Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Congress considers Presidential recalls , 1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1973 Releasing faculty salaries WHEN THE REGENTS meet today to vote on Regent Dunn's resolution to publish faculty and administration sala- ries, we hope that they will pass it with- out further ado. State law already holds that official records of any state agency are "public property belonging to the people." The Regents have thus far avoided disclosure by citing another portion of the same law which says that "in some limited in- stances the public interest may require that the names and compensations of a public officer or public employe be held in confidence..' This is clearly an attempt to stretch a special dispensation into a loophole. And the Regents have yet to demonstrate why withholding the pay scale is in the public interest, rather than in their own interest. And state Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley's re- cent ruling that the names and salaries of public employes must be considered a matter of public record has given teeth to Regent Dunn s resolution., JN THE FACE of such weighty legal and legislative decisions, the opponents of the measure have marshalled a few un- impressive arguments. The first is that making salaries public would weaken what is facetiously called the merit system. Those who favor the present publish and/or perish hiring and promotion procedure loftily conclude that this system has some positive correlation with teaching ability. This is not the conclusion reached by any independent evaluation body. It is certainly not borne out in the experience of students whose education suffers for whims of the editors of scholarly jour- nals. The real fear of those who oppose Dunn's measure is that it will cause con- tention within departments. It seems only reasonable that those whose pay does not approach parity being exploited,; their plight. will decide that they are and take steps to rectify THE SECOND pro-secrecy argument is that the publication of salaries would turn the University into a second- class institution (or third-class, or worse). This is a stock banner the Re- gents yank out of the closet each time that they are expected to do something of which they disapprove, as in the ad- mission of blacks in larger numbers. Each time they must be reassured that other prestigious institutions have done the same thing they are asked to under- take with no apparent harm. In this in- stance the state schools of New York and California, and other public colleges and universities within Michigan (notably MSU) seem to have survived the publica- tion of financial records. And finally, in what can only be a feeble attempt at humor, Regent Deane Baker has asserted that, in a similar in- stance, students would not like having their grades published. The situations are not analogous. Students, who provide considerable income for the University, are not subject to economic discrimina- tion in the same way that faculty mem- bers, as employes, are. Perhaps, in the near future, the Edu- cational Testing Service can undertake a lengthy survey to determine whether any groups of students are facing discrimin- ation, in grading. But, for the present, that is not the issue. THE ISSUE IS the possible discrimina- tory pay practices of the University. If the Regents attempt to evade this is- sue now, the courts will force them to face it in weeks to come. And the Re- gents' behavior will once again call into question their ability to function in the multiple role of management, arbiter, and public watchdog of the University. Doily Photo by JOHN UPTON Until the last burning dragt By JAMES WECHSLER ALTHOUGH THEY hardly plan- ned it that way, Richard Nixon and Spiro Agnew may achieve a certain immortality as the men who finally compelled Americans to contemplate far-reaching change in our political processes. For many months the two domin- ant facts about the national con- dition have been deepening unease about Mr. Nixon's capacity to gov- ern and an equally manifest reluc- tance to confront the stresses of a long impeachment struggle. These clashing emotions have been intensified by signs that Vice Pre- sident 'Agnew is in special troub- le of his own. Despite the current efforts of the White House and some Re- publican spokespersons to pro- claim that Watergate belongs to the past, as if repeating the thought often enough will exor'ise the un- pleasantness, no such relief is in sight. Too many men are al- ready entrapped; who and what will break next as prosecutions proceed? THE VIEW THAT we are doom- ed to three long years of creeping paralysis and futile polemics seems to be the prevailing fatalism. But in Congress there are thoughtful , if little-heralded legislative stir- rings that could set the stage for national debate. It is time they received notice. Rep. Jonath'an Bingham (D-N.Y.) has introduced a constitutional amendment that would permit Con- gress to call for a new national election when it "determines that a situation has arisen in which the President cannot adequately per- form the functions of his office." A comparable scenario is pro- jected in a longer, more detailed amendment co-sponsored by Reps. Edith Green (D-Ore.) and Mor- ris Udall (D-Ariz.). It would em- power Congress to initiate