4 OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, November 27, 1985 The Michigan Daily rh Sidrigan Bai1 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board 4 Creature from the black 'U' By Robert Honigman Turkeys and lame ducks THANKSGIVING is a holiday for the birds. More specifically, it is a holiday of turkeys (certainly not for them) basted and served with stuffing and cranberry sauce. That's the obvious part of the holiday. The other applicable bird is less obvious: that's the lame duck. Thanksgiving is as much a lan- dmark in the academic year as the lighthouse is to a trans-oceanic :ship. It signals that the end is at last in sight. There is, of course, the matter of the harbor rocks, in the Univer- sity's case exams, still to maneuver around, but better a harbor of obstacles than an endless sea. From here on out, the semester is history. Students who have yet to CRISP at least know what they will be taking next semester, and the list of assignments still to do has shrunken to the point that it can be recited entirely. Which, of course, sounds awfully like a lame duck. In the interim following the selection of an official's successor and his departure from office, he is in the odd situation of maintaining the power to make decisions, while knowing full well that he will not be around to take the blame if they turn out to be poor ones. And so it is for most of the University community. Falling asleep in class becomes almost ac- ceptable because "he won't remember who I am when he's grading the final" attitudes are more demonstrably true. Putting off a day's homework isn't so bad because "he can't ex- pect us all to keep up now that exams are coming." And suddenly it seems less vital to rewrite rough drafts so rigorously when the clock strikes 5 a.m. and there's another term paper due the next day. Thanksgiving is a lull before the final tempest; a final chance to catch a breath before facing the bulk of a semester's work in two weeks. Yes, Virginia, there is a creature that cannot see itself in a mirror or stand the light of day. It has no feelings and no remorse, only hunger. It does not know it- self or what is, and it has no memory nor any awareness of the effect of its behavior on others. And it loves the passive student, the quiet faculty and the busy officials who bury themselves in their little shells and pass through its halls and corridors bum- ping into each other but never meeting or sharing their lives with each other. For in each shell is nourishment for the creature's growth. One of the cruelest periods of university growth in American higher education came during the 1960s. In that era the federal government began funding research at major universities in the tens of millions of dollars annually. But the federal gover- nment reimbursed universities for the overhead and indirect costs of research only at the rate of 20% of direct costs, although in fact, overhead costs ran between 60% - 80%. What that meant, for example, was that when the University of Michigan received $30 million for sponsored research, it had to use $10 million from its general fund to support the overhead and indirect costs of research. The public only saw the $30 million of federal funds and thought the university made a "profit" from research. The University didn't tell them this was a false impression because it didn't want the state legislature to know it was syphoning off state funds and tuition to subsidize federal research (as it still does today.) The University discovered it could find millions of extra dollars in its general fund Honigman is an attorney in Sterling Heights. if it watered undergraduate education by making increasing use of graduate students as teachers and increasing class sizes, Tuitions were raised too, so that the average freshman and sophomore actually brought more into the university in tuition and state appropriations than they cost the university to teach (as they still do today). This was standard practice at all big league research universities, so there was no question that it was something that was competitively necessary if not morally sound. Officials faced the unspoken conflict that first rate universities had to im- poverish their undergraduate programs in order to grow and survive by simply never speaking about it. The result was that, in an era when the University was increasingly oriented towards graduate education, the campus was packed with more new freshmen each year to bring in the necessary revenue to support expanding federal programs. Im- mature people were attracted to the very institutions least interested in serving them so they could be exploited as a financial resource. This monstrous evil was done un- der the auspices of one of the kindest and gentlest - and certainly one of the most moral - presidents the University ever had, Harlan Hatcher, a tall shy white haired gentleman who was the embodiment of academic probity and respectability. It took a long time to realize that the University is a creature that exists separate and apart from the people who run it. The creature doesn't let them see that it has corrupted them and captured their allegiance by making them partners in the venture. They are obsessed with the growth and survival of the institution and its corr- petitive position, to the exclusion of any other goals or values because their own careers are tied to its growth - and in a way, it's hard to see how they could behave or think any differently. No institution ever matures and survives without becoming a creature whose first goal is survival and growth. And it must never allow anyone to become aware of its real motives or see its behavior in the clear light of day or it will die through public condemnation and regulation. But just occasionally