14ie r4 toin alfhd Eighty-one years of editorial freedom The world sucks... I feel lousy I1 Edited and managed bys 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Editorials printed in The Michigan or the editors. T students at the University of Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers his must be noted in oil reprints. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1972 Assault on freedom STUDENTS IN Chemistry 227 were sur- prised Monday when Acting Chemis- try Department Chairman Thomas Dunn told them that Prof. Mark Green would no longer be teaching their class. But tile shock waves went beyond the Chemistry Bldg. when Dunn openly ad- mitted that Green was suspended for de- voting class time to an anti-war slide presentation. Neither Green's academic qualifica- tions nor his dedication nor his effec- tiveness-the commonly accepted cri- teria for evaluation - were ever ques- tioned. Instead, Dunn was offended that class time was taken up in a demonstration of how the chemistry and technology that students study is being applied by their government in Indochina. By approving such a demonstration in his classes, Green had allowed class time to be "mis- used." Dunn's suspension of Green is repre- hensible in a community of scholars which values the right of an instructor to teach his students free from the shac- kles of administrative or governmental control. DUNN'S SERIOUS action (it is the first suspension of a faculty member in over seven years) is singular in Its lack of justification. First, as any faculty member or stu- dent knows, many other University pro- fessors do not conduct their classes strictly within the narrow confines of a course description. And for this flexi- bility they are lauded as innovators, even if the new approaches do not seem directly related to the course of study. Second, if "misuse of class time" is a punishable crime, then there is need of a purge of the far worse offenders who cancel classes or waste far more time than the 30 minutes it took to present the slides. Finally, the simple fact that nearly a dozen -other professors have shown the same slide show to their classes without Editorial Staff SARA FITZGERALD Editor PAT BAUER ............Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY ...... ........Editorial Director MARK DILLEN................... Magazine Editor LINDA DREEBEN ........Associate Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS .................. Managing Editor LORIN LABARDEE ................Personnel Director ARTHUR LERNER ......... ... ,....Editorial Director JONATHAN MILLER ...............Feature Editor ROBERT SCHREINER ...............Editorial Director GLORIA SMITH .............. ........... Arts Editor ED SUROVELL ... .....................Books Editor PAUL TRAVIS ..........,.Associate Managing Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Barkin, Jan Benedetti, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson, Zachary Schiller, Ted Stein. COPY EDITORS: Diane Levick, Jim O'Brien, Charles Stein, Marcia Zoslaw. DAY EDITORS: Dave Burhenn, Daniel Jacobs, Jim Kentch, Marilyn Riley, Nancy Rosenbaum, Judy Ruskin; Paul Ruskin, Sue Stephenson, Karen Tink- lenberg, Becky Warner. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Susan Brown, Jim Frisinger, Matt Gerson, Nancy Hackmeier, Cindy Hill, John Marston, Linda Rosenthal, Eric Schoch, Marty Stern, David Stoll, Doris waltz. Photography Staff TERRY McCARTHY .............Chief Photographer 'ROLFE TESSEM ....... ...........Picture Editor DENNY GAINER .... ............ Staff Photographer TOM GOTTLIEB ...................Staff Photographer DAVID MARGOLICK ..........Staff Photographer threat or intimidation from their depart- ments, makes Dunn's decision seem all the more a personal political attack. If class time can be deemed "misused," who can really make that decision? The department chairman? The vice presi- dent for academic affairs? Why not the professor? Further, how is the distinction to be made between class time that is used appropriately and that which is not? As Green himself points out, the issue would not have been raised if he had shown a promotional film put out by a chemical company. Is he suddenly guil- ty for demonstrating some of the more negative applications of the same sci- ence? IT IS EXTREMELY narrow-minded to view the educational process as a series of facts to be memorized, a series of skills to be learned. Green will ac- knowledge that the slide show probably did not help his students learn organic chemistry laboratory techniques, 'the main topic of the course. However, Green fortunately believes that technical ex- pertise should not be "imparted in a vacuum," that it is the teacher's job to suggest the relevancy and potential use of such skills. Green 'didnot foist his own anti-war views on his students-an outsider made the presentation and