u r Aichigau Daily Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are tree, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD WINTER Mace and Police: Dangerous Duo TWO WEEKS AGO, City Council wisely suspended the use of Mace. For a number of reasons, Council should main- tain its ban on the aerosol tear gas. First, Mace is largely untested and its possible effects unknown. The Ann Arbor Police Department admitted as much when they asked the'University's phar- macology laboratories to test it for them. The report of the Kerner Commission suggested that chemical devices with conceivable riot control applications Wilbur Cohen's Liberal Dilemma HEW SECRETARY Wilbur Cohen is a roan caught in the dilemma of many old-time liberals - men frightened by suggestion of change from the status quo. Inconsistencies in Cohen's speech at yesterday's honors convocation are prob- ably due to his own position as a man of liberal background who has recently joined a "stand pat" administration. Cohen told honors students yesterday to "dream new dreams" and to "never subscribe to pessimism and despair.?' Ri- diculous pap. These are impossible demands to make of a graduating class that will face prob- lems of poverty and shaky money that cannot be solved with a Vietnam war-a war that cannot end under the adminis- tration Cohen has recently joined. Cohen's presence in the cabinet is tacit support of Johnson's claim that the Unit- ed States' domestic problems can be solved while we remain 500,000 strong In Vietnam. (Cohen did not mention the war.) The most courageous thing Cohen could have done would have been to draw national attention to the impossibility of conducting a worthwhile welfare pro- gram while supporting a full-scale war. COHEN'S THESIS - students must be committed and involved in national and community affairs after graduation -is impossible considering the govern- ment's present oppressive nationaland international stalemate. The undercur- rent in his own speech and the reaction of the audience to that undercurrent demonstrates the impossibility of linking youthful ideals with current U.S. poli- cies. "For the last four years," he said, "you have been free to contemplate the world's most pervasive problems and you have been able to criticize and dissent, but you have not been forced to take respon- sibility for existing problems." The audience, mostly parents of Co- hen's age, at this point applauded loud and long. It's- right, especially for a liberal, to encourage youth to become involved in what's happening. But liberals, in order to make these comfortable-sounding ideas fit with youth's current dissent from administration policy, are forced to the ridiculous cant: be committed but wait ten years because you disagree with what we're doing right now. ALMOST a dozen busloads of students headed for Wisconsin yesterday to campaign for a peace candidate-a can- didate who disagrees with the adminis- tration's stand on Vietnam. These students and other youthful McCarthy supporters are hardly fighting a war against their parents' generation. They are fighting reactions like Cohen's -reactions from people afraid to dissent for fear they will be associated with "ir- responsible youth." These people seem to feel every change espoused by youth threatens anarchy. Cohen and many other people of his generation are seeing a threat from youth that just isn't there. Today's stu- dents don't have to change their direction to be committed in 1976-they're com- mitted, albeit not to all policies of the administration. ASSOCIATION with ideas supported by youth means, for many, support of some frightening new life style-a ridic- ulous excuse for not supporting worth- needed further testing. Tile report men- tioned Mace specifically. % The Institute for Defense Analyses said last November that while Mace shows promise, it still needs further testing. General Ordinance Equipment Corpor- ation, the manufacturer of Mace, has never published its ingredients. This casts doubt on the nature of its chemical composition. Worse, it makes it more dif- ficult for physicians to prescribe rational antidotes. SECOND, policemen who use Mace need special training and must have dem- onstrated their willingness to use it spar- ingly. Because the effects of spraying Mace into the human eyeball at close range or allowing Mace to penetrate an open wound are unknown, its use dictates ex- treme caution.t Persons who have been sprayed with Mace need to be washed promptly with water. Police must both know and be willing to use the simple, immediate anti- dotes which will prevent Mace from caus- ingg chemical burns and possible infec- tions. Although it is argued that Macing be- ligerents is more humane than batting them with a blackjack, this argument begs the question. Even if Mace were