Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 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. )AY, FEBRUARY 6, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: JIM NEUBACHER Keeping the press free On the ways of prevarication THERE ARE many pillars of freedom. Democracy itself would be diminished without the freedoms of speech and as- sembly. Freedom would be lessened if citizens were denied recourse to a lawyer and a trial by their peers. And without freedom of the press, a country is the cap- tive of those who control information. Two recent news items should cause the defenders of freedom of the press to recoil in horror. The suggestion by a .member of the National Commission on Violence that newspapermen be licens- ed by the government, if put into prac- tice, would threaten the meaning of the First Amendment guarantee of a f r e e press. And the government's practice of seeking broad subpoenas of newspaper arid TV news records would, as effective- ly if more subtly, undercut the strength of the press. Both practices fail to comprehend the reasons behind the existence of news- papers as the Fourth Estate. THE FIRST AMENDMENT was intended to insure that there would always be independent critics of the government. The leaders of the state governments who forced the adoption of the Bill of Rights - knew of the frailities of men, that in office they would seek to stifle those who challenged them. They would do so as naturally as they would seek office and honor in the first place. The one assur- ance against such official arrogance was a strict, absolute injunction barring the federal government from interfering with the press. In our times, and in history, we have seen the press misused. It has whipped the nation into war fever when no justi- fiable cause has existed. It has attacked and destroyed good and honest men. It has shown conflict where there was none before. In short, there has often been a failure of the truth to prevail. But there is no acceptable alternative, there is no way to improve this imperfect system, for the imperfections are inher- ent in men. THE, NEED FOR improving the quality of the press would be denied by only a fool. But the suggestion of Dr. W. Wal- ter Menninger that licensing is the an- swer, or any answer at all, is at least as foolish. Not only does it fail to insure anything close to perfection, let alone im- provement, it also treatens the integrity, and freedom of those who are licensed. ,Does anyone suppose that a reporter, knowing he must face a board of govern- ment licensers, will feel perfectly free to write a story damning a politician in power? It is not the problem of libel, which journalists accept as an appropri- ate limit on their activities. Rather, it is the problem that a man's fivelihood would be threatened by his performing honestly his function as a Journalist. If Tad Szulc's story on the imminence of the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961 had been printed by the New York Times, President Kennedy would have undoubt- edly, as Times editors feared, blamed that. institution for the failure of the invasion. Kennedy was later to tell Turner Cat- ledge, then managing editor of the Times, "I wish you had run everything on Cuba .. . I am sorry you didn't tell it at the time." Curiously, Kennedy was not so charit- able toward David Halberstam, the re- porter who first started to shoot gaping holes through the fiasco in Vietnam. His attempt to get the Times to take Halber- stam out of Vietnam is one of the black- est marks on Kennedy's record. Would these two men's "irresponsibil- ity" in writing too close to the so-called edge of national security have cost them their licenses and their jobs? Unques- tionably. THE GOVERNMENT'S use of subpoenas poses a threat of a different kind. It is an attempt to compromise the inde- pendence of the press, striking at t h e roots of the question of who the press is responsible to. The practice is an unsavory one, and journalists are not to be lauded for co- operating, which they do more than the public knows. But the government is the more culpable for being the more power- ful party and the initiator of the process. And it should be clear to editors and pub- lishers that there will come a time when = they will not be able to agree with the government on what is and is not to be subpoened. The press will have to fight such sub- poenas eventually, and the sooner it does the better.. THE THREAT OF the press becoming an information gathering arm of the government for the purposes of prosecu- tion is obvious. The result would be a limitation on the ability of the press to inform the public. No reporter c a n gather news appropriate for publication without gathering more, that for many reasons, shouldn't be printed. If a source cannot feel safe in talking to a reporter, if there is a reasonable chance the report- er will be forced to speak against him, then he cannot tell him anything. The press must be free to dabble on the edge of legality. It must be one of the releases for the tensions of society. As a possible agent of political change, when other political channels close, when the ballot box doesn't work and the judi- cial system is out of date, the press may be the only tool to effect social and poli- tical change. 