Green did not com- ment on the presentation. Instead, he was simply informing them of what tech- nology can do-defoliate and bomb. President Robben Fleming posed the problem in his State of the University address this year when he said, "How then do we put together pure informa- tion-which is essential if one is to un- derstand the history and culture of our society, or to work meaningfully in a specialized area-and a capacity to apply that information thoughtfully in a cur- rent context?" The presentation of the slide show seemed to be an answer. FOR THE PRESENT, the chemistry de- partment is graciously allowing Green access to the Chemistry Bldg. and paying him a salary - as long as he doesn't teach his students. LSA Dean Frank Rhodes has told Dunn to set up a committee to conduct a hearing and review Green's status in its entirety. Dunn should immediately reinstate Green since there is no justification for the suspension. At the same time, stu- dents and faculty should demonstrate their support for Green in whatever ways possible - perhaps by showing the slide show in their classes to demonstrate a professor's right to conduct his or her class as he or she sees fit. In commenting on the Green case, Vice President for Academic Affairs Al- len Smith told The Daily, "It's only a cause celebre if you make it one." Smith, however, is wrong.Students and faculty haven't made it into a con- troversy. Dunn, and the administration which backs him, have. -THE SENIOR EDITORS By CHARLES STEIN JEFF CRUISES into my room a n d drops down into the chair as he so often does. "Life sucks," he comments matter-of-factly. "Life sucks," I answer. With our ritual greeting out the way we settle down to a conversation which generally focuses on the sucky, the adjective form of suck, experiences we've had during the day. NOW WHEN we say life sucks we don't mean its particularly harsh or cruel or unbearable. We always h a v e enough to eat, a place to sleep and all of the other essentials generally re- quired for a healthy existence. Neither do we mean thatwe've had any tragic emotional problems - no heart-breaking affairs, near-suicides or the like. Rather its just been one of those days that approached mediocrity from below and didn't quite make it. If you had to define suckiness, you guessed it, the noun form of suck, it would probably involve a combination of boredom, sexual frustration and gen- eral disillusionment with everything. TO BETTER illustrate the concept, the old fill-in-the-blank technique might be more helpful. For example, you know life sucks when: - You're ready to go to sleep and you can't remember what you aid dur- ing the day. - You can't wait for summer vaca- tion while you're in school, but once summer starts, you can't wait to come back. The list could go on indefinitely. Yet the most significant thing about suckiness, I think, is the fact that some form of the condition seems to afflict a vast majority of people, especially col- lege students. Such a conclusion would probably come tion that he goes to the University. "Hey, you go to school in Ann Arbor, man?" they ask with obvious jealousy. "There's a lot happening in that town, isn't there?" Implicit in this statement is 'the no- tion that simply because there is a lot of political and cultural 'activity go- ing on, the residents of Ann A r b o r must have fun. But in my travels around the country I have come to the conclu- sion that suckiness knows no boundaries. LAST SPRING, for instance a friend invited me to join him on a trip to Chicago. "Chicago", I said enthusias- tically, "hey, there's a lot happening there!" After spending a few days in Chicago we managed to discover a great many people who seemed to be as unhapy as we were. Imagine that, not happy, and with so much happening. At this point, the obvious question to be raised is, what does it take to make people happy? Answer - it beats the hell out of me. Actually that's not completely true, because at times I have a feeling I really know. But this column is not the place for such a lofty philosophical cis- cussion. Rather it is designed to reach those of you who feel as I do, and reassure you that you are not alone in this world. SO NEXT time you meet a fun-loving student on the street, and he approaches you with a monstrous grin on his face and hits you with a 'Life is really won- derful, isn't it?", step up confidently and tell him the truth. You will be a better person for it. Charles Stein is a Daily night editor. I "Did you read in this morning's paper about the wonderful and exciting time we students are having?" as a shock to most middle-aged Ameri- cans who have visions of college stu- dents as fun-loving freaks reaping the benefits of the sexual revolution. While there certainly are people who do fit this description, I would argue that they are merely a vocal minority, whose strident cries