found to be completely harmless, can there be any guarantee that the conven- ience of being able to use Mace might not tempt police to use it on innocent citi- zens? If policemen sincerely think that Mace is harmless, won't they be quicker to harass a disrespectful but legal by- stander with Mace than they would hit him with a night-stick? The incident which led City Cduncil to suspend the use of Mace evokes serious questions whether Ann Arbor Police have the training (which can be learned) or the self-control (which cannot) to use Mace. Prior to the incident, only selected members of the force had been issued Mace. Even so, the circumstances of the incident-in which police used Mace on spectators at an automobile accident and, according to some reports, in a hos- pital-were sufficiently dubious in origin for Council to suspend Mace and initiate an investigation. THIRD, to resume the use of Mace at * this point would be politically disas- trous. Whatever the investigations of the incident turn up, Mace in the minds of the Negro community has become an in- strument of white racism and brutality. Even if subsequent chemical tests prove Mace completely non-toxic and changes are made in the composition and struc- ture of the police force which give reason to believe that it will be used knowledge- ably and cautiously, the emotional con- notations which Mace has in the eyes of the Negroes of Ann Arbor should discour- age the resumption of its use. To begin again with Mace would only further wid- en the gulf between the black and white societies in Ann Arbor. OF THE three thousand cities in the na- tion which have tried Mace, Ann Ar- bor is the only one to renounce it. Its po- lice are in a quandary With which all should sympathize. They have been urged to find humane weapons and they have come up with Mace. They should now come up with something else. The lack of adequate chemical tests, the evidence that the police force is not prepared to use Mace with caution, and the social tensions it could engender would make resumption of Mace a travesty. -URBAN LEHNER Editorial Director No CO MMent EAST FARMINGDALE, L. I., March 25- A large, friendly dog named Smokey elated police officers here today by tracking down caches of marijuana as easily as another might fetch a stick. "Find the dope, Smokey," Patrolman Robert J. Poisson of the Buffalo Police Department commanded, patting the 85- pound German shepherd on the head. In little more than a minute, the dog weaved his way through a room full of gn trrrint a nr lnlinm 11177 PA n Won' By DAN SHARE WEDNESDAY is a Day of Resis- tance. But the April 3 Resis- tance will be significantly differ- ferent from the headline-grabbing affairs of the past. As Warren Camp of New York Resistance put it, "We want a solemn, mov- ing demonstration." This time all across the country the focus will be almost totally on the collection of draft cards and individual acts of conscience, "Resistance" emerged as a dis- tinctive political term with the first Day of Resistance held last Oct. 15, loosely associated with Stop the Draft Week and the Pen- tagon March of Oct. 20. The activities ranged from re- turning several hundred draft cards to the Justice Department to extensive demonstration in Cal- ifornia asover 3,000 people tried to block the Oakland induction center.. A second Day of Resistance was held last Dec. 4 with extensive draft card collections and massive demonstrations around the White- hall Induction Center in New York City. WHAT WILL be happening in Ann Arbor on Wednesday is fairly typical. Between ten and thirty individuals-most are still making up their minds-will join sev- eral hundred men across the /country in turning in their draft cards. Perhaps 2,000 resisters have done this already. . Other events planned for the day include a rally on the Diag and a march to Selective Serv- ice office on Liberty Street where the resisters will attempt to turn I in their cards. Resistance members hope that April 3 will provide impetus around which effective communi- ty contacts can be built. This is the real importance of April 3. For it is probably the last event of its kind. And behind this lies a major policy shift. Resistance members, both local- ly and nationally, feel the head- line-grabbing demonstration has outlived its usefulness and that any success in the anti-draft cam- paign is now dependent on suc- cessful community organization. Consequently the Resistance, which up until now has received the bulk of its supports from the campus, is turning its attention to the community. Dan Brody of New England Draft Resistance, outlined what the Resistance feels is its major problem, "We have to build a radical awareness - not just on the college campuses." It is this theme of radical awareness which is reflected by Ann Arbor