4 , 91e £trtipan Daihj Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Academia's role in social c 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. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1973 By RAY GOZZI WE DO NOT understand the behavior of real persons. As a result, we have lost both the War in Vietnam and the War on Poverty. Our academic institutions have contri- buted to our igrnorance, and are perpet- uating it. At just the time America faces prob- lems of national and global scope, our academic industry is rigorously training a generation of specialists to focus on as narrow segments of reality as possible. At just the time we need to synthesize knowledge about the behavior of whole persons, our academic industry is care- fully implanting techniques of "critical an- alysis" which insure that no synthesis will be acceptable. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that academic institutions have become self- serving absorbers of intellectual energy, which are not contributing what they should to a society desperately in need of intelligent guidance. . We recognize this fact in our everyday language which o f t e n betrays our true perceptions. When we say that an issue has become "academic," we mean that it has become meaningless, unresolvable, or triv- ial. Our failure to understand the behavior of real persons has produced results we may truly call evil. Our "War on Poverty" has not eliminated poverty, but rather has created a bureaucratic monster which robs much of the population of its rights, divid- es families, and creates dependency - per- petuating the problems it was designed to solve. Our War in Vietnam has not stopped Communism, but rather has killed millions of civilians while supporting a series of corrupt dictators, and has thereby streng- thened the cause of those whom we have opposed. In this time of vast and crippling failure, it only makes sense that the intelligence of the society should be directed toward mak- ing sure such failures will not recur. It only makes sense that the intelligence of the society be directed toward a new understanding of the behavior of whole persons. Of course, the intelligence within academ- ic institutions is doing no such thing. No one will deny that the basic trend within academic life has been toward in- creasing specialization. The result is that more books are turned out on narrower and narrowed topics. It is a commonplace that no one can keep up with the increas- ing volume of detailed work. Specialized vocabularies emerge, incom- prehensible, to those outside the specialty, providing still more barriers to unified understandings. The thrust of education is toward forcing students to become profic- ient in one specialized vocabulary, rather than understanding where each separate' area of knowledge is located within a larg- er whole. Within each specialization, arguments over methodology take up the major portion of a student's education, submerging ar- guments over substance. All this while our social reform policies are failing miserably and the people are electing Richard Nixon to do something about it. THE MOST INSIDIOUS aspect of aca- demic life, however, is the intellectual style which is produced by this increasing spec- ialization and narrowness. This is the style of "critical analysis," so carefully incul- cated in all students. While some degree of critical analysis is a valid part of every intellectual effort, as presently practiced the technique has reach- ed an immoral extreme where it is focused almost entirely on its destructive aspects. It is definitely the fashion to attack, pull apart, dissect and destroy virtually a n y book, thesis, or construct, The book review sections of academic journals remind me of the River Amazon, with its piranha vic- iously snapping at anything whole which enters the river. A critic is not required to be consisteat 7hange himself. He is not required to have any co2.structive purposes. He is not required to possess any over-arching perspectives. le is not required to build something in place of that which he tears down. All that is necessary is criticism. Viet- nam-like destruction results, with no con- structive aspects. This extreme criticism is produced by the situation where nobody can possibly know all the detailed work being, done, yet must appear to have thought carefully about all of it. Refuge is taken in the technique of vicious criticism. Priority goes to appearing knowledgeable, not to con- structive understanding. ACADEMIC INSTITUTIONS, then, a r e acting immorally in the truest social sense of that word. Self-seeking behavior within narrow fields has become the basis for intellectual life. This produces knowledge which is too narrow to deal with the basic problems America faces today. And the competition between narrow intellectuals produces an extreme critical style which apposes, with all its strength, just the kind of thinking America needs. Ray Gozzi writes a weekly column en- titled "Maggie's Farm" for the Yale Daily News. .4 Letters: Boycott .: .... ..:... .. .. ... . .." .. .."........ r.:::.:: . :}:'ii.:...... :*... .::n-. ...: . ::::t ..:4t. }:ivtti.:.a ..".v-:h.. .....: ........ n...n\.....v: }}-};::: .. ..... . n ... ......... ......v.