Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Sunday; February 6, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Rhodes and Cornel need to look at both siOdes A LOOKING ................ w BACK. THE WEEK IN REVIEW IT SEEMS INCREASINGLY likely that University, Vice-President Frank Rhodes will soon fill the presi- dent's chair at Cornell. Despite of- ficial caution, inside sources are con- vinced that Rhodes' selection is a virtual certainty. And, despite his demure "no com- ments" to the press, members of the Cornell search group report Rhodes has shown an enthusiastic interest in the post. If offered the job, it is highly probable that he'll take it. Rhodes is a complex man, and it is difficult to assess his record in black and white terms. Before his appointment as liter- ary college dean in 1969, Rhodes was very well regarded as a 'lecturer and teacher in the geology department. His classes were well attended and liked. Members of the faculty holei Rhodes in high esteem. He is seen as accessible and a fighter for facul- ty interests. As an administrator, Rhodes has shown a flair for innovation and a capacity for leadership. Many regard him as the "first among equals" in the higher echelons of the Univer- sity administration and second-in- command to President Robben Flem- ing. Those who have dealt with Rhodes report that he is personable and at- tentive, that he shows an interest in what others have to say. BUT SEVERAL FACTORS cast sha- dows on his administrative per- formance. Rhodes' record does .not demon- strate a consistent commitment to recruitment of women and minorities for faculty and administrative posi- tions at the University. Percentages of women and minori- ties among University faculty and ad- . ministrators are dismally low. Little progress has been made in this area during Rhodes' tenure in office. Even among new appointments, minorities, and women have been inadequately represented. Rhodes' efforts to block the ap- pointment of Jewel Cobb, a highly qualified black woman, as literary college dean is the most visible evi- dence of his insufficient concern for affirmative action goals. Dr. Rhodes has also failed to show adequate concern for student partici- pation in University decisions. He commissioned a study of access to confidential student files without ap- pointing a single student to the pan- el. He took no measures to involve LSA students in the search for a per- son who would eventually become their dean. Finally, Rhodes has demonstrated a tendency to withdraw into secrecy on important issues of University- wide interest. While this is under- standable in the case of his present discussions with the Cornell Presi- dential Search Committee, it was to- tally inexcusable in the Jewel Cobb affair, when the University commu- nity had a ,,right to know what was going on. The news blackout that Rhodes imposed thwarted that right. The Cornell University community - trustees, faculty, alumni, staff and students - needs to evaluate the to- tal record of the candidate it selects for the top position there. The Daily hopes that it. will consider all as- pects of Rhodes' record - good and bad - in making its decision. \ C -v pY 4 " n r Road to Cornell T9HIS TIME Frank Rhodes is on the other side of the look- ing glass. And things arte still going his way. In Cornell's search for a fig- ure to wear the title of univer- sity president, the University's vice-president for academic af- fairs has emerged as the north- ern star. A rather impressive administrative record and an impeccable Oxford polish to boot would make Rhodes a valu- able commodity in the eyes of most anyuniversity search com- mittee. Were it not for one rath- er uglydblemish, Rhodes could be billed as the perfect admin- istrative commodity. But the legacy of Jewell Cobb will prob- ably prevent that permanently. However, Rhodes' handling of the Cobb affair is apparently not enough to discourage the Cornell talent scouts from court- ing the University's veep. In fact, they've been so dazzled that Rhodes apparently stands as the unanimous first choice of the presidential searchcom- mittee. But, as we've seen in the past, search committee unanimity is no guarantee of anything. Increase number .. THERE ARE apparently three things from which no Uni- versity student can escape: time, tide, and an increase in dorm rents. The Housing Rate Study Committee has made its annual recommendation, and it means an approximate $200 in- crease for dorm residents next year. The major plan to cut costs - a meal consolidation program which would send resi- dents from three central cam- pus dorms to three neighboring ones for lunch and dinner on weekends - was soundly re- jected by dorm residents in a Housing