x '" Q!yIi £fripan Datj Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan JAMES WECHSLER Vietnamizat ion and the postman 's son 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 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. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS SDS, U' both to blame in North Hall trashing HOPEFULLY, THE senseless destruction of windows and trophy cases at North Hall last Saturday night is not an indica- tion of the direction student activism will take on this campus., As the most visible manifestation of U.S. imperialism4 on c e n t r a 1 campus, North Hall, which houses the University's ROTC program, has borne the brunt of political activism over the past year. Although the ransacking of North Hall was motivated by sincere opposition to U.S. imperialsm, this petty vandalism can hardly be seen as a meaningful or pro- ductive political action. Organized by Students for a Democratic Society, the destruction at North Hall climaxed a noisy march by about 500 people from the Anti-Repression Teach- in through downtown Ann' Arbor and across campus. APPROXIMATELY 200 people remained around North Hall and in the true spirit of a high school pep rally, cheered their 30-man t e a m on to a victory against the enemy windows and trophy cases of the ROTC program. Apparently, few people at' North Hall questioned the value of this action, for when it is examined in any perspective at all, it must be condemned-both as a political statement or as a political tactic. Ransacking a building achieves nothing in any political context. There is a real need for the University to disassociate itself from any program. which serves or legitimizes the military. However, this goal can only be accom- plished with strategies which are per- suasive or massive enough to force the University's hand. THE ACTION at North Hall was as de- structive to the movement against imperialism as it was to the building it- self. At the very least it destroyed the credibility of the issue in the eyes of the community - at - large. But more impor- tantly, it alienated potential supporters of the movement against imperialism from participating in any united action at all. A political movement against imperial- ism should be militant, but militancy has to be distinguished from senseless vio- lence and malicious destruction. Even more disturbing is the manner in which .Saturday night's activities took place. The whole rah-rah atmosphere of the teach-in and its emotion ,charged climax are reminiscent of the pep-talks and appeals to patriotism which the mil- itary uses to get soldiers to fight in Viet- nam and put down riots. These political tactics cannot be excused by the morality. of the cause they are supposed to further. Advocates of a movement which con- demns the manipulation of minds should not indulge in the practice themselves. After all, the U.S. military may have as much moral confidence that its tactics tire justified by the cause which it sup- ports. MEANWHILE, THE University adminis- tration will announce today its offi- cial response to the violent demonstra- tions of the past two weeks. Ideally, this response will involve an apprppriate balance of concern for the security of the University and the rights of the individuals involved. Of necessity, the administration must be expected to protect the University by pressing charges against. those involved, if they are known. At the same time, however, the administration must guard against unfairly indicting those not di- rectly involved in the destruction, or seeking penalties too severe to fit the crime. HOPEFULLY, THE administration will choose to press charges through the student courts. The alternatives-action in the criminal courts or the schools and colleges-would seem unwise on a num- ber of grounds. Action in the federal or state courts could lead to penalties involving long jail sentences-punishment which would only harden views that American society is repressive and unresponsive to peaceful methods of change. Academic penalties like suspension or expulsion would be inappropriate on en- tirely different grounds. The -crime in- volved simply has no bearing on the aca- demic capabilities of those who partici- pated in the destruction. But if those i n v o 1 v e d in Saturday night's fiasco are to be held responsible for their malicious actions, the University administration must share the blame for the! sorry events. By allowing the exist- ence of an institution of violence and political domination on campus and by delaying positive action on the question until last semester, administrators have provoked a violent response. Through its support of ROTC, the ad- ministration has contributed to the frus- tration many students have felt in their inability to affect change through estab- lished political channels. -STUART GANNES -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN W ALKING INTO the lobby of our build- ing the other day, I noticed a postman engaged in quiet conversation, with one of the maintenance employes. There was an interval before one of the mysteriously- mechanized elevators arrived and I over- heard only a fragment of their exchange. First there was the letter-carrier saying: "My son just got the news - he's going to Vietnam next month." The other man said grimly: "No kidding. You sure?" The answer was: "Yes, he's got his orders. TiHE POSTMAN w a s a graying, grave figure and one was tempted to admit ov- erhearing his remark and pursue all sorts of questions about his private emotions. But I