iir 3ri$ttn DBu 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 Prague's short-lived golden age 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THE RSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA ABRAMSON Iw Tt er side of law and order TRADITIONAL MARXIST analysis divides America into classes based primarily on economic considerations. Perhaps a more relevant cleavage today is between those who fear and those who trust the police. Each day thousands of Americans suffer from unobserved and unreported in- stances of police harassment or police attack. These incidents rarely generate massive protests. They do not bring pressure on the police departments for reform.. The victims are generally those without a con- stituency-the blacks, the poor, and such socially ostracized groups as "hippies" and war protesters. These disenfranchised fear and hate the police. But for the majority of Ameri- cans, the policeman is a source of help in time of trouble, a consoling number to paste on the wall above the telephone. The events of the last week and a half especially have indicated that many of the offspring of privileged white families are beginning to perceive the reality of po- lice harassment. THE FRIGHTENING power of uncheckedpolice officers was demonstrated yester- day with brutal clarity to Daily staffers in particular and University students and faculty in general when Steve Wildstrom, Daily managing editor, was attacked without provocation by county deputies. Wildstroi was trying to enter a public building where welfare mothers were meeting with the county board of supervisors to protest inadequate clothing allow- ances. As a complement to this attack, Wildstrom was arrested and charged with as- sault and battery. Fortunately Wildstrom's injuries were limited to cuts and abrasions. Wildstrom is white and well-educated and able to obtain concerned legal counsel. He is far more able to bear the onus of an arrest record than the average ghetto resident. Still, it is not hypocritical for us to admit that police brutality has become more real for us, in the same way we hope millions of Americans were affected by last week's needless slaughter in Chicago. While it pales next to this latest manifestation of police brutality, we are also incensed by the repeated refusal of Washtenaw County police authorities to allow properly-credentialed 'Daily reporters access to buildings and events open to other local media. By STEVE ANZALONE PRAGUE-The days between Bratislava and the Russian in- vasion may have been Czecho- slovakia's golden age. For these short weeks, now almost forgotten, the future looked promising for the people of Czechoslovakia, Skeptics, who had doubted that Dubcek would really change any- thing, became believers. If only for a little while, Czechoslovakia was a nation again, and things were destined to become better.f The invasion of Russian troops cut short the Age of Dubcek. The promise for a better future was snuffed out by the invading tanks. But the Czechs and Slovaks stood fast. They would not allow them- selves to be prostrated again.,The failure to recognize this new na- tionalism in Czechoslovakia was probably the worst miscalulation of the Russians during the Krem- lin-Prague interplay., Soviet observers in Prague should have expected a rise in national unity especially after the post- Bratislava d a y s. Nationalism emerged on all fronts and was more than partly responsible for the united resistance against the Russian soldiers. The Soviets also permitted a dangerous taste of the new free- dom that Dubcek promised. It would indeed be foolish for Mos- cow to presume that the Czechs would long remain content with a return to the conditions under the Stalinist Anton Novotony. In-this sense, the days after Bratislava were not in vain. Before Bratislava, many Czecho- slovakians were dubious about Dubcek's promises for more free- dom. I learned this from two Czechoslovakian students that I met at a youth hostel in Paris. THE TWO STUDENTS were in Paris, on their way to southern France, where jobs awaited them. They said that since Dubcek had me that now he had faith in Dub- cek. He reported that ninety per cent of the Czechoslovakian peo- ple stood behind Dubcek while he was at Bratislava. This he found to be very unusual support for the government. The mood among Michael, Jan, and their friends was a hopeful one. Jan talked about going to the United States the next year to visit his uncle. Another, known to his friends as the "walking Web- ster's dictionary," proudly dis- played his English versions of Robert Louis Stevenson, Huxley, and Sherwood Anderson. They all spoke freely about the Russians and former leader Novotony. They admitted that their candor was not always possible. One of Michael's friends, a blonde-haired girl named Hana, led the group singing as the eve- ning wore on. She told me that the songs were in Russian. She said that they had been forced to learn them in school. "They are so stupid," she explained. "We all hate them but sing them when we get drunk." PROBABLY the greatest show- ing of Czech unity came during the visit shortly after Bratislava. The thousands of Prague residents that lined the way to the Castle cheered loudly when the car car- rying President Svoboda, Dubcek, and Tito drove through. When the leaders went into