Black Berets are Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan or the editors. I THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1970 Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers iDaily express the individual opinions of staff writers This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS c + . Abortion laws: It's t ime f or a change r1PHE ABORTION laws in this country YET THE POINT of abortion refor must be totally revamped in order to this: Each woman has the rig end the toll of maternal deaths and the examine these moral and religiou emotional suffering that are the direct sues, seek advice and information doctors and clergymen, and make result of the current repressive law, final value judgment herself. This Michigan is a good place to start. In osophy should be the basis of the* the State Senate, there are two bills Having a child is a serious, impo worthy of support. One would completely action. It should not be taken lig legalize abortion if performed in a hos- Abortion is equally as serious. The d pital by a licensed physician. The final ion on which course to take mus decision on abortion would be a private made wisely, but it must not be imp matter between the patient and her phy- by the state. sician, just like any other serious medical Abortion reform should be accompa operation. The other bill would eliminate by better sex education, increased a penalties against doctors performing ability of contraceptives, and more r abortions. tic social attitudes. This will help t There are many complicated, emo- duce the number of unwanted preg tional issues involved in the abortion de- ies in the first place. bate. Because of this, there is a serious We want you to consider the i tendency to go to great lengths to try involved in abortion, and decide for to convince everyone that a certain, fav self, but we also want you to allow o ored religious or moral outlook is cor- rect, and should predominate over the -JIM NEUBACHER others, becoming the basis of the law. 38 other staff memb c Nixons pollution address: Politics or commitment? rm is ht to s is- from the phil- law. rtant ghtly. decis- t be posed aniedi avail- ealis-. to re- gnan- ssues your- thers bers By TOVA KLEIN THE REPRESSION of the Black Pan- ther Party has been receiving nation- wide attention lately. People in Ann Ar- bor, however, have somehow managed to ignore the Black Berets. Their Ann Arbor Six have been facing a long series of pre-trials on felony charges including yes- terday when a hearing was postponed un- til the end of March. The Black Berets are what may be called a Panther-in-training organization, rather than a junior group as some peo- ple believe. Members of the Berets are from the Ann Arbor community, some work, some attend Washtenaw Commun- ity College, and some are in high school. Gary Wilson and David Hunter f i r s t organized the Berets early last summer after attending a national conference in. California called by the Oakland Black Panthers to create a national United Front Against Facism. THE BERETS, who started out with about 10 people, want to deal with con- ditions existing in the Ann Arbor com- munity which have escaped the attention of, or been ignored by most people. They feel that delapidated housing, and families without enough food and clothing are conditions existing in Ann Arbor that should not be allowed to go unchallenged. "The Beret ideology is based on Pan- ther ideology," explained Terry Drye, one of the Berets. This means that we want to work with the people and for the people in assuringthat their basic needs are met, and in helping them assert their human rights. Although the Berets were originally hop- ing to receive an official Panther chart- er, the prospects for this at present look rather dim. With most of their leadership facing trials - both here and in Chi- cago - and some of the weaker members scared off as a result, it will probably take a while before the Berets can even return to the level of operation of the past summer. Whether or not the Berets will ever get and official Panther charter is some- thing that they see as relatively unim- portant, "You don't have to be a Panther to be a revolutionary," Terry emphasized. BEFORE THE BUST, the Berets were working in the black community trying to unify the people and have them under- stand that they must act together if any- thing is to be accomplished. At first, they concentrated on having internal political education classes sev- eral nights a week for themselves and new recruits. Then they opened their of- fice on the corner of Ann and Fourth Ave. to political education classes for the community. A free breakfast program and a liberation school were also in the plan- ning stages, but did not have the neces- sary community support. The churches they had appealed to for help pleaded, "The janitors wouldn't like it," or "The Board of Deacons wouldn't approve it," while asking outrageous ques- tions such as "Are there really any hungry children in Ann Arbor?" Just around the time when their office was busted, they also organized s o m e political education classes in West Quad and a few other dorms. Relationships with the Black Student Union were also being established. ON AUGUST 31, 1969 at approximately 11:35 p.m. four Berets were standing "security" at the front of the office. In the back, a group of about six people were having a political education c 1 a s s. Ironically, they were talking about secur- ity, and Terry remembers just having said, "You never know when the pigs are going to vamp . . ." when the door burst open and in stormed two or three of Ann Arbor's "pigs". When two of the Berets asked for a search warrant ,the p o l i c e answered that they had a warrant fo r facing har David Hunter. When asked to produce it, they refused. Then one of them hit Victor Grayson,} and the fighting started. Terry described the scene as one of complete confusion. There just "happened" to be a few other police cars waiting outside, including, oddly enough, some of Sheriff Harvey's boys. They all eagerly rushed in to help.