lt e fr4ijan Daitl Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Edible advice: Student counseling Wednesday, October 1, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 By TOM STEVENS IF YOU WANT to water your dog, drink free coffee (un- der condition of cooperation), get cheap peanut butter and jelly' sandwiches, simply vege- tate or obtain fast service and good advice, go to the Student Counseling Office, 1018 Angell Hall. They're the only univer- sity office that doesn't cease to exist from noon to one daily. Student counselor Lenee Sel- man espoused the office's de- sires for me. "We want people to come in," she stressed, "be- cause we're here; this is the students' place." "People get tied up in the Academic Counseling office to solve a problem that we could take care of here in five min- utes with a little advice, but most people don't realize that," Selman iterated. PHYSICALLY, THE office is small, low key, and very infor- nal. It is definitely not intimi- dating. Even the water dish for dogs is small and unassuming Don't go in with an excessive- ly thirsty wolfhound, What else? The SCO has a supply of fat loose-leaf bin d - stuffed with student course evaluations which are available for at least a lot of popular classes. Also therein lies th; road to free coffee. For filli out a couple of these forms you are entitled to the hot bever- age. ALTHOUGH the Student (om seling office has no real author- ity they are a nimble contct in figuring out what you can do almost anywhere at the Uni- versity. They can recommend, refer, suggest and consolr. They can offer you lists of t tors who will help you with your studies for some or no cost. Born in 1968 as a rest it f recommendation to the Univer- sity Literary board by a student steering committee the Student Counseling office is funded by the university under direction of Dean Tony Morris. ALL iN ALL, 1018 Angell Hall is more than just a place to go to water your dog, hang out, and get .heap sandwiches. People can come in here to study ,too," Lenee Selman add- ed. 1018 Angell Hall is a good place to clean your academic karma and more. Oh, the peanut butter and jel- Dadv Photo By PAULINE LUBENS ly sandwiches are available Wednesdays for fifteen cents. Ton Stevens is a member of the Daily Editorial Page staff. Politics o ermination By TOM ALLEN j AST YEAR, the Ann Arbor Science for the People group composed an informa- tional exhibit entitled "A Marxist Perspective on the Food and Population Issue" and posted it on a Biology Depart- ment bulletin board. Three times within the next two weeks the exhibit was taken down by department m e m b e r s who claimed, "That's politics, not biology." The incident is typical of the confrontations that have evolved between the entrenched scien- tific establishment and a group of radical scientists, some working here at the University, who are exploring the political nature of scientific activity. "We're trying to break down the myth that science is objec- tive or non-political," says Doug lBoucher, a member of the Ann Arbor chapter of Science for the People. "In fact," he claims, "science is an integral part and a powerful perpetua- tor of the existing social struc- ture." THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL 'Remember, I'm all for you getting cost-of-living pay increases too! If you ever become employed, of course.' End Franco reign in .Spain BLACK STATE, W HIL rUI , Racism rampa tin l R THE RECENT executions carried out by the Spanish government against popular protests and appeals from the Vatican and European labor unions only highlights the severity and cruelty of Europe's last bastion of fascism. General Franco's Fascist govern- ment is old and decayed to the core. The sooner it disappears, the better. In this light, the general strike in the Basque region, the refusal of European workers to unload Spanish cargo, and the possibility that Spain will be censured by the United Na- tions are encouraging signs. Unfor- tunately, but typically, President Ford's response to the situation has TODAY'S STAFF: News: Glen Allerhand, Gordon At- cheson, Jay Levin, Angelique Mat- ney, Jim Nicoll, Jeff Ristine, Step- hen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, T o m Kettler, Linda Kloote, Jon Pansius, Marci Turunen Arts Page: James Valk Photo Technician: E. Susan Sheiner left much to be desired. His remark, "I am opposed to violence," seems to miss the point. The desire of the U.S. to maintain bases in Spain has helped support the oppressive Fascist dictatorship. The U.S. in effect, is supporting in Spain and in other Fascist countries like Korea, the right of the government to tyrannize its people. This policy must be changed. If people want terrorism to end in Spain, they should press for the for- mation of a new government in which change can be achieved peacefully and democratically. Hopefully, a more progressive government can be creat- ed which is strong enough to sever it- self from a degenerate past. i fr Photography Staff KEN FINK PAULINE LUBENS Chief Photographer Picture Editor E. SUSAN SHEINER Staff Photographer GOR.DON TUCKER..... Staff Photographer By the Southern Africa