PageA-Thursday, April 13. 1978-The Michigan Daily Squandered opportunities i i. ., ; , ' '. s° ' ., 9 « °. a : e / ~ / ,, 7i , ./. 114 ., - --- "h "" lr- 1r a ,.. " /i. /<' . C U r 'Hey Sam, I'm back! How's the old do-it-yourself diet goin'?' 'i6 Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom. 420Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 LXXXV I, No. 154 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Sigh. Always the goat. I've never been successful at anything. Not even failure, as it were. Why, last week I had the opportunity to become the folk hero of the seventies. And I blew it. Mind you, the circumstances were a bit odd, and I'm sure I would want the notoriety, or even six-to-ten with time off for good behavior, but - I get ahead of my story. I WAS driving down State Street toward William from the south, and traffic was fierce. The light at State and William was only admitting two cars through on each green and I was terrifically impatieht. I decided to turn into the driveway by the Union and cut over to State Street. Cruising slowly down the lane, all of a sudden I had cause to slam on my brakes. For from between two parked. cars, out darted a mysterious pin- stripe-clad white-haired eminen- ce. Rubbing my eyes, as the figure sprinted nimbly away into a waiting limousine, I noticed that the man was none other than President Robben Fleming, leaving the office for the after- noon: I was stunned. But the reflex- action of foot upon brake, history was preserved. Not changed, no, but ah, and well it might have been! What would have happened had I been less alert? Or if, heaven forfend, the brakes had failed? The sixties had their folk heroes, all right. Tom Hayden and Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hof- fman, the hippies, the Yippies, those who sat in at Columbia, those hurt in Chicago, those mur- dered ruthlessly at Kent. Who have been the heroes of the seventies? Have there really been any? Billy Jack, perhaps? That trio of feminine fascists, Bryant & Morgan & Schlafly? John Sirica? Daniel K. Inouye? AND THEN it came to me, in a stunning revelation. I would have been the new folk hero. The headlines: 'Michigan Student Of- fs U' Prexy' or 'Violence Erupts on Michigan Campus'. There are some people on cam- pus who would doubtless have read the accident as a call to ac- tion, a kind of revival of that fun- damentalist revolutionary time a decade ago. Rallies would be mounted. Hordes of people would throw Molotov cocktails at anything that moved. I would be it! Yes, indeed. And I can see the trial now. A hushed courtroom, as demonstrators outside march. A silent vigil, I think, would be the most tasteful, though in the . style of the times there would probably be lots of noise and By Jeffrey Selbst call the world), my lawyers would be preparing motions for mistrial, suing the auto company for brake failure, and like that, The "Free Jeff Selbst" commit- tee would be formed and William Kunstler would undoubtedly try '.A CAUS~E ..A CAU ... 1 r rr ....L . state debated creating a Death Row. I would begin to get a little nervous. The lawyers would get me out based on the misconduct of the judge, and thereafter I would ap- pear on Tom Snyder. Then I would have to get myself an agent. Endorsements (though certainly not of brake systems) would follow. I would run for local office, and become grey and CCopier Mowus srvice All the way up the line IEN INDICTMENT of former Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation head Patrick. Gray and two other ecutive FBI officials on charges of priving citizens of their civil rights is velcome one. During the early 70's the FBI, xious to catch up with fugitive mem- &; of the activist Weather Un- Sg-pound, plundered the rights of hun- ille al tapping phones, g emailsatarching _homes and Lgthe foilie of Underground 4pers. While the U.S. Justice Vatment chose to ignore charges of j, violations initially, investigations 6"'IBI activities were indictments e product of some three years of Gray is the first bureau chief to ever charged with a criminal act, and his rmer aides, Edward Miller and W. ark Felt, are the first executives to be arged. The indictments shatter an aginary barrier that has existed/ ien dealing with possible criminal ings by intelligence officials. Like the fice of the President, the FBI Direc- ''s seat has been considered sacred d imnmune ground in the past. Only th.i these indictments are such sitlons given their proper perspec- trace such violations all the way up the line. Over a year ago, the Department indicted former New York FBI official John Kearney on the same charges of civil rights violations. When it came to light that Kearney may have been