JAMES WECHSLER.- 4'I 94C EtdiaptBatig Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS The proxy campaign: What's good for GMNl... NEXT WEEK IN Detroit, a group of would-be reformers will confront the masters of air pollution, armaments, and highway unsafety in an attempt to make General Motors responsible. By all indi- caions, the insurgents of Campaign GM will be overwhelmingly rebuffed. Among the factors that stand in the way of success for Campaign GM is the University Regents, who own some 25,000 shares of GM stock. Last month, accord- ing to reliable sources, the Regents re- fused to even discuss the matter in closed session before they issued a statement saying they would adhere to there present policy of either voting shares in favor of management proposals or abstaining. Today, the R e g e n t s will hold their regular monthly meeting and a group organized by Campaign GM Will attempt to confront the Regents and convince them to change their minds, and vote the Uilversity shares in favor of the three proposals by Campaign GM at next week's shareholders' meeting. Another setback is the only likely out- come. THE REASON for the Regents' support of present GM policy is fairly straight forward: As the Regents define the best interests of the University, what's good for General Motors really is good for the University. In line with the general view that it should function as a service institution for U.S. society, the University has de- veloped in such a way as to have a con- fluence of interests with large corpora- tions like GM. This alliance manifests itself in a number of areas: -Regent Otis S m i t h (D-Detroit) is general consel for General Motors. -University researchers do occasional research for GM. -GM, along with Ford, recently funded the multi-million dollar building for the Highway S a f e t y Research Institute, a University subdivision whose work, will aid automotive research. -Like all good neighbors, the Univer- sity will sometimes let GM have some land it needs. In a secret a c t i o n last March, for example, the Regents author- ized the sale of 26 acres of land near Wil- low Run Airport for $113,000 to GM, which owns contiguous parcels. In light of these ties, and because serv- ice to the corporate world is a financial prerequisite to the continuation of many of the University's activities, the reluc- tance of the Regents to slap the GM man- Despite tt " e crisis, a gr44 IT WAS BAD ENOUGH when President Nixon ordered American troops i n t o Cambodia. But he did it without consult- ing or even informing Congress and now that omission is coming back to plague him. An increasing number of Senators, fed up with the war and angered at Nixon's cavalier treatment of them, are striking back with proposed legislation to cut off funds either partly or totally for the es- capade in Indochina. Two amendments to a $20 million mil- itary appropriations bill have been in- troduced in the Senate. A motion spon- sored by Senators Frank Church (D- Idaho) and Jobn Cooper (R-Ky.) would end appropriations for ground forces in Cambodia. Another amendment, spon- sored by Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) and Sen. Mark Hatfield (R-Ore.) would end all money for the war in Indochina by the end of the year and all funds for withdrawal of troops by June 1971. While the Cooper-Church amendment is given the better chance to pass, both would serve to provide a long-overdue de- bate in Congress over the war. Further- more, if a large enough number of Sena- tors and Representatives vote for either measure, Nixon will be forced to think twice before expanding the war again. agement by supporting Campaign GM is hardly surprising. BUT EVEN if the Regents did support the drive for "corporate responsibil- ity," and even if shareholders approved the three proposals submitted by Cam- paign GM, the change in the mammoth corporation would be imperceptible. Campaign GM's three proposals are, in fact, the embodiment of moderation. The first motion would amend the GM Certifi- cate of Incorporation to include a state- ment insuring that the corporation would act lawfully and in the public interest. A second would add three seats to the 23- man board of directors so that "public representatives" can be a d d e d to the board without challenging the status of p r e s e n t members. A third proposition would create a special Committee on Cor- porate Responsibility to report on possible adverse social impact of corporations ac- tivities. THAT THE conspicuous impotence of these three resolutions was intentional becomes clear from a glance at literature put out by Campaign GM. Organizers con- tinually, for example, emphasize that they are not intent on unseating the elite which controls GM. The moderate nature of these proposas is unfortunate. Doomed to failure as it was from the start, the campaign would have served a better