Committee A POEM BY Dennis Brutus begins: "A wrong-headed bunch we may be but the bodies of poets will al- ways be the anvils on which will be beaten out anew, or afresh, a people's destiny." Prof. Brutus of Northwestern University delivered the first Kwame Nkdumah Memorial Lecture at the U-M on Wednes- day 24th September. He started by briefly honoring Nkrumah who "pointed the way for anti- colonial struggle," according to Brutus. Nkrumah's thought he said, is re-emerging now, clar- ifying the struggle between black and white from the "struggle of oppressed against oppressor, exploited against ex- ploiting." Brutus gave a careful analy- sis of several areas in southern Africa. Speaking about South Africa itself, he used the ex- ample of the town he grew up in (and was arrested by the sec- ret police in), the automotive capital of Africa: Port Eliza- beth. In that town, said Brutus, Ford, G.M. and Chrysler have plants that systematically ex- ploit blacks. "It is a criminal act in South Africa for a black to talk about striking," he told the audience. "let alone actual- ly doing it, or organizing a un- ion." "A M E R I C A N corpora- tionsrpay taxes in Pretoria for the right to suck dry African resources," he said. He stressed that armed resistence is not be- ginning in south Africa; it has begun. The success of this struggle is also not in question. "Anyone who thinks a quarter of a million whites in Zimba- bwe can hold down 5 million blacks. indefinitely needs o have their head read" The on real question is how tortuous, the road to liberation wii be. And what part the U. S. will play. H~e spoke of a recent devel- opment in south African af- fairs. When colonial Mozani- bique fell, and with it the re- gime in Lisbon, it looked to south Africa's rulers as if th iir buffer zones to the north were crumbling. At this stage, a noe of jet-set diplomacy, called de- tente, was introduced. On one day last year, South Africa's ambassador to the U.N. in New York said that 6 months would completely change their situa- tion. On the same day, inside so tA icin a tovn called em en, rime nister orster made a Speech saying that there woId soon be "a drastic chant " in the attitude of 1lacks outide south Africa. nd o t ae day, Pres. Ka- undo f Zabia spok~e of "din- w s th Africa. Inside sut fr o hi has chang- e: re oppressed as al- w s h strt . seems to hov een arfuiy planned: to irowdiv ''n into the ranks of tosnotr of the srug h Ah bought w: T!l~t difficult to th irlence be- l wh blacks n'sl~ beounrywhie blaks iict cotyre ruthless- ,,, sooesed- this pretense Sd ne. "t stinks?" said THE POEM S'l 'EI) above runt mas:. ''we roust die;: w e must buy a newbhonest (lestiny:. nOt only tearing our flesh to tear( the shackles of alien 0 u')'ss 1011 bet giopmog with lacerated forgers. 10 1gh:, to or a :v~ of righ.' B O U C H E R IS ONE of several graduate students and faculty members, mostly in the biological sciences, who make up Ann Arbor Science for the People. They are affiliated with an international organization of the same name, which bases itself on the contention that most scientific work serves on- ly the interests of a select cor- porate elite who dominate cap- italist society. Simultaneously, according to the groun, the scientific community ignores the needs of most human be- il ~ The organization has exam- ined a variety of issues, in- cluding health care, weather modification, overpopulation, and the international food cris- is from a radical perspective. As a part of their local ac- tivities, Ann Arbor Science for the Penpl° will present a sym- posium to be held September 29 thru October 3, entitled "Bio- logical Determinism: A Critical Appraisal." For those who may not be aware of today's scien- tific nomenclature, biological determinism is best defined as the theory which contends that certain human actions and so- cial characteristics are genet- ically pre-programmed at birth. SOM' SCIENTISTS, such as Willia1 Shockley of the Uni- versity of California at Berke- 1?v, have used the theory to in- dicate that inferior genes in black people make them less intelligent than whites. Others offer genetic explanations for violent tendencies in some hii- mans as well as female s.b- missiveness and male domi- nance in sexual relationships. "Biological determinism," ac- cording to Steve Risch, a grad- uate student in ecology and an -1-tive member of Science for tne People, "is one of many theories in which scientists are offering professional justifica- tions for social evils, such as racism and sexism." "In effect," continues Risch, "these scientists are saying that society can not be changed." Many of the controversial as- pects of biological determinism will be considered by lecturers from several Universities dur- ing the conference. The sym- posium, held in conjunction with the University Values Year Program, may be elect- ed for academic credit as Uni- versity Course 414. After the five day series of afternoon and evening lectures, enrolled stu- dents will spend the following weekend at Grass Lake Camp outside Ann Arbor, where dis- cussion sessions will be held. LIKE THE symposium, much of Science for the People's work