'(PrA141an Batt# 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 Nonviolence and the American Way _ . Where Opinions Are Free, 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. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DANIEL OKRENT The Equitability of the Draft And the Professional Army ACCORDING TO MARC ' ANTHONY, "When the poor hath cried, Caesar hath wept." The times have changed and the poor are no longer crying. They are rioting. And as tears were met with tears, so violence is met with violence. "Caesar" is no longer crying. He carries a gun now. In response to poverty in America the federal government has instituted job training programs. The rationale being that if the"poverty stricken youth are educated the entire poverty situation will Work itself out. These type of programs seemed to be the right thing to do, but they have failed miserably. In the case of job training the error is obvious. The programs were aimed at the youth who could not enter college for academic or economic reasons. But any young American males who are not in college are not available for the job training programs either, they get draft- ed. O'ALLEVIATE THE PROBLEM, the Michigan chapter of the NAACP has proposed that a draft deferment be given to youths who enter some form of job training program. Under this proposal youths who are being drafted simply because they haven't money or the education to enter college would be given a chance to gain some practical education which would allow them to advance themselves in American society. The draft deferment would provide, as it does for a great many college stu- dents, the incentive needed to keep these youth in training programs; one of the problems facing 'job training programs such as the youth corps. The deferment would give a youth from the slums a little wider choice in life than that between the slum or the military. In many cases a youth will re- enlist in the military just to escape from the poverty at home. When this happens, the system needs to be changed. A FEW YEARS AGO the shortage in man power resulted in two lowerings of the draft standards. The purpose of this move was to reach those youths who could not obtain a college defer- ment. It was the easy solution to raising military manpower. The NAACP's proposal would remove this group from the draft. With a cut in its main supply of manpower the govern- ment would be forced to effect major changes in the inequitable draft system. From both sociological and economic- efficiency the most desirable solution would be a long-term enlistment, well paid professional milita'y. Socially, this would put an end to having people go to war-against their will, and fighting for causes the feel are not theirs. Economically, the armed forces invest millions of dollars annually in training. personel. At the end of each three or four year enlistment period, they lose their entire investment as the techni- cians they've trained leave for better paying jobs. Several Pentagon officials have expressed belief that such a system would lead to increased military ef- ficiency and economy savings over the long run would accrue from such a sys- tem. THE LOW PAYING MILITARY does, for the uneducated soldier from the slum, little economcally to rise him out of his poverty other than give him a skill that may be usefull after leaving the services. A, military whose pay scale would have to compete with other factions of the economy would not only benefit the en- listed man, but the entire' economy as well. The proposal by the Michigan NAACP could be the beginning of a change for the better for America's underclass. It could also be the long needed stimuli needed for a revamping of an outdated and discriminatory draft system. Whether it is or not depends on Congress' sincerity in rectifying the draft, and waging a real "war on poverty." -MICHAEL ROBERTS NONVIOLENCE IN AMERICA: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, Edited by Staughton Lynd, Bobbs-Merrill, 1966, 535 pp. By DAVID KNOKE I YND'S AVOWED purpose in documenting the traditions of non-violence in America is to dis- pute the comon belief that "non- violence is a philosophy conceived by Gandhi and Tolstoy, and re- cently imported into the United States by Martin Luther King, Jr." The book is a rich anthology of over 40 documents including such widely-regarded testaments as Thoreau's "Civil Disobenience," William James' "Moral Equivalent of War" and King's "Pilgrimage to Nonviolence." The documents follow an historical context from nonviolence's 17th century ori- gins with the Pennsylvania Qua- kers, its evolution through 19th century abolitionism and anarch- ism, to its present 20th century forms as a philosophy (pacifism) and a tactic (non-violent resis- tence to evil - most notably in the civil rights movement). The original forces that drove nonviolence to flower were fun- damentally religious. It is not coincidence that King, a Bap- tist