Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSrTY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD INCONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Czechmate for Stalinist Politics . . ere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NDAY, APRIL 7, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA ABRAMSON The Federal Role in the Ghetto: A New Rendezvous With Destiny IMAGINE President Johnson's dilemma. courageous and charismatic Negro leader has been brutally assassinated. Riots, now almost a part of the urban landscape, have erupted in cities around the country. The quandaries posed by the ghettoes show no signs of going away by themselves. Monday night the President must ' tell the Congress and the nation what the government intends to do about them, yet there is really very little he can say. The government has been trying to do something aboutracial and ghetto prob- lems throughout the Johnson adminis- tration. The President can boast a copious list of social legislation: the Civil Rights measures of 1964 and 1965, head start 'programs, i model cities programs, added social security benefits, govern- ment-industry co-operation- to train the unemployed, Yet the problems have not seemed es- pecially amenable to federal solution. 4ot enough money has been spent, of course. Although the past few years have seen a liberal administration and liberal Congresses, the gigantic sums of money needed to make the federal programs work have not been' forthcoming. The basic conservatism of the American peo- pl and their representatives and a costly war in Asia have served to keep a tight rein on domestic spending. NSUFFICIENT funds, however, have not alone crippled federal attempts to solve social problems. Even where pro- grams have been instituted they have often been counterproductive. A grow- ing disparity' between unexceptionable intentions and abysmal results has been the sad history of federal social programs 'since the end of World War II, and before. The Federal Housing Act of ,1949 promised "a decent and standard dwell-, ing unit" to every American. But the Urban Renewal program which sprang from it coupled with the proliferation of federal highway construction has de- stroyed hundreds of thousands of hous- ing units and replaced them with higher priced housing, thus raising inner city rent by reducing the available supply of housing while serving suburbanites who can get home fromdowntown jobs faster at night' *,Aid to Dependent Children provides subminimal incomes to families where parents are unemployed. Worse, ADC has encouraged the break-up of poor families and given little incentive to 'underskilled unemployed to take what menial' jobs they are able to perform. * All of the programs, even those- like the Head Start program and federal subsidies to industry to train the unem- ployed-which seem to point in the right direction, discourage the formation of black enterprise and separatist institu- tions through which black people can win their rights and privileges as Americans The need for black institutions, black cilture, consciousness, sense of manhood, cannot be understood outside of an his- Dogmatism FRIDAY afternoon a student and a beautiful white husky-collie puppy walked into the senior office. The stu- dent asked about joining The Daily staff and as I stood in a corner of the room talking to him his dog walked over to my desk and rather irreverently defecated upon the floor next to it. Considering some of the letters to the editor The Daily has received this week, it is obvious that the dog was merely a ttempting to play consensus politics the only way he knew how. -U.L. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press, O )legiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 120 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan, 48104. Daily Percept Monday during regular academic school year Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrie. ($5 y mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). torical context. Much has been written on this, from E. Franklin Frazier to Christopher Lasch. Perhaps the most succinct and practical statement is the one with which Frances Piven and Richard Cloward, faculty members of Columbia's school of social work, began their article in last week's New Republic: "If there is a lesson in America's pluralistic history, it is that the ability of an outcaste minority to advance in the face of majority prejudices partly depends on its ability to develop coun- tervailing power." JOHNSON'S dilemma is that the govern- ment can undertake little positive dramatic action in this work of develop- ing countervailing power. With the Civil Rights measures (includin'g, hopefully, a strong federal open housing law in the near future) the administration will have completed its work of constructing avenues for the integration of middle- class Negroes into white middle-class society. Yet the federal government can do something, however unspectacular, for the massof blacks in the ghetto. It can concentrate its funds into those more effective programs which still hold out hope of obtaining practical results. It