'But to do so, it must be free! to explore. The constant threat of being a tool of the government would destroy that ability. -RON LANDSMAN ' Managing Editor By JIM FORRESTER LAST SATURDAY, The Daily printed an article stating that President Robben Fleming was a liar. But it seems that many people found it difficult to believe what they read. This article will differ from Saturday's: It will present docu- mented proof of Fleming's lies. The evidence will be in the form of Fleming's own testimony at one of the LSA sit-in trials. The court transcript is quoted through- out. Fleming hedged on the truth. distorting it and confusing those who must sit in judgment. IN THE TRIAL of Robert Wen- dell, Richard Zuckerman, Eric Dueweker, Lawrance Soberman and Steven Schaer vs the People of the State of Michigan, Fleming testified on Dec. 8 and 9, 1969. The following is Fleming's testi- mony under direct examination concerning the mass meeting that took place on Regent's Plaza at 3 p.m. on Sept. 25, 1969. It was at this meeting that th decision to occupy the LSA Bldg. was made. Q. Now, at the time you left the (Administration) building, what was the condition of the doorways of the entrances, sir? A. The doors were locked. Q. Why were they locked? A. They were locked because for a few minutes before that somebody had thrownba brick through one of the plate glass windows on the west side of, the building, and there is in that building no room or classroom or auditorium that would accommo- date anything like the numbers of people who were out front. On the day to which Fleming was referring, there were several hundred people there, but the doors were locked before they ar- rived, and before the window was broken. But the most significant doubts about Fleming's veracity are rais- ed by his testimony concerning his signature of a complaint asking for an injunction against the people sitting-in at the LSA Bldg. The following cross-examination is most illuminating. Q. I see. Now, Mr. Fleming, could you tell us who the defend- ants named in this complaint are? A. (Reading.) Robert Par - sons, Mark VanDer Hout. P e t e r Denton, Martin McLaughlin, Dav- id Miles, Gary Baldwin, Joseph Jersey, David Duboff, Eric Chester, Steven Nissen, David Bernstein, John Scott, John Doe and Jane Doe. Q. I see. Now, Mr. Fleming, be- fore signing this, did you appear before Mr. Forsythe (the Uni- versity attorney)? A. Idid. Q. I see. And, before signing this, sir, did you state under oath that you were duly authorized to execute this Complaint? A. Yes. Q. I see. And, sir, before sign- ing it, dik you state that you knew the contents thereof? A, A. did. Q. And did you also state the same is true of your own know- ledge? A. I did. Q. I see. And didn't you fur- ther state (the same to be true of your own knowledge) except as to matters stated therein to be on information and belief. A. I did. Q. I see. And, any matters that you state in there on information and belief, you believed to be true. Is that correct? A. Right. Q. Sir, is there any matter at all in that Complaint stated on information and belief? A. I don't recall at the moment without going through it. Q. Sir, the question is: Did you at any time, does this c o m- plaint at any time say that you are informed and believe a fact is true? A. I haven't looked at this in three months. (Witness reviews Exhibit - the Complaint. I do not see such a statement. Q. Then it would be your - excuse me sir, you did sign this un- der oath, is that correct? A. I did. _ Q. I see. You rose your hand and signed it under oath, is that correct? A. I don't know whether I rose my hand or not, but I certainly signed it under oath. Q. You sure did. And, sir, you say nothing in there is stated to be on information and belief. Is that correct? A. It does not appear to be stated that way.. This testimony established that Fleming swore to the information in the complaint on the basis of his own personalknowledge, not on thfe claims of anyone else. Yet what Fleming says he knows of his own personal knowledge to be true is simply false. For example, in the complaint Fleming swore that he knew that the people named did three things: They were in the LSA Bldg., they took part in the Institute for Sci- ence and Technology sit-in the week before, and they had taken part in the North Hall takeover: "9. That Defendants, and di verse other persons unknown to Plaintiff, acting in concert with them, have threatened similar ac- tion against other buildings on the Campus of the University of Mich- igan and have occupied the build- ing known as North Hall on the Central Campus and the Institute of Science and Technology on the North Campus." Eight of those named could and can prove they had nothing to do with North Hall. Five can do the same concerning IST and at least two of those named were nowhere near the LSA Bldg. the night of the sit-in. When, after occupying North Hall for several hours, people es- caped out: the rear of the building, the police took video tapes of those involved. The Ann Arbor police were unable to identify any of the insurgents. But, "of his own knowledge," Fleming did just that -identified people in the build- ing. Examine the following cross examination: Q. I see. Was Marty McLaugh- lin in fact in the ROTC Building? A. Well, one of the things about the ROTC Building was, of course, that many of the people burst out.. . Q. h (Interrupting.) Is that a hard question? A. . , . without getting identi- fication. Q. Is that a hard question? A. He may have been in part of the time, but he was not in all of the time. I know because I talked to him at various times in the course of the evening. McLAUGHILIN at no time en- tered North Hall. The decision to enter the building was made at a mass meeting in Angell Hall. Mc- Laughlin voted against the motion. After the vote, people left for North Hall while