minister himself, made his pilgrimage through the tenets of the Sermon on the Mount and the example of the Gandhian campaign to free India. It is not incidental that what- ever terms described nonviolence, they echo the commandments of Jesus. "The nonviolent resister not only refuses to shoot his op- ponent but he also refuses to hate him," writes King. "At the center of nonviolence stands the principle of love . . . We are not referring to some sentimental or affectionate emotion . . . Love in this connection means under- standing, redemptive good will." Centuries of fertilization and application of nonviolence in the abolition movement, the labor MANY OF THE DOCUMENTS go beyond the "I have a dream" type. Programmatic proposals and eye-witness accounts of nonvio- lence in action dominate the re- cent era. Draft resistence, which has blossomed in the past year as the Vietnam war escalates, may for war and in securing the de- sired impression of unanimity much easier." THE CIVIL RIGHTS movement in the South in the early '60's was the most impressive application of programmatic nonviolence. The wave of sit-ins, jail-ins and marches met with the endemic violence of the white South and produced an entire pantheon of heroes and heroic movements. In those days the Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee still believed in the ability of love and conscience to overcome in- justice. The sad self-destruction of SNCC in the bitter heritage of Charmichael and Rap Brown raises profound questions of the future oftnonviolent tactics if they cannot adapt, to the special form of racism in the North. "Real nonviolence," w r i t e s David Dellinger, "required an awareness that white oppressors and black victims are mutually entrapped in a set of relation- ships that violate the submerged better instincts of everyone. A way has to be found to relase the trap and free both sets of vic- tims." Not only in the Negroes' strug- gle for decency is nonviolence perilously close to extinction. That lingering, waking nightmare of America - Vietnam - has be- come a forge upon which non- violence will be tempered or broken. Staughton Lynd himself proba- ably knows this as well as anyone in the civil rights and peace movement. Since the death of A. J. Muste last spring, the mantle of spokesman for the peace move- ment is devolving more and more upon the shoulders of this quiet Quaker. LYND READ A DOCUMENT at last week's teach-in which is . a strong bet to be included in some future chronicle of the fortunes of nonviolent direct resistence. The document is a supportive statement by older persons for some 500 draft-age men who are expected to commit mass civil disobedience on Oct. 16 by re- turning their draft cards and re- fusing further cooperation with the selective service. Mass civil disobedience is a long journey from Thoreau's individ- ual refusal to pay his war taxes. Yet it is an integral and inevit- able outgrowth of the spirit of nonviolence during a war which splits America more bitterly than France was split over Algeria. "There was a time," said Lynd, "when we could spend two or three years as radicals and then go on to professional careers in middle-class America. The day of being patted on the head for going down to Missippi is over. "The day of being spit on as you come out of prison is coming'." FOR STAUGHTON LYND and others who have been raised in the tradition of nonviolent resis- tence, bearing witness to evil by direct action is a natural part of their heritage. By themselves they may ac- complish little. But by their ex- ample they may yet touch that part of the understanding hum- anity community which exists within even the most misguided of us. Author Lynd movement, pacifism and civil rights, h a v e created major changes. It has evolved from early concepts as largely a Chris- ian dutyto avoid potentially com- promising situations to a con- cept in which the resister actively engages his oppressor and tries to "exterminate all enemies by turning them i n t o faithful friends." well have taken its cue from Rev. A. J. Muste who wrote, after the draft law's passage, that pacifists should not accept alternative ser- vices to conscription. "To me it seems that submit- ting to conscription even for civil- ian service is permitting oneself thus to be branded by the State," Muste explained. "It makes the work of the State in preparing Letters: Problems Facing the Pilot Programs To the Editor: AS MOST OF THE Pilot stu- dents, we have read with in- terest the two articles and the October 10 editorial dealing with the Pilot Program. It is apparent that The Daily has finally brought to light most of the major problems confronting the Pilot students. We don't want to repeat what The Daily said, be- cause it did such a commendable job of pointing up what is present- ly lacking in the program. The one obvious omission is the fact that during registration, a great per- centage, of Pilot sections quickly fill