- Terry pointed out that the raid was timed just before a holiday, late at night when no witnesses would be in the streets, and anyone arrested would have to wait until the holiday was over to be bailed out. It was also just at the time when the Berets were becoming known in the community and new programs were being set up. At one time 'duirng the melee about five policemen had' Gary Wilson face down on the floor spread-eagled. One of the Berets got his head slammed against the side of a police car while being shov- ed in. The police arrested six: Gary Wil- son, Jerome Wright, Eugene Gregory, Lor- enzo Small, Victor Grayson, and Howard Hayes. Hayes wasn't even there at the time. He was picked up while out with some friends. Four were charged with assaulting a police officer. While Jerome and Lorenzo were charged with assault with intent to go great bodily harm. Some important material was taken from the office, including some lists of names. The police later came back and further ransacked the Beret's part of the office, Terry said. Lack of funds and little community support has made it difficult for the Ber- ets to get a lawyer. Kenneth Cockerel, a black radical lawyer in Detroit may take their case if they can get enough money together to pay the expenses involved. Thus far the Berets have all had court appointed lawyers, one of whom, at a recent pre-trial, had to be corrected by. the police officer he was questioning on the witness stand, when the lawyer used the term "colored" and the policeman responded with "Negro". The lawyer then proceeded to mumble something under his breath about quibbling over terms. AFTER THE BUST, the Berets contin- ued trying to organize a Free Medical Health Clinic and some free first aid and nutrition classes which were to be held at Jones School on Saturdays for the community. The health clinic was being planned in conjunction with Dr. Edward Pierce and the Student Health Organiza- tion. At this point, four Berets went to Chi- cago to learn what they could from the chartered Panther Party there. Donnettea Brewer stayed to work with Ronald "Doc" Satchell, Lt. of Health for the Chicago Panthers. She happened to be in F r e d Hampton's apartment the night of the infamous raid, and is awaiting trial on charges which include attempted murder, aggravated assault, possession of illegal weapons, and breaking parole. IN THE MIDST of all this repression, and the discouraging picture being paint- ed to potential Berets and Panthers, a small group of the Berets are still man- aging to function now. Unfortunately, most of their work has been, of necessity, hampered by the trial. Lately they have been orginizing for yesterday's march in support of Huey P. Newton's appeal and Huey's Birthday Celebration Benefit, which will be held Sunday night in Ypsi- lanti and in the Union Ballroom in Ann Arbor. The Berets, like the Panthers, h a v e obviously been picked out for special har- rassment and repression. This is true even though none of their activities have been illegal or anything hinting of "violence" or "militancy". They have also been com- pletely ignored by the press, and h a v e received little community support. This is not bad luck; it's pure and simple racism. 4mb times ,v 'd, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Law students question legal process SOME POLITICIANS have the ability to pick up an issue after it has become popular, and give the impression t h e y are doing everything possible to a v o i d making it a partisan issue. President Nixon's message to Congress on pollution shows that he is such a politician. Only during the past few months has the Nixon administration discovered the pollution issue. Early last year when Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) and Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Mich.) introduced bi11ls creating a council of ecological advisers to the President, administration officials constantly opposed them. Yet on Jan. 1 the President signed Jackson's bill, proud- ly proclaiming it the first new law of the decade. The latest statement to Congress is the most comprehensive plan for con-' trolling pollution ever presented by a Pre- sident. Yet it fails to recommend the mas-; sive appropriations which are essential and it ignores the need for population control. FOR MUNICIPAL waste treatment plants, Nixon requested a total ex- penditure of $10 billion over the next four fiscal years. Of this amount the fed- eral government would finance only $4 billion. Both the total amount and the federal share are inadequate. For comparison in other programs such as interstate high- ways and the supersonic transport t h e government has contributed 90 per cent. Municipalities will be hard pressed to provide 60 per cent of the cost of their waste