you can catch a glimpse, of the creature, as it unconsciously surfaces under the smooth rhetoric of public relations. Once, Michael Raddock as head of the University of Michigan's public relations department naively identified "the purposes and functions to be served by the University Relations staff. Its purpose is 'to maximize support for, and minimize op- postion to, the University of Michigan and its programs.' ('Support' as used here in- cludes political-societal support as well as I financial support.)" (Report to the President, Vol. IV, 1968) Raddock was not an evil man articulating a sinister program - rather he was an extraordinarily naive man who happened to stumble across the real purpose of the University without realizing its significance. Francis Allen, the law school dean also delivering his Report to the President in 1968-69, described a disturbing attitude he found widespread among students in the University: "The only thing that-matters, it is said, are the realities of power; the reasons are a disguise and a camouflage; those who in- dulge in such efforts as reasoned ar- ticulation are simply engaged in a cosmetic function." Probably few in the university ever noticed these two isolated comments plucked at random from the boring tedium of institutional documentation, or that they said essentially the same thing. So no one ever realized that students picked up these attitudes from the University itself. The University takes its students firmly in grasp and injects its values into them, and students become a walking adver- tisement for the institution. People who take from others when they are helpless and dependent. People obsessed with their own survival and reputation. People who never admit they are wrong. Do you see people like that around you? LETTERS: Band-O-Rama deserved big coverage a6 Time for reflection TP 0 THE AVERAGE third grade class, Thanksgiving is a time to recall the contributions of such noble "Indians" as Squanto to the early American settlers. To listen exclusively to such stories obscures the harsh realities of the historical and contemporary conditions of Native Americans. While there is no denying that many Native American customs have become a part of general U.S. culture, yet the Native Americans themselves remain downtrodden. With rates of alcoholism and suicide among their young traditionally far above the average, Native Americans are threatened even as a population. As a culture, they seem slowly to be winning more respect as scholars take their art and social theories more seriously, but the realities of that culture are too of- ten cartoonized to appear only as junk jewelry or smoke signals and wigwams. Native American students at the University are still considered an under represented minority in spite spite of slim gainst in enrollment the last two years. Currently, there are a total of 153 Native Americans constituting .5 percent of the student body. In spite of their small numbers at the University, Native Americans should be considered in some ways to be the University's founders. The University's forerunner, the College of Detroit, was build on land donated by the Chippewa, Ot- tawa, and Potawatomi tribes. In 1981, a 10 year legal battle over a charge that the tribes granted the University the land on the condition that its children receive free education thereafter ended when the Michigan Court of Appeals declared the charge unfounded. Nevertheless, the University main- tains a scholarship fund sup- plemented by money from the Federal Bureau for Indian Affairs to provide money specifically for qualified Native Americans. While such financial support is appropriate for academically qualified students, it provides no help for the large number of Native American teenagers who are unable to benefit from secondary education because the setting in which they live does not par- ticularly encourage scholarship. With over 50,000 Native Americans in the state, the University has an obligation to assist them in educating themselves. While Thanksgiving is an ap- propriate time to recall the con- tributions that Native Americans have made to contemporary culture, it should also be a time to reflect on the conditions that prevent today's Native American population from realizing its full potential. To the Daily: Was anyone at the Daily even cognizant of Band-O-Rama, the University band's fall spec- tacular? In case you didn't know, it was last Saturday night, November 2. Indredulously, Monday's edition of the Daily lacked any mention of the event. Perhaps you weren't informed of the performance. That wouldn't be much of an excuse. The event was well posted. Besides, shouldn't the people in your Happenings section have been able to alert the rest of the staff? Perhaps you didn't think the performance would be any good. I sincerely hope this isn't the case. It would be extremely dif- ficult to respect you as jour- nalists if so. True or not, you missed one of the most spec- tacular shows you could ever hope to attend. Among the highlights: the premier perf or- mance of a piece of music com- missioned Dr. Revelli in honor of his 50th anniversary with the University bands, a standing ovation for the piece, its mar- velous performance by the sym- phony band, and Dr. Revelli, and an electrifying "Blues Brothers" revue from the marching band that brought a capacity crowd in Hill Auditorium to its feet several times. Perhaps the editors decided that Band-O-Rama wasn't "news worthy." As editors this is your privilege, buteit makes me won- der about their reasoning. President Shapiro's open house was considered "news worthy." According to the Daily "...about 600 students..." attended the open house. According to the program handed out by ushers, Band-O-Rama featured over 450 