h £1d1;gan iailtj Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Who are the 'Friends of Newsreel"? 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. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1972 Busing: Roth rolls on HEN THE Sixth U. S.. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled yesterday on Judge Stephen Roth's Detroit metropolitan area busing plan it should finally have laid to rest suspicions that the whole affair is a conspiracy Roth cooked up in a fit of frustration with his Detroit area neighbors. For what Roth did was a first. He found that segregated neighborhood housing patterns in the Detroit area were not accidental, but were a result of "of- ficial actions and inactions" by "federal, state and local (governments), private organizations, loaning institutions, real estate associations, and brokerage firms." Such de jure, or "by law," segregations is subject to court-ordered remedies ac- cording to the Supreme Court, under both Earl Warren and Warren Burger. [N ITS decision yesterday the Cincin- nati-based court agreed with Roth that "the only feasible desegregation plan involves the crossing of the boun- dary lines between the Detroit school district and adjacent or nearby school districts . .. "The power of the court to disregard such artificial barriers is all the more clear where, as here, the state has been guilty of discrimination which had the effect of creating and maintaining racial segregation along school district lines." That, simply stated, is the crux of the matter. THE COURT did send the ruling back to Roth for refinement, to allow the 52 school districts outside Detroit their day in court before any busing can be implemented. However, the gist of the court's ruling, much to the chagrin of both Robert Grif- fin and Frank Kelley, was that Roth and the NAACP were right, that Detroit area schools are illegally segregated and that sooner or later the buses will cross dis- trict lines. The knotty trail of appeals is certainly not exhausted. But the ultimate unravel- ing of the legal string is coming closer and closer to Detroit area school offic- ials and children. Detroit. authorities did not invent seg- regation, but neither did Judge Roth. It's real. And so is his busing order. -ARTHUR LERNER Editorial Director By TERRY MARTIN DURING THE course of the past several years, relationships between film dis- tributors and campus film organizations have deteriorated to the point that dis- tributors are unwilling to rent to Ann Arbor any longer. Unreported showings of films, low estimates of movie attend- ance (which distributors use to determine how much to charge for the film), and incidents where film groups simply ab- sconded with the' proceeds are some of the offenses Ann Arbor film organizations have been guilty of. This situation prompted the Student Or- ganizations Board to formulate a pro- posal for licensing all University film groups that was submitted to the Student Government Council for a vote this Thurs- day. In reaction to this, a petition against the proposal was circulated this week by one film group, Friends ofsNewsreel, who contended that the licensing regulations were "repressive and possibly illegal." Theykwere the only film group staging any kind of coordinated protest. Discussion at the SGC meeting resulted in the elimination of several of the more restrictive amendments. However, a final decision on the proposal was postponed pending a reworking of the proposal at open hearings this week. IT IS important that extreme caution be exercised in formulating any kind of restrictions upoh any kind of organiza- tions. In this case, though, the group most concerned about submitting to licensing proposals is ultimately associated with an individual and an organization whose past actions are partially responsible for the present need for some kind of licensing. In an article Thursday The Daily linked Friends of Newsreel with a now defunct organization known as the University of GM: Inse By MARTIN STERN noted. GENERAL MOTORS Board Chair- to Gen mtan Richard Gerstenberg, in media, writing off auto factory worker dis- ics pla satisfaction earlier this week, has job ali shown an amazing insensitivity to light o the needs of the modern industrial are so worker. Is h Gerstenberg, in a speech on Wed- cse f nesday, explained the situation in cuos f language most understood by the becaus wealthy auto magnates - the lang- iseitus uage of money. Those concerned porate about worker alienation and work- man'sc er dissatisfaction,kGerstenberg ey isn't ceptionally high economic status man d Michigan Film Society. The link between the two groups was made on the basis of a letter which one distributor, Films In- corporated of Skokie, Ill., sent to Maurice Rinkel, Auditor for Student Organizations. The letter said that "Friends of Newsreel, formerly the University of Michigan Film Society" had not cleared up a previous balance of $1024.69, and requested Rinkel's assistance in seeing that this was paid. It also asked that recognition of Friends of Newsreel as a student organization be withheld until the debt was paid. AT THAT time, Friends of Newsreel spokesman Glen Allvord denied any con- nection with the Film Society. He still denies this connection. There is more evi- dence, however, which supports the link between the two groups. Dave Schaper, SGC Treasurer and mem- ber