treatment plants. But even if they could, the $10 billion would not begin to meet the'need. Five times as much might be more realistic. CURB INDUSTRIAL pollution, the President recommends tripling oper- ating grants to state pollution control agencies over the next five years. Here the President plans to move too slowly. His proposals call for amending state- federal water quality standards to im- pose "precise effluent requirements" on all industrial and municipal polluters. If states are to aid in establishing and stringently enforcing this new require- ments while the population and the num- ber of polluters expand, they need the money now to establish and operate the program. "Precise effluent requirements" could be a major step in reducing water pollu- tion. However, they must first be estab- lished. Nixon calls for doing this "on an expeditious timetable" but as usual sets no limits. For these standards to be ef- fective state and federal agencies must also vigorously enforce them. Another encouraging part of the pro- gram is the provision for a $10,000 per m~a m _ ma ve-a - ha - stantial improvement over the present system of setting up standards in specific regions. However enforcement of t h e national standards has been left to the states. This is a mistake because different states will enforce the standards with varying exactitude. Pollution does n o t follow political boundaries. And as usual, there is no indication of when the new standards will be established. Nixon says public hearings "involving all interested parties" must be held first. Although these hearings may be needed, the gov- ernment should set up a deadline for completing them and writing the new standards. Some proposed changes for evaluating air pollution from automobiles are en- couraging. The President recommends Congress pass legislation requiring "re- presentative samples of actual production vehicles be tested throughout the model year." Under present law only manufac- turers' prototype vehicles are tested for compliance with emission standards. NIXON'S PROPOSALS for disposing of solid waste are among the best in the report. Recognizing the deficiencies in many current techniques, he has ordered "a redirection of research under the Solid Waste Disposal Act" to encourage recycl- ing of wastes. Unfortunately, the President's message ignores federal funds for the construction of solid waste treatment plants. While re- cycling may be the only permanent solu- tion to the disposal crisis, it cannot ac- commodate cities' needs today. To do this, new facilities must be built. Cities need federal aid. Last year Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (D-Me.) introduced the Natural Resource Recovery Act (S. 2005) which authorized the secretary of health education and welfare to m a k e grants to municipalities for construction of solid waste disposal facilities. In com- mittee hearings -last year, administration officials opposed this bill. The President should support Muskie's bill and vigorous- ly work for its passage. THE MOST SERIOUS omission in t h e Presidential message, however, is the lack of recommendations for population control. It should have contained specific proposals for reducing the rate of popu- lation growth as close to zero as possible. If United States population growth re- mains unchecked, it could nullify any benefits gained from the new programs for air and water pollution, solid waste disposal and outdoor recreation contain- ed in the pollution message.- As the population increases, so does the number of people creating pollution and discarding solid waste. Population control is the key prob- tam in t+e nvirnnmental eriss Without To the Editor: THE ATTORNEY who cross- examined President Fleming as described by law Profs. Wright and Copperrider, rather than be criti- cized, ought to be congratulated for his display of legal acumon in employing tactics that represent the very foundation of American justice. The only legal system in the U.S. that is not based on trickery, deceit, and entrapment exists in the minds of Wright and Cooperrider. The point is not to condone such practices, but to self-righteously condemn them while engaged in an enterprise (law school) that trains eager minds in their utilization, must strike the objective observer as a bit hypocritical. What did President Fleming ex- pect to be asked about by students against whom he had brought criminal cahrges and whose schol- arships he had threatened, the weather? Perhaps the blame should fall on the county prose- cutor's office, whose attorneys ob- sequiously rush up to Fleming after the completion of his testi- mony to congratulate him on hav- ing survived the ordeal, for failure to prepare their witness for the cross-examination. IT IS INSTRUCTIVE to con- trast the outspokenness of the professors in defense of their "dis- tinguished colleague" with their utter silence of other issues that woul dappear to constitute equally grave threats to the notion of justice. (17 law professors from Harvard travelled to Chicago to protest the conspiracy trial; don't waste your time in an effort to determine if the Michigan law faculty was represented.) Actually what happened was that the natives got restless and started tampering with the sacred rights of justice, desecrating them in the eyes of the high priests of law. PRESTO!! Two of the elect descend from their gothicrafters to rebuke the interlopers, inform- ing