have muffled the voices of the silent sucky majority, and captured the imagination of the aedia. ONE CAN'T blame the press for this distortion, however, for what suburban businessman wants to pick up his morn- ing paper and read about college stu- dents who go to class in the morning, the library in the evening and have wet dreams at night. That businessman has to think t h a t someone out there is having fun be- cause he knows that he certainly isn't. By reading about liberated college stu- dents he can at least have the vicarious pleasure of dreaming about the life of action he is missing. The degree to which this myth of the fun-loving student has pervaded our thinking is truly astonishing. One often encounters it when he happens to men- LI The realAmericans rally round the flag By LORIN LABARDEE FOR A radically minded student F from Ann Arbor, attending the American Independent Party (AIP) rally last Saturday in Dearborn was almost as big a rush as smok- ing a quarter gram of Primo hash. My only previous experience with conservative politics was conserva- tive politics as presented by the likes of Archie Bunker. I had never before attended a meeting where people actually believed "all that garbage." They came in droves, six hun- dred strong, to hear their favor- ite rightwingers enlighten them on the "right" way to vote on Nov. 7. There they were in all their glory, singing "America the Beau- tiful" and dressed in red, white and blue. I desperately sought an in- conspicuous place to hide should- er length hair as I notice head after head of neatly cropped locus. And then there was the "flag- waver." I mean she really wasn't waving a flag, but the dress she was wearing was as much of a flag as anything could be. The white stars on the blue background trail- ed beguilingly around the liberally scooped neckline while the red and white stripes stopped short well above her knees. "Yes," I thought, "this must be a real American." ALSO AT THE rally were a large contingent of "right to life" peo- ple congregation behind a h u g e black banner adorned with white letters and a white skull and cross- bones. The slogan on the banner cried out, "ABORTION IS MUR- DER." One of the anti-abortion people was a slick-haired character in a greasy mechanic's jacket. He could have been the pickup driver in "Easy Rider" with the rifle rack mounted on the rear window of the truck. Another real American. Candidates were also on display. There are candidates on the AIP ballot for everything from Drain Commissioner to President. For the reporters it was a field day. Quotable quotes abounded. I wondered to myself, "Are these people really saying these things?" Yes, and worse yet they actually believe what they're saying. When AIP presidential candi- date John Schmitz came out with, "When guns are outlawed, only out- laws will have guns." he was re- warded with a standing ovation from the crowd. "God," I thought to myself, "these guys are really sick." Although it is hardly a pressing )I issue, Schmitz also thought it ne- cessary to expound on Arthur Bre- mer, "the man who shot Governor Wallace." He told the people how Bremer wasn't alone and that the attempted assasination of presi- dential candidate George Wallace was part of a huge plot to snuff out the AIP in America. SCHMITZ ALSO accused t h e media in America of a conspiracy. This one he referred to as a "con- spiracy of silence." Schmitz claim- ed the media is so controlled by the Republican and Democratic parties that they were prevented from giving coverage to the AIP. The two main conspirators which Schmitz named in the "conspiracy of silence" were John Chancellor and Walter Cronkite. I wondered if Schmitz consider- ed Al Ackerman an accomplice in the "conspiracy of silence" for not reporting the football scores of every podunk university around the country. Yes, it was all clear now, these were real Americans, every one. Lorin Labardee is Personnel Di- rector of The Daily. '' r i~2 ai JACKADESO WASHINGTON - Congressmen are playing so fast and loose with their free postal privileges this year that misuse of the mails is becoming a major campaign is- sue in political races around the country. The Fair Campaign Practices Committee reports it has already received twice as many complaints about congressional abuse of the mails in this campaign as it re- ceived during the entire 1970 cam- paign. Formal complaints have been filed against James Howard, D- N.J., Hamilton Fish, R-New York, John Moss, D-Calif., Bob Mathias, R-Calif., George Shipley, D-Ill., John Asbrook, R-Ohio and Albert Johnson, R-Calif.Inraddition, the committee says there are dozens of other cases in which congress- men have allegedly abused the mails but have not been challeng- ed formally by their opponents. Under the law, congressmen can use the mails free of charge for official business, but incumbents have become so ingenious at dis- guising political puffery as official business that the Postal Service has given up trying to enforce the law. CONGRESSMEN have perfect- ed all sorts of ways to circumvent mailing restrictions. Frequently, they insert self-serving material public expense. These practices, among others, have so exacerbated postal au- thorities that they now refuse even to send advisors to Capitol Hill to caution congressmen not to abuse the mails. "It simply would do no good," one insider said, Why have congressmen shifted so dramatically to massive direct mailings this year to get them- selves re-elected? Besides the Postal Service's reluctance to en- force the law, political watchdogs cite new restrictions on political ads in the media and the reappor- tionment of numerous congres- sional districts as the major fac- tors contributing to Congress's latest assault on the U.S. mails. -Pension Reforms Rebuffed- The U. S. Chamber of Com- merce has reached into the Senate and effectively squashed legisla- tion that would protect older citi- zens from being cheated out of their pensions. The Senate Labor Committee, which has spent years investigat- ing pension abuses, has establish- ed that citizens who lose their jobs before retirement often re- ceive no pensions at all even though collectively they contribute millions of dollars to pension funds. bers are furious and have pro- mised a big battle on the Senate floor. Meanwhile, a TV network has dramatized the great pension scandal in a nationwide television documentary. But we have learn- ed that corporate powers are put- ting quiet pressure on the TV net- work not to make the document- ary available for private showing. -Around the U.S.- Space Are Convenience - The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has proudly an- nounced in a press release that it has awarded a contract to a pri- vate firm to develop the world's most expensive toilet. The com- mode under contract will be launched into space for use by astronauts in the space shuttle pro- gram. The pricetag for a proto- type toilet is staggering: $238,000 . . . Meanwhile, back on earth, the government is spending hundreds of thousands more dollars for the convenience of its employees. This year, for example, the government estimates it will spend $350,000 for smoking stands. If public money isn't going down the .drain, it's go- ing up in smoke. Union Strikes in '73-President Nixon's Wage Board has held sal- ary increase to about five-and-a- half ner cent a year. But after the Tom Anderson, left, the AIP vice-presidential candidate and Rep. John G. Schmitz (R-Calif.) at the party's convention in Louisville, Ky. Aserious matter of By JAY RISING THE BASIC GOAL of the College as it is stated in the first page of the LSA handbook is to encourage each student to study within their classes not only those areas needed by all educated men and women, "but those as well that lead to effective integration of human values, ethical commitment, and individual responsibilities." In this past week the college has flagrantly disregarded its own principles and taken a step backward in terms of relevant educational values. We, the LSA Student Government, strongly condemn the action ,toward Mark Green, and urge all groups of the University, students, faculty, and the administration, to join together in support of what we feel are the basic rights of each faculty member and to bring reforms to this institution which would prevent future authoritarian reign in de- partments. Aside from the omnipotent issue of academic freedom which remains as a central concern for all involved, the initial concern of this matter lies in the question of what is determined as relevant to each particular class and who's responsibility it is to decide. We of the LSA Student Government feel that each individual faculty member must be given the responsibility for this matter. The college, in this instance, and the university, in principle, must prevent future political decisions which abuse the rights of each faculty member. There is, in our minds, no question of the political implications surrounding this event. Given the primary responsibility of teaching his students laboratory techniques, not solely in the vacuum of the class- room, but in view of the consequences of their implimentations (in this case the Vietnam War), the slide show is both relevant to the class specifically and to the overall educational views promulgated by the University. We reject the idea that education can or even should be value- free. The question that has arisen here is who is deciding the relevancy of materials in each class and on ghat basis are these decisions made. Clearly the case here is that relevancy was determined on the basis of Prof. Dunn's views toward the- Vietnam War. T ,;nnvp rof ti-in nnpi nanm p , n- an nll en nnot nn th-e iankinn Ilki & U 'I 119T