can get out of the way, resolving not to institute programs which would impede the development of separatist power cen- ters. And it can fund a guaranteed in- come plan which will provide the poor with an income level compatible with human dignity and at the same time not discourage black initiative. Blacks must build their own institu- tions. They must run their own school systems, even if they have to use white teachers. They must build their own political machines. They must run their own businesses in the ghetto, whether co-operatively or individually. They must not allow their initiative to be destroyed or their manhood insulted by well-in- tentioned but condescending w h i t e agents of federal government programs. All this they must do. B UT THE federal government can do something as well. By channeling the bulk of its funds into programs which will have immediate long-range effects -like head start and like subsidies, toj industries for training-the government can strike at the fear of failure which hinders the education of ghetto children and 'provide meaningful and lucrative employment for the unemployed. Although blacks must take control of inner city governments, the federal gov- ernment can stop the subversion of the inner cities it has undertaken through urban renewal, highway construction, the destruction of low-cost housing and metropolitan-wide planning agencies. Finally, the government can enact a guaranteed annual income law. The problem of progress juxtaposed with poverty is still with us, and in an era of rising expectations its consequences are accelerated. As many observers have pointed out, history will refuse to forgive a rich society which refuses to tax itself to lay an economic foundation for human dignity. Economists have demonstrated how such a program can be enacted without destroying the incentive to work: by establishing a program whereby earned income up to a certain level is added to subsidized income. While separatist in- stitutions are being built and solidified, the government can relieve the squalor of the ghettoes without stifling the im- pulse which will make those institutions possible. These programs mean an end to fed- eral planning and federal guidelines, for planning-and the paternalistic view im- plicit in planning that the planners know better how the planned-for should live their lives-is the sitrest way to obstruct the progress toward full citizenship which blacks must plan for themselves. THIS IS THE legacy of fed-eral failure and this is the unique challenge to federal powers which President Johnson should keep in mind as he prepares to face the joint session of Congress Monday. The role of the federal government which is necessary is not the traditional liberal By BILL LAVELY IN EASTERN EUROPE, the name of Joseph Stalin has long, brought unpleasant images to mind. Night arrests, purge trials and political executions typified his years in office. His ugly brutality, more than any thing else, has been con- demned by Communist Party lead- ers. Yet the political legacy of Stalin-repression, clumsy bureau- cracies, and conservative party structures--has survived the drive for "de-Stalinization." Repression is the most Well- known device of Stalinism, but far more influential to modern life in Eastern Europe is the con- servative leadership which he left behind. The Stalinist leadership was chosen on the basis of its medi- ocrity. Intellectualism of any kind represented a danger to the Stalin- ist system. Therefore, leadership by its very nature sought out the mediocre to replenish its ranks. The conservatism of this ap- proach is basically incompatible with modern technological ad- vancement. Yet the simple, dog- matic approach to sophisticated problems has continued ,to hinder economic and social advancement in Eastern Europe. But in Czechoslovakia, a move- ment within the party against proto-Stalinist policies has finally brought real revolutionary reform. TWO FORCES unique to Czecho- slovakia have combined to pre- cipitate the upheaval: the attempt of the Slovaks to wrest political power from the Czechs, and the basic incompatability of the ad- vanced Czechoslovakian economy With the outmoded Stalinist sys- tem for running it. Recent months have seen the, ouster of hard-line Stalinist An- tonin Novotny by the party cen- tral committee and his replace- ment by liberal Alexander Dubcek. With Dubcek has come a start- ling program of reform. Censor- ship is" gone. Opposing views mray be voiced, and criticism is actual- ly encouraged. The "democratization" drive has brought with, it such an at- mosphere of inquiry and self-crit- icism that Czech newspapers are bringing forth a parade of skelet- ons from old Stalinist closets. This week, the catharsis continued as the discredited Novotny con- fessed his Stalinist sins. Just as significant as Dubcek's liberal policies, however, is the fact that he is the first Slovak ever to head the Czechoslovakian government. Czechoslovakia only came to- gether as a nation in 1918, when Slovakia was united with the Czech-speaking principalities of Bohemia and Moravia. Since then, the Czechs have held power over the Slovak minority.