educational function by attacking the real source of GM's dis- regard for the interests of the people. Profit maximization and expansion of profitable activities continue to be the guiding motives of U.S. corporations. This is why GM has blocked development of auto safety devices and schemes of public mass transit, and why the corporation is heavily involved in military production. O THE EXTENT that they have at- tacked this problem only incidentally, the organizers of Campaign GM are evad- ing the real issue behind "corporate re- sponsibility." Corporations like GM will only be responsive to the interests of the people when the people take control from the corporate elite. At present, reform of General Motors is impossible and essentially irrelevant. Campaign GM will have meaning and impact only to the extent that its failure further demonstrates that failure in such reformist ventures is inevitable-. -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Editor e current tin of hope pected to come in early June, when many schools have already let out for the sum- mer or are holding final exams. Fortun- ately, schools'and citizens' groups around the country are working to see that such a situation does not occur. Some schools have called off classes for the rest of the term to allow students to w o r k against the war. Others may be forced to follow, as they discover the im- possibility of re-opening their protest- rocked campuses. But that still leaves a large body of people who are opposed to the war but have not reached the level of militancy necessary for taking to t h e streets. For them there are groups such as the "Community Coalition" in A n n Arbor which is working to pressure Sen- ators and Congressmen to vote in favor of anti-war legislation. The Coalition is presently conducting a door-to-door campaign in the commun- ity, urging people to contact their rep- resentatives in Washington-by mail, tele- gram or personal visit and ask them to vote in favor of measures such as the McGovern-Hatfield amendment. DESPITE THE unresponsiveness of gov- ernment, especially to student opin- ion, the present situation seems to carry some grain of hope for results. The Sen- ate has s h o w n its willingness by the Reuther: WHEN WALTER REUTHER led his Auto Reutheri Workers Union out of the AFL-CIO ing hosp two years ago, a veteran labor colleague just a ye privately lamented his decision. "Walter Reuthe was too impatient-if he had just waited, fered fro and avoided some arguments, George while he Meany would eventually have resigned and lishment, he could have been head of the whole labor entrench movement," the elder statesman said. the John But Reuther finally would not wait; obsessive while others saw him as an eternally tion, he f youthful indestructible, perhaps he was from the brooding over time and mortality. Assassins many of had nearly murdered him in 1948; there war issu had been other narrow escapes; for more Meany'sI than two decades-and at the moment of lude can the fatal crash-bodyguards were frequent- totality o ly'at his side. There was also the remembrance of other IN A long years of waiting-the years in which liberated the late R. J. Thomas, a genial bumbler, signs tha presided over the UAW, while Reuther central r vainly challenged him. Then, having war. His achieved the top UAW post, he waited dent was again-until saintly, revered Phil Murray executive died and Reuther finally became the CIO's scale att leader. and a vi He had committed himself to reunifica- istration tion of labor and in 1955 he negotiated the Despit peace pact with -Meany. While Reuther years, he again was "No. 2," the assumption was that history-b he was destined for ,the succession before initiative too long. only wh4 range of MEANY PROVED RUGGED and robust; promise his reluctance to abdicate was probably tragic in intensified by Reuther's increasingly vocal of events criticism of his rule. Their painful differ- He ha ences were temperamental as well as with bott philosophical; Reuther was vexed by the ing JFK' lethargic, "middle-class" mentality that cussion seemed to be suffocating much of the labor Reuther movement; Meany, a salty product of the is likely building trades, was more disposed to look an appoi with pride at past accomplishment than tact with to dream of new worlds. Reuther, who had dentialc grown up in a Socialist family tradition, with Hu had a compulsive commitment to social been ele change; Meany, although his horizons had for a po notably broadened in many matters, re- ginningi fused, for example, to sanction AFL-CIO involvement in the Freedom March of 1963. WALT Never 'one of the boys' marched-as he did for the strik- ital workers in Charleston, S.C., ar ago. er's insurgences in the 1960s suf- m an inescapable inhibition. For was tilting with the labor "Estab- ," he was very much a part of the ed political structure