have never acquired a true journal- istic talent for intrusion inesuch moments; I was" rather relieved when the elevator door opened and I found myself removed from the scene. Afterward I regretted my reticence. For the largely untold story of t h e present phase of Vietnam is not that of the heir- alded "withdrawal" program but of those still on their way to that front, and of relatives for whom the reports of disen- gagement must have special poignancy. IN EVERY WAR there have been those who died in the last moment before the A bortio guns were stilled - or even because word of the armistice belatedly reached the sec- tor where they were under fire. But, as in so many other matters, Viet- nam has created an unusual circumstance. It is the declared policy of our government that we are on our way out, that we have forsaken any dream of military victory, and that the process of withdrawal is "ir- reversible." Whether that will prove to be the case if the adversary undertakes a major of- fensive may be debatable; certainly there remain some in the military who still cling to the fantasy that a new outbreak of large-scale fighting will bring a reescala- tion of the American commitment. BUT THAT IS not what most Americans think about (despite the warning contain- ed in Mr. Nixon's utterances). It is the general assumption that the war is "wind- ing down" and that there will be a steady stream of returning troops as the Novem- ber elections approach. Unless the pace of the program is accel- eratedsbeyond any current expectations. however, there will also be a continued procession of replacements. The son of the postman will be only one of many still destined for assignment to th a t blood- soaked country, and some of them will not come back. WILL THE NUMIBER of the victims be so limited that their departures (and deaths) will be unnoticed - except by par- ents and wives and children and immedi- ate friends of the family? Clearly that is the Administration's political calculation, bolstered by the hope that casualties will also be so significantly reduced that the impact on the electorate will be minimal. Still one wonders how long this apathy. can be sustained. Surely it is conceivable that there will be a new revulsion over loss of life in what is formally proclaimed to be the twilight of the war. For, except to those still deeply convinced that Vietnam is a crucial front for the forces of civili- zation, these sacrifices will appear increas- ingly senseless. And true believers must be asking whether there is any logic in any withdrawal if in fact we have so profound a stake in the outcome. WhAT HAS FORTIFIED the Adminis- tration's position since the high point of antiwar, manifestation last autumn is not merely the general impression that our role is nearing an end. It has been Mr. Nixon's success in promoting and preserv- ing the illusion that the only alternative to his program i5 to "cut-an-run" over- night in a humiliating, disorderly Dunkirk while Hanoi and the Viet Cong fly their flags over Saigon. The tragic failure of the antiwar forces- has been their inability - perhaps aggra- vated by the indolence of some sectors of the media -- to dramatize the point that there is an authentic option. Time a n d again there have been clear signals indi- cating that the emergence of a coalition regime in Saigon - one far more repres- sive than the military cabal run by Thieu - could open the way to a negotiated set- tlement. In Paris the other day UN Secre- tary General U Thant reiterated that view. IF SUCH A coalition inevitably means the triumph of .the Communists a nd a "blood-bath." why is it being urged by in- creasing numbers of non-Communist voic- es in South Vietnam? Are they ignorantly inviting their own execution? Or would they prefer the risks of peace to the per- petuation of a Saigon despotism that of- fers them neither peace nor freedom but the spurious fantasy of "Vietnamization" and indefinite extension of the conflict? In their current paralysis, the Demo- crats (with a few valorous exceptions) are abetting the conspiracy of silence on this issue. Will they finally speak out when their Policy Council meets next month? Or will they, too, treat as forgotten men the youths who must continue to perish in. Vietnam to keep Thieu and his generals in power? @ New York Post Up from the underground By JIM NEUBACHER IN JUNE, 1969, Sen. N. Lorraine Beebe (R-Dearborn) took the floor of the Senate to speak in favor of a bill that would h a v e liberalized the state's stringent abortion laws by allowing the op- eration when the pregnancy was dangerous to the physical health of the mother or was the result of rape or incest.- The only woman in the Senate startled her peers when she re- vealed she had undergone an abor- tion - a fact she had never even told her family. The response was a respectful standing ovation, but the vote on the bill disappointed Sen. Beebe's hopes. It lost 17-16. The senator went home t h a t night disconsolate, but convinc- ed her effort had made an impact. IT HAD. In Detroit and across the nation, newspapers and tele- vision networks picked up t h e story of her speech. One of the first calls she re- ceived was from her mother who said, "What have you done? Your picture is in the paper and they say you had an abortion." . But Sen. Beebe had felt compell- ed to make her remarks hardhit- ting. "I wanted to make these men realize that they were playing around with women's lives. All I had heard was the male ego being demonstrated in flowing tones on the floor. "Well, they