McLaughlin went to David Bernstein's house on Wil- lard St. From there he went to the SAB and then to The Daily. At The Daily, he was informed that North Hall was surrounded by police. McLaughlin got as far as the front door of the building, but no further. If heahad chosen to enter he could have been identi- fied upon going in the door. He is well. known to Det. Lt. Eugene Staudenmeier and he talked with Staudenmeier in front of the building. Yet the police made no identi- fication of McLaughlin because McLaughlin never entered the building. Yet if we are to take Fleming at his word, as attested to in the complaint he signed, Mc- Laughlin was in the building. Indeed it appears that Fleming knew little of the whereabouts of those he swore "of his own knowl- edge" were present. Most startling is the admission that he didn't know whether one of the people named in the injunction was in Ann Arbor the night of the North Hall takeover. In cross examina- tion: Q. Steve Nissen was in Cali- fornia onthat night, wasn't'he? A. I don't know. Excepting those arrested,. Flem- ing is not sure who was in the LSA Bldg. Again, under cross ex- amination: Q. David Duboff. Do you be- lieve he was in the building too? A. Yes. Q. You believe he was? A. I believe he was. Q. Did you see him there, sir? A. I don't remember, The Monday morning after the arrests defense lawyers went to the County Bldg. to challenge the injunction as a complete fabrica- tion on the part of the University administration. But shortly be- fore they arrived the University's attorneys withdrew the complaint. A public airing of this ridiculous injunction last fall would have exposed Fleming-and his lies. YV Letters: Fleming rests his case Strike the Ann Arbor Bank To the Editor: YOUR RECENT comments on my veracity, plus the clarifications and reclarifications which have ensued, remind me of the famous story of the judge who was taken ill and had to go to the hospital. While there his colleagues on the bench sent him a telegram wish- ing him a speedy recovery. The vote was four to three. On the larger question of truth- fulness, perhaps both of us will simply have to rest our case on our respective reputations within the academic community. --R. W. Fleming Feb. 4 McLaughlin To the Editor: WHEN IS the judgment of an editorial "too negative?" Is it when the reader does not agree with the editor's point of view? Mr. M. McLaughlin says that "ob- viously Hirschman and Gannes have learned nothing from the teach-in repression." Obviously, then in his eyes they had no right to even write a column about it. But Mr. McLaughlin does not say this. He just says that the judg- ment of the writing is "too nega- tive." To him, the writer obviously doesn't have to know what he is talking about, as long as the atti- tude is in line with Mr. McLaugh- lin's own thinking. If Mr. McLaughlin does not agree with meeting a crime with "...the most fitting or appro- priate punishment for the crime," then what d o e s he suggest be done? Should a society use the laws that are in general use by consent of the overwhelming ma- jority of that society, or should there be oppresive new "laws" de- vised especially for the occasion? Judging by the tone of his letter (Feb. 3) it appears that Mr. Mc- Laughlin is very much against re- pression of any kind. Yet he_ doesn't want society to absolve the crime in the most fitting or ap- propriate way. He certainly does not deny that a crime has been committed. If there is to be no enforcement of society's rules then we don't need a body to make up rules, either. We could start this pro- cess right on the student level by disbanding SGC and CSJ. Mr. Mc- Laughlin's statements favor this. Why. then, does he want to be president of SGC? THE SDS people feel that no crime wascommitted. They feel their raid on the university's North Hall and on Ann Arbor bank w e r e not only excusable. While they're certainly entitled to defend the action, t h ere is no other attitudes that don't agree with its own, by force if neces- sary. Since when is destruction of property, malicious vandalism, a n d breaking windows called "trashing?" Perhaps "trashing" is used with justification to describe dumping trash, especially since DDT is indeed "trash;" but it is called "covering up" to use the word and its connotations when much plainer and more honest words are available. -Robert M. Knapp Feb. 3 Misquoted To the Editor: IN THE Februar-y 5 issue of The Daily, I was misquoted as having said, "However, nearly every library has at least been able to automate the routine jobs such as circulation, ordering books, and cataloguing." What I said was, "The more successful automation that has taken place in a few li- braries has dealt with the more routine aspects of such areas as circulation ordering books, and cataloguing." -Thomas P. Slavens Associate Professor Feb. 5 Racism To the Editor: FOR OVER TWO WEEKS I've been waiting for either a letter or an editorial condemning the lead- ers and membership of Temple Beth Emmet for respectively call- -ing police to protect themselves from the voice of Charles Thomas reading the Black Manifesto, and for failing to overrule or criticize that call. Actually, I did see a letter from a P. W. Charles, but I really have waited for a Jewish voice to be raised in protest . . . Time's up! I wonder how many members of the congregation had their houses cleaned by "schvartzes" that day, and whether they sent home the family's cast-offs with the maid. And how did the members cele- brate Chanukah this year? Per- haps they lit some candles and bought expensive