off the record 4 .. Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students cit the University of Michigan English incentive plan 'a better idea'? 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-05521 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1973 UFW faces the real enemy THE TENTATIVE agreement reached be- tween the Teamsters and the United Farm Workers establishing UFW juris- diction over farm worker organizing may finally allow the UFW to concentrate on its real enemy: California growers. For much of this year, the UFW bat- tied on two fronts to retain its grape- picking contracts, facing both the cus- tomary grower opposition and the Team- sters. When UFW grape contracts ex- pired this year, many growers signed with the Teamsters, as contract terms specified markedly reduced benefits in both in pay and noneconomic areas. Prohibitions against the use of pesti- cides, which kill several thousand farm workers each year, were eliminated in the Teamster contracts, as was the hir- ing hall system of deciding who will work. Grower - Teamster contracts re- verted back to a labor contractor sys- tem, in which kickbacks and favoritism instead of seniority may determine who works. THE GROWER-TEAMSTER alliance ex- tended as far as bribe-taking on the part of some California Teamster offic- ials. And when UFW pickets tried to in- duce farm workers still in the fields to strike with them this summer, they were r . Mr4tgalt Daily Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief DIANE LEVICK...........................Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER..................... Sunday Editor MARILN RILEY .........Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER..............Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH......................Editorial Director TONY SCHWARTZ ....................Sunday Editor CHARLES STEIN..........................City Editor TED STEIN......... ............ Executive Editor ROLFE TESSEM......................Managing Editor Business Staff BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager RAY CATALINO ,...............Operations Manager DAVE LAWSON..............Advertising Manager BANDY FIENBERO...............Finance Manager SHERRY KASTLE ..............Circulation Director JIM DYKEMA.........sales & Promotions Manager DEPT. MGRS.-Caryn Miller, Elliot Legow, Patti Wil- kinson ASSOC. MGRS.-Joan Ades, Linda Coleman, Linda Cycowski, Steve LeMire, Sandy Wronki ASST. MGRS.-Chantal Bancilhon, Roland Binker, Linda Ross, Mark Sancrainte, Ned Steig, Debbie Weglarz STAFF-Ross Shugan, Martha Walker SALESPEOPLE-Deva Burieson, Mike Treblin, Bob Fisher, Debbie whiting, Alexandra Paul, Eric Phillips, Diane Carnevale Photogra phy Staff DAVID MARGOLICK Chief Photographer KEN FINK ..,....................Staff Photographer THOMAS GOTTLIEB ..............Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN................Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI............Staff Photographer TERRY McCARTHY ............Staff Photographer TODAY'S STAFF: News: Chris Parks, Gene Robinson, J u d y Ruskin, Steve Selbst Editorial Page: Ted Hartzell, Z a c h a r y Schiller, Eric Schoch Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: Ken Fink attacked by Teamster - hired thugs as well as being arrested by local sheriffs. The Teamster decision to abandon its effort to cripple the UFW can only im- prove UFW prospects for both regaining grape contracts and achieving success in the lettuce fields as well. UFW President Cesar Chavez made the point plainly when he announced the tentative agreement between the two unions: "We and the growers can fight it out." THE UFW STRUGGLE, in a sense, is thus beginning all over again. Some contracts the Teamsters reportedly have agreed to renounce will not expire until 1975, and many growers are as adamant as ever that they will not accept union- ization. Moreover, large corporations increas- ingly own the fields the UFW is organiz- ing in, making it that much more diffi- cult for the farm workers' union to exert sufficient pressure to force a settlement. The fact remains, however, that the Teamster-UFW agreement allows the UFW to once more turn its energies on the growers. As Chavez said when the set- tlement was announced, "Until 24 hours ago we were fighting two giants, but now we're only fighting one." Law and order -ITY POOR Spiro Agnew. Faced with possible indictment for alleged crimes while a Maryland politician, he has re- sponded in the way he knows best - a personal vituperative attack against As- sistant Attorney General Henry Petersen. Caught between unsympathetic court decisions and an unsympathetic Presi- dent, Agnew feels his position and pres- tige so threatened that he has no recourse but to attack the Justice Department for doing its job. Last Saturday, the Vice President re- ceived a long standing ovation for a speech in which he was seemingly trying to discredit the Justice Department probe. He accused Petersen of leaking al- legations to the press, subjecting him to a "kangaroo" trial. He charged that the Justice Department, and especially Pet- ersen, were trying to regain prestige by prosecuting him. He did not find it neces- sary to substantiate those charges, how- ever. Agnew's speech appears to be another step in his attempt to quash any criminal investigation of his past activities. The Vice President has the same right as any other person to defend himself, of course. He should be given the presump- tion of innocence until proven guilty. He should not be presumed un-indict- able until out of office, however, despite his obvious feelings on the subject. In view of his past support of main- taining "law and order" in America, it is ironic to watch his attempts to destroy efforts to maintain "law and order" when they apply to himself. By TED STEIN A SMOKE-FILLED meeting of the board of directors of Gen- eral Motors. The grizzled chairman leans over the table. "Look, we're really having trouble with o u r trainee program," he says. "We just can't get the recruits. What can we do?" Quickly a junior executive out- lines a stock strategy. "We'll ex- pand our incentive program and reward performance," he suggests. "We'll give cash awards and cir- culate the best ideas submitted by trainees in a newsletter to the entire group." The corporate mentality. B u t suddenly, it is a University stra- tegy. For if a newly approved English department program gets off the ground, just that kind of commercial approach will be part of the University's answer to the desperate need for improved fresh- man-level education. IT IS NOT surprising, therefore, that the English department h a s gone out of its way to introduce its own "incentive" program with- out any fanfare. Says the plan's author, English Prof. Walter Clark, "It isn't any Watergate secret .. . But sometimes it's better to start doing something and then let peo- ple find out about it." The proposal was snappily ap- proved by the literary college and the English department chairman over the summer. And with good reason. For even on the face of it, the idea is outrageous. Under the provisions of the pro- gram, the best papers selected by teaching fellows in required fresh- man courses-English 123 and 150, and Great Books 191-will be cir- culated among the 2,200 students in a weekly newsletter. In addition, money made available from t h e Hopwood fund will enable the de- partment to award about six cash ments, the loss has been proportional to the swellin ranks. Officially, the program istrators downplay the re role of the incentive. "V to encourage some sense munity," says Clark. "Stu( be able to see what ather are doing." How heightened compet create its antithesis - co - is not clear. But if the ale isn't convincing, try "We've had Hopwood A' a long time," Clark say writing is done in the Univ the freshman level . . . inver ely why a freshman piece can't be ig of BGS compared to a piece of senior crea- tive writing." But there would s admin- seem to be a light year's worth of cruitment difference between a required We'd like theme and a creative piece enter- of c.m- ed in the Hopwood conteest. dents will MORE PERNICIOUS than this students is the tacit assumption that do- ing something well must be recog- ition will nized in some way. This is part mmunity and parcel of any incentive system, at :ation- but it is a crass way of drumming another. up interest in English. The values wards for of literature cannot be price-tag- s. "Most ged, and to do so openly cheapens versity on learning. it makes What we have here is a sales gimmick instead of a bold move to substantially improve the fresh-' well man program, which is a lot like filling the cavity of a man suf- par- fering from a coronary. It is not i way particularly difficult to figure out what's needed - smaller classes and more participation f r o m professors in anprogram currently ...... dominated by novice teching fel- y there," lows. ve money Moreover, the program contri- ive them butes to the corporate mentality which has already established it- is Clark's self here. This kind of thinking no reason leads Regents to view themselves ". . .the assumption that doing something must be recognized in some way is part and cel of any incentive system, but it is a crass of drumming up interest in English." arrogantly as a board of directors. THE SUPPORT for the incentive program shows a genuine concern for the problem. As Clark admits, "Freshman English is disliked by many students." In addition to the Hopwood mon- ey, meanwhile, the literary college has made funds available, and the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching, which services faculty members, has provided a grant of $1,500 to pay the 40 teach- ing fellows who will be editing the newsletter and awarding the cash prizes. With this much support for a half-baked idea, it is certainly pos- sible that a more substantive move would receive similar backing, even if it costs more. FORTUNATELY, faculty mem- bers involved in the freshmen pro- gram met a week ago and some strenuously objected to the plan. It appears, therefore, that the pro- gram will be modified if not com- pletely scrapped. This prospect is encouraging. For the image of a university where education is marketed like tooth- paste is one that should make us all shudder. ebo prizes totaling $100 each week. THE NEW INCENTIVE pitch in- dicates the nervousness felt by the English department over the reduc- tion of majors in the past few years. Like other LSA depart- sense to funnel some mone he reasons. "Since we ha to reward, why don't we g some recognition." At the heart of this linei contention that there is" Rent commission hi ts the cook, By GORDON ATCHESON THE CITY'S rent control commission met again last Tuesday night to discuss the housing situation in Ann Arbor but the center of attraction was a box of cookies sitting on the table. After five months of work the commis- sion attempted to re-establish-some kind of goals during the Tuesday session. Not sur- prisingly the tenant and landlord interests could not agree on what the group ought to be doing. The "neutral parties" kept complaining that this had all been decided when the members first got together. Apparently, whatever objectives had been delineated were forgotten in the heat of summer. The commission, however, reach- ed a consensus that the vanilla creams were quite tasty. City Council set-up the "Blue Ribbon Citi- zens Committee on Rent Control" to study the feasibility of artificial regulation to re- duce the exorbitant rates charges by local landlords and issue a report either for or against such controls. INSTEAD OF making recommendations the group has followed the Peter Principle to the letter by gathering data to prove what just about every tenant already real- izes. Ask anyone on the street about rents and the response will invariably be some- thing along the lines of "it's incredible" or "what a rip-off" or even a fatalistic "Jesus Christ." Probably the data is valuable and does mean a great deal. Unfortunately, depend- ing upon which commissioner one asks the information proves direct opposites-"''rent control is needed," "rent control can't be the answer," and most popularly "the is- sue requires much more study." All the council members and the mayor had been invited to the meeting. Only Jer- ry De Grieck (HRP-First Ward) attend- ed. He stormed out after declaring "I'm glad I voted against this commission be- cause this turned out to be just what I thought it would be - nothing!" Sandy Rauch, "a neurtal" turned to him and sarcastically added "we feel the same as you do." ONE COMMISSIONER brought in a con- crete proposal to reduce rents by altering the method of mortgaging buildings. Merle Crawford of the business school stood up and paternalistically announced the plan "obviously" could not work. He drew a diagram on the chalk board and began his lecture. Like many profs he proved nothing and took twenty minutes to do it. At least the group knew there would be no exam at the end of thedcourse. They just passed the; cookies around again. The week before, the commission approv- ed "the spirit" of two proposals aimed at encouraging more housing in the area but not directly controlling cost to tenants. Nonetheless, at the Tuesday meeting one member explained, "We'll have to check into them further to find out if we under- stood what we were doing." Another commissioner had to be reminded that he had actually voted for the pro- posals. Throughout the session, though, various members did penance by apologiz- ing for missing previous meetings and con- sequently being unaware of specific issues under consideration. ADMITTEDLY, the commission is com- prised of volunteers who don't have all the time in the world. But they have been given a responsibility which will apparently go unfulfilled. Hoping the commission could come up with a definitive policy decisions was clear- ly pie-in-the-sky idealism. During that "typ- ical meeting" they bickered, hemmed and hawed, and reached no conclusions. Anything brought up for consideration was kicked around for awhile and then faded away without a formal decision ever being made. Rent control is too vital an issue to just fade away in an over-heated conference room on the fourth floor of City Hall. Sure, the commission will eventually file a re- port reinforcing what tenants already know but probably won't have any definite re- commendations for improving conditions. Ultimately, the commission has . merely proved that any bureaucracy, even a ten- person bureaucracy, cannot squarely con- front a given problem without strangling it in red tape and then laying it to rest under a mountain of reports which urge more study. For the record, by the end of the meet- ing nearly all the cookiees had been eaten. Gordon Atcheson is a Daily staff writer. Schembechler: Tough but not obsessed to s By DAN BORUS SATURDAY THE readers of this page were treated to a delight- ful fantasy by Co-Editors Christ- opher Parks and Eugene Robinson in which they argued that the basic philosophy of Bo Schembechler was grounds for his removal as head coach of the University's football team. In their piece, the authors cite the following deficiencies in Bo's Football vision: that Schembechler is obsessed with winning to such an extent as to cloud all other values and in that regard Bo Schem- bechler deserves the nickname "Little Woody", that Michigan foot- ball is brutal and dull, that Mich- igan is onaitsway to becoming a football factory. Though well-intentioned, the ef- fort of Parks and Robinson falls short. It falls short simple because it does not address itself to either the facts of the game or the per- sonality of the coach their effort vilifies. IN MY CONTACTS with the man, I have come to the conclusion that Bo Schembechler is not W o o d y Hayes. He does not tear up side line markers, he does not adopt a "nothing is wrong with football". approach, nor does he compare football with historical events like crossing the Rubicon. Schembech- ler is intense about football, but he is not a maniac. Football is simply a violent and brutal game. It is based on the jungle axiom of hit or be hit. It is this fact that is responsible for its mass appeal to the American public. THOSE WHO understand t h e game realize that no aspect of the game is without collision and vo lence. Even the much heralded (at least it is around here) passing game has its lion's share of vio- lence. It is violent to those line- men who must be continually bat- tered byhard-charging pass rush- ers. It is violent to quarterbacks who run the risk of the blindside (a tackle which must rank as one of the most brutal aspects of t h e game). And it is violent to pass receivers who can get hit at al- most any moment and without any protection once they get the bail. To accuse Schembechler of ex- cessive violence, then, makes lit- tle sense in a game permeated by it. Certainly Schembechler does not urge his players to excessive acts Saturday's article. Obsession iith winning is destructive but I don't read evidence of obsession into any behavior of Schembechler's I have seen during my work as sports edi- tor. No one can deny that Schem- bechler yells at players, fellow coaches and officials. But that is not particularly odd, especially in the heat of battle. Yelling on its own is not evidence of obsession. Why, I suspect even co-editors yell when things do not go as hoped. PARKS AND ROBINSON, it seems to me, have committed a mistake in assigning football a moral quality. It has none. It is not an allegory for life nortis life an allegory for football. It is a game in which tensions are sub- limated and feelings are raised. Vince Lombardi's famous dictum that you win for God is ridi- culous for the same reason. It may be poetically a good device, but it is not a good measure to judge the merits of a football program. There should be no fear that Michigan will fall into the ranks of the football factories of OSU, Tex- as, et. al. The academic tradition is much stronger here than at the football factories. Students here, perhaps because the outcome of games is for the most part well known, do not live and die with the Maize and Blue. And could you imagine Michigan students over- turning Ohio cars on the day of the OSU-Michigan game? I can't and I don't think it will ever hap- pen. It will be a sad occasion if that happens in this town. EVEN IN THE "unimaginative" charge, Parks and Robinson mis- state the point. To be sure, t he running game as practiced by Schembechler may not be crowd pleasing, but to accuse him of a lack of creativity is to ignore the Gil Chapman end around against Michigan State last year, the Paul Seal pass off the tackle eligible play against Purdue, the genius of the quarterback option that Den- nie Franklin runs as well as any college quarterback. The article is not without its re- deeming points. Big time college football is excessive, mercenary and exploitative. The Texas inci- dents described in the book Meat on the Hoof are reprehensible. The spring practice abuses described in a recent Sports Illustrated arti- cle are nauseating. But Parks and Robinson offer no evidence of these maladies here and I know of no such excesses in the Michigan program. To indict Schembechler for that system and its abominable abuses is taking the argument a step too far. Schem- bechler is hardly a dishonest man- iac. TOO OFTEN Americans h a v' e paid lip service to the notion that "It doesn't matter whether you win or lose, but how you play the game that counts." That lip se; v- ice, that callous disregard forsbe loser, not the desire to win, is the problem with college football. 'That, not Schembechler, is the issue. Dan Boruis is Daily sports editor. Doily Photo G(uns replace verse' With Neruda's death, By OLIVER PIUM PABLO NERUDA died, too. Of cancer, of course. And Allende dies just as routinely of a self-inflicted bullet into the mouth. So they're both dead now. Culture and politics carefully linked, inter- twined and buried in a shallow grave. Neruda was a Chilean leftist, a romantic, and a damn good poet, perhaps the best in Latin America. His Nobel Prize for Poetry simply recognized that fact: he received the honored prize the year after Al- lende received a politician's prize - victory, and the chance to forge a just socialist society. Neruda had already begun. IN THE LAST bloody week of Chilean freedom ,and socialist con- struction, Neruda wrote quickly of Nixon, the CIA, imperialism, Ana- conda, fascism, and the gorillas. Malignant cancer crept through his body as he wrote sharp short lines of the encirclement creeping from t . - t .1-.- I,+ - .f- *....-+;~- 1+ 1 rnAWrv~ . .......... Contact Your reps-