Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by s+udents of the University of Michigan Rebuilding discrimination in Mississippi laynard 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. AY, JANUARY 9, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: ALEXA CANADY What price dissent? $240 and 7 days P IS CEASELESSLY observed that so- ciety's concept of an imperturable id unchanging system of Justice is ally a delusion. Unfortunately the re- nt sentencing of an individual convict- for sitting in at the LSA Bldg. last [1 serves to illustrate how blind justice America sometimes is. The student, Roy Mash, received a nalty amounting to $240 (a $40 fine us $200 in court costs) and must spend e week in jail. If he declines to pay e fine, he must serve an additional 45 vs. In other words, for committing a con- entious act of civil disobedience, t h e ident is faced with penalties stiffer an those often imposed on felons. And this is not the first irregularity in e sit-in cases. Although the majority those tried so far have received con- :tions, several students brought to trial r the same contentiofi have been found t guilty by local juries. They will pay . fines and serve no jail terms. Thus rks the District Court. HIS IS NOT to say that laws against civil disruption should be abrogated that the practice of trial by jury ould be abolished. Indeed, it is tradi- Credibility revisited tionally accepted that if an individual sees no other way than civil disobedience to redress or dramatize a grievance, he must be willing to accept the penalty for it. Although certain ideologues of the New Left refute this--arguing that one is not guilty if he breaks an illegitimate law- most students who sat in at the LSA Bldg. to protest the University's failure to establish a bookstore have submitted without resistance to arrest and court proceedings. They defend their actions,, but they expect convictions. However, it is difficult to understand the justification of such a harsh sent- ence. Although conviction carries a max- imum penalty of $100 fine, plus court costs and 90 days in jail, the sentence imposed in this case is, as several lawyers have observed, quite severe. IT IS APPARENT that the court hopes to discourage further civil disobed- ience on the part of University students by enforcing stiff penalties. This is pro- bably prompted by a desire to stifle future extralegal activity and is a reaction to the fact that more benevolent w o r k penalties imposed on those convicted in last year's ADC sit-in did not prevent this years action. But in the case of the LSA sit-in, merciful juries, together with last year's more sensible sentences, merely under- line the capricious operation of the court. WHAT IS NEEDED, is a more studied and realistic code for dealing w i t h civil disobedience cases - a code under which the political protester would not be treated like the felon. The urgency of finding new proced- ures for dealing with civil disobedience is increasing as is the incidence of such. cases. Clearly, more people are turning toward civil disobedience as the best means to effect social change and it is hard to refute the efficacy of the tactic. In its last report, even the National Com- mission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence was almost evenly split on whe- ther or not to endorse civil disobedience as the most successful means of spurring change. If the courts are to squash essentially nonviolent action in the name of justice, they will merely be confirming the worst suspicions of protesters about the closed state of American political channels. THE INCREASING incidence of civil disobedience, therefore, should not cause the court to throw the book at each and every offender, but should cause lawyers and legislators to re-exam- ine the book they are using. In sentencing, the court should con- sider the morality of an individual and his act as well as the letter of the law. Travesties like the latest sentencing should not continue. (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article is an extended version of an article which will appear in the Jan. 10 edition of the New Re- public.) By DANIEL ZWERDLING WHEN GULF COAST Mississip- pians talk now about the great disaster, they mean not only Hur- ricane Camille which ripped apart 600 square miles of their state last Aug. 17, but also the national re-' lief effort that has followed. For despite most heroic accounts of government programs to rescue Mississippi from one of America's worst natural disasters, there is growing evidence that federal and state relief programs have em- phasized physical reconstruction while ignoring human misery, and have discriminated against the poor and the blacks. Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Me) and Birch Bayh (D-Ind) and the special Senate Subcommittee on Disaster Relief, have tromped to Biloxi this week just to investigate such charges. Spurred largely by a recent report by the American Friends Service and Southern Re- gional Council, the investigation- which will move to Washington in February-may uncover a disaster porkbarrel crammed with govern- ment incompetence and political maneuvering. THE HURRICANE relief efforts read like a bumbling play with various federal and state agencies playing disjointed roles. The script began when Missis- sippi Gov. John Bell Williams formed an elite Governor's Emer- gency Council on Sept. 6, and or- dered it to write a comprehensive plan for the long-range economic development of the disaster area. Initial operating expenses for the Council come from a $495,000 grant made by the Commerce De- partment's Economic Development Administration. In a state which is 43 per cent black, and largely impoverished, Williams managed to appoint to the council white, rich bankers, realtors, attorneys and corporation executives. (This was not unusual, however. Out of 104 governor's councils in Mississippi, one mem- ber is black.) Despite an outcry from civil rights and anti-poverty groups, the council seemed good enough to President Richard Nixon -who 10 days later issued an executive order commanding "all, ed first for rehabilitation aid to the Red Cross, whose 29 emer- gency field offices gave outright grants-not loans-for food, cloth- ing and housing. However, "the Red Cross told people to exhaust all other possibilities for aid be- fore coming to them," reports Gil- bert Mason, Biloxi NAACP chair- man. So that meant going to HUD, to find a trailer to live in. If you were a single person without a family, HUD told you to forget it -no trailers provided, except to families. But families who didn't own a big enough lot, or families who couldn't clear the debris from their lots, didn't qualify under HUD regulations. Neither did poor fam- ilies who owned decrepit inland shacks which the storm damaged but left standing. Most trailers didn't evenarrive until October and November; and only 16 had trickled into hard-hit inland coun- ties by late October. The first families who managed to get them had to sign blank leases without knowing how long they could live in the trailers or how much rent they would have to pay. HUD simply hadn't formulated its terms. Before HUD even publicized the trailer policy, it suddenly an- nounced it would not consider more applications-because, as one official told the Friends, HUD was "unsympathetic" to anyone who had failed to apply. When local groups pointed out that in such confused circumstances hardly anyone knew about the trailer rentals, HUD finally extended the application deadline 30 days. Finally, at the end of October, HUD announced it would pay the $50 per month rent and utilities for only three months, although law permits the government to pay up to one year. After that, families would pay on their own. (HUD did add a poverty provision guarantee- ing that no one would have to pay more than 25 per cent of his in- come on the trailers. That sounds generous, but actually doesn't af- fect anyone unless his income falls below $2400 a year. ONCE STORM victims moved into their shiny but cramped (uar- ters, they could approach the fi- nance agencies like SBA, to see about rebuilding their homes and businesses. ling of national charities, is a quasi-government agency charter- ed by Congress as America's of- ficial human relief organization. It exercises autonomy over its funds and operations. Undoubtedly an invaluable pub- lie servant, the Red Cross unfor- tunately sees its mission as helping families to "resume normal family life in the home and in the com- munity"--which means restoring them to their pre-disaster level of living. Translated into dollars, this means that the poor get just enough to restore their shacks, while the middle class receive un- limited grants to rebuild their com- fortable carpeted homes. The Friends Service cites a case in which a $39.00a income family received a full bedroom outfit, while' another family which made $3 000 per year got a mattress. An official Red Cross food guide, furthermore, advises caseworkers to follow either a "low-cost" or EW VACATION TV special cheered >ur souls this winter. Right along- "Arnahml and the Night Visitors" and Wizard of Oz," there was good 01' himself, reminiscing to W a 1 t e r kite about how he never really want- be President at all. the former President filled t h e n, it seemed almost like 1967 again, 7, when "credibility gap" was t h e of the day,randall the voices from Lington seemed dripping with evil. wondered if anyone at the networks bothered to check with the film clips e 1964 State of the Union Address to . Johnson really fumbled in his vest et for his withdrawal statement, as aims. aetheless, one could almost feel nos- for the time gone by. Is it true we had a President who was a human and not a plastic windup poli- i doll? -JENNY STILLER Editorial Staff HENRY GRIX, Editor TEVE NISSEN RON LANDSMAN City Editor Managing Editor ANZALONE...........Editorial Page Editor STEELE............... Editorial Page Editor STILLER......... .. Editorial Page Editor A ABRAMSON ....Associate Managing Editor LIPPINCOTT ......Associate Managing Editor WAYNE...........Arts Editor GRAY ..... ..... ......Literary Editor BLOCK ..............contributing Editor BOGEMA ............Contributing Editor RADTKE...............Contributing Editor NCE ROBBINS ...............Photo Editor IR SHAPIRO.. Daily Waahington Correspondent :::: ..... . ..... l" ' " : " .:: :" ":" .. . .....": :::.V:::: :": 'A::": ~.iti .:"i':"':%'.":{ x.11 R" ::1'r. ".:'.." "..... .::J. ::'" 'y'.:." .::':: .. Y.. ...: ':.". :tiff{ :":':':tiv:'}: : y:.:.:':. .;':"::":.. ". ..The Red Cross unfortunately sees its mission as helping families to 'resume normal family life in the home and in the community'-which means restoring them to their pre-disaster level of living. Translated in- to dollars, this means that the po fr get just enough to restore their shacks, while the middle class receive unlimited grants to rebuild their carpeted home s." -HENRY GRIX Editor . BU R " 7 [} '"lT R '' urrrY. ~r..n ' . _ t { i y}, , b 1, I F', 2 ,\ e) ' a ,f, A cS y y . -n H "fi. t L 7 ' !c ' , 1 w y T _/+ + -, , . , . ' 1 F 1. ~ ^ I . R.