the castle, the chanting did not abate but rather rose to a crescendo ,when the youthful-looking Tito appeared from a window with his hands clutched over his head in a sign of victory. The happy Czechs continued chanting, "Svo- boda, Dubcek, Tito,' while some carried signs extolling Tito and denouncing East German chief Walter Ulbricht. The surging crowd pressed hard against the high iron gate to the front of the Castle. They suc- part of a stand-up comedian. The crowd was extremely pleased and returned to their homes with their paper flags held high. One man at a streetcar stop spotted my Czechoslovakian flag and came over to me and started speaking in Czech. When I told him that I was American, he pointed to the flag. I waved it in the air and he walked away, shaking his head in disbelief. These were indeed strange times for Czechoslovakians. BUT THESE HAPPY DAYS did not last long. The Russians moved in and took over. But the Czechs and Slovaks refused to be knocked down willingly. Their brave non- cooperation was surprising to Mos- cow. They saw that the attitude, "What can we do," had been lost during the daysrafter Bratislava. The gate in front of Hradcany castle had opened a little bit. Because it did, it really was too late for the Russian invasion. There could be no turning back from the days folowing Bratislava. The Czechoslovakians will proba- ly keep pushing at teh gate be- tween them and their government. And if the Russians had planned to keep this gate permanently closed, they should not have al- lowed it to open-not even just a little bit. WEE .. small world, isn't it?" jL--mJAMES WECHSLER- n Hwksville *I The Soviets permitted a dangerous taste of the new freedom that Dubcek promised It would indeed be foolish for Moscow to presume that the Czechs would long remain content with a return to the conditions under the Stalinist Anton Novotny. .a mkstisms2iit#nsiE2EE is##20 i'esliA #ANiA Editor's Note: The Russian injas- ion of Czechoslovakia caught T h e Daily in the middle of semester break. We are attempting now to do justice to the importance of this ma- jor crisis and its many ramifications. This column by James Wechsler, the editorial page editor of the New York Post, was written in the midst of the crisis. While subsequent events have rendered a few of his references outdated, his column still represents an excellent rebuttal to those who will attempt to use this crisis as an excuse for the revival of bellicose an- ti-Communism. THE RUSSIAN rape of Czecho-- slovakia is producing predict- able spasms of righteousness in the hawk set. The tragedy has al- ready elicited from Dean -Rusk the pious observation that our pres- ence in Vietnam has acquired new merit; it "underlines the commit- ment of this country to freedom and to the ability of small nations to work, out their own affairs." In some commentaries there is alnost the suggestion that this act of Soviet self-exposure con- stitutes a gain for mankind by vindicating those who have ob- structed the quest for peace in Vietnam. By that standard, the true triumph of hardnosed West- ern diplomacy will come when the Chinese drop their first atomic bomb on New York, thereby prov- ing beyond dispute the virtue and wisdom of excluding them from * * JT IS 'IRONICALLY fitting that Wild- strom's arrest and the brutality which surrounded it were intimately connected with a protest by county welfare mothers. These protesters are women who en- dure harassment and occasionally bru- tality from the police as part of their everyday living experience. Just as white suburban mothers cope with the annoy- ances of broken air conditioners or smudged fingerprints on refrigerator doors. And it is the dangerous myopia of these comfortable whites to the daily burdens of the poor which is a major source of the social friction visible throughout our society. HO W CAN THE generally white, smug county board of supervisors know what it means to live under the humilia- tion of this affluent nation's welfare sys- tem? To have to literally beg for money for clothes to send their children to school? To submit to patronizing analysis by self-appointed and often inadventant- ly racist social workers. There are few differences between these continual annoyances and the con- stant encounters with the police which are the price of being poor in an America which has made a fetish out of law and order. How many whites know the shame of being questioned and sometimes even arrested because there's been a robbery in the neighborhood? How many know the hurt of sitting-in to protest an inade- quate clothing allowance and having your small child bowled over by a white police- man? WHAT OF THE impotence, the emascu- lation of being unable to make the established political mechanisms work in your behalf? Too few Americans recog- nize that the poor have little chance of redressing their grievances through our much-vaunted legal system. If they place counter charges against the police, the action is expensive and lengthy. If the charges are criminal they must go through the offices of a district attorney who must work with the police every day. If the case ever goes to court, it is merely their word against that of a Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Fall and winter subscription rate $5.00 per term by policeman who by virtue of his post