of the Student Organizations Board, claims that Allvord and former University of Michigan Film Society Leader George de Pugh are both officers of a corporation called Community Media Projects Incor- porated. Confronted with this information, Allvord admitted it was correct. He said that he founded the organization in March, 1972, and that at present it was in the process of "reorganization." Schaper says the organization is register- ed as doing business under the name of New Morning Bookstore. Coincidentally, New Morning has the same phone number as Friends of Newsreel. MORE EVIDENCE is in a letter written by the Cinema Board to SGC concerning a meeting between Friends of Newsreel and Cinema II. During the meeting, a "dis- cussion of the geneology of Friends of Newsreel" ensued. "References to ARM (an organization headed by de Pugh) the U of M Film Society, Conspiracy (another former film co-op), and the New Morning Bookstore seemed to be somewhat em- sitive to barrassing," the letter continued, as the Friends of Newsreel insisted that these groups did not evolve from ARM, but were in fact 'fostered' by ARM. Inasmuch as we (Cinema II) find it difficult to be- lieve that ARM, an organization which, in Mr. de Pue's (sic) words, "went broke and couldn't pay its bills," could possibly be healthy enough to foster other organi- zations, we suggest the term "begat" as a reasonable compromise." The connection between de Pugh's prev- ious organizations and Friends of News- reel is "embarrassing" to Newsreel be- cause those organizations and de Pugh are on film distributor's blacklists. Mich- ael Harpster, spokesman for New Line Cinema, a film distributing company which deals heavily in Ann Arbor, said "If you know where George de Pugh is, let me know. We've gota few things to settle with him." IN THE light of this, it is most interest- ing that Friends of Newsreel have voiced the most vehement objections to licensing, licensing which they should welcome since it provides a reliable reference for busi- ness dealings with companies who might otherwise be wary of an Ann Arbor film group that is so intimately related to a disreputable organization. The evidence against Friends of News- reel, however, goes beyond relationships with other groups. There are current in- cidents involving Newsreel, which, accord- ing to U of M supervising filp pro- jectionist Peter Wilde, raises serious doubts as to its own reputability. Wilde is described by representatives of other campus film groups, including Ann Arbor Film Co-op and Cinema II, as an ''extremely reliable source." He is also listed as technical adviser to Cinema Guild. At Newsreels' recent showings of Reefer Madness, according to Wilde, attendance estimates made by himself and one made by an agent of New Line Cinema differ- ed by Newsreel's estimates by about 600. Figures of crowd attendance are import- ant because they provide the basis for a distributor's charge for rent of the film, and thus affect the amount of profit made. HARPSTER SAID he had not yet re- ceived Newsreel's report for that movie. He said there was no way to put a check on attendance figures, and that New Line had always accepted Newsreel's estimates "because they do such good business." He said he had received several letters from Wilde advising him of the Reefer Mad- ness discrepancy in the figures. Charges have also been filed against Friends of Newsreel for unsigned adver- tising. According to Steve Bernardi, a member of the operations committee of the Ann Arbor Film Co-op, he has biled a personal suit against Newsreel, citing as a particular example the advertising for a recent Newsreel movie, W-R, Mysteries of the Organism. Allvord says that if any advertising went out unsigned, "it was an oversight." At last night's SGC meeting, Friends of Newsreel described as "witch-hunting" a measure in the Student Organizations Board Proposal for licensing film groups. The measure prohibited the "formation of numerous organizations (the membership of which generally overlap)". SUCH A measure, of course, is only "witch-hunting" if there are witches to be hunted. It is significant that Friends of Newsreel was the only film group to stage a coordinated protest to the proposal. The tangled situation concerning Friends of Newsreel makes some sort of licensing pro- cedures seem even more necessary. Terry Martin is a day editor for The Daily. 7 "v r I1 auto worker blues"2 Keller: A plan for thinkers STUDENTS currently enrolled in courses experimenting with Keller Plan may be involved in a transitory phase of edu- cation that will ultimately lead to "learn- ing liberation". The Keller plan, while not completely freeing the student from the pompous framework that usually governs him, does permit him to learn the required material at his own leisure. No longer must he get fired up to take tests at predetermined hours. And, with a bit of luck, the number of students the profes- sor can refer to on a first-name basis may exceed a handful. With few exceptions, the concept of learning to satiate one's endless appe- tite for knowledge has become obsolete. The student's motivation now stems from the enormous competition for grades so he can lead the heartless rat race to grab the spoils. After all, to get a good job, one really don't need a good education, just top-notch grades. To worsen matters, starting with a precedent set at