- " l ,~~ t " k 4 s , Y i agencies and departments of the government of the United States S to coordinate their activities and efforts" through Williams' council. The council, as a result, has be- come the main clearinghouse for what will surpass $100 million in federal aid, and the virtual di- rector of Misissippi's economic future. ON THE FEDERAL level, the government in Washington hands all responsibility for disaster relief to the Office of Emergency Pre- paredness in the Executive Offices. According to statute, the OEP con- centrates after natural disaster on rebuilding public facilities, clearing debris, and funneling aid to state and local governments. The OEP spends the rest of its time preparing the nation to sur- vive an armed military attack. Who handles the human aspects of a disaster? The federal govern- ment parcels out that responsibili- ty to various departments and their innumerable agencies, such as Housing and Urban Develop- ment, the Red Cross, the Small Business Association, the Federal Housing Administration and the Office of Economic Opportunity. Clustered in turn around each of these organizations, each a mas- sive bureaucracy in itself, are countless local church, civil rights, charity and anti-poverty groups who want to help. The result is a plethora of independent, special- ized human relief groups with no centralized responsibility or con- trol. THIS IS WHAT faced over 4,000 destitute families as they began re-emerging in September from storm refugee camps, ready to be- gin reconstructing their lives. Over 80 miles of the Gulf Coast, once crammed with hotels, business firms and homes, lay utterly flat- tened by the worst hurricane in America's history. Two towns, Pass Christian and Long Beach, had been virtually blown from the face of the earth by 200 mile per hour winds; even their wreckage had washed away. The toll: 135 dead, 12,000 homes destroyed and badly damaged, and 600 businesses obliterated. One third of Mississippi's econ- omy had disappeared in a single storm. Where does a family begin when theu'irworl l hn:-, ihv~oo l blown In the coastal areas, the hur- ricane left SBA offices as wiped out and confusedas everyone else. One OEp official working in the field recalls "finding a man wan- dering the streets mumbling some- thing about the SBA. I asked him if he needed help finding their of- fice, and he said, 'Yes, I'm the local SBA representative.'" BUT EVEN storm victims who found the SBA couldn't get help unlessthey alreadyshad substan- tial assets - because they could provide no loan collateral. The poor never had the collateral to begin with, and middle and mar- ginal income families who had once had collateral, had lost it to Hurricane Camille. As a result, most loan agen- "moderate-cost" budget in doling out money to needy families. The low-cost food plan, reads the guide, "places a heavier reliance on less expensive food groups, such as potatoes, legumes (dried beans and peas), flour, and cereals. The moderate-cost food plan permits the use of higher-priced cuts of meat, eggs, citrus fruits, and some frozen and convenience foods." Red Cross officials claim this food budget was issued only as a guide, and insist that everybody in the disaster got equal food al- lowances. Citizens testifying at Biloxi's Senate hearings will disagree. As for housing grants: Disaster Relief Director Robert Pierpont acknowledges the disparity be- tween funds granted to the poor flies in desperate need of money to settle for a quick cash settle- ment, worth only a fraction of their total damage claims. THE MISSISSIPPI STATE Bar Association, apparently recogniz- ing the need for general legal aid, urgently called the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity on Aug. 22 to request for a legal services pro- gram. Within 12 h o u r s - the quickest grant approval in its his- tory - OEO was sending $50,000 to the Association, despite its no- toriously conservative, r a c i s t stance. (OEO officials n o w de- scribe the grant simply as a sac- rifice, in order to squeeze a tiny foot in the door of Mississippi's legal programs.) Since then, none of OEO's mon- ey has gone toward helping the poor. Instead, Bar President Boyce Holleman - the coast district at- torney who won fame prosecuting civil rights workers in 1963-65 - has funneled the grant only to- ward middle and lower-middle class whites. The whole 'effect is to bypass any involvement by community action and anti-poverty groups, who under OEO legal services reg- ulations should really control the entire program. Holleman, infact, has told law- yers volunteering f r o m various civil rights organizations to get lost. H 1 s legal aid "volunteers" consist mostly of fellow attorneys