is of an educational na- ture. The group attempts to arouse the consciousness of the scientific community as to the political and social implications of their work. However, Science for the People's efforts are not confin- ed to educational and informa- tional work. Their research ac- tivities have produced concrete methods by which scientific knowledge can be used to bene- fit neople in their daily lives. As could be expected, the group's activities have often been met with disdain and dis- anproval from the entrenched scientific community. In 1971, Science magazine, refused to mrint "Towards a Science for the People," an ar >cle written by four radical scientists from the University of Chicago. "Many aspects of science," counters Scott Schneider, "such as some theories concerning the overpopulation and food short- age issues, are inherently po- litical." 7'oin Allen is a mem ber of the Daily news staff. '. , l. .a. . r:i:r . -I ,i11 .'M t f''i r 4 V ':. Y:, < .?Z S a lche3£ PORTUGAL Fascism 0, By ROBERT MILLER THE WORKERS, PEASANTS, and soldiers of Portugal knowv a revolution cannot stop half-way. They are moving the revo- lution forward. Many in the Socialist Party and those who hold formal government posts are also aware that the contradictions of the present situation necessitate a change. But their fear of these further changes are forcing them to move to the right. This threatens the gains already made by the workers and peasants and raises the possibility of civil war. The basic ideas of the Portuguese revolutionary movement are clearly subversive. Working people are taking over their society and factories and running them themselves. Portuguese Workers' Councils control production, line speeds, health condi- tions and wages. Workers' control has become generalized and numerous industries have been nationalized. Under workers' control all workers' jobs are protected. In the textile industry, "The changes taking place in the factories, army and fields of Portugal are revolution- ary. If the political framework does not change in the relation between man and the means of production, there will be a civil war." women took the lead in the drive for equal wages for equal work. Sex and wage differentials are breaking down. While the American press has largely concentrated on the North, peasants and agricultural laborers in the South have been redistributing the land of the capitalists who have fled. In short, the social and economic fiber sewn by forty years of Fascist dictatorship is being torn apart. the run strength they can grab hold of their own lives and jobs and control their own economy through democratic councils. In Portugal, the workers' representatives are elected by the workers and are immediately recallable. Workers discuss and decide policies which can be changed at any time. In April a new organization called the Revolutionary Councils of Workers, Soldiers, and Sailors began to appear. At this time there was a strike to raise the thirty dollar per week slave wage prevalent under the Fascist regime, and obtain the right to work, demands that were eventually won. The movement to build the CRTSS was started by the Proletarian Revolutionary Party-Revolution- ary Brigade but are independent of all political parties though they include Socialists, Communists, left socialists and others. UNFORTUNATELY, THE American press has largely con- centrated on the cosmetic changes in Portugal. They make it appear as if the struggle in Portugal originates from party clashes and that workers' discontent is somehow instigated by the Communist Party. On the contrary, the Communist Party tried to hold back the revolution but was unable to in light of the revolutionary upsurge by the workers, soldiers, and pea- sants, who are revolutionalizing their own lives. An instance of obsessive attention given to the Communist Party is the coverage of the Republica incident. The American press made it appear that the Communist Party was trying to end free speech by shutting down the Republica newspaper. However, the Republica, which used to be sympathetic to the Socialist Party, suffered from declining circulation, and was going bankrupt. The workers at the Republica demanded that the paper change its policy or be nationalized. Today the Re- publica is run by the workers and there are at least two other Socialist newspapers. Besides, if the American press and gov- ernment is so concerned about freedom of the press, they showed little alarm when the present government called out the army to take over the left-oriented radio stations. Again, the American press calls these "extreme left controlled" when in of production hit Portugal, a sm -Inde we k nation, the hard- est. Portugal was fored to alter its poltical and economic structure. Agoain in the tw1'1.i.h centi I has b'an the wake' no- tions - Russia in 191t 7 China in th fu rt ies and fifties and Por- World and the idustrial world. in the end, the difference in outcome between Chile and Potrtugal may be due to the fact that the Chilean army was tr'aiaed in America, while the Portuguese armed forces studied the African liberation movement. Also the workers, peasants I