them that words lose their common meaning in the esoteric never-never land of legal sophis- try, and instructing them to re- nounce their impetuosity and sub- mit themselves once again to the benign monopoly of those who havebeen admitted to the legal priesthood. The allegory is symptomatic of a legal profession that is char- acterized by successive stages of withdrawal from reality and from the people it in theory serves. It commands peopletto surrender the protection of their rights to its hands, and then activates itself in the performance of this function in direct proportion to the finan- cial return it receives. But getting back to our law pro- fessors, having fearlessly ventured forth into the unknown to defend one of their brethren from the forces of anarchy, they can now retreat back to their 9th floor cubicles, their closed faculty meet- ings, and their faculty only bath- rooms, secure in the knowledge that they will be on the invitation list for President Fleming's next cocktail party. -John Bowers, Law '71 Feb. 11 Them too To the Editors: WE WOULD like to reply to the Guest Column by Professors L. Hart Wright and Luke K. Cooper- rider. While we admire their pro- fessional competence, we feel their column missed the central thrust of the charge that President Flem- ing lied in his pleadings for the LSA injunction. When plaintiffs seek injunctive relief, they have a special duty of truthfulness. What 'may be only "technical errors in the pleadings" in the situation of lengthy litiga- tion take on a more dangerous onus in injunctive actions. Tradi- tionally, such errors are screened out by the adversary process. Op- posing lawyers discover the falsi- ties and point them out to the judge. Then, as correctly stated by Wright and Cooperrider, the erring parties are allowed to amend the pleadings. However, the injunctive process is ex parte, or "one-sided," at its inception. The plaintiff approaches the judge, tells him what has hap- pened, and seeks a temporary or- der reestablishing the "status- Itt l -- -OWNWMWNW m p. r.U7, 9- :6 -n J and Tnbne Syndicate "They also 1 .C, "--A serve who only stand and wait.. quo." The judge then issues the temporary injunction acting on this information alone, without the benefit of contributions of opposing lawyers. 'This is exactly what happened the night of the LSA bust. At no time did the attorney's, for the University attempt to find out whether the students in the build- ing had a lawyer who could appear for them in court. Attorneys for the students repeatedly sought to see the pleadings or appear before Judge Conlin. After the issuance of the order, one attorney spoke to the judge on the phone and at- tempted to reopen the proceedings, but his request was denied. Per- haps the reason was that the judge had accepted President Flemings factual pleadings as true. What ensued, of course, was the temporary restaining order. The falsity found fruition in a binding court order. Only the tactics of the people preventing service of the order kept Fleming's "technical mistake" from sending our broth- ers and sisters to jail for con- tempt. That's the way the legal process works-in the courts and in the streets, not in the law books. -Neal Bush, Law '70 free rural and provincial general hospitals, free children's hospitals and Casas de Socorros (neighbor- hood clinics) in every segment of the cities and in rural towns too. This was more medical care, avail- able to MORE people than they have in this country now. Cubal had a better physician-to-popula- tion ratio than the U.S.A.; -Free education, including kin- dergarten, pre-primary school, pri- m a r y, secondary, universities, technical schools, art and music schools, industrial schools and free room and board for needy students from the interior of. the island that came to study in La Habana; -We had laws to protect the workers from being exploited: for every 8 hours' work the people got paid for 10 hours, for every 12 months' work the people got one full month with pay and without work; -Housing for workers and farmers; and -Social discrimination was out- lawed. In reality is was non exis- tent, since the biggest general and hero of the Independence War of 1895 was as black ,as they come. TO SAY that we did revolution in Cuba to "socialize" Cuba is the biggest insult I ever heard. Mr. Schanoes does not know what a who did the revolution are in prison, dead or in exile. Mr. Schanoes is totally mistaken to think that we who did revolu- tion were a part of an "inter- national solidarity." Cubans hate foreign interference in their af fairs. They resent Russian Im- perialism more than the mythical Yanqui imperialism. Another interesting matter is the "struggle" for the 10 million "tons." Notice I say "tons" and not Tons. The "ton" is a standard invented by Castro. The Ton is the international standard used in Cuba until 1960. In 1954 Cuba cropped 7 mil- lion Tons of sugar (about 14 mil- lion "tons") without having. to force labor the whole population of Cuba or importing mercenaries from the U.S.A. (in the strangest colors, as if implying that in Cuba we had racial discrimination) UNLIKE Mr. Schanoes, I speak frgm experience. While he was in grade school, I was doing and making revolution. I fought against Batista with the D.R.E. and Jose Antonio Echevar- ria was a dear friend to me. I later fought against Castro and his double crossers with the M.R.R. I .%ac m-sma + hearem rfnrce ,,