following orders issued by Gray to direct illegal activities, the Justice Department decided to reopen its in- vestigation. Under a new prosecution team, sufficient evidence was gathered to effect this week's indictments. In fact, Attorney General Griffin Bell announced the dismissal of illegal' wire-tapping and mail-opening charges against Kearney shortly after the latest indictments were returned. While it is only fair that Kearney be relieved of his scapegoat status, dropping all charges - simply because he was following or- ders - may have been overdoing it. The Justice Department is certainly not ignoring others who were "just following orders." Some 68 FBI agents face disciplinary proceedings as a result of illegal activities alleged in the' investigation. Punishment could in- clude anything from a letter of censure in the agent's file to abrupt dismissal. As far as Gray and his aides, we look forward to a trial from which not only will other illegal activities by FBI of- ficials be detailed, but also from which the Justice Department can begin to assemble a more realistic policy for dealing with intelligence officials who have no regard for the Constitution. shouting. The pudgy judge, rounding the bend towards ninety, would regularly admonish the defense to shut the hell up, while all newsapers ran editorials. My defense counsel would try an in- teresting defense called "sixties intoxication", arguing that I had been "hypnotized" by the radical actions I had seen while growing up and had been temporarily, insane at the time. THE JUDGEMENT would most likely be summary and I would be sentenced to life in prison, or some such. I would be tossed into the slammer while some grinning gargoyle of a jailer swallowed the key. My cellmate would likely be the Boston Strangler. Meantime, outside (as we cons to horn his way in after most of the tiresome legal work had been done. The committee would sell buttons to raise money. A simple "Free Selbst" would be best, maize on blue, ap- propriately. And there would be concerts. Peter, Paul, and Mary would get together again, and do a benefit with Paul McCartney and Wings and Bette Midler (who would do it because in an interview I would mention that she's my favorite singer since the death of Ethel Waters). MRS. FLEMING, the bereaved widow, would visit me in prison, and the newspapers would make a big thing of it. The capital punishment issue would be raised again and I would be moved tem- porarily to solitary, while the respected. My following would increase among the old radicals of the sixties, and I would soon become a representative to Congress, and then a senator. And then, the crowning moment. The governor of Michigan would ask the Board of Regents, who would unanimously approve the nomination, and I would be voted in as - the President of the University of Michigan. And I, unlike some I could name, would watch my step crossing the street. Sigh. Always the goat. Ie/f reY elbst, a fretrlentt contribiir ;to the Dailreg tnlitorial page. ha a rh/ fai I(t"I fi'.. LETTERS TO THE DAILY When willprof's appeal be heard? qe . Thie announcement of the charges-is 0od for another reason. It marks the A stice Department's willingness to .M QPPV' WONT BULD W NEUTMON Some... MY PAWY vj"ILL 8i -n* WaTiR ON BOMB.. . MY PAWY WONTVSumLo THE i4EU1koW aBwMe.. & 'e To The Daily: Tenure for Joel Samoff? The question is to be answered by the Executive Committee of LS&A. The big question of course, is how will the Executive Committee vote? A secondary issue, but a very important one, and one which up until now has been overlooked is, when will the Executive Committee make its decision? Once finals are completed, most students leave Ann Arbor as quickly as possible. Would the Executive Committee begin its decision making process at a time when most studentsewill be unable to participate? Will students, those most affected by this decision, be robbed of their opportunity to present their views? I implore the Executive Committee either to take up this question immediately and make their decision before classes end, or to postpone their decision until late September. To do otherwise would be both irresponsible and unfair to those most concerned. - Stewart Mandell Ann Arbor 'distorted' coverage To The Daily: Daily reporter Mitch Cantor is building an unenviable record for himself as a distorter, rather than reporter of campus labor news. The February 28. Daily carried a Cantor article distor- ting positions of the Organizing Committee for Clericals (OCC) on the basis of a careless inter- view with an OCC supporter not authorized to speak for the OCC. OCC Chairperson Marianne Jen- sen reached Cantor before his ar- ticle went to press and