had very little un- derstanding or feeling for what this was all about. They don't realize that a woman herself has to make the decision on abortion. "After the speech a movement surfaced. The underground which has existed for so long is begin- ning to come out. You can almost feel it shifting and gathering force and beginning to move under- foot." IT IS HARD to imagine S e n. Beebe as the leader of an under- ground movement. A conservative committed to the principles shared by many of her constituents in suburban Dearborn, Sen. Beebe has also devoted her time in the past year to working against the grape boycott. She urged house- wives to organize and buy Califor- nia grapes to break what she con- siders to be an illegitimate strike. Nevertheless, she is an o u t - spoken proponent of abortion re- form and far more radical in her feelings on this subject than many of her "liberal" colleagues. "I'm glad now that the bil11 failed the night I made my speech," she says. Because she be- lieves a more liberal measure now before the Senate may pass as a result of the developing ground- swell of public opinion. THE NEW BILL is presently being reviewed by the Senate Health, Social Services, and Re- tirement Committee, which is chaired by Sen. Beebe. "These bills are before my com- mittee' because this is a health issue, not a legal issue. I look at it from a medical point of view," she says. The committee has begun a special round of hearings on the bill in 12 cities throughout t h e state. "We especially try to hold hear- ings in the districts of those Sena- tors who voted against the b Il I last summer," she explains. IT IS IMPORTANT, she points out, that "abortion, if liberalized, will not be mandatory. It will be up to each woman to take into ac- count all of the arguments and make her own moral decision. This is the way it must be. We can't legislate morality, transform the moral and religious beliefs of the Senate into law. The individual must choose for herself." SEN. BEEBE feels that n e w abortion laws are not only desir- able but also necessary because of the danger of the present law. She recounts some of the many "hor- ror" stories she has heard con- cerning botched abortions and the experiences of desperate women. "In one Detroit hospital," she says, "about 40 women a year come in needing treatment be- cause of a botched abortion by some quack. It takes a tremendous amount of effort to save some of these women, and often they have to have hysterectomies. They can never bear children again, even if they want to in the future." BUT THE dangers of abortion are not only physical, she cites the testimony by psychologists vwhich shows that women who get safe, clean abortions when they need them have fewer resulting emo- tional problems than the women who are forced to have children. they don't want. And the unwanted children of- ten are on the receiving end when these women attempt to find an emotional release for their frus- tiations. Sen. Beebe is optimistic that these issues and others central to the bill are being brought f o r t h at the hearings. The good turnout and an intelligent 'discussion at these hearings could convince the Senate to pass the reform measure, she says. "NEVERTHELESS, we're going to make certain compromises to get it passed," she predicts. Two of the amendmens t h a t have been talked about. at t h i s time are welcomed by Sen. Beebe, and she feels they will not hurt the bill, but improve it. "We'll likely include the provis- ion that would allow the abortions only if done in an accredited lic- ensed hospital," she says. Although this has been criticized by some supporters of reform who contend this will make abortions m o r e expensive, and out of the reach of some indigent women, she points out that legal abortions are includ- ed under almost every health in- surance program in the country, including the popular Blue Cross plan. In addition, she says t h a t there are indications that the fed- eral Medicaid program will pay for abortions in the case of the fin- ancially impoverished. Another amendment welcomes by Sen. Beebe is the "conscience clause." This would say that no legal or disciplinary action could be taken against a doctor, has- pital,or staff member of a hos- pital who refused to participate in an abortion operation because he thinks it immoral," she explains. BUT THERE are amendments being talked about by more con- servative senators, she says, that might severely cripple the bill or change its intent. One of these, the "man-involved" amendment, would require t h e consent of the father of the child as well as the mother before the abortion could be legally p e r - formed. Supporters of the amend- ment claim it protects the inter- ests of the father, but critics claim that it is a crude move aimed at unmarried women, prostitutes, and all cases in which the relation- shiip is not permanent. SEN. BEEBE blasts this amend- ment, saying it contradicts the main principle of abortion reform -the woman should have the right to control her pregnancies, not the man. Sen. Beebe does not know how her outspoken position will affect her chances of re-election n e x t November from her predominant- ly Catholic district, but she is go- ing ahead with her drive for re- form. F 4i LETTERS TO THE EDITOR BSU supports the Black Manifesto Neighborhood power prevents an eviction WEN A GROUP of angry black home- owners in Chicago began putting their monthly payments for their homes into an escrow fund last year, everyone involved knew that sooner or later an at- tempt would be made to evict one of the families. The homeowners claimed their month- ly rates are absurdly high - rarnging up to four or five times more than for a per- son with a conventional mortgage - and formed an organization called the Con- tract Buyers League which has tried to renegotiate the rates. In the mean time, the leagues members have withheld any further payments on their land contracts until Universal A ci fieti .r~l . 