throughout son years. As Vietnam became the , oppressive national preoccupa- found himself uncomfortably aloof e rising currents of protest. To the young his quiescence on the e was almost indistinguisable from pro-war'advocacy. But that inter- not overshadow the affirmative of his life. SENSE President Nixon's election Reuther, and there were recent at he was preparing to assume a ole in rallying opposition to the last important act as UAW presi- to win approval from his union's board last Thursday for a full- tack on the Cambodian invasion gorous repudiation of the Admin- 's overall Vietnam policy. e the doldrums of the past few has a secure place in the labor books; his pioneering audacious s will fill a large chapter. It is en measured against the infinite fhis talents andlimitless early that there remains a sense of completeness, and of the perversity S. d a continuing, warm relationship rh John and Robert Kennedy. Dur- s Presidency, there was serious dis- of a high government post for and in a second Kennedy term it that he would have received such ntment. He was also in close con- Robert Kennedy's ill-fated Presi- drive, although hesitant to split bert Humphrey. Had either man cted, he would have been in line sition of influence and a new be- in life. ER REUTHER was never "one of 4 4 the boys." He skipped the beer-drinking and poker-playing and dirty jokes and was taunted for his abstinence. Even many of those closest to him could not claim any deep intimacy. Now one realizes how little was known of the interior man, and won- ders how much loneliness was concealed by outward self-assurance. If he lacked some of the common touch. few have fought harder or more valorously for so many common men, or with more tangible result. At the news of his sudden death one thought with anguish of the construction workers who have recently defiled New York with their savage assault on peace demonstrators. Are labor's a} into- crats" to be the rightist replica of the com- pany goons who brutally assaulted Reuther on the Ford overpass in 1937? Now eulogies for Reuther will fill the air. A true regard for his memory would be ex- pressed in condemnation of these local union sluggers by Meany, Harry Van ,Ars- dale and other leaders of labor. That would have mattered to him; that would be rele- vant to the meaning of his life, and to his vision of justice and human dignity. Does no labor dignitary dare to say to the :bard hats what Walter Reuther would have said as they dishonor the traditions of union- ism?. New York Post *i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 4% Married To the Editor: The following is an opetn letter to the UniversityDRegents: AT A CLOSED, unannounced meeting in April you decided to make a payment of $252.000 to the Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion and that this payment would come directly out of the rentals1 paid by married students living in the University Housing. The rea- son for this payment is sunposedly the closing of the University School which "traditionally" serv-t ed as a balance to the children in married housing attending the public schools. This reasoning is fallacious and the decision to raise rentals by $22 per month is a dangerous one,7 which will have far reaching con- sequences all across the State. What is worse, this decision was made hastily, and in secret, with- out full knowledge of all she facts of the present situation and ob- viously without concern for the welfare of the married student population. You seem to think that the 1245 families at Northwood and Univer- sity Terrace would not be a power- ful enough pressure group to op- pose such highhanded tactics. You seem to think that these families could pay as much as 50 per cent of their income for rental without undue hardships. You do not appear to care about the effect this raise in rents will have on blacks, and other minor- ity groups to whom you have made, a commitment for their education. You do not seem to realize that housing rents'are high enough when University rentals go up. private relators in Ann Arbor also raise their rent, so your decision will effect everyone living in Ann Arbor. Furthermore, you seem to have abandoned the whole concept of "low cost" housing that has been the avowed philosophy of the Uni- versity in building University Ter- race and Northwood. You have chosen to ignore that for all the years the University School was operating, there were no children from married student housing attending the Ann Arbor School System. YOU SEEM TO have preferred making a payoff to the City of Ann Arbor for the recent troubles on this campus in order to pacify them, than to keep the best in- terests of the students at heart. You have succeeded by your short memories illogical argu- ments and high handed decision making in alienating a stable segment of the college community. You have