generally commands the respect of a jury. jT WOULD BE unfortunate if the re- sponse to this morass were seen as piecemeal reform. Disciplining a single police officer will change little. We must not forget that the lives of policemen are unenviable at best. They are underpaid and overworked. Many of them are children of the ghetto who have narrowly escaped by virtue of their own struggles. It is not surprising that they cannot understand why society is so concerned with people who are econ- omically little worse off than themselves. While no one will deny that the police must be given some latitude and discre- tion if they are to carry out their diffi- cult duties, it does not follow logically that authorities should be all but immune from reprisal by poor people who have righteous complaints., FIFTEEN YEARS AGO, the issue divid- ing America was civilian control over the military. Today the American people must reassert civilian control over local police departments. There will be a protest at noon today that will begin on the Diag and then march to the County Bldg. While the arrest and attack on Steve Wildstrom helped to generate today's rally, the protest encompasses far more than this isolated instance of police ir- rationality. The real cause for protest, the real is- sue, is the continued treatment of those -unlike Wildstrom-who are unable to fight back. The rally and march are also in support of the welfare mothers who have for the last two days tried to convince an un- heeding board of supervisors of their plight. Therefore we ask you to attend the rally on the Diag at noon today, to show, solidarity for the countless unrecorded victims of police hysteria each day to show our compassion for those welfare recipients who endure petty harassments beyond the comprehension of the com- fortable white community. -THE SENIOR EDITORS Editorial Staff MARK LEVIN, Editor taken over, nothing had changed. They had been permitted to leave the country, but it was a long and difficult process to attain the nec- essary papers. Michael, who claimed he lived near the birthplace of Franz Kaf- ka, spoke several languages flu- ently enough to translate books. He still had trouble in obtaining some books, even under the more liberal Dubcek regime. For Michael and his friend Jan, difficulty in obtaining books was just another insufferance of the Communists, whom they openly scorned. In Paris. Jan and Michael were pensive. To them, the future looked hope- less. Michael regarded the coup that brought Dubcek into power as simply a reshuffling of the same government officials. But when I asked them what they planned to do about their oppression, they loked at me incredulously and said with resignation, "What can we do." I guess the revolutionary spirit was dead in Czechoslovakia. But all that changed after the conferences in Cierna and Bratis- lava. Dubcek did not buckle under the Russians, as Michael and Jan expected. People in Czechoslovakia started to change. their minds. A month later, I ran into Jan and Michael in Prague among the thousands of people who had turned out to greet Yugoslavia's Marshall Tito. Their jobs in France had fallen through, so they had returned to Prague. But their outlook was very -much dif- ferent. IN AN OLD fourteenth century pub near Hradcany castle, Jan, who jokingly said that he was a great Castro fan every time he took the wrapper off a cigar, told ceeded in opening the gate about a foot before the soldiers pushed it shut. Nevertheless, it is im- portant that Czechs like Michael and Jan opened the gates between them and their government, even if it was just a little bit. Tito then emerged on the other side of Castle and delivered a short address which expressed hope for increased friendship b e t w e e n Czechoslovakia and the maverick Yugoslav regime. Czech assembly president Smrkovsky folowed Tito to the microphone and took the representation in the civilized halls of the United Nations. NO APOLOGIA for the mon- strous Soviet invasion is worthy of serious debate. This crime is more despicable than the crushing of the Hungarian rebellion; in the case of Hungary there was the faint claim that the insurgents were implacable anti-Communists whose ascendancy might protend some ultimate threat to Soviet safety. But the Czech leaders now held captive by the Russian com- missars were themselves Com- munist. Their heresy was an at- tempt to escape from the smoth- ering heritage of Stalinism and prove. that the traditions of Czech political democracy were com- patible with the economics of so- cialism. It was an historic experiment, and it created panic in the Soviet leadership. That the Soviets - or the controlling b 1 o c in the Kremlin - should fear the con- tagion of freedom so desperately, more than 50 years after their own revolution, is a crude revela- tion of the insecurityinherent in despotism. The deed is done, and no amount of lamentation in Washington will suddenly end the night that has fallen again on Czechoslovakia. Nor will the cause of the vic- tims be significantly aided by a rhetorical rampage of the Ameri- can right, exploiting the frustra- tion and anger evoked by this dis- aster as an excuse for revival of all the dead-end sterotypes of the cold-war era. Probably no measures short of a military intervention - advocated by no one of consequence - can swiