,y Eighty.Three Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Letters: Fan mail and good advice 420 Maynard St., Ann-Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1974 Urging LSA to adopt report THE LSA COMMISSION on Graduation Requirements published a doubly. surprising report in Wednesday's Daily. Not only was it a relatively clear and un- derstandable document - as few Uni- versity committee - produced papers are - but the report actually makes several provocative, positive suggestions, includ- ing: * A complete overhaul of the present admissions process. * A new program aimed at attracting potential undergraduates older than the prime 18-22 age bracket to the University. * A new regulation transforming all LSA classes to either four or two credit hours. Credit hours required for gradua- tion would be raised from the present 120 to 128. * A proposal that present restrictions on drop-adding be removed. * A new, eight credit "maxi-course" be offered to freshmen to introduce them "to the intellectual challenges and re- sources of the University." * A recommendation that the Dean. and the LSA Student Government estab- lish a complaint office "so that inade- quacies in our administrative appara- tus can be quickly identified." THESE ARE FAR-REACHING proposals which, if completely implemented, would greatly change the face of LSA. Basically, much of the present bureau- cratic hassling would be eliminated; more importantly, however, what remained would be clearly defined, and much eas- ier for the uninitiated student to under- stand. Under the new distribution require- nents, for example, students could se- lect from either three pre-planned "pat- terns" of distribution or, if they prefer- red, could formulate their own program of any 32 hours of credit outside of their field of concentration. The present lab- oratory requirement would be eliminated. The four-hour proposal is a bold step that could add an exciting new dimen- sion to University education-especially if, as the Commission urges, the addi- tional fourteen hours per term are used for more than just another lecture. THE COMMISSION'S suggestion that the College Board's Achievement Tests be dropped as an admission re- quirement is a heartening one. Hope- fully, this would help alleviate the per- plexing situation where bright minority students who could easily receive finan- cial aid once admitted are nevertheless out of the University by the preliminary application fees. We hope - for the benefit of both stu- dents and faculty - that LSA will care- fully consider the well-though-out sug- gestions of its Graduation Requirements Commission. -DAVID BLOMQUIST health To The Daily: MEDICAL Mediators,. the local organization to helpconsumers with their problems with health care providers, may itself benefit from a service which has existed at the University Hospital for nearly two years. It is called, Healthy Line. By no means perfect nor an an- swer to all patients' problems, Healthy Line is a 24-hour telephone service located in the P u b I i Information Office of the Hos- pital. By calling 763-4400, any day or any hour, the patient, family mem- ber or friend may leave a brief statement of the problem and ex- pect a response within 24 hours. Even though unable to solve all problems immediately, we do ack- nowledge each call, and we send a statement of the problem by special memo to the department or person capable of handling it. Healthy Line does not handle medical -inquiries, release patient information, or make appointments for care, emergency or otherwi-e. The service gets an average of three calls per day, and problems seem mainly to be concerned with billing or clerical matters. T h e service is widely advertised through the Hospital. Our office considers it part of its responsibility to work with pa- tients treated at University H o s- pital, and we are more than will- ing to cooperate with such organ- izations as Medical Mediators. -Louis Graff, Director Health Sciences Relations University of Michigan Feb. 25 cooperation To The Daily: READING THE campaign liter- ature for the upcoming city coun- cil elections April 1, it seems clear that Democrat and HRP candidates are in substantial agreement on many points of practical import- ance to people who live in Ann Ar- bor. In fact whatever differences there are between local Democrats and local Human Rights party con- stituents, they are academic so long as the Republicans are in power. Whether from the stand- point of human rights, the environ- ment, or the well-being of the city and its citizenry in general it is fairly imperative that the Repub- licans be defeated quickly. Might there be some way then, by which Democrat and HhP can- didateg could have a primary to se- lect the stronger candidate in each ward where splitting the vote would give the seat to the Repub- licans . . . for example in the Fourth Ward? This might be done by means of an actual informal primary or else by a survey con- ducted by pairs of inter viewers, one from each party. If s> cessful- ly carried off this could furm a valuable precedent for use in, oth- er places as well. If, on the other hand the cam- paign is going to be characterized by petty rivalry between Democrat "Whether from the standpoint of human rights, the environ- ment,, or the well- being of the city . . the Republicans be defeated quickly." and HRP candidates (as has been the case so far), then perhaps we deserve to have profiteers contin- ue to rape the city in the name of "progress" and "chacgng what the traffic will bear," and we deserve to have to live underground while the morality of the cocktail party parades itself.. -Bob Milbrath School of Business. Administration Feb. 26 workers To The Daily: I HOPE THAT Jon Crane's ar- ticle (Sunday Magazine, February 9) is not representative of t h e quality of Daily journalism. His poor methodology has led him to serious errors in his attempt to give us an "inside look" at t h e lifestyle of young factory workers in Monroe - a glimpse at how the other half lives. He appears to base broad generalizations on a few snatches of conversation. Hav- ing spent eighteen months work- ing at a Ford stamping plant just a few miles up 1-75 from Mon- roe, I know that no "overpower- ing sense of responsibility" to jobs exists among the young single workers. Furthermore, Crane's fig- ures are inconsistent. With an above average attendance record, it is difficult to make less t h a n $11,000 per year. I have never observed missing work to cause "self-hatred" - especially on hot known that absenteeism is a major problem in the automobile indus- try. Granted, among married workers, regularity is more pro- nounced. In the future, I hope your writers will be more rigorous in their reporting. -Lawrence J. Radecki, Grad Feb. 11 solidarity To The Daily: IT'S OFTENibeen observed that Mankind has its myths, but that fact would not be so disturbing except for the desperation w i t h which we delude ourselves. In the 18th Century, kings claimed to rule by divine right in order to bring order and peace to t h e world. In the 19th Century, the White Man shouldered his burden of civilizing the world. Having had these schemes (and others) blow up in our faces, however, what do we do? We troop down to hear Pat Sumi spin tales of another savior, the Working People. "Only when the working people have mastery of society can we overcome rac- ism," she says. Having spent some time in 'the working' class, t h i s seems somewhat unrealistic to me. The working class is just as racist and self-seeking as a n y other, and when or if it gets con- trol it wil do just what any other special interest group does when it gets control; that is, lord it over the rest. According to Lenin, +he October 1917 revolution was intended to set up a dictatorship of the proletariat. Did they eliminate racism task a Jew?) Did they eliminate imper- ialism (ask a Czech)? Well, may- be Russia got off the track. China set up a dictatorship of the pro- letariat. But if a Chinese dis- agrees with Mao, holds a relig- ious belief, or, for that matter, insists on staying neutral, he/she had better wish he/she were in Russia. Well, maybe China got of the track . . . and so it goes on and on, through any country, capitalist or socialist, dictatorship or democracy, run by any class or race or combination thereof. SUMI BELIEVES that the only solution to racism and exploita- tion comes from all people work- ing together. Well, try *ha. some- time. Anyone with delusions of Third World People's Solhdarity should take an unguided touir of Asia, Africa, or Latin America, and see how the third world people treat each . other. The concl--sion is that Man is Man, and five or six millennia of recorded history (and who knows how many of un- recorded history before that) should ocnvince even the most dy- ed-in-the-wool humanist that Man doesn't learn from his 'her mn;s- takes. The old movie line, "You got ,us into this mess, now you get us out," is quite foolish; any- one incompetent enough to lead a group into troulbe is only likely to make things worse by trying to get them out. So it is with us. We invent the airplane, and hail it .as an instrument to bring peoples to- gether; and then drop arnfs on each other from them. We invent radio and T.V. to communicate and understand one another bet- ter; and use them to spread poli- tical propaganda. We develop soc- ial, political and eeonanmic p r 0- grams and movements to bng justice to the world, and find our- selves being led around by the nose by political opportunists. Well, what is to be done? This seems an awf Illy gloomy and pes- simistic viewpoint to taxe. Not at all. Even if it were, he bliss of ignorance is dangerous, especially that of willful ignorance. But tne optimism is that, having found a few ways that don't work, people look outside themselves for one that will. Hopefully some people will realize that mankind can't solve the problems it has gotten itself into, and will wake up and look elsewhere, trying other sources (maybe even God; who knows? He's never been tried, or at least not according to instructions). At any rate, the ,sooner we stop play- ing around with our fantasies and start some'serious looking, t h e better. -Thomas N. Beach vv.vu w t" - Y. :.::.:':: " ".:' "..... ". . ....: :":. YT .".":Y ice. "... :t4 .S".'