'HE EDITORIAL by Philip Block in Sat- urday's Daily questioning the truth of President Fleming's testimony in recent trials of students arrested in t h e LSA Bldg. sit.-in was only the interpretation of evidence by the writer. The article did not represent the feel- ings of the senior editors or staff of The Builders, the group which built the homes and collects the rent agrees to bargain with them. THE FIRST CONFRONTATION between the Contract Buyers League and Uni- versal Builders occurred last week when an eviction notice was served to J o h n Moss, one of the striking homeowners. However, when the day of t h e ouster came, the builders were outmaneuvered by the league when hundreds of its mem- bers went into the streets to prevent any eviction from taking place. The police responded on Thursday when 200 officers went to Moss' home to insure that they wouldn't be outflanked a second time. On Thursday, t h e eviction proceeded without any incidents; 3 or 4 police mov- ed the Moss family furnishings out of his home while the remaining 196 or 197 of- ficers insured law and order. After a few hours the police left and union members preceeded to move all of Moss' belongings back into his home. IOSS, who still owes $27,000 on his $31,- 000 home amiably told reporters that the 200 policemen reminded him of Viet- nam, and added that he would still with- hold his mortgage payments while re- maining ensconsed in his three-bedroom To the Editor: THE RACISM which exists in this society has been supported morally and economically by the churches of America. The church as an institution is, in part, re- sponsible for the oppression and degradation of ,black people. Therefore, it is the obligation of the church to rectify its racist ac- tions. They must surrender to the black comnmunity what they and the rest of this racist society has stolen, the opportunity and means for the development of the black community. WE, THE colonized black com- munity on the campus of the Uni- versity of Michigan, support the demands for monetary reparations made by the Black Manifesto and the reading of these demands in the churches of Ann Arbor and throughout the nation. All wealth to the dispossessed! ' --The Black Student Union Jan. 29 Mistakes To the Editor: SEVERAL MISTAKES are to be found in your article covering my interview with SGC on Friday, Jan. 30 and published in your Jan. 31 edition. I did not say that the salary "presently offered" was $10,500. Mo re important even is that the mention of salary was a minor part of our discussion, certainly not of sufficient significance to war- rant its being listed as number one among the "obstacles that might prevent (me) from taking the job if offered." To the Editor: WE WOULD LIKE to clear up a few misstatements in the Satur- day edition of The Daily. First, Tthe Daily stated that "SDS leaders", were pleased with the threat of vigilante action from students. This is absurd. We dornot seek to direct our attack against students, Engineering or other- wise; we attack those who main- tain corporate and military power over blacks, workers and third world peoples. SDS attacked DuPont because they kept troops in the Wilming- ton ghetto for ten months and because they supply armaments used against the Vietnamese and other wars of national liberation. If we are attacked during an ac- tion we will fight back, but we prefer to talk to Engineering stu- dents than fight them. ON A MORE absurd level was the editorial that appeared the same day. The person who wrote it, criticizing our actions, was the same one who proposed those very actions at a mass meeting the night before. Guess what his mo- tives were. We can't. The content of the editorial was just plain wrong. Our purpose was to reach as many people as pos- sible, and we accomplished this. The editorial says, "A pitiful number of people were involved in activities . . . Few people stopped to watch the films that were shown." This directly contradicts both the news article and personal reports. Films were shown all day. both days, and a large number of people consistently showed up. in the editorial), Thursday's and Friday's actions were aimed at mass participation. We under- stand that our actions will alien- ate some people, but this cannot prevent us from acting on our politics. Our goal is to educate and involve students in the prim- ary struggles going on outside the University-the liberation strug- gles of blacks, browns and third world peoples. Finaly, and most importantly, The Daily exhibited this tendency to cut itself off from te rest of the world. .On the day of the Repression Teach-In in which GI organizers, Black Panthers and Chicago Conspiracy defendents were to speak about the repres- sion coning down on their move- ments, The Daily ignored all but the repression against the LSA sit- in students. We recognize that this too is a case of repression, but to devote all space to this, especially when the Black Berets in Ann Ar- bor are facing much heavier re- pression, is wrong. Power to the People. -Dan Brooks '72 -Tim Hall '72 -Marty Lahr '72 Ann Arbor SDS Jan. 31