- This situation has added Slovak resentment to the already poor relations between thetwogroups. Recently, Slovak party members have attacked the Novotny govern- ment for its economic discrimina- tion against Slovakia. It was no coincidence, then, that the movement againsttNo- votny was lead mainly by Slovaks. BUT MORE important than the Czecho-Slovak dispute were the economic, failure of the Novotny regime. Czechoslovakia is unique in Eastern Europe in that it was the only nation to come under the reign of Stalin with an already 'highly industrialized and success- ful economy. All would have Been right in .. in Prague, a movement within the party against proto-Stalinist policies .. Czechoslovakia had that economy' stayed successful. But the industry which had flourished under cap- italism suffered under the Stalin- ist "command economy," and, by 1960,'a major economic crisis had developed. The dispute which occurred in the top levels of the party over the causes and solutions to this crisis began the, actual =movement to- ward liberalization in Czechoslo vakia. A movement to seek the advice of specialists and to take a more enlightened view of economics gained strength over the tradi- tional dogmatic approach. Econ- omists were calledI in. Frank dis- To the Editor: ON E OF THE ear frustrating exp freshman law stude law" purblindly ac very basic tenets a erects a structure h questioned assump "it is not the time challenge these ass at worst, it is heres awesome assumpti all assumptions se naive attitude tha "the best of all p and all we need do i little imperfections. If one opens both around he may soo the patches havec original garment what we have is patched garment bu outworn loosely jo do not mean to wri conceded hope n dirge, but I. do s healthy skepticism der. The "givens" n to be challenged. No Are religion or n states rights unifyi or are these rather which not only s some men but tos from others? These troublesome questi because belief in the life much easier fo ual, but the disfun on the rest of th may be crippling. Perhaps the sing the most onerous r the individual's gr his assumptions or "right" ones; thisi this faith rendersb learn from the expe BertoldrBrecht's M suggests that man i learning. MotherC mendicant who enc that she can suppor by following the battle to battle, se: them. One after anoth Courage's children the war, but she co ageously" to promot ing to save the res dren. Then the last a result of the war Courage has sacrifi children to the wa ically, tragically, s that her childrenn What is the lesson is that there is no le ly because she is so what she must do, and personal expe her nothing. THURSDAY nigh man was murdered- perceptiveness, who whose political aw utter charm overs Kennedys' and the they could but app competent in the s majestic stature. He was a man ofv truly be said, "he st like a colossus wh men creeped about Letters to the Editor on the Death of Reverend King that must be learned.' The next suburbs. We p liest and most few months may tell wheth'er or to the blacks, eriences of the not the "true believers" can be feared, but s nt is that "the shaken from their erroneous to the police, repts so many faiths or whether we are a nation is overlooked. s "givens" and of Mother Courages who sacri- And comfo from these un- fice all to nothing. The question Its National ( tions; at best of whether man learns from his already served nor place" to experiences or whether the only for sending th umptions; and, lesson is that there is no lesson men to black g y to do so, The may soon .he answered. Will we find on underlying 1 -David Goldstein, "70L our eyes to ems to be the overflowing to t we are near For the Poor lot by the Arm ossible worlds" To the Editor: men find it ea Is patch up the To tE r: ask questionsI DR MARTIN Luther King, Jr. harsh to the - eyes and looks spent the last few months of lice, but these n realize that his life preparing for the South- the President' nsrealie tht ern Christian Leadership Confer- on last yea consumed the ence's "Poor People's Campaign" mounting dea and perhaps scheduled to begin In Washing- news does no no longer a ton, D.C., later this month. He Aewe o ao it merely some had planned to lead thousands of ers aise ned patches. I poor people in a prolonged, non-a against a sys te a lament of violent demonstration aimed at teantyarsrsi or a funeral convincing Congress to enact leg- tently resorts i uggest that a islation to meet the needs of the threat of viol may be in or- poor: To wipe out slums and re- political, soc may well need build the cities, to extend quality problems? w! education and medical services, It is impo nationalism or to create jobs and provide guar- while America ng phenomena anteed incomes for all. It was to jury to black divisive forces be, in his words "a last desperate ket the Natio erve to unite attempt to avoid the worst chaos, at Ann Street separate them hatred and violence any nationW stating at 3: Dmay well be has ever encountered." 