.:::": SIYSNlJI::,".":::.::t YfJ.V .................... . . r .. .. o.:tX +F7 A . .... ..! ....... .1t .. ... Y. {. Iit LI w -ry se. w i&m m6" 1' '" ""'4j+. t ._ _ t . " H Ai -: , r r" tip': z;, :a i .,-.. . k fi, J :. If , 1 :4 ., 1 , {~t:;: i)F"{i}?' "":: nao:'?Yai. :"}.":'R".}::"'".... . r;.}.'...."....Y........rA.. "rr~f."Y....Y...;.{. Pr: v::::+" r" "".:::::.:r:.,.:";r~:{ia' ?+."v.: . ;..'. .. ..a!4 '' ^^}:"... ... . . . .. ..r.~'*a'' . u F t _. Jill , The GOP and impeachment By GARY P. THOMAS SEE DICK. See Dick sitting in the W h i t e House. See Dick sell the Republican Party down the river. The deal went ,down in Miami in 1972, and only now are Republicans begining to see just how they have been screwed. Michigan's 5th Congressional District is solid GOP country - a bed of Republican con- servatism. The last time a Democrat won there was in 1910 - until last week. Gerald Ford had never gotten less than 60 per cent of the vote in the 5th. So when he as- cended to the vice-presidency to replace Spiro T. Agnew, pollsters and pundits naturally as- sumed the vacant House seat would go to the GOP heir apparent, Robert Vander Laan. Not so.' In a stunning upset, Democrat Richard Van- der Veen, campaigning on a theme of the "mo- ral bankruptcy" of the Nixon Administration, swept the district in an election that sent Re- publicans scurrying for cover. IN HIS FIRST news conference of the year Monday night, President Nixon did not mention Watergate as a deciding factor in upcoming con- gressional elections. "I think this will be a good year for those candidates standing for the administration," said Nixon. State GOP chairman William McLaughlin disagrees. The defeat in the 5th, he said, was "a disaster for Republicans in Michigan." In a conversation with McLaughlin after the Nixon press conference Monday night, he sA hp "rtms,±Fntl1v Adsarsp" with the Pres- up is for Congress to enforce the toustitu- tion." NIXON IS DETERMINED to stay in office. He refuses to see the handwriting on the wall - that his own party faces disaster at the polls in November because of him. At the 1972 Republican convention, Nixon knew, of course, that he could not serve ano- ther term. The GOP had put him into the White House, but after his nomination and election, he could afford to alienate the GOP - which he promptly did through his handling of Water- gate affair. He has placed Republican candidates in an impossible position. If they run against Nixon, they lose the diehard GOP support. If they stand with him, they lose the power of the ticket- splitting vote. THE POLITICAL barometer, as indicated by the election in the 5th District, points to a solid defeat for the GOP in November. Watergate re- mains unresolved, and Democrats are going to milk the issue for all its worth while voter dis- satisfaction is at an all-time high. In Michigan itself, Gov. William G. Milliken will face an uphill battle in his reelection bid in November. The path of the Repubican Party is clear: GOP members of Congress must vote to im- peach Nixon. If they care at all about their political survival, which all politicians do, they must move to get Nixon out of office. TO STAND BY Nixon will tell voters that the Republican Party tolerates corruption and dishonestv in its elected officials. If that hap- Thompson To The Daily: IT IS LITTLE short of pathetic that from three allegedly independ- ent perspectives, the D a i l y could produce but one view of the Hunter S. Thompson lecture. I suspect you sent one reporter who uses three names. But my quar- rel is not really witth the redun- dancy of your reporters, but rath- er their density. All three parroted the tired notionthat if a political speaker isn't deadly serious and purposive, he's a bore and a waste of time. They might look to their own writing if they are sin- cerely concerned about boring peo- ple and wasting time, but more to the point, this is the same old garbage that the alleged radicals on your paper have been pouring out for years, though this time col- ored in contemporary temper tan- trum. "How dare Hunter Thompson come to our campus and not take us seriously. We're students, we're radicals, we're sincere. It s o u r university and our course and our dollar bills and if he doesn't play our way we simply won't play." Christ, who's the bore? The ar- ticles reminded me of that brick who got up from the audience and asked, "Hunter what are we gonna do? A bunch of morons are running the government and all the serious people are oni the out- side." Can anybody really believe that that's what's nappening? AT SOME point you have to consider that perhaps Ralph Nad- er doesn't know "the real truths in American political lif.-," that perhaps there aren't an real truths. Nader's fine, he's got his place and his function and he does it. But I can't identify witn the kind of outraged, compulsive, 'ser- ious' political behavior he'3 come to represent (and which the Daily apes). Government isn't a '65 Cor- vair, it's an organic process, and the kind of clinical, didacric lec- tures which the 'serious' people at the Daily demand, are false and' illusory. As for Thompson, he liv- es his philosophy and doesn't feel compelled to preach it. Just as the thrust of his journalism attacks the fallacy of 'objective' reportiag, the pretentious notion that the journal- ist can be independent of the event, when he is, in fact, part of it, the lesson of Thompson's lec.ure was that successful political criticism can't be precise, impersonal a n d intellectual. 