William and Mary and Harvard in Colonial times, students in America's universities have been given little freedom to determine how he shall learn the material offered to him. At a specific hour of a specific day, the student must drag himself to class, either to blindly scribble down the "relevant" gospel dictated by the lecturer or exhibit his progress on arbitrary exams. With the number of eligible candidates vying for a limited number of job and graduate school positions increasing faster than a speeding bullet, the current rat race is certainly doomed to become a perpetual marathon. DESPITE THE popularity of this in- novative system, there are still many students. that appear slightly bothered. Stemming from habit, they would still seem to prefer have information spoon- fed to them as it has been for years. But, to discard one's crutches involves a time-consuming process and the change in the students' attitude, if any, wilt be gradual. Perhaps the plan would produce better results of started in the grade schools for young people always seem more capable of altering old mental patterns. At any rate, if successful, the Keller Plan will partially free the student from the bonds of rigid memorization and per- mit him more time for imaginative, thoughtful thinking.. -BOB ANDREWS working FACT Most C them a underpr able to1 literally selvest nothing ival. Ref on Propose ened w worker semblag as opp The lat greater But talk ofr againu "The theses all inv(. cost to must in price o sumerr Gerst sarilyt Sweden of wor out on have sh morale Thus it seems unreasonable eral Motors that the m a s s politicians and social crit- ace so much emphasis on enation in the factories, in f the fact that GM workers well paid. igh salary a justifiable ex- or inhuman working condi- Are factory workers happy e they are so well paid? Or possible that the rich cor- powers have overlooked other needs? After all, mon- t everything. What about hu- ignity? Self-respect? Decent g conditions? TORIES ARE discriminatory. of those who are drawn to re the poor, uneducated and rivileged. These people, un- procure work elsewhere, are ty forced to prostitute them- to a job which offers them more than a means of sur- rms are needed desperately. ed ideas have included short- work weeks and giving the a greater part in the as- ige ofthe finished product, ?osed to just one function. Ater could give the workers pride in their job. Gerstenberg shrugged o f f reform. Too costly, he cried, using the money motive. public does not see that suggested remedies almost olve an extra cost; a direct the manufacturer w h i c h nevitably be reflected in the f the product that the con- must pay." enberg's point is not neces- true. At Volvo factories in , for example, small groups kers unite in teams to turn e car at a time. Studies hown that besides increased there is also an increased rate of productivity and a decrease in factory defect (which, inciden- tally, is a growing problem in U.S. factories.) It would appear that in- itial costs required formass con- version to a new system would in the long run be miniscule compared to its advantages. IT IS PATHETIC to think, how- ever, that long needed social re- forms must be permanently delay- ed because no one is willing to tear down old outdated structures to build new structures when expense is involved. Thus, the problems of the factory are ignored, until the dehumanizing pressures of the job becomes too much for some, just as our slums will stand until urban riots call attention to the plight of the ghetto. The auto industry has to realize that the auto worker is human, and as such, must be treated like one. Money well needed for re- forms is available, at the expense of a lower profit margin. People or profits? The proper priority must be decided. I An auto worker: Content? CHECKS AND BOUNCES Always ready to help students? Pushing peace through war The United States, in cramming last- minute military aid into South Vietnam, as seen in the last few weeks, is liable to turn the situation there into a horrible" disaster.. The most dangerous and obvious re- sult of saturating the South in this man- Editorial Staff SARA FITZGERALD Editor PAT BAUER Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY ...............Editorial Director MARK DILLEN................Magazine Editor LINDA DREEBEN ........ Associate Managing Editor TAMMY JAOOBS ................. Managing Editor ARTHUR LERNER................Editorial Director ROBERT SCHREINER.............Editorial Director GLORIA JANE SMITH ................BArts Editor ED SUROVELL... ...... ....... ..... Books Editor PAUL TRAVIS...... .Associate Managing Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Barkin, Jan Benedetti, Di- ane Levick, Jim O'Brien, Chris Parks, Charles Stein, Ted Stein. COPY EDITORS : Meryl Gordon, Debra Thal. EDITORIAL NIGHT EDITORS: Fred Shell Martin Stern. DAY EDITORS: Dave Burhenn, Jim Kentch, Marilyn Riley. Judy Ruskin, Eric Schoch, Sue Stephen- son, Ralph Vartabedian, Becky Warner. TELEGRAPH/ASSOCIATE NIGHT EDITORS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson. Laura Berman, Penny Blank, Dan Blugerman. Bob Burakoff, Beth Eg- nater,. Ted Evanoff, Cindy Hill, Debbie Knox, David Stoll, Terri .Terrell. STAFF WRITERS: Howard Brick Lorin Labardee, Ka- thy Ricke, Eugene Robinson, Linda Rosenthal, Zachary Schiller, Marcia Zoslaw. ARTS STAFF: Herb Bowie, Rich