8. We urge e ons especially The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, Dr. protest thei m might make King's successor as President of America to r the.individ- SCLC has said that Dr. King's thus honor the ctional effects dream-"That one day this na- Luther King. e society just tion will rise up and live out the --Rev. and V true meaning of its creed"-must Nancy Ba le belief with not die with him and the cam- Bill and L epercussions is paign will continue as planned. Bert and 1 at faith that Funds are needed to help fi Ed and El beliefs are the nance this operation. The bucket Julen and is so because drive which began on the Diag t Richard a iim unable to on Friday will continue on Mon- Mi. and M! himences of life, day and Tuesday. Those wishing Rev. Rona other Courage to contribute by mail should Eric Wolf s incapable of send their checks to: SCLC Poor Stuart an Couagele; o "People's Campaign, c/o Michigan Couragew r sa Daily, and it will be forwarded D t her children to SCLC headquarters in Atlanta. soldiers from Jacqueline A. Evans To the Editor: Iling goods to --John P. Evans OMMENTIN C page edito er of Mother Hypocrisy cannot chastise are killed by To the Editor: taste in the t ntinues "cour- MARTIN LUTHER KING has your editorial. e it, ever hop- been assassinated. I accused The LI t of her chi- We abhor the response of white taste. Also, I d tchild dies as America to the assassination as your assertio , and Mother much as we abhor the assassina- Johnson and ced all of her tion itself. have involved r which iron- White America has responded mistaken situa he supported to its own act of racism by send- HowevIc might survive. ing in the National Guard and I ever believe ? The lesson state and local police to 'control' solely or parti sson! Precise- black people. Blacks for whom fronts us toda certain about Dr. King's death was but the frontsa~ very graphic latest in a long series of such accept as a re riences teach murders are offered not even the so much mone from the doni promise ofa program of social the war, becau change. They are offered the in- problem. t a very great sult of police invasion. Instead of Irstiem . a man whose responding with a serious attempt ithe veral se eloquence, to understand or to change racism the blame else reness, whose and those institutions by which the situation t hadowed the it lives, white America finds. it sen. By trans Johnsons' so better to cordon off black com- rather than lo ear rankly in- munities all over the country. So hearts, where hadow of his does white America reaffirm the lies, we, the w pattern of the past. So does it United Statesi whom it could add to its complicity in Dr. King's worse. The Ne rode the world death, reveal its fear of black country cannot iile we petty men, and rush to contain those side until we1 beneath his whom it does not or will not Negro with the cusion and liberalized economic policies resulted. The high-level split caused gov- ernment pronouncements to con- tradict each other. Each faction would give its orders to the lower echelons of the massive bureau- cracy. The cautious bureaucrats, not exactly sure which orders to follow, took the safest path and interpreted policy in the most am- biguous way possible. Enforcement of previously strict rules of censorship became more ambiguous, too., Gradually, the disagreement among party leaders was translated into a general re- laxation of government control. This process, which began in the early sixties, brought gradual liberal reforms to Czechoslovakia. Previously repressed writers' were rehabilitated. New appraisals of Czechoslovakian history w e r e made. Slovak nationalism was as- serted and tolerated. Czech poli- cies became increasinglo move liberal. , Then this spring, the last ob- stacle in the path to democratic reforms -Novotny himself --was removed. Replacing him is a lib- eral and a Slovak, a man who promises to make Czechoslovakia a true "socialist democracy." Whether Dubcek will make good' his promise is still open to ques- tion. If he does, it will inevitably hasten the pace of democratic re- forms throughout Eastern Europe, and usher in an entirely new phase of Communism. YET there are good reasons to doubt the permanence of the new freedoms. The hopeful atmosphere in Czechoslovakia today is rem- iniscent of the elation which fol- lowed Gomulka's takeover in Po- land in 1956. The hopes for liber- alization were dashed then, and they could be today. Even more doubtful is the likeli- hood of a democratic government emerging in Czechoslovakia. Czech intellectuals claim that democracy can only succeed if opposition parties are permitted. The Dubcek government has ruled out this possibility for now. But the lack of an opposition party should be no real barrier to democratic government. The Czech Communist party has shown that sufficient dialogue and op- position can exist within a party to produce quite radical reforms, 'One could ask whether the United States would be signific- antly different, significantly less free and stripped of opposition if only one party existed. It is an ex- tremely doubtful proposition, What must be a prerequisite for a Czech democracy is the estab- lishment of democratic institutions quite separate from the Party. The government, the courts and the law must be responsible