a spec- ial election within 90 days when "the President has failed or re- fused faithfully to execute t h e laws enacted by the Congress; or ..has willfully exceeded t h e powers vested in him by the Con- stitution and the laws of the Unit- ed States . . . or has caused-or willfully permitted the rights of citizens to be trespassed . ." By BETH NISSEN "Light up or leave me alone" Traffic, Low Spark of High Heel- ed Boys HIS IS WRITTEN for anyone who has ever lit up a cigarette. put one out, sneezed, coughed, or strained their eyes to see an An- gell Hall movie through a cloud of smoke. Today's smoker must contend with the AMA, the Cancer Founda- tion, the succinct Surgeon Gener- al's warning, the 50c-a-pack charge, and a public that is increasingly intolerant of cigarette smoking. People are beginning to react to the stubborn stale smell that hangs in rooms, closets and on clothing, the ugly butts, eye-stinging smoke, and the medical suggestion that exhaled cigarette smoke may be physically harmful to those non- smokers who inhale it. It was once an indication of status to smoke; it is now gener- ally socially acceptable to tolerate but not encourage or participate in smoking; a time may soon come when it will be socially commend- able to discourage and forbid smok- ing. I remember the first experiment- al drag I took in the fourth grade. It was followed by a gasp for cool air and what must have been four hours of coughing and eight hours of aftertaste; it was my first and last. IN JUNIOR HIGH, my class- mates were divided into those who smoked and those who didn't. The bathrooms were the hang-outs for the smokers, who agreed among themselves they were more sophis- ticated and experienced than the rest of us with virgin lungs. It was never difficult to distinguish a smoker from a non-smoker; the female smokers always seemed to be the ones who teased their hair, wore bras first and spread garish blue and green on their adoles- cent eyelids, while their male coun- terparts slicked their hair back, hid their jeans from the laund y, and talked exclusively of motor- cycles and the female smokers They were harder to distinguish in high school. They were much more discreet, more practiced. The bathroom was still the center of puffery (the hall with three bath- rooms was the school "drag strip"), with clouds of smoke hov- ering mysteriously over the stalls in the back, two sinks pluged with swimming butts, and an instant chorus of well-timed flushing when- ever a teacher was too near the bathroom door. THERE WAS SOME obscure im- age that accompanied the light' up action, a composite image birthed by Madison Avenue and the smokers themselves. The ads as- sured men of their masculinity, in- dividuality and appeal; women who smoked were independent and the epitome of liberation. But the image began to falter under ever-increasing discourage- ment: warnings, the ban on tele- vision cigarette ads, and the in- crease in public service mesages against smoking. It will only be a matter of time, hopefully, until the issue of smok- ing in public becomes a national health campaign, like the current- ly effective emphasis on seat belts, on until Smokey expands his serv- ices to putting out cigarettes along with forest first. Some non-smokers are taking the initiative and asking people to please refrain; some smokers dre showing growing sensitivity a n d asking a quick "Do you mind if I smoke" to the persons on either side of them in a crowded lecture hall. Those reluctant to endure a smokers who-do-you-think-you-are stare have taken to subtly hiding ashtrays and coughing conspicuous- ly when a cigarette is lit. And there are those who are not in the least bothered (usually smok- ers or ex-smokers themselves, children of smoking parents, or friends of tobacco tycoons). THE NON-SMOKERS of the world must continue their vigilant- ism and persuasive efforts firmly and convincingly until smokers can find an alternative: nail-biting, over-eating, thumb-sucking, medi- tation, anything. The economists can then capitalize on the new market of short-nailed, overweight neurotics. It may work better than anything Nixon's tried to date. Beth Nisson is a student who, as you might suspect, does not smoke. APART FROM the precise time- table and more elaborate specifi- cations in the Green-Udall formula, there is one other significant dif- ference between their approach and Bingham's. They would re- quire a two-thirds vote of b o t h houses as a first step; Bingham's resolution calls for a simple ma- jority. Since it takes a two-thirds vote to override a Presidential veto, the difference may be more apparent than real. But Bingham notes that a beleaguered Chief Executive might be disposed to seek a new mandate once repudiated by a simple majority. Under both amendments, the in- cumbent would have the right to run assuming that he obtains his party's nomination. (Bingham's re- solution does not spell out the me- chanics of designation, as Reps. Green and Udall do; he contends it would be preferable to enact the basic principle and let Congress evolve the machinery). EVEN IF EITHER won C o n- gressional sanction and survived Presidential veto, the approval of three-fourths of the states would still be needed. Barring s o m e unforseeable bombshells that could create a darker mood of national emergency, the road to such