-.....,..... . \..... ... :: ....:. . ..... .wt '"t . .. .. .., " Dial "M" for Mitchell Watergate: A pohltical victory? THE WATERGATE trial is over, and top Administration officials are probably gloating, secure in the knowl- edge that their involvement in the Wat- ergate Scandal remains obscure. A quick jury verdict of "guilty" against the last two defendants, G. Gordon Liddy and James W. McCord Jr. for the breaking in and bugging of the Democratic National Committee offices will effectively close the matter for the time being. If any trial in recent history deserves being called a travesty, then surely this is the one. The government, in effect prosecuting itself, proved lax in it's re- sponsibility to develop a full case, involv- ing bringing to light all facts available about the Watergate affair. We have five of the defendants plead guilty before the trial began, removing any possibility of new revelations and exposures coming out within the trial. Add to that the recent news reports which charge that the five - Howard Runt, Bernard Barker, Frank Sturgis, Eugenio Matinez, and Virgilio Gonzales- were paid off to keep silent and to plead guilty, and the situation is sticky indeed. NOW THAT the trial is over, the only consolation can be that McCord and Liddy may both face up to forty-five Today's staff: News: Debbie Allen, Prakash Aswani, Angela Balk, Robert Barkin, T ed Evanoff, Cindy Hill, Rolfe Tessem Editorial Page: Kathleen Ricke Arts Page: Herb Bowie, Sara Rimer Photo technician: John Upton years imprisonment in payment for their government loyalty. There is little satis- faction in knowing that the government obviously feels justified in employing "invasion of privacy" tactics wherever it wants. Are we to listen to the defense lawyers Gerald Alch and Peter Maroulis, who contend that governmental "bugging" is acceptable when it feels that someone is suspected of acting "dangerously?" It is dangerous to think that one crime is acceptable when it is undertaken to pre- vent another. Fortunately, such logic didn't prevail at the trial. presiding Judge John J. Siri- ca did an effective job in questioning the credibility of the defense arguments and tried to open the proceedings to a more intense investigation. THE WATERGATE Affair isn't closed, however. An upcoming Senate in- quiry into the Watergate case, headed by Senator Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) hopefully will expand upon the trial data and will be able to disclose the names of all gov- ernmental personnel involved in this act of espionage. At a time when the federal govern- ment is becoming more and more daring in violating the individual rights guaran- teed in our country's Constitution, it is more important than ever that brakes be applied to such governmental intrusion. The government, through the Water- gate trial, has won a temporary victory. The upcoming Senate investigation has the potential of not only upsetting the government's victory, but their self- righteousness as well. -MARTIN STERN To The Daily: DURING THE last months we have worked to get pledges and to get endorsements from various or- ganizations. The Farm Workers Union now has probably more en- dorsements nationwide from cit- ies, states, hishops, unions, poli- ticians, etc. than it did during the Grape Boycott. But still it's not enough pressure to force agribusi- ness to meet the just demands of farm workers. Now the real fight is on. The lettuce boycott in the Midwest and on the East Coast has now taken the focus of a national secondary boycott campaign: The target is A&P here and Safeway on the West Coast. A&P is the largest chain store in the country and buys in one week over four million heads of letuce. Also A&P is the biggest buyer of scab lettuce and proved during the grape boycott that they only cooperate with the large cor- porations as long as they can. They have over months refused to co- operate with our boycott and con- tinued to carry non-union lettuce. The main reason for ;hoosing this stratgy is that A&P and Safe- way are the only chains really large enough to force growers to settle the dispute and to give their workers what they ask for: the right to form a union of their own choice. Our demand is UFW lettuce or no iceberg (head) lettuce. One of two things must happen - There is only between 10 per cent and 15 per cent union lettuce on the mar- ket. Either A&P stops buying non UFW lettuce or they force enough growers to sign contracts in order for them to get enough UFW let- tuce to meet the demands of con- sumers. Our main object now is to pre- pare people for the picket lines we will be having later by leafleting and by spreading the farm work- ers' struggle through all possible channels. The mass support for the grape boycott some years ago showed how effective and successful the non-violent way of social change can be if we all get together. A Union for the lettuce workers will bring farm workers and all poor and oppressed people in the country a step further towards their goal: freedom and justice. Success or failure will mean hope or desperation for millions of peo- ple. Farm Workers rely on us. We have accepted the food they are producing without thinking for a long time. They gave us food and got back poverty and miserable living and working conditions. It's our turn now to act. Farm workers need your strong support now. We have the power to change things if we are united. People proved this during the Grape Boy- cott. -Lettuce Boycott United Farm Workers Jan. 31 Student apartments To The Daily: THE LETTER in The Daily by Irwin Gross and others telling how hard it was to get a water pump installed in an apartment under- scores the failure of City Hall to deal in a meaningful way with the problems of apartment dwellers in Ann Arbor. The last few years have seen a rash of controls imposed on land- lords and developers. Zoning laws, housing codes and measures deal- ing with deposits and rent con- trols have been adopted by our City Fathers, and some are talk- ing about still more controls. But reasonable rents, good service, and fair dealing have not come about. The only result of all this action has been that student apartment bilding has come to a complete halt for 3 years and not enough family apartments have been built to meet the demand. The latest issue of House and Home, the builders trade maga- zine, sheds tears of grief for land- lords in Houston, Texas, and North Kansas City, Missouri, where high vacancy rates have forced land- lords to offer inducements of up to 3 months free rent, payment of moving expenses elimination of de- posits, and, in some cases, even leases. What Ann Arbor needs is more apartments, a lot more. To gef them, City Hall must create a cli- mate which attracts construtcion and modify the short-sighted and counter-productive controls which have caused builders to m o v e their operations to towns where they don't get hassled all the time. Apartment dwellers can put good old capitalism and greed to work for them by pulling the strings for their own benefit. -Clan Crawford, Jr. Jan. 31 . What is ye worlde coming to? Allowing e woman to control her own body!' .. :...:.. ::. .::::::: rY."::"..v::.." ........y.....: ":.i: . ... r..F........................."::",.}: J:'}<{:i;. :::"". :};"; .;. . !:.. . . ..: The roach that ate N.Y. Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc- tors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. i WHA R /o WITPUJ55? ft a' FA' 1:M2 FAT /!AJE FOR tJ GAVE A&) THAT LUP MAN 0?A0 O-s-cw ARC) /la FOR~ 1 F6RR~t By PETE HAMILL LATER, WHEN the Roach Com- mission tried to find out what happened, they decided that it all started the week after New Year's in Frankie Stanko's cellar. Frank- ie and his friend, Willie Diamond, were trying to make hooch with the Chemcraft chemistry set that Willie's son got for Christmas. At some point, Frankie knocked over a bottle of Mission orange, at the exact moment that some chemi- cals spilled. And through the mess walked a cockroach. Nothing un- usual; in New York cockroaches walk through everything. Frankie and Willie left. A few days later, Frankie was at the bar in Rattigans, having a dozen fast boilermakers, and look- ing out the window. He saw his housetshudder. He sipped t h e boilermaker, and saw the h o u s e shudder again. "Lookit this," he said. "My house is shaking." And then, very slowly, the home be- gan to burst outward in a show- er of bricks, plaster, fire escapes, and TV dinners. And then, rising from the debris, they saw T h e Roach. * * * The Roach was at least a story high, gleaming in the afternoon light, its feelers blinking for di- rection. "What is that thing?" the bartender said quietly. "I think," said Stanko, "that it is the big- gest cock-a-roach in the world." The bartender pulled a drink from the tap: "That goddamned Lind- say. What'll he think up next?" The next few hours were, to coin a phrase, an orgy of chaos and destruction. Firemen poured gal- lons of water on The Roach, who The Roach ate a three-year supply Environmental Protection Admin- of electrical wiring stashed in the Globe Lighting Co., just as Milton Lewis arrived with an Eyewitness News team. "Now," listen to this," Lewis said, just before The Roach ate him. The Roach carved a path of de- struction through Brooklyn, grow- ing larger and sleeker with each meal. He swallowed every fruit and vegetable store on Fifth Av., Jefore heading into Pintchick's on Flatbush Av. where he ate through all the wallpaper, oilcloth, plastic plants and linoleum - the g r e a t desserts of The Roach's y o u t h. Satiated, he lay down on Flatbush Av. Within minutes, the National Guard arrived under orders from Gov. Rockefeller to practce their usual restraint. They set off an artillery and rocket barrage which missed The Roach and destroyed Carroll St. Three lawyers from the Ameri- -an Civil Liberties Union arrived in a gypsy cab "to insure that The Roach's constitutional rights are not infringed upon," but The Roach just blinked, and ate them and the cab. Police from t' e Ber- Ren St. station tried to book The Roach "for resisting assault," but The Roach ate the station house. Tanks, flamethrowers, laser beams were thrown into the battle; a re- quest was made to President Nix- on for permission to "nuke" The Roach, even at the risk of losing Brooklyn, because he was commit- ting the ultimate American crime: Destroying property. Nixon was hiding somewhere. The Roach was marching re- morselessly on Manhattan, when Mayor Lindsay convened an em- istrator Jerry Kretchmer interrup- ted: "We don't have time for de- finitions. There's only one solu- tion." All heads turned in his di- rection. "J-0 Paste!" The WASPs in the cabinet thought Kretchmer had collapsed ender the pressure. "What is J-0 Paste?" the Mayor said. There was a wild discussion of the merits of J-0 Paste, and reluctantly, be Mayor agreed to give it a try. There was only one problem: sice the Irish had moved out, and the Jews had moved uptown, the city's entire supply of J-0 Paste was in the hands of the Puerto Ricans. As The Roach mashed through Brook- lyn Heights and onto the Brooklyn Bridge, desperate calls were made to Puerto Rican leaders. And they were resisting. Said one: "No cock- roach ever called me a spick." The Roach was halfway up the side of the World Trade Center, with Bess Myerson tucled under a feeler, when Rockefeller and Pe- ter Brennan relented. They agreed to kick all of the Irish out of the construction unions and replace them with Puerto Ricans, in re- turn for the hoarded J-0 Paste. * * * Millions of potato slices were spread with the deadly paste, and a fleet of helicopters, led by Fred- die Feldman of WOR, headed for the Trade Center. Bess Myerson was crawling to safety on the roof, while the deadly cargo was aimed at The Roach. His chies roared through the night sky, bel- lowing the hurt, defiant and some- how noble, until, overcome, he top- pled from the roof, falling to doom. He landed on three building in- spectors who were waiting for a \ } V K N d A FOP WU 1OA FTOE kOF5. OF IiUCK. 1W6& YOU -MEOAT AREYO TrO TAL4K SCAPCWO 7O. FOR ? ,/ / 4 i AI