to, yet protected from, the Party. IF THE BASIC institutions are not changed, and the Czech gov- ernment continues to be the same, entity as the Czech Communist Party, liberal policies will be mere- ly that. In that case, freedoms could be revoked as easily as they were given. reach law and order whose rebellion is upply Stoner rifles whose lawlessness rtable Ann Arbor? Guard Armory has i as a staging area e Michigan Guards- ghettos in Detroit. i it as easy to close the trucks literally the public parking ory, as the Guards- sy to shoot first and later? (It may seem Guardsmen and po- are the findings of s own Commission *'s riots and the .th toll in today's t contradict them.) )w our black broth- rs to stand alone tem which consis- to violence and the once in the face of ial and economic ssible to stand by adds insult to in- people. We will pic nal Guard Armory tand Fifth Avenue :30 Monday, April veryone to join us: response of white assassination, and momory of Martin Vrs. Daniel Burke ncroft ouise Derman Michele Garskof len Geffner eNancy Gendell nd Jean Mann rs. Walter Paul ld Tipton I Lucy Karabenick mestic Blame G on your front rial of April 1, I e you fornusing poor aiming and tone of ,No one has ever )aily of using good o not disagree with n that President his administration us in a tragic and tion in Vietnam. annot now, nor will that Johnson is ially to blame for crisis which con- y. And I refuse to ason the fact that y has been diverted estic problems for ise that is not the y attitude concern- situation, of putting where, which causes o persist and wor- ferring the blame oking into our own the problem really hite citizens of the make the situation gro unrest in this even begin to sub- begin to treat the respect he deserves V Choosin gSides For the Revolution By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN The assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King may have an effect on the United States far more lasting than even several days of rioting in the nation's major cities. Even in relatively quiet Ann Arbor I could see an increased impetus for change as 200 blacks met Friday night to consider possible action, in the wake of the Nobel Peace Prize winner's death. The meeting was calm. But even In that calm there was a kind of slow tumbling-over-and-over feeling you experience when the pace accelerates. ("All praise to the black man, Get the gun.") The feeling was strong enough to pervade some of the speeches- even a q> iet speech by Councilman H. C. Curry (D-First Ward). "The- handwriting is on the wall. There's no corrupt government that can stand forever," Curry told the audience. "The end is just about here for the white man." The words left his lips and spread softly over the group. Curry has been a councilman for several years, working in the mainstream of establishment institutions, working through the system. Yet neither Curry nor the other, more militant, speakers proposed any concrete or immediate action for the black community; there nothing had changed.f Nor was the change in rhetoric alone-militant Black Power in Ann Arbor was not born this week. But now people like Curry were espousing it, and young and old alike were absorbing it and contemplating it. "You've got to have guts, you've got to be :,a man who wants to stand up," said Curry. And then, too, there was a change in the attitude towards militancy. Curry and other speakers consistently appended "but don't go out there unorganized" to their calls for action. There seems to have been a realization that violence In its pure and simple form is not the answer. Instead, a plan, a master plan for the American black is neded to /liberate him from white oppression. ("All praise to the black man. Get the gun.") Sitting in the midst of the black audience, I was one' of about five whites in the capacity crowd at the Ann Arbor Community Center. But I did not, to my surprise, feel particularly white; in that respect I felt almost nothing. Neither did I feel any guilt of complicity with the white community. Instead, there was the glimmer of an old, familiar feeling-of being the extra man after they chose-up for a stickball game when I was young. It was a feeling of something happening that I should be a part of and yet could not join. It was the pent up repulsion and revolutionary spirit in me coming frighteningly near the surface. And while I did not feel especially white, I think I may have been trying very hard to be black. I wanted to get in there and help plan the fight through, help pilot the revolution. ("All praise to the black man. Get the gun.") I rationally understood that my pigmentation cannot change but I didn't feel it. For I could not grant that I should mourn less for Martin Luther King because I am white. And when Ann Arbor CORE Chairman Ezra Rowry told the group of "a conspiracy going on in this country against black people," I could only feel that the conspiracy was as much against me. Then, when Black Student Association President Larry Mann spoke of the need for unity and planning, I wanted to be with it. I realized 7 emild. ,,~ nt h in vad nn tri~i4vht tohp -t harv nt sufferedwI'ith them. I