survey last week. "I wanted to try it," said Judy DiMattia, the Housing Of- fice's associate director for ad- ministration and finance. But the students didn't, and though the Rate Study Committee has the final word, passage of the transfer plan is unlikely. Students objected to several by-products of the consolidation, all acknowledged by housing ad- ministrators: - Crowding in the three host dorms would be more trouble than the $12 per year savings would be worth; - Dining rooms in the three visiting dorms would be' closed to all weekend activities; - Community spirit would be damaged. Now the committee is looking in nooks and crannies for other ways to save. They may in- crease laundry rates, they may snitch the paper towels from corridor bathrooms, and they might just cut administrative costs by two per cent. * * * Fireside chatter PRESIDENT CARTER lounged next to his brand new fire- place Wednesday night and pro- jected an image of homespun, neighborhood leadership. And as he did so, he was no doubt real- izing how hard his new job real- ly is. It was a casual "Fireside Chat" modeled after those of Franklin D. Roosevelt which Carter had in mind, and it came off with sincerity. But its sub- stance showed that Carter is acknowledging the terrible diffi- culties of meeting the promises of his smooth campaign for'the presidency. He spoke of energy conservation, of unemployment, of inflation, and of cutting waste in government; through it all, his plea was for pitching in, for self-sacrifice. There was barely a promise in it. "If we all cooperate and make modest sacrifices," Carter said of the severe energy shortages racking the East and Midwest, "if. we can learn to live thrifti- ly and remember the import- ance of helping our neighbors, then we can find ways to ad- just and to make our society. more efficient and our lives, more productive." Carter is evidently seeing that his administration cannot shake the nation to its foundation all by itself. His speech Wednesday was an admission of sorts;' and one which may reassure those who thought Carter a dema- gogue snowed by the rhetoric of his own campaign. -Ann ,Marie Lipinski, im Tobin Editors-in-chief i _ -_ etters r 1 \ NIP n , r.,.n _ -s. c-.a"'".., - . , ' .as ,Q y F v ! , , F f . i ' // % ' I . -- j __ 4 y; i l A:. To The Daily: MICHAEL BECKMA the Level" column of was slanted. He sanctimoniously that Abeng - the E minority community' - ately underpublicized1 Arts and Cultural Fest in East Quad so as t( age attendance by wi residents, yet he offer nuendo as evidence. TO READ THE ar would be hard presse cern that Mr. Beckma the Jan. 27 meeting of resentative Assembly Quad / Residential Co erning body), when was discussed. For t me who were at the n is impossible. MR. BECKMAN'S1 to the contrary, no worse about the sho of Abeng's efforts to the festival than do th of the Abeng commur nade this perfectlyt ing the Jan. 27 Repr Assembly meeting. does Mr. Beckman me salient fact. MR. BECKMAN Abeng counsellor Ken "launch(ing) a viciou al attack" on Sue J member of, the Repr Assembly who c about the lack of pu the festival. AGAIN, IT IS ha lieve that Mr. Beck at the meeting.' A "vi sonal attack" conjure ages of diatribes ag Johnson's ancestorsK veiled threats. Mr. sneech was at times ical and perhaps ove but it was certainly n FINALLY, MR. I states that Ms. Johi drew a resolution sh fered, presumably a of Mr. Cady's so-call Had the other memb Renresentative Assen that Ms. Johnson's. had substantial me most likely would hai the issue further in st Johnson's retraction was no further disci Ms. Johnson withdrei tion, Mr. Beckmand port this. MR. BECKMANs thbre were three sign East Onad publicizin tival. This is false. sign by a dining r disanneared latert dav.I am told that o met a similar fate. MORE OVE1R the RD's and RA's (s Ouad were informed tival the week befor Sn-P of them activi qeed all of their co dents to become in Abeng WHILE PUBLICITY for thes Festival unfortunately was not7 all it could have been - as Abeng -leaders themselves ad-i qN'S "On mit - there is just no evidence f Jan. 29 to support Mr. Beckman's alle- gation that Abeng sought to ex- implies clude or discourage white dorm ast Quad residents from attending any - deliber. part of the Black Arts and Cul- the Black tural Festival. ival with- Lee Kirk a discour- Associate Director, hite dorm Residential College 's only in- Director, East Quad To the Daily: tie, one KENT CADY'S piece in t h e d to dis- Feb. 1 Michigan Daily entitled fn was at "Black Cultural Festival - A the Rep- Rebuttal", would have been (the East more correctly called "A per- lege gov- sonal Attack-on Michael Beck- those like man and Sue Johnson." I neetingkei thought that Mike Beckman wrote