who lost their offices in the storm, and who have earned $10 per hour from OEO funds for their ser- vices. A local newspaper recently noted that even former Gov. Ross Barnett (who in 1963 blocked fed- eral marshalls trying to enroll James Meredith in the University of Mississippi) has helped out. NOW, ALMOST five months af- ter Hurricane Camille hit the Gulf Coast, most of the wreckage has been cleared a w a y and a few small businesses are struggling back out of the soil. Some roads are almost repaired, and the water and sewage lines, ripped apart like spaghetti, are being relaid. A few families have e v e n returned to their damaged b u t repairable homes. BUT MOST OF the 4900 fam- ilies still homeless are doomed to live the rest of the year in emer- gency HUD trailers scattered over the coast. Many of them - the poor, and the new poor who lost their hold- ings in the storm - don't know how they .will begin paying rent and utilities when their leases ex- pire this month, how they will purchase food (the state welfare department has refused to lower food stamp prices), or where they will find work. The Department of Labor re- cently released $800.000 in Emer- g e n c y Disaster Unemployment Compensation to Mississippi work- ers, but they will need more mon- ey than that. Prospects in the n e a r future don't look good. Industry hasn't started moving back, but when it does, businesses like the canning companies will probably mechan- ize. The Army Corps of Engineers didn't help during the debris cleanup when it let $21 million in contracts to out-of-state firms, rather than local firis who des- perately needed business. Local firms simply didn't produce the best bids, according to corps per- sonnel, who add "We can't give t h e m preferential treatment." Perhaps in future disasters the Army might make allowances. THE OEO has tried to initiate social rehabilitation, but curious- ly, the government has tied its hands. Within three weeks after the hurricane, OEO visited all the concerned federal agencies, ped- dling lengthy recommendations on flflmnnt an ., t+inn n,nurn~.o t c ur Care" fund appeal on television. But most of that money, donated by citizens wanting to ease human misery, has been invested by local governments in municipal bonds where it quietly earns interest. Mississippi's o w n Governor's Council, meanwhile, busies itself with grandiose economic plans for the future. Councilmen, industry and state political leaders have their eyes on consolidating t h e coastal communities into a model metropolitan region - whose shining glory will be a $100 mil- lion complex dripping with golf courses, boat marinas and high- priced apartments styled in a Ha- waiian motif. The worst-hit victims of t h e hurricane don't want a Mississippi Miami Beach, but so far the Emergency Council has made few efforts to listen to them. "Public hearings will come later," says Chairman Edward Brunini, an at- torney In t h e meantime, local black leaders Gilbert Mason and Robert Clark, the only Negro state legis- lator, have filed a formal co- plaint with t h e Commerce De- partment, charging the all-white council violates Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which for-! bids discriminatory use of federal funds. Commerce investigators are still studying the matter, but the Governor may first yield to grow- ing pressure to appoint three blacks to the Council - an easy way to quiet dissidents and avoid embarassing legal hassles. The source of this pressure is President Nixon, who apparently is using the hurricane disaster to build a solid political base in Mis- sissippi - and doesn't want to spoil everything w i t h racial troubles. From the moment Nixon turnedthe mostly Dixiecrat Gov- ernor's Council into a conduit for $100 million in federal funds, he has made valuable friends among the states top Democrats. Many have already flaunted their affec- tions at a state Republican fund- raising dinner last October f a r Vice President Agnew - who pre- ceded his pitch f o r Republican support by a grand tour of the disaster area. "The indication Nixon wants to do everything possible to help is certainly making an impression," notes Fred La Rue, Nixon's spec- ial consultant on political patron- age and now his personal liaison with the Council. That was the message in recent full-page news- paper ads picturing the President and - Williams in a f o n d hand- shake: "Mississippi thanks Pres- ident Nixon." IN THIS ATMOSPHERE, th e special Senate subcommittee hear- ings may provide some hard, much needed scrutiny of thefed- eral government's response to Hurricane Camille - and all dis- asters. There is still time to salvage the aftermath of Camille by assuring that as Mississippi rebuilds her- self, all the old patterns of pov- erty a n d discrimination - de- stroyed for one moment by na- ture - are not rebuilt by the gov- ernment. 4 ..~ ~ 1K r; r, II S'I u r, ll-, hh .1 <-N+ a7 Ir, loo / + cies automatically discriminated against most blacks-particuarly the SBA, which granted over 95 per cent of its loan dollars to whites. To make m n hers r se. maO ny and funds given better-to-do fam- ilies. "We can't give a poor man the money to go out and build a mansion," declares Pierpont. "Is it right to ride social reform on the coattails of tvaopiv?" Wr