toys to com- memorate the victory of the free- dom-loving Massabees over the op- pressive Philistines, in days-long gone by. BUT TODAY,. in this country, and for some years hitherto,nthe real "Jews" have been (and are) the Blacks. Perhaps they too, will one day be able to light candles and give their children expensive toys on the anniversary of their victorious freedom struggle. If so it will not Disruption To the Editor: FRIDAY AT 2 p.m. my Econo- mics 201 Lecture in Natural Science Aud. was interrupted by a group of SDS people denouncing government warfare contracts to certain private industries. The lecturer, Mrs. Muriel Con- verse, stated at the beginning of the interruption that she was op- posed to such things in lectures, but that she would not try to outshout the group. Econ 201 stu- dents began to boo and hiss in opposition to the demonstrators, who still refused to leave, The lecture was finally allowed to begin at 3:25. I might add here that the same group of SDS people had been demonstrating throughout the day in the Fishbowl, where they re- ceived a great deal of favorable attention. THE POINT I wish to make is this: I have paid my tuition at this University so that I may enter the Nat Sci Auditorium and listen to an Econ 201 lecture. I have not paid tuition to see an SDS, or any other, demonstration. If I wish to witness such a demonstration, I know that I may do so in public areas of the campus, such as the Diag and the Fishbowl. I resent being forced to witness any demonstration as a blatant infringement upon my rights as a citizen of this country and as a student of this University. Furthermore, to attempt to f.orce an audience to listen to a dissent- ing viewpoint by disrupting nor- mally scheduled activities and by the use of insophistication and profanity cannot possibly serve to promote that viewpoint-but in- stead to promote extreme opposi- tion to that dissention. -Judy Norris '70 Feb. 2 Reseni m ent To the Editor: THIS LETTER is a response to John Feldkamp's letter of Jan. 23. In that letter~ he accuses thole, of us in the Baits tenants union lead- ership of misleading both the ten- ants of Baits and the general uni- versity community. I must say that we resent this accusation; and at this. time I hope to set the rec- ord straight. If you recall, Mr. Feldkamp noted that a double in Baits rents for $112.50 a month. In eight months this equals $980.00 He then noted that the apartments in Northwood are on a twelve month basis. So far so gpod. The fault in his logic shows wGvhen one notes that Baits is not empty in the summer. According to the figures Mr Feldkamp gave me after our Dec. 8 meeting, an additional $200 is generated by every double in Baits during the summer. This addi- tioinal revenue brings the Baits double total to $1180. Bear in mind that this is $40 above the total for a Northwood efficiency. Also re- member that this is for a 12' x 12' room and a john shared with an adjoining double. FURTHERMORE we do not have cooking priviledges or facili- ties as do those in Northwood. Those of us involved with the B.T.U. try to be honest in our dealings with the tenants of Baits and the University as a whole. We can only hope Mr. Feldicamp will do the same in the future. -George C. Caruso Vice-President Baits Tenants Union Jan. 29 Letters to the Editor should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. E TENANTS Union's call for mass ithdrawals from the Ann Arbor k this afternoon is a fitting and ap- )riate protest. Acting against that k's practices in dealing with garnish- .t of strikers' accounts, the Tenants )f has a legitimate grievance for h they have chosen an appropriate i of dissent. Strikers and those who pathize with them should participate he protest. arnishment is a legal procedure by h a court order may be obtained to ze funds held in a bank account. In ease a landlord ray seek such a t order to freeze 125 per cent of the uted rent in the strikers account thus enting anyone from withdrawing that ey. ae Ann Arbor Bank's handling of e procedures has proved flagrantly ,ir. The basic complaint of the Ten-' Union has been that the Ann Arbor K has not notified students that their unts have been garnished. The stu- s then write checks without knowing account can no longer cover them. checks are bounced and the students then pay the resulting penalties. WEVER THE Tenants Union cites xamples of mistreatments which are asked payment be stopped on, The stu- dent had written a new check to the Tenants Union; which the bank subse- quently invalidated. When the student confronted the official, he reportedly told him the landlord should have the money. As an alternative to the Ann Arbor Bank, the Tenants Union suggests that students open accounts at the other Ann Arbor banks. The union claims that other banks in town, while complying with the court order of garnishment, have been courteous and helpful to the students being garnished. The union says these banks notify the students of their garnishment as soon as possible. "They also say that in some instances, these other banks have informally suggested Legal methods by which the student might make himself less accessible to garnish- ment. BUT THE Ann Arbor Bank has clearly gone out of its way to make the garnishment proceedings more difficult for students. Looking at these circumstances con- cerning the Ann Arbor Bank's conduct towards its student depositors, it seems that today's demonstration is an entirely appropriate one. By a mass withdrawal of accounts, the bank will be hit where ^.. fr. . 2 4 11 ' N ii UI~1i~' El ~,wrIY 'U U