a well-reasoned and ob- jective article which deserved posturings a more reasonable response one feels than the vindicative personal rtcomigs abuse expressed by Mr. Cady. e leaders After admitting to the thesis hity. They of Beckman's article: i.e. that ylear dur- there was a negligence of duty esentative on the part of the Abeng mem- Nowhere bers in charge of advertising the ention this festival, Mr. Cady proceeds to heap petty insults and insinua- accuses tions upon the characters of tCadysosbothBeckman and Johnson. t person- How can we take Cddy ser- sohnson, a ionusly when he suggests that the esentative Mafia and the Errol Flynns osntplained should have been invited to the blicity for festival? (And, incidentally, that oversight wasprobably due not rd to be- to basic chicken-heartedness, but rda t i'as rather the same negligence scious per- which resulted in theabsence es upeim- of an invitation to the majority ainst Ms. of the East Quad community.) and thinly I, for instance, heard nothing Cady's of the festival in the weeks pre- scatolog- ceding it, and chose to go out of erly windv town on that particular week- ot vicious. end, - a decision which may BECKMAN have been reversed had I been nson with- informed. ze had of- I regret that Cady felt the ne- s a result cessity to remark upon John- ed attack. son's character by' describing ers of the her as being "on crutches" and nblv found having "frequented the cocktail arguments bar', a statement designed no erit, , they doubt to conjure up the image ve debated of some kind of derelect. The rite of Ms. references to "Oopsy the clown" n. There and half--bate author" destroy-. ssion after ed any credibility or legitimacy w her mo- which the rebuttal may h a v e did not re- possessed. It is unfortunate that Abeng states that could not have produced a more ns in all of responsible spokesperson to an- ig the fes- swer the very legitimate ques- I saw one tions posed by Michael Beck- nom which man. It is also deplorable that that same the Daily would allow such vindi- )ther flyers cative personal grudges as Mr. Cadv's to be published on the , A L L of editorial page. In the future I ic) in East hone that all parties concerned of the fes- put a little more thought and e it began. reasoning into their actions. ely encoir- -Richard Rosenthal rridor resi- rnjced, as contending that fewer Hugue- nots had been killed in the Mas- sacre of Saint Bartholomew than is generally believed. But if a Catholic writer had claimed that no Protestants were killed I would question his right to be a historian at all. It is one thing to say that Nero did not burn Rome, and quite another to say that he was a kind ruler! The historical principic is that our belief is proportioned tothe number, kind, variety and cred- ibility of the evidences. 0 u r evidence of the Nazi massacre of the Jews comes from various sources: statements and admis sions by many Nazi leaders themselves: statements of sev- eral hundred persons who man- aged to survive; evidence by the armies occupying Germany; photographs of the heaps of dead taken during such occupation; records of the formal and open trial of sundry' Nazi leaders, in which they were represented bv counsel, who could have brought evidence that the alleged mas- sacres had not taken p 1 a c e at all; had there been any par- ticular prison camp in a n y age or country, it is historical proof that there was a posi- tive policy of extermiration, or that the inmates suffered t h e crueler fate of dying f r o m starvation and abuse. -Preston Slosson (professor emeitus of history). To the Daily: MY IMMEDIATE reaction to the article about the Northwest- ern University professor w h o claims that no jews were killed by Nazi was that this was some kind of sick spoof created by an incredible stupid anti-Semite. A spoof that I only wish were tre and so could bring back a fam- 'ily half destroyed because they could not escape these 'mysti- cal gas chambers;" or that it could erase the nightmares my grandfather continuously h a d from the years he spent in a concentration camp - beaten like a dog and watching .hose around him destroyed. Vur- ther thought about the book raised some questions in my mind which I strongly feel shold should be voiced to the public. Are we to discount the records of allied soldiers who enered the camps of Auschwitz and otn- er concentration camps? Are we .o ignore the camp-tattooed num- hers on the arms of survivors and their memories 'for t h e statement of an assistant pro- fessor of electrical engineering? (He certainly seems far from his area of training). Tf B'at feels so strongly that this is an anti-Nazi myth I sggest he lok to the Nazis' own films. As adamant as Butz seems to be he was not sure eno igh of himself to face an, actual con- centration camp survivor on a ily ity at MSU, but those Spartans are certainly not one up on us Wolverines! Photocopying ices started here in Ann Arbor, not. in East Lansing. Last summer, during the Ann Arbor S t r e e t Art Fair, Albert's Copying plac- ed one of their IBM Photocopier IT machines outdoors, and invi.