up with non-Pilot students, leaving prospectively Pilots "up in the air." This is one additional item that must be looked into by the Standing Committee for Pilot Program as well as President-des- ignate Fleming. However, Pilot students have not been standing idlely by the run- way. The Student Pilot Council (S.P.C,.) has been formed within the student body to work towards as many of these needed reforms as possible. S.P.C. is a coordina- ting committee composed of rep- resentatives from the five auto- nomous Pilot houses, which hopes to form a more coherent commu- nity. Furthermore, through its structure, S.P.C. will bring togeth- er to resources of the academic. social and administrative capa - cities of the five individual houses. The Pilot Program was con- ceived with the "Wright" idea, but time has come for it to graduate into the "jet age." -Jack Myers, S.P.C. coordinator -Jeri Albertson Asst. Coordinator -Nan Rice, -Brian Zemach, Social Co-chairmen Barry's Boys To The Editor: THE PROLIX DIATRIBE in the Letters section of Wednesday's Daily against Senator Goldwater, his enthusiastic supporters, and those who hold that there are situations in which certain values take precedence over human life is an excellent, if unfortunate, example of the simplistic, atti- tude towards reality that seems to afflict the writer and so many of his contemporaries. Perhaps it is useless to com- ment on the ill-conceived and hastily prepared remarks of this young man whose personal ex- perience is so limited and whose study ofthistory has been so shal- low that he condemns war out of hand, recognizes no greater evil than death, and fails to rea- lize that he might well not be here in an American university among his liberal, intellectual peers if his immediate predeces- sors had adopted similar short- sighted attitudes in earlier per- iods of stress. Nevertheless, as the "partisan" who committed the apparently unpardonable sin of applauding some of Senator Goldwater's speech "vigorously" and who "proudly" admitted his preference for the honest Gold- water over the duplicitous mani- pulator Johnson, I have an in- terest in offering brief rebuttal to some of the charges and im- plications of the letter Mr. Har- wood ingenuously admits is emo- tional. No rational conservative sug- gests that men be killed because of their belief in communism. When this beliefnhowever, leads these misguided men to commit murderous attacks on village lea- ders, government employees and innocent civilians, then the re- alist may be led to the conclu- sion that killing these men is by far the lesser of the two evils. It is certain that Senator Gold- water would question an order to kill Harold Wilson, even if Con- gress said it was "vital to the 'Honor of The Country'." He re- alizes, as I do, that as long as Congress is elected by individu- als who arrive at snap judgments about fellow students' murderous instincts based on their "vigor- ous" applause and "a haughty look," then the orders of the Congress are to be automatically questioned. I for one am not afraid to live in a society whose moral stan- dards include a hierarchical ar- rangement in which Justice stands above human life. On the other hand, this society, known as America, also permits dissent and even emigration, for those unwilling or unable to put up with the chenilles of taxation - and patriotic service. -Cyrus R. Sisson, Grad International To the Editor: THANKS TO The Daily for bringing out some very timely reports on the International Cen- ter. It is indeed sad that this University which over the past 150 years has built up such in- ternational reputation as to be able to bring a glittering array of international dignitaries for the Sesquicentennial celebration, is now taking a path which will turn the International Center into a deprived reservation, betrayed, isolated and forgotten. As if things were not bad enough when the University raised the tuition by some $500 a year, the foreign student now finds that the International Center has to cut down on a number of services such as: the number of hours the centbr remains open, cut back the newspapers their receive, etc., indeed, cheap! In our opinion the International Center serves a variety of func- tions to the foreign student rang- ing anywhere from providing a second home, to sheltering him from abuse, be it from the Immi- gration Department, or any reac- tionary member of the Univer- sity's schools and departments, or from a regressive philosophy of the State. It is a deplorable situ- ation if the Center does not have proper operational budget. Some explanation from the Board of OPINION The Daily has begun accept- ing articles from faculty, ad- ministration, and students on subjects of their choice. They are to be 600-900 words in length and should be submitted to the Editorial Director. 