protested the inaccuracies. Irresponsibly, titled " 'U' Hiring Freeze Gets No Union Reaction." Untrue! On March 21 Cantor had interviewed two OCC spokespersons who had protested vigorously against the hiring freeze. He had been given a copy of an 0CC leaflet which said, "According to the Univer- sity Record (March 13, 1978), at least half of the potential deficit will be eliminateed through our increased sweat. Three and a half months of not filling a job through vacancies, means forced over- time, speed up through increased, work loads, and no transfers or promotions.. . . Let's get some control over our working lives! Let's get a union-NOW!" When Cantor reached OCC Vice-Chairperson Mary Braun on March 23, she repeated the OCC position put forward in the leaflet. Even picking out the mildest of her words, Cantor could not distort her meaning completely: the hiring freeze means speedup and no promotions for campus workers. The content of the OCC literature and the interviews with OCC spokespersons flatly contradict the article's headline. Cantor's article claimed the hiring freeze "has drawn a few grumblings but no action from local workers and their unions." Well, first things first! Someday 10,000 UM workers will hit the bricks when management an- nounces its intention to take $1.5 million out of our hides. But to walk out now takes organization. Organizing is where the campus labor struggle is at now. As soon as we are organized, then we will deal with UM management. The only weak voice from campus labor was AFSCME Local 1583 President Dwight Newman, who reportedly said, "They (the University) have a right tn hire anv time they want neutron bomb To The Daily: In response to your article April 6 about the members of Congress who wrote a letter to Carter urging him NOT to scrap the neutron bomb, I felt moved to write Robt. Carr (D-E. Lansing) the following letter: Dear Rep. Carr: You are mistaken, mistaken, mistaken about the neutron bomb. The very thing that makes it so appealing to the military, and now, apparently, to you, is also its greatest danger - it is usable. Production and deployment is simply another short-sighted step toward in- creasing national insecurity. Like a paranoid individual, we are creating the world that we fear most, and are doing so by our sane, calculated efforts to avoid that world. Who can suppose that at some point in this mad arms race the Russians are going to throw up their arms and say "You win" and settle for something less than parity? Who can blame them for wanting to build missile bases in Cuba in response to production of the neutron bomb? Not only do we have the equivalent on their borders, but we'd be scared stiff if the Russiahs had such a usable weapon and we didn't. We may believe ourselves to be several years "ahead" in this aspect of the arms race, but you can be sure that in ten years the Russians will have the neutron bomb if we do. Then how secure will we be? It's hardly a matter for taking sides - us or the Soviet Union. The real enemy is the Bomb and the Way of Death that is insanely producing it. We fool ourselves if we believe that we are less likely to become the world's next Hitler mament, not the facile support of every latest piece of death technology and gimickery that comes from the Pentagon and the giant defense contractors. There will always be new pieces of technology, new toys of the wealthy and powerful. There is no final weapon. And ultimately we will win no security in the world through our insane search for the final weapon and for ab- solute military might. For the sake of sanity, for the sake of our children, for the sake of peace,' do reconsider your position. - Bill VanWyke. " henry 's sculpture To The Daily: Think back at how Picasso's early works were received by his contemporaries or how Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase was regarded at the l New York and Chicago- Armory Show. These works,' now held in respect, were new to the public eye. So too is the John Henry sculpture. Henry's sculpture, placed next to the Museum of Art, is on loan by the artist for the duration of the show, "Chicago: The City and its Artists, 1945-1978," until April 23. The exhibition, organized by Diane Kirkpatrick's graduate seminar on Chicago art and the graduate students in the Museum Practice program, focuses on what may be new to many people. Even in its short tenure here on this campus, the Henry sculpture has been a center of attraction: people approach it, explore its polished sides and create com- plementary companion pieces. For that alone it has achieved its purpose. Not only does it represent a distinguished sculp- tor and make passersby open winter-dreary eyes, but it heralds