re- form will not be swiftly traversed. But if these are ideas. w h o s e time has not yet come, they sure- lv belong on the agenda of public discussion. Clearly they would embody fate- ful alterations in our political structure, introducing basic ele- ments of Britain'sparliamentary system. Is that an unthinkable thought after both Watergate and Vietnam? Neither amendment is necessar- ily the last word. It may be ar- gued, for example, that a Con- gress which decrees a new na tional election should in fairness provide for its simultaneous dis- solution and an electoral test of its own members. (It must also be recognized that the proposed changes would require the opposi- tion party to maintain some equi- valent of "shadow cabinet.") GRANTING THAT Congressional and state action is unlikely before the 1974 races, the start of major debate on the amendments could transform those contests into a midterm popular plebiscite with special meaning. While the political sickness un- folded in the Nixon Administration - from Watergate to Cambodia - and the ensuing national malaise in the backdrop for these remarks, the issues transcends his term. Certainly the existence of such de- mocratic instruments for change might have modified the tragic chronicle of Lyndon Johnson's de- bacle in Vietnam. Nor can this be discounted as a desperate scheme to "reverse the Nixon mandate" of 1972. For if that result still has any validity, his disintegrating second term could be salvaged by a new na- tional vote. The larger 'qustion is whether many Americans are prepared to face the implications of their dis- taste for the impeachment route (which could conceivable lead Carl Albert to the White House). In a deeper sense, are they willing to concede that imperfections H1 our system are in part responsible for our present frustration -nd dis- array? We will never know the answers until responsible voices begin to present the questions - as Bingham, Mrs. Greene and Ud- all are trying to do. James Wechsler is editorial page editor of the New York Post. Copyright 1973-The New York Post Corporation. ,11 U.S.-India: A failing detente Endorsing the lettuce boycott THE UNIVERSITY Housing Council voted Tuesday -night to support the United Farm Workers UFW union's let- tuce boycott and prohibit the purchase of lettuce not picked by the union's mem- bers. To some, the lettuce boycott currently being conducted by the UFW may seem to be an abstract struggle. However, the boycott has proved to be one of the most effective tactics the UFW can draw on in its effort to gain union contracts with California growers. It was. through the grape boycott of the late 60s that the UFW forced growers to recognize their union as the grape pickei's' bargaining agent. The contracts signed in 1970 between growers and the UFW established for the first time a seniority system of hiring, medical and retirement benefits, protec- tion from the use of pesticides, and other significant farmworker gains. AFTER SIGNING the grape contracts, the UFW moved into the lettuce pick- ing area, hoping to bring about the same kinds of changes. However, when the grape contracts ex- pired this year most growers signed with the Teamsters, eliminating most of the UFW gains of past years. The Teamster contracts were notable for their swtich back to a labor contrac- tor system of hiring workers, a system which allows kickbacks and favoritism instead of seniority to decide who shall work. Moreover, significant evidence of Teamster-grower collaboration in trying to undermine the UFW's position has been found. Just last week, the Justice De- partment handed down several indict- ments for the payment of bribes by grow- ers and packers to Teamster officials. UNITED FARM Worker efforts to defeat the Teamster-grower alliance have included a grape pickers' strike-which met with harassment from both the po- lice and Teamster-paid thugs-and a na- tionwide boycott of grapes as well as of the two largest grape purchasers, A&P and Safeway. The success and prospects of these tactics will be the subject of numerous dorm discussions early next week, at which farmworkers who participated in the grape pickers' strike will talk. We urge that students attend these discussions, especially so that they may vote more intelligently in the November referendum which will put the campus lettuce boycott to a vote. In light of the struggle the UFW is en- gaged in to establish its hard-won gains once and for all, the actions of the Uni- versity Housing Council is no longer ab- stract. It is concrete and, what is more, correct. Barely heard THE VIOLENCE caused by apartheid in South Africa has apparently become so commonplace that it no longer merits significant attention. Yet, last week police gunfire mowed down 11 striking black miners at the site of the country's richest gold mine. Pneu- matic drill operators at Western Deep Levels mine had demanded a pay in- crease, which was rejected by the Anglo American Corp., the! mine owner. When protesting miners advanced on the mine's administration building, the police opened fire, killing the 11 and wounding 27 more. South African Prime Minister John Vorster's comment on the killings was that, "The police have always acted with the greatest caution in such circum- stances. They acted the same way last night." Others, including the secretary general