4 'The Looking Glass' War ownD SAYS t D~ON'T GET ALONG. WITIA HIPP'IES ?" ET'S PLAY PRETEND and conjure up a young, blond, 1dCa!istic-type chap. He can be our hero. In the deeply rever- ed Horatio Alger tradition, he is a self- made man because he hasn't had the wondrous benefits of a college education. As any reader of "Babyhip" has al- ready guessed, our hero psychodelically decides to start an underground news- paper as the medium for his, message. Steeped in the capitalist tradtion, he patiently accumulates enough capital to pay for several trialt issues of his paper and even manages to gather an enthu- siastic staff. After spending the requisite three week to come up with a deeply symbolic "Alice in Wonderlandish" name for the paper, the staff, under the guidance of our intrepid hero, manages to deliver to the printer the dummy of the first issue only two days after the promised dead- line. IT IS ABOUT this point in our narrative when the tiny elves who have been casting a bright glow over our hero's enterprise vanish, and the cold, hard glare of reality destroys our pretty little tableau. For it seems last Friday our hero (Jef- frey Hoff) went to his local (Ann Arbor) printer (Demco Enterprises) to get 5,000 copies of his paper ("The Looking Glass") and recived instead the abuse of all present who loudly insisted that they were not going to print this sort of stuff. What the printers objected to, ac- cording to Hoff, was an article on resis- tence already printed in "Vietnam Sum- mer News" which, the printers main- tained, obliquely advocated the assasin- ation of President Lyndon B. Johnson. Since then Hoff has been turned down by at least six printers here in Ann Ar- bor, several in Detroit, and one in Man- chester, each of whom fears community reaction or disagrees strongly enough to refuse to print "The Looking Glass." If one wanted to dwell on the political implications of "The Looking Glass" af- fair one could make such hacknyed, but nonetheless true, observations as how incidents like this illustrate the funda- mental limitations of our allegedly demo- cratic society. But no amount of political polemic will get "The Looking Glass" published. Since printers are free to accept what they like, there is apparently no legal issue involved here. So unless a coura- geous printer is found, or "The Looking Glass" buys it own press, Ann Arbor's first underground newspaper will appear stillborn. THE POSSIBLE premature death of "The Looking Glass" would be a loss for the entire University community because it promised to be a courageous and con- troversial little newspaper which plan- ned to focus on the acute and relatively ignored problems of our "All American City." -WALTER SHAPIRO No Commen ATHENS, Oct 8 - The Greek military junta has asked Andreas Papandreou, who is in jail awaiting trail on charges of high treason, to advise it on economic matters. . . "Brigadier Patakos is understood to have visited Mr. Papandreou in the Averoff prison in Athens about 10 days ago. Mr. Papandreou, who headed a left- of-center faction of the Center Union party led by his father, former Premier George Papandreou, is accused of having conspired to have a group of sympathetic officers seize control of the army .. . "The Minister (Ionnis Rodinos-Orlan- dos, Under Secretary of Coordination and one of the officials responsible for dir- ecting the country's economy), backed by R n'ar PaatP lne iircii Mr Pana.n- Governors or the Vice-President of Student Affairs is urgently needed. -The Guild Council of Guild House Calcuta To the Editor: YESTERDAY (October 8) I was surprised to learn (through the UM Television "the Worlds of India") that Vasco da Gama land- ed in "what we now know as Cal- cutta." Indian history textbooks have always credited a small port on the westycoast of India with the first European landing-the name, Calicut. It was also heartening to know that the British had a very valid reason for conquering the land- they needed stability in the coun- try so that they could trade with it. I await the sequel to this pro- gram with curiosity. -Mahabanoo N. Tata Uniforms To the Editor: 0 FTEN WHEN I leave the sta- - dium after. a Michigan defeat I hear members of the crowd say to each other-by way of consola- tion, I suppose. "Well, at least we have the best band." But no such comments reached my ears last Saturday when Navy defeated Michigan. Small wonder, I think, with the Navy's drum and buggle corps making the Michigan band look, both in dress and in ma- neuvers, like something P.T. Bar- num might have dreamed up in one of his more jaded moments. Just the removal of those maize and blue sateen capelets would be a step in the right direction. -Elizabeth G. Patterson 0, 4 FEIFFER OM YE Hv ' RAC P - AV T' r TNVY- "OHE rr5 GREA'( i7RA' HAP A 'OI TY! AT flIYJS ACC(I ET CHILP. NAPE ED nYV -&L E7Y! j 60T t ~COU7 6AT SOCICTq/ HA' GONE' AWAYi M~Y $6 A 14A5 G&06 T'5LE'6iHAS 60k)E 1& ULM gITTt( A B'TMLMIM YEWOANJ' ACC~196 T K.)fOFCK IUP LOOKh AFTER GREAT 5OCIE7TY 1L W AY YE'6z-*... 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