the radical members of council on some issues but not on others, and there are the begin- nings of a movement afoot to find someone further left to op- pose him. So far, however, the only likely candidate, current ex- ecutive vice president Jerry De- Grieck, is discounting the possi- bility that he will run. * * * THE ANN ARBOR office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation is denying reports that from 16 to 24 agents have been scouring the campus this fall in an attempt who charged it had been taken from North Hall during a 33-hour occupation of the ROTC classroom and office building in May. During their visit to campus in August, the FBI agents alluded to a massive investigation of the building takeover, a probe tl~ey said would probably lead to indict- ments by a federal grand jury. A spokesman for the Ann Ar- bor office now says the question of the North Hall takeover is not completely settled. "There are still some little things .to be resolved," he says. But the lapse of time since the existence of the investigation was made known makes it seem un- likely that indictments will be forthcoming. * * * THE COTERIE OF middle-level University administrators dealing with middle-level security prob- lems was at it again last week. The subject this time: The prophet Stephen and his Caravan of faithful followers. The security group, headed by Associate Vice President for Busi- ness Operations James Brinker- hoff, had some apparent success in dealing with the hippie threat. Stephen and his followers were convinced to park their 50 buses and vans at the Pinckney Recrea- tion Area rather than making a full-scale vehicular invasion of the campus area. Allan Smith to keep tabs on left-wing groups. The FBI last made its pre- sence felt on campus in August when two agents from the Ann Arbor office tried to bully their way into a student office in the Student Activities Bldg. without a search warrant. Material found in the office- which was assigned to the Student Mobilization Committee and Legal Self-Defense - was later allowed to be removed by the FBI agents, I Letters to The Daily New Haven notes: The symbols of justice By JIM NEUBACHER Editorial Page Editor NEW HAVEN, Conn. N THIS quiet New England college town, there is an intriguing physical symbolism surrounding the trial of Bobby Swale and Ericka Huggins. The two Black Panthers, accused of murdering one of their own, are being tried in a huge, solid New Haven County Superior Court Building, constructed in the Greco-Roman (Washington Modern) style; six solid marble columns grace the entranceway to a courtyard- like interior which looks four stories up to a skylight of translucent leaded glass. The building is located on Elm St., facing the New Haven "town green", a vision which brings to mind conceptions learned in grade school of a past era, when public gathering places were meant for that, and towns were constructed around them, (in Boston, they call it the Commons.) There is still respect in New Haven for that inter- pretation of the green as a place for the public to gather 1nd speak out. A recent court order which banned demonstrations, disruptions, and picketing within five hundred yards of the Superior Court Building carefully excludes the green, a scant 25 yards away - right across Elm St. THE SOLIDITY and strength of the c o u r t hbuilding and the ehat and opnness of the green as people. They are the corporate structures, the bank buildings and financial institutions which have played a key role in shaping this country so that a man like Bobby Seale, who demands that power revert back to the people, who pledges to defend himself against racism and state sanctioned violence, becomes an enemy of the state. * * * FOR THE PAST WEEK, attorneys for the defend- ants have been trying to find fair and impartial jurors to hear their client's case. What they have been confronted with is a depressing stream of humanity, a parade of human weaknesses, prejudices, fear and in- competence. The entire jury selection procedure in this trial certainly is no different than the procedure in count- less trials across the country each day. That is un- fortunate, because under present conditions, the jury system, though in concept an excellent manner of ad- ministering justice, is fast becoming an unworkable, unviable system. The process of selecting the 500 persons from whom the attorneys choose the jury is set up to exclude young people, black people, and college educated people. Doctors, lawyers, journalists, and other professional persons are excluded. Young married women w i t h children are automatically excluded. All persons who are not registered voters are excluded. ly seems fair that of the first 100 prospective jurors, only 3 were black. It certainly will not be a jury of Bobby Seale's peers. What is needed is day care assistance for women with young children, better pay for jury duty, (or a. state law which requires employers to compensate their workers who are called for jury duty) and a removal of the restriction that bars those who wish not to vote from serving on juries. A speed-up in the court processes would help also, reducing the hardship on jurors who now face trials lasting as much as six months. THE ATMOSPHERE surrounding the trial has been strangely quiet and relaxed so far. During the spring when Lonnie McLucas was on trial on charges stemming from the same incident, there were constant demonstrations on the green, all night vigils and a packed courtroom. Now it is quiet. There are always spectators, but sometimes only half the seats are full. The press sec- tion was packed on opening day, but now is sparsely occupied. There is humor occasionally in the courtroom, some- thing that is likely to disappear when the jury selection is down to its final stages, and the crucial examination and interrogation of witnesses begins. Bobby a n d Ericka seem in good spirits, giving the clenched fist salute to the spectators each day as they enter the Huey Newton To the Daily: A NOTE to those of us who walk- ed out on Huey Tuesday night be- cause they 'can't stand political people who don't have !a firm grasp of political philosophy,' Huey could have come on as The Black Militant, put on a good show and left. Few would have been disappointed. Instead, he had something to say. When some- one presents himself to you as a person instead of a symbol, you usually end up revealing your- self for what you are as well. Many of us did just that. We re- vealed ourselves as true middle class intellectual elitists with lit- tle or no contact with reality. What we saw Tuesday night was a man in the process of com- ing to grips with the real world, maintaining and developing the integrity of his party and mending meaningless ideological splits. He presented us with an ideology in the making which he will con- tinue to develop and which he in- vited us implicitly and explicitly to join in developing. Instead of tell- ing us how bad the world is, he in- volved us in the confusing, disor- ganized, dialectical process of hiilrlnc o nltinal,,- r- n-nmin than to any ethnic group's 'right' to predominance. 1 His replacement of internation- alism with intercommunalism is far more than empty rhetoric. It denies the categories upon which divisionist nationalists base their arguments. It denies the pessim- ism of communists who doubt the likelihood of reconciling subject- ive conflicts between people even after the objective origin of those conflicts - capitalism - is de- stroyed by integrating the e n d (a world community) into the pol- itics that will destroy capitalism. His distinction between s u b - jective and objective enemies pro- vided a firm basis for alliance with revolutionary workers and for a firm basis for alliance with revo- lutionary workers and for real- liance with the antinationalist, working class oriented politics of Boston based SDS. The intellectual elitists' d i s - dain for Huey's analysis rises out of a plastic life with enough lei- sure to articulately restate ideas worked out by revolutionaries like Huey., His political analysis rises out of direct experiences with the most brutalizing, dehumanizing as- pects of the American d e a t h culture and with organizing and developing the vital black culture and true revolutionary when we saw one. -Jim Guinter '71 Nov. 17 Pakistan To the Daily: WITHIN THE past week, a tidal wave caused incomprehensible disaster to East Pakistan. An esti- mated three hundred thousand died. Say that number to your- self so that you may realize it's magnitude! What kind of cover- age was this tragedy given? To- day it was given a picture on the front page, and the other day a one column article. What if this death had occurred in France, England, or some other western, white country? This, I'm sure would rate wider coverage. I witnessed the same lack of concern in the Detroit papers, and this is probably indicative of the way the disaster was treated na- tionally. I'll make no conclusions regarding racism, rather point out how interesting it is that the Uni- ted States continually plays down death in the third world. People are dying every day in numerous small wars, and in genocidal ac- tions which some people in power have chosen to keep us uninform- 4 4