of the World Council of Churches and the United Nations Special Committee on Apartheid, had less praise for the police. THE INCIDENT will no doubt pass with little change in attitude of any of the parties involved, including the U. S. rnomenment Our nrnorations will con- By JOHN BARTON W7ASHINGTON - Events s u r- rounding the recent visit of Pakistan Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto suggest the administra- tion's efforts to attain a balanced foreign policy towards India will be difficult to achieve. It is not so much that new pol- icies are too difficult to devise and put into practice. Rather that old ones are so easy to remember. Ironically, it is not the visit of Bhutto - who heads the govern- ment India has regarded as its major enemy - but the recent coup in Chile and the dispute be- tween the U.S. and Cuba that is at the core of the latest flap between Washington and New Delhi. For some time before the visit of Bhutto, both Indian and U.S. of- ficials went to great trouble to pub- licize a mutual desire to forget past troubles, real and imagined. NEVER MIND that U.S. policy had tilted toward Pakistan in the Indo-Pakistan war of 1971, Indian officials said. Forget the fact the U.S. supplied Pakistan with wea- pons that had been turned against India instead of the "Communist aggresors" for whom they were in- tended. Pakistan lost,tEast Pakis- tan merged as Bangladesh, and things would be better. Never mind that India used every posible chance to denounce the U.S. policy in Asia in the most vitriolic terms, U.S. officials said. Forget the fact India has accept- ed an enormous amount of Amer- ican foreign aid but still sided more with the Soviet Union than the United States. The Vietnam War ended, and things would be better. Only the day before Bhutto ar- rived, a ranking State Department official told reporters that Bhut- to's visit would not result in any new military arms supplies for Pakistan. And in a sharp reversal of past practice, officials made it clear the U.S. no longer w o u I d automatically support Pakistan in its problems with the giant neigh- bor, India. BUT ON THE very day that of- ficial spoke, Cuban Prime Minis- ter Fidel Castro was warmly re- ceived by Mrs. Gandhi in N e w Delhi. Castro, not unsurprisingly, had some unpleasant things to say about the United States. Among them was a direct accusation that the United States was responsible for the coup in Chile and the result- ant death of deposed President Sal- vador Allende. Mrs. Gandhi and other Indian oficials had already criticized the coup in Chile in terms American officials privately interpret as a thinly veiled attack on the United States. U.S. officials winced. They hive concluded that by giving Castro a public forum and implying a U.S. role in the Chilean coup, Mrs. Gandhi had, once again, buried the hatchet in the American hide. AMERICAN OFFICIALS are hoping that the incident is just an -isolated slap at the U.S. face and not the forerunner of a sustained anti-American attack. It is just such stinging barbs, however, that have derailed past eforts to bring about better understanding b e - tween the United States and India. Heard against a backdrop of thanks by Bhutto for Amrican support and generosity, some of- ficials here believe it is yet ano- ther reminder that the road to better understanding between the United States and India will not be an easy path. John Barton is a writer for the United Press International. Letters to The Daily (i Coleman Young To The Daily: I HAVE JUST read, in great dis- may, Eugene Robinson's portrayal of the Detroit mayoral primary. Having spent my summer working in Senator Coleman Young's cam- paign I felt I had to write to clear up some of the viciously false statements you made. Coleman Young and his support- ers 'did not expect to lose t h a t primary on Tuesday. We expected that, having the most progressive and appealing candidate that we would get sufficient votes from all racial and ethnic communities in Detroit to place second behind John Nichols. Coleman Young did not offer "general babblings" on his v i c- tory. He gave customary thanks to all of his gathered supporters, ex- pressed his appreciation for the support of countless rank-and-file union members, and urged all to work toward our next victory in November. Coleman Young is not a "black liberal."' He is a black man with an extensive record of struggle, in Detroit's Black Bottom, in the police, improved housing condi- tions, decreased unemployment and many others. I don't know whether you spent any time at all observing or working in Senator Young's cam- paign this summer, or indeed whe- ther you live in the city of De- troit or not. But I see your at- tempt to picture Senator Young as a foolish, inexperienced man who has been thrust by fate into a posi- tion he doesn't know how to deal with, as a very racist and danger- ous action. I hope none of your readers' are diswayed from work- ing, as I will, with all their ability to elect this man the next mayor of Detroit. -Marcia> Fishman 7SRC Sept. 14 prisoner To The Daily: I AM A FEDERAL .prisoner at Leavenworth, Kansas. I have been in prison now almost five years. I expect to be getting out next sum- mer, and after being in prison for so long, I have lost all contact with the people I. once knew on the streets. I \\\ \\\ . l\. \ > .. I