'They', the morons, to political thought. Those who lis- tened heard Thompson speak of liking Pat Buchanan even though he thought him politically obtuse; of his discovery that Richard Nix- on, that plastic man, had a relax- ed and human side. Those who lis- tened heard Thompson suggest that Edward Kennedy would prove more valuable to the left t h a it George McGovern, because Ken- nedy remained open and educable. Those who listened heard Thomp- son tell of McGovern's persistent delusion that it was Eagleton and a coincidental conservative trend that defeated him. But, as Thomp- son suggested, McGovern b e a t himself in '72. His humorless and absolute dedication to 'principle' had him tripping al over himself trying to prove sincerity, and in the process turned millions of vot- ers to Nixon, whom they knew as an equally large but more famil- iar jerk. If national elections were held solely in this community of 'ser- ious' people, Ralph Nader could be our President; but we'll have to do something about humanizing the image of radicalism, and knocking the prop of 'seriousness' from its pretensions, before it will have any appeal to the bulk of the American populace, whose only response to these White Knight fan- tasies is, "Come off it." I sug- gest Hunter S. Thompson has tak- en a step in that direction. -Dennis Earl Ross, '74 Feb. 14 refs To The Daily: DURING THE football season, I was very pleased with the Daily's explanations of several calls by the officials. It seems, however, that basketball has a different breed of officials who rarely make the right call - especially against the Wolverines. The impetus which caused me to write this letter was an article in the Sunday, February 17 edition by George Hastings. In the article, Mr. Hastings states about the Indiana game, "A n d they had the usual Big Ten home- club edge from the officials, who dispatched Michigan's starting ;uards on some awfully cheap Fouls. Also, several times when listening to the broadcast of games on WUOM-FM I have heard the commentators make incorect ex- planations of calls or declare an afficial wrong when he was right and the commentator obviously lidn't know the rules. As a high school and college IM basketball official, I think it's time that it was recognized what a difficult job the officials have and what a superlative job they do in per- forming it. FIRST OF ALL, officials are neu- tral and it doesn't matter where the game is played or who hired the officials. Secondly, 95 per cent of the dispute over calls is due to lack of knowledge of the rules by players, commentatorsand re- porters or spectators. College ball is not played in the rough-style of professional teams. Finally, it is extremely difficult for two, or even three, oficials to watch closely the action of ten speeding athletes on a basketball court. From their position on the floor, however, they have a 100 per cent better view of the actual action than anyone 46 or even 2 rows up in Assembly hall or Crisler Arena. In short, the officials do not de- termine the outcome of any game - that is done by performance, within the stated rules of the two teams. The officials are simply there to see that the rules are ob- served. "Spectator" or "Back- Seat" officials should stop "blow- ing their tops" and let the trained officials blow their whistles. -Bob Labanowski Feb. 17 comparisons To The Daily: IT WAS interesting that an ar- ticle appeared in the Daily com- paring University of Michigan teaching fellow benefits to other Big Ten schools. The University used similar statistics in answer to the data gathered by law school secretaries who compared clerical staff salaries at U.M. to ealaries at other schools in this area and in the state. Comparisons with other Big Ten schools does not take into con- sideration a number of important factrs such as cost of living in- formation, the effect of the state income tax, the differences in base (in-state) tuition rates at the various Big Ten Schools. S u c h supplementary data is necessary in order for informed considera- tion of the merits of the case for either teaching fellows or other staff. I think it would be of value to the whole University commun- ity if such data were ferreted out and made public. I 'hope sone group will decide to take on this challenge. -Name withheld by request Feb. 22 subjectivity To The Daily: BY NOW, I have become accus- tomed to the fact that the c h i e f honchos of the Daily insist upon editorializing throughout t h e i r "newspaper." Indeed, the mere existence of a specifically desig-, nated editorial page is a virtual sham, since subjective opinionating is liberally 'sprinkled . throughout the less-than-august journal. I noted a particularly disgusting example of this in the Sunday, February 10 Daily. In the section entitled "The Week in Review," re- ference was made to certain ac- tions taken' by Mat Hoffman at last Thursday's SGC meeting (which I attended). The author of the article, Chris Parks, has contemptuously a n d wronkly contended that the purpose of Mr. Hoffman's actions w a s specifically