Glatzer, Donald Spain. Sports Staff JOHN PAPANEK Sports Editor ELLIOT LEGOW ner is that these imported weapons can only delay the peace in Vietnam which certain U. S. officials insist is their goal. Psychological damage to the people caused by this "give and take" relation- ship between America and Saigon is like- ly to hamper peace. While the Vietna- mese become too dependent, the U. S. is overbearing to the point of blatant im- perialism. Can the South's economy withstand this volume of aid? The imported wea- pons or war create armies and refugees at the expense of agriculture and other livelihoods left behind. Military assistance merely continues to emasculate the large neutralistic or apathetic percentage of the population. Besides disrupting age-old traditional life styles, profiteering, corruption, and graft continue to grow. This in turn wid- ens the huge existing gap between the wealthy and poor classes. Furthermore, the status of military careers is en- hanced giving the soldier a distinct ad- vantage over civilians. To secure a real, lasting peace in Viet- nam, it would be wiser to cultivate that peace instead of feeding the flames of war with such material. For South Viet- nam, the answer lies in helping the people through agricultural, medical, and construction-type aid to rebuild their devistated nation. Maintaining the dig- nity of the Vietnamese people can go a long way towards repairing the U.S.-in- flicted damage. Richard Gerstenberg of the American industrial work- er." He continued by citing f i g u r e s showing that auto workers a r e among the best paid workers in the world. GM workers make from $4.52 an hour to over $7, with aver- age yearly earnings of $12,466, he Martin Stern is a night editor for the Editorial Page of Thos Daily. , By ROBERT SCHREINER N ARBITRARY practice by at least one local bank concerning bounced checks has resulted in un- due embarassment to students, as well as inconvenience to the stores and services they patronize. The practice itself came to my attention in a very personal way, although the reasons behind it proved somewhat hard to extract from the mire. It started in mid-October, when the National Bank and Trust Com- pany of Ann Arbor - that's my bank - sent me three notices in quick succession stating it w a s Il charging my account $3 (per no- tice) "representing the fee to cover the cost of returning your check" to a local restaurant, pharmacy, and the telephone company. What had happened was that my account was overdrawn by these checks (but by only a fraction of that total amount), and the bank, rather than bother to cover my checks until my next deposit, had simply sent them back to the busi- nesses they were payable to, and charged me three bucks a check in the process. I WAS somewhat piqued, not so much because I had failed to bal- ance my checkbook properly, and not because I was fined for it, but because the bank did not see fit to cover my account for the little it was short. My account was almost six months old, and in that time I had made over $1,000 in transactions without a hitch. The least the bank could do, I figured, was give me a little help when I got in a jam. At the bank one of the tellers told me she didn't know why The Bank had not covered my checks. but that there was another method sometimes used, entailing the same $3 fine, but in which the b a n k also covered the check. However, she did not know the criteria in- volved for determining the method used in a particular case. A person higher up did not know what criteria were used either. In fact, she denied emphatically that any other method was used, except the one used on me. "This is our policy across - the - board", s-h e said. I WENT AWAY disgruntled, hut that was nothing -compared to ;he way I felt when upon investigating through certain friends and ac- them the $3, but also covering their checks. Recently, I talked to someone still higher up in the bank bureau- cracy, and he admitted that t h e notices do indeed come in the two tyres. It is up to a single book- keener, he explained, to determine which of the overdrawn checks the computer rejects will be covered, and which will be returned. "With everything computerized, it's pretty difficult to tell how god an account it", he said. "Until we get a better system, there are go- ing to be some errors." THE PROBLEM is, while we are all waiting for a better system, it appears that students are com- ing out on the short end of the stick. For whatever reasons, stu- dents apparently are not eligible for the same privileges afforded to o-r more "solid citizens". Maybe this is because students are regarded by banks as a had risk. But the banks, like all large bureaucracies, should be aware ;)f the dangers of such generalizations. For every student who oaunces checks deliberately, there are per- hans several who do so unknow- ingly, or in extraordinary circum- stances. Not only students, but the busi- nesses they patronize should be critical of the bank's policy, be- cause it is a hassle to send in a bounced check to be cashed and have it ret-rned. All in all, the bank would be doing everyone a favor if it real- ized that the embaras iment and inconvenience caused to students is just as real as that caused to "adults", in the same way that their money is just as green. Robert Schreiner is an Editorial Director of The Daily. i j ". '4 w Si #1