- ed the Art Fair visitors to stop and photocopy their faces for free. It was a publicity ginmk, started by a couple of Univer- sity students who were working at Albert's. Photocopying faces s h o u 1 d not be taken lightly, eit'er. It is a serious art form. I have de- veloned several different stylesf of facial xerogranhy -- f r . n t view of face with both hands framing the face, right profiks, left profiles front view with smile only, and even two facing faces on the same page. By controlling the lightness or dark- ness of the print, one can creete a wide variety of effe -S. Jrcld- ing a luminous, ethereal ,inter- pre'ation. I can even mike a, person anpear to be asleep on a dirk, mysterious night wit h dreamy little stars in the skv. On some photocopying machin- es. it is possible to have one's face copied onto a transparency. to he later used on an overhead prniector. The kids at MSU think their "new fad" is funny, but if 'hey want any real expo;ure to the art of photocopying faces, they should meet the Uni v'rs'ty folks who originated and reveloped it. ' I can demonstrate virtually anything when it comes to photo- conying faces. The MSU people may criticize my techniques. M'nt that's okav, just as !olg as they don't hurl any facial invectives. I intend to nublish a hook aholt the creative nonslbilides of photoconvina - n only of faces, but of other ;trking imn- ages such as cigarete lighters. matches, and basenl-i bats. te name a few. My hook will l'e called "creative Xerog'anhv" and I hone it will Belo enc;i)r- ye the establishment of a new denartment of xeroeranhy at the School of Art, alongsi le the de- partments of ceramk s,print- making; and granhic design. -April Smith Carter - the man who promised to be a new type of leader - is willing to let this . . . type of bigotry go unpunished" and concluded that "our new Presi- dent. like so many other Amer- icans, is either indifferent or hostile toward Arabs." Your criticism of Carter is uncalled for.(Although members of the Federal Trade Commis- sion are appointed by the Presi- dent with the advice and consent of the Senate, they serve stain-' tory terms of .seven years and can be removed by the Pre=dent only for "inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office." Unlike members of the Cabriet, who serve entirely at the p'ea- sure of the President, the trade commissioners sit as an inde- pendent board with quasi-legisla- tive. quasi-judicial funct: ons which' "must be free from execu- tive control," in the words of the Supreme Court. While Dixon's remarks were bigoted and ,disgusting - and much as we might -think t h e y morally disqualify him trom holding an office of public trust - it is far from obvious whethes thev constitute any of the statu- tory offenses that allow removal from office. If the sixteen mem- hers ofCongress who have urg- ed Carter to fire Dixon. do their homework, I think they will alo learn that Carter is probably powerless to do. what .hev are asking and what you have rather impetuously chided him for not doing. -Bruce Johnson WI4AT ARE YOU 'DOING? a f .p '. el * GOING OVER MY NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS. t Govinda's To The Daily: IN REGARDS to your article on the problems at 3ovinda's Restaurant. I would like to say that the -Hare Krishna movement is not, and never has been, in any way connected with the pol- 4icies politics, or profits of that venture.. The presence of pictures of Krishna and allusions to Indian philosophy do not establish com- pliance by association. We hold no monopoly over these things and they have been used by such diverse figures as George Harrison, musical "Hair", Al- bert Einstein, and Mahatma Gandhi. Certainly you don't mean to infer that they ara also agents ,and arms of our- Move- nient? Thank you for your time and I hope this sets the record straight. Badarinarayan dass, president Radha-Krishna Temple, Ann Arbor nO can do To the Daily: IN YOUR -editorial of Febru- ary 2, you criticized President' Carter for having failed to "dis- miss Federal Trade Commission- er Paul Dixon as swiftly as pos- sible" because of Dixon's eth- nic slur against Ralph Nader. You suggested that "Jimmy WMAT FOR? s t a LOOKING POP LOOP-OLES. - Contact your reps Sen. Don Riegle (Dem.), 253 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. e.T- m xf-, .C3 fl Rla Cantgl '1111. I"1 I r