succeeded in making a few more of us lose faith in the "establishment." Overall, your decision is going to hurt many more people than it can possibly benefit since the Ann Arbor Board of Education does not really need this money at this time, they just want it. I can only urge you, most sin- cerely, to reverse this harmful de- cision because so many people are going to suffer if you do not. -Ted Oegema, Grad. May 13 It's not new To the Editor: THIS LETTER IS' directed to all students at Kent State Univer- sity (KSU) who organized, sup- ported or in any way participated in or observed the recent tragic events on campus. The entire na- tion was shocked, frightened, and appalled at these events.but prob- ably none as badly as you were. For many of you this was your first close encounter with sudden, violent death. But death is not a new arrival on the K.S.U. campus. Remember, just last month Jerry Rubin came to Kent and told you that you should be.ready to kill your own parents in support of "the revo- 'lution." Unquestionably a few were glad this tragedy took place and will seek to cause others. But for the majority of you who were sadden- ed - if you don't like the heat perhaps now is a good time to get out of the kitchen. -Philip S. Tokich, Grad. May 12 V'P--OSS To the Editor: IN SEVERAL recent stories The Daily has stated that I refused to meet with President Fleming un, less a reporter was present. This is slightly inaccurate. I refused to meet with President Fleming un- less the Daily was invited to at- tend. And, if I understand correct- ly the President's position (as it was relayed to me'by his secretary) it was that he refused to meet with me unless the press was barred. I am sorry to learn that the President considers me unaccept- able as a candidate for the vice presidency, but I thank The Daily for giving me this information. As was apparently the case with the other candidates, I have never received any communication from the University administration on the subject. -Peter Steinberger 0' ow I Soviets ask Henry Ford to help build a truck plant.-News Item # PRESIDENT VS. SENATE Gum bodi~ By EDWARD ZIMMERMAN DURING THE RECENT controversy over the Carswell nomination and the cur- rent heated debate over the involvement of American forces in Cambodia, the Presi- dent has encountered stiff resistance from many members of the Senate. Perhaps the single most important development to come out of these two- cases has been the Senate's exercise of "Advice and Consent" over the President's nomination of G. Harrold Cars- well for the Supreme Court and in ques- tioning the Presiden't deployment of troops in Cambodia without its consent. Previous to the final vote on the Carswell nomination, in a letter to Senator Richard Saxbe (R-Ohio), the President stated that he was angered by the fact that some sen- precipitates power struggle senators who so disapproved of the Presi- dent's meddling in senatorial affairs that they voted against Judge Carswell. A SECOND MAJOR FIGHT over the ex- tent of the President's powers as Com- mander in Chief was initiated when Presi- dent Nixon moved American troops in Cambodia without the approval of Con- gress. But the Cambodia issue is only part of the issue. To understand why a fight wili occur. one -has to understand a certain principle of the men in the Senate. They resent any intrusion upon their constitutional powers and for the last several years, they have felt that the President has been ignoring them, and are extremely disgruntled. FROM TIME TO TIME, Congress has tried-though with little succcess-to con- trol the President's use of force in the conduct of foreign policy. In the 1930's for example, Congress passed a series of Neu- trality Acts designed to keep us out of "the next world war." But this legislation was not effective in deterring Franklin D. Roosevelt from making the U.S. "the ar- senal of democracy." In 1952, during the Korean War, Presi- dent Truman ran into difficulty when the steel mills went on strike. He seized the steel mills but was rebuffed by the Supreme Court 6 to 3 when the cas went to court. Justice Hugo Black, who explained the opinion of the majority, explained it quite cimnl "Tp Pr.,id~ntC+owpr if' arv to~ In 1969, the Senate passed a "sense of the Senate" resolution demanding that the President consult with them before enter- ing into a treaty with a foreign country or before committing the U.S. militarily. Nixon did not feel obliged to adhere to that resolution either. BY PLACING EMPHASIS on "Advice and Consent," the Senate has s o u g h t more of the responsibility for foreign policy formulation. But by his actions con- cerning Cambodia, President Nixon has flagrantly violated these restrictions. President Nixon promised to extricate us from Vietnam. Instead, he has involved us in Cambodian affairs. Fifteen years ago, when Nixon was the Vice-President. he #I