Resistance. Dennis Church, an Ann Arbor Resistance member, hopes that on April 3 draft age males will do more than just turn in their" cards. Speak- ing in a noreauvian terms, ne hopes that they will view the act as a beginning of a "redefinition of life." You HOWEVER, campus discussion is not primarily concerned with morally based acts of Resistance. Rather most queries are con- cerned with short term courses of action like leaving for Canada and delaying and harassing the draft system through lawsuits and pro- tracted appeals. Church says emigration to Can- ada is approaching a point where it may begin to hurt U.S. man- power requirements. It is estimat- ed that 15,000 to 20,000 men have left already, settling primarily near areas around Toronto or Vancouver. The Resistance expects that with the end of graduate deferments, the rise in emigrations to Canada will severely affect the nation's technical capacity. One local member estimates that as many as 800 University students may eventually settle in Canada. There is also the possibility of initiating legal action. Experts have calculated that as few as 5.000 court appeals could clog both the judicial and Selective Service systems for up to two years, However, the Resistance be- lieves that University students are knowledgeable enough to find out about these alternatives on their own. While this argument has merit, it neglects the real necessity for collective action on the campus. Both emigration and legal harass- ment are far more likely to be po- litically effective if they are done on a group, rather than an indi- vidual basis. And leaving students to fend for themselves will de- prive many potential resisters and evaders of the psychological and emotional support of working within a group. Resistance has chosen to seek out those groups in society who it believes do not know the alterna- tives - the poor and the unedu- cated. IN CHOOSING to emphasize community organizing Resistance has correctly perceived that the nation's poor are potentially the most effective political force in the nation. But what they neglect is that draft resistance is a role for the middle class students and not ghetto residents. The poor have too great a problem in making ends meet to worry about choos- ing alternative life styles. What Resistance forgets is that the poor can only be organized by the poor. The most relevant course of ac- tion, both politically and morally, is for Resistance to continue to focus on middle class organizing, primarily on college campuses. Locally while Resistance has put a great deal of effort into mo- bilizing students through work- shops, meetings and individual contacts, there still remains thou- sands of potentially sympathetic students who need to be reached. The best hope for the anti-draft forces is to begin concentrating on reaching the potential resister -the middle class college student. While not glamorous, such a course of action could create a draft resistance movement which would be an effective political force. From there efforts could branch out into the community as it brought the draft system to a halt. 4 Come Home, Resistance October's Washington Marci What the resisters want now is for their supporters to channel their efforts into educational projects among the poor. For reaching those people-particular- ly the poor-who have no clear idea about their rights or alterna- tives to the draft has become the main goal of the Resistance. RESISTANCE members feel that they can build an effective polit- ical force among the disenfran- chised powerful enough to lead the way to basic and fundamental changes in national policy. However, Resistance is trying to tred the same path which such groups as Citizens for New Poli- tics and, to a lesser extent, Stu- dents for a Democratic Society have found less than rewarding. In doing this they are obviously going beyond the simple issue of draft resistance and using the draft to begin a politics of the disenfranchised.- Warren Camp, referring to Re- sistance efforts at organizing sup- port in Harlem said, "We just don't look very visible to them." Chicago Area Draft Resistance (CADRE) reports the same prob- lem-lack of support for Resis- tance among ghetto dwellers. "Their attitude seems to be 'why fight anymore' and they accept going into the service right on the spot," reports Mitchell Hilton of CADRE. The problem is simply that most of the poor do not see the draft as major an issue as do students. To them the draft is tangential to the problems of poverty and lim- ited opportunities. Furthermore, this new attempt by Resistance is another attempt by the non-poor to organize the poor for what are ultimately middle class ends. ARNIE BAUCHNER of Ann Ar- bor Resistance reports that local efforts have so far met with "very poor