students and faculty members. I'll concede that the open house starred more students, but did 4300 people buy tickets to watch students parade through the President's home? Band-O- Rama sold out Hill Auditorium. All told, the four bands directly affected nearly 500 people in one three hour event. What con- stitutes "news worthy?" Perhans vn didn't think the 4, 1985). Band-O-Rama could have made cosmetic con- tributions to the paper as well. The marching band could have provided several photographs slightly more eye-catching than your front-page portrait of students filing into the Shapiro residence. Take for instance the double-time, high-step entry as the band members came charging down the aisles or the choreography of the percussion section during Temptation. Both of these scenes could have yielded pictures with all the in- tensity and emotion that photo- journalists search for. Assuming that all my hypotheses up to this point are in- correct, (the Daily staff knew about Band-O-Rama, they an- ticipated andentertaining perfor- mance, and the editors con- sidered the event both news wor- thy and captivating), maybe you had actually planned on printing a write-up on the concert, but due to unforeseen problems you were unable to cover the event. That would explain the absence of a write-up but is no excuse for complete omission. Not enough space? Most newspapers edit to make room. It wouldn't be ex- tremely difficult to squeeze in a paragraph or two. So we still don't know why the Daily ignored Band-O-Rama. Perhaps the event didn't live up to the Daily's requirements of political activism or Big Ten Football standings. Sadly, the Daily is becoming a paper ex- clusively for sportswriting and political bantering. The concert, symphony, jazz, and marching bands weren't with Bo's Boys in Illinois for the weekend or protesting the CIA's presence on campus so they weren't worthy of your coverage. So what if they've been working for over two mon- ths, so what if they earned ap- proximately $17,000 in one evening, so what if over 4000 people cheered them on? Maybe it's time the Daily came down off its political and athletic high horses. Our University and community have many more facets than sports and fashionably controversial political issues. I'm not suggesting that you abandon your attempts to keep students infor- med on these aspects of campus life, merely that you expand your focus to include other issues as well. These areas may not direc- tly concern you, may not even matter to you, could even be disagreeable to you, but might be subjects or viewpoints that are very important to others. -Michael Kampe November 6 'Graffiti artists 'respond on paper To the Daily: I am writing in response to your article on campus graffiti printed in last Thursday's edition. I would like to make clear to that particular journalist and tothe general publicrthat distinctiion between a "graffiti artist" and a "graffiti scrawler." A "graffiti scrawler" is an ar- tistically untalented cowardly vandal whose only purpose in his messages is to cause pain and sorrow to all who view his disgraceful work. "Graffiti artists" or "graffiti writers", such as myself and my crew are quite the opposite. Our purpose is to liven people's lives through the display of our unmatched artistic talent which would otherwise go unseen by the public. Unlike the scrawlers, our "pieces" (short for "master- pieces") are sprayed or "bom- bed" in the most brilliant and vibrant of colors with the most in- tricate of styles. Our murals, large depictions of people or places, take hours of painstaking planning and preparation not to mention the many more hours spent in spraying the mural it- BLOOM COUNTY self. These pieces are oftentimes short lived, being "buffed" or eradicated a few days to a few weeks after the initial spray. Undaunted by these temporary setbacks, we continue to borbh hoping that someday more people will acknowledge graffiti as a true art form. This goal, however, is made all the more difficult to reach by the scrawlers who continue to not only hurt and anger others with their mindless, bigoted sayings, but also create a bad name for the true graffiti ar- tists who spray in the hopes of pleasing others. -The Phantom Representative of the "Graffiti Kings" including Kid Wack and Clay-D November 21 Sexism in sport section To the Daily: Your Monday, Nov. 25 editorial ("Girl Talk") should have noted that sexism is alive and thriving not just in the Reagan ad- ministration but also in the sports section of The Michigan Daily. Again this year the so-called "Michigan Daily Guide to Wolverine Basketball" ignored the women's team. True. Mon- day's issue did give the women 25 square inches of coverage. That compares to the 23 square feet for the men; is that all you think the women are worth? The Daily owes its readers an explanation and women athletes in general an apology for this continued sexist policy in sports coverage. Is it perhaps the case that you feel people are not interested in women's basketball or you just did not have the energy to cover the whole basketball story or maybe it's just economics in that you cannot get enough adver-0 tising revenue to off set the cost of the full coverage. If your editorials do represent a majority of the Editorial Board then why don't you put your views into practice. It is not too late to do the right thing. -Bob Beattie November 25 by Berke Breathed iffYif... ..iii~-~iii iiiiiYYi"" " . .. . . . *.*.*.*.*.*.*.*.*.*.*** iiiii f' Y Y i YYYi Y i~ rii ii i"" ~ ii n " i finnn.." . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .YY lYiii Cii Y . Y! . Y YO ~fiiiYYY" " i, We encourage our readers to use this space to discuss and respond to issues of their concern. Whether cover universitv. A nn those topics Arhor cm- I