to offend certain rac- ial minorities. This contention is absurd. It assumes that any ar- gument one might have with a member of another race is rac- ially motivated. Both Mat and I happen to hold both white and nonwhite advocates of the lettuce boycott in equal contempt. I SPEAK as a close friend of Mat's in asserting that any claim made to the effect that he is a racist is without foundation. It's just too damn bad that certain individuals were offended by Mat's lettuce consumption. It ought to' be pointed out, as an aside, that there have always been a great many Chicanos who are disgusted by Cesar Chavez and wish to have nothing to do with him and his boycotts. I could therefore ju4t as reasonably state that advocacy of the lettuce and grape boycotts is anti-Chicano. This demonstrates the absurdity of invoking the ques- tion of race into these matters.- To repeat, if some Chicanos w e r e offended by Mat's lettuce consump- tion (the reason for which he care- fully explained), that's too bad. To me, the symbolismof' at's lettuce consumption is akin to the destruction of -an auotomVile on the Diag which took place a few yars ago, in the sense *bat both acts sought to concretize a parti- cular point of view. I was deeply offended by the creepswwho de- stroyed that car, but, of course, the Daily wasn't around to sooth my bruised feelings. If minority groups on this cam- pus think that opponents of s;me of their doctrines will be inhibited and intimidated by having their motives impugned, they're sadly mistaken. I NEED NOT dwell -ipon the case of Ted Liu. Mat stated that he was rebuking Liu for' a recent demonstration of physical force, an act that Mat would vigor-.sly. p- pose no matter who performed it. Chris Parks claims that Mat an- tagonized "Asians" by his anti- Liu motion. For the life of me, I can't recall another Asian aside from Liu in attendance at the meeting. Students on this campus ought to vigorously oppose such reckless distortions of fact. Contrary to Mr. Parks' assump- tion, Mat has no interest in "bait- ing" any racial minority on cam- pus. -Alan Harris Feb. 14 .... .. ...,..,...:.....{ ..1 .... 1........ 4 ,.:... {... .. ............ ... N.":::: .1N:.1. r: rf: .. .......'..~.: ;"."~ .Nr: .Y y~ .. : y :N.N~. 1.1....1.' r:.:.11111'rr.NYa f. .S:i t t~:44N V.. . r.... .... r ........ ..... ....v ... ,........ d.1n Y.h.. ..............,.~ .0. ,..1 ...,...:.........y......... ... .SC:'": ... r... .....11 "".; "}}. 4r}d":'r'o}."". ". .' rei. ..y..a ,,yyam ...:.".. n: .......... .{. w.N: ".".: ":........ ".v.1 .....,..Q....:::. :"::::::" :............. n.:....,................ ...r ., .... ,............... ~........... ..4..... .. }.."]"".1.. ~. .'Y.N. a . 4+',rr. ";YY}Y;{":{ :r;;.: ?};i.. ;;.;.y:;i:;:;:irx.."r{.;; . .".... rn1{;., ..f ... { ..............".1..........:~,v:t:. ::":t,".":.vrr:.:r;,.:a4:.L".c:{v:1v.".^.."...'v.:N...,.,r}r". 1..... ..... ....t 5p ""i:'-k ... ,." : oppression To The Daily: AS FACULTY members of The University of Michigan and spec- ialists in the field of Chinese Stu- dies, we are writing you to ex- press our immediate concern for the plight and welfare of the Sov- iet Jewish Sinologist Vitali A. Ru- bin. As the enclosed resume and documents explain, Mr. Rubin has sought for two full years to emi- grate from the U.S.S.R. and to carry on his research in ancient Chinese history and philosophy elsewhere. His government has repeatedly denied his requests to go abroad and has cut off nearly all of his communication with the outside world. Likewise, his scholarly writings have been suppressed des- pite the fact that he has been classified "an important special- ist." Indeed, his situation has be- as well, we are disturbed that he is not allowed to work in the Unit- ed States and to be in direct com- munication with us; for we had hoped that during his stay in New York, he might visit The Univer- sity of Michigan, exchange with us and our students valuable insights into subjects of mutual interest, and keep us abreast of Soviet schol- arship on China. As long as he is denied freedom to choaae where to work and with whom to commun- icate - certainly, these are basic human and academic rghts - we all suffer a loss. WHILE sympathetic to the prob- lems encountered by many Soviet Jews, the U.S, State Department, in- the past has repeatedly stated that it is "not in a position to in- tervene directly in cases w h e r e Soviet citizens wish to go to third countries, as with Professor Ru- and students at The University of Michigan have taken a personal in- terest, would it not "e most ap- propriate for our government to take concrete action on his behalf? We respectfully ask that you per- sonally do whatever can be done through the State Department and other offices of the U.S. govern- ment to secure an exit permit for Vitali Rubin and his wife. His best hope for continuing his career as a scholar, and it may well be his only hope at this point, is the kind of pressure vhich you and other members of the United S t a t e s Congress are able to exert. Thank you very much for your kind attention and coope!-ation in this urgent matter. -J. I. Crump, Prof. of Chinese Robert F. Dernberger, MR. RUBIN currently has a standing invitation to go to Colum-