results. Ann Arbor Resis- tance has tried leafletting at the induction center and bus depot where registrants leave for their physical in Detroit and contact- ing local men who are 1-A. The goal of community action is to make the residents aware of their rights and options. Local re- sistance members recognize that community action involves a long te'm commitment and that only by a very slow, painstaking pro- cess can this ever be achieved. But they consider this necessary. By focusing its attention on community organizing, Resistance is abandoning two profitable or- ganizational efforts. In fact, by phasing out large demonstrations and organizing on the campus Re- sistance is abandoning two major features of its work to date. Dennis Church believes that the local Resistance has received two major benefits from past days of Resistance. First public collective action has generated the kind of psychological enthusiasm which aids organizing activities. And the Days of Resistance were instru- mental in breaking down the in- dividual's sense of alienation that dealing with the Selective Service can create. But as Church explained, "After the Pentagon March there was lots of talk about demonstrations being counter-productive." Organizing has been quite suc- cessful on college campuses. Most returned draft cards have come from campuses like this. For ex- ample, Ann Arbor Resistance re- ports that it has been innundated with serious inquiries about alter- natives to the draft from Universi- ty students. 4 Where there's smoke, there's fire Cap ita lism, the Thitrd o-rid and the Pill By DAVID EPSTEIN Liberation News Service A FULL-PAGE advertisement in a recent New York Times sug- gests that the answer to crime in the streets is birth control. A shock photograph of a hairy youth attacking a middle-class, middle-aged man at knife point tops the ad, which says "the qual- ity of life in this great country of ours is deteriorating before our eyes. . , . Is there an answer? Yes -birth control is one." The spon- sor of the ad, the Campaign to Check the Population Explosion, is only the latest in an array of powerful institutions that are adopting population control as an important weapon in social engi- neering. Included among the sponsors of the ad are Eugene Black, ex-head of the World Bank, Dixie Cup ex- ecutive Hugh Moore, long a bank- roller of birth-control activity; Frank Abrams, ex-head of Stand- ard Oil of New Jersey; and John Cowles of the magazine and news- paper family. Population is political. Lyndon Johnson says that every five dol- lars spent on population control in poor countries is equal to a hun- dred dollars spent on economic development. Israeli leaders call on their Jewish citizens to have mnore babies as "internal immigra- tion" to match the rapid growth of the Arab populations in the newly occupied regions. Southern states in the U.S. have relatively liberal laws on birth control, steri- lization, and now abortion-the Georgia legislature is the fourth in the U.S. to pass a law widening grounds for legal abortion. The reason: to check the rapid growth of the black population. Brazilian bishops joined leftist students in protesting the sterilization of women in the underpopulated Am- azon region where U.S. speculators are buying seemingly poor for possibly mineral-rich land. The use of birth control devices is not immoral in itself. Control of their own bodies is a pre-condition cutting population growth rates in countries such as South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand. India and Egypt. Black people in the U.S. are another target. THE BASIC instrument in the overseas campaign is a small plastic device called the coil, the Lippes loop or the I.U.D. ("intra- uterine device"). When inserted into the opening of the womb, this device, a foreign object, somehow -the precise mechanism is not known-causes sterility, supposed- ly reversible if the coil is removed. Unlike condoms and the dia- phragm, the I.U.D. does not de- pend upon foresight in the heat of passion, nor does it require liter- acy skills like counting or reading a calendar as do the rhythm method and the pill. Using the LU.D., a mobile team can enter a village and indefinitely sterilize as many women as can be pressured into permitting insertion of the inexpensive device by class defer- ence to white-coated medical per- ed and ready for future exploita- tion and settlement. A later proposal by think-tank Hudson Institute to create a series of inland lakes on the Amazon added fuel to the flames. One of the proposed lakes would flood Manaus, the Amazon valley's sec- ond city and capital of Amazonas state. Brazilian Senator Mario Martins says Americans plan to use the area either for resettling U.S. blacks or as a refuge for use after a nuclear war. -Birth control would prevent the growth of a local population whose displacement might lead to long-term bitterness like that of Palestine Arabs displaced by Is- rael's expansion. A less bizarre critique of popu- lation control observes that in peasant societies large families are one of the main sources of self- esteem and prestige people have. In the absence of social security systems, children also provide the only hope of support in old age. On the other hand, large families are encouraged by landlords be- front lines of this battle against population growth. A Rockefeller- dominated group called the Popu- lation Council spends $5 million annually on grants in bio-medi- cal research, demography and ac- tion programs. The Ford Foundation, with a program similar to that of the Population Council, has spent about $100 million on population control. Nearly $10 million has been spent on field programs in South and Southeast Asia, where U.S. bombs now effect a more di-' rect check on population growth. Expenditures are high in such tightly controlled U.S. satellites as South Korea and Taiwan, and in India, "showcase of democracy" where food production per capita is 30 per cent below that of so- cialist China, due in part to an archaic land tenure system. Now the U.S. government aid program is budgeting about $35 million on population control. Ford, which sees its programs as "seed money" to promote certain lacking in a touch of missionary zeal. Ford Foundation Population Program Officer Lenni Kangas defended the idea that black grievances in the U.S. should be redressed, and denied any anti- black intent in birth-control pro- grams. Blacks, like the poor coun- tries in general, don't need more people, say's Kangas, but healthy, educated, emotionally secure peo- ple-which won't happen unless population growth is limited. George Varky, an East Indian economist who works for Planned Parenthood, insists that 70 per cent of the U.S. poor to whom subsidized birth control should be directed are white. Half of the blacks, however, are in this poor group, so any such program would have a disproportionate effect on black population, which some black radicals think will enable them to control many central cit- ies in the next decade. Condemnation of birth control was a theme of one of the resolu- tions at the 1967 Black Power conference in Newark. Birth controllers like Kangas and Varky contend that they fa- vor other programs to combat poverty, but that birth control is an essential element, since cheap death control (vaccines, anti- biotics) has cut into the balance between deaths and births. This leads to rates of growth higher than any in history. Others contend that it is not overpopulation, but exploitation and inefficiency that cause under- development and poverty. Arable land lies fallow or is used for high-profit, low calorie products like meat. Monocrop agriculture for export distorts the rural economy. Educa- tion is non-technical, and the up- per and middle classes disdain practical tasks. Many ,underdevel- oped countries export capital to the U.S. even as thousands are unemployed or underemployed in country and city. Poor countries are denied access to technology, as in the case of 0 Birth controllers, it should be emphasized, do not see themselves as Dr. Strangeloves plotting the course of the world toward some macabre fu- ture. In best Eastern Establishment style, they are liberals who talk the language of humanitarianism. In fact, their advocacy is never lacking in missionary zeal. y * i sonnel, petty rewards, propaganda or coercion. Sixteen per cent of South Kore- an women of child bearing age have been sterilized by this meth- od. Unauthorized experiments with the I.U.D. caused a row in Brazil last year. Medical students from the University of Goias discovered Presbyterian medical missionaries inserting the devices in women in small settlements near the strate- gic Belem-Brasilia highway. This area is very much underpopulated cause they tend to costs at rock bottom, marriage binds people keep labor while early to the soil. IN CONTRAST to agriculture and other high-labor industries, U.S. extractive and consumer goods producers might stand to gain from population control. They hire small numbers of peo- ple at relatively high wages, and in the case of consumer goods, they concentrate on luxury items protected by high tariffs that were formerly imported. policies and projects, is very pleased. GRANDDADDY of the popula- tion control agencies is the Plan- ned Parenthood Federation, which operates domestically, and urges a $100 million Federal program to get poor women to have fewer' children. Heavy outlays for research re- flect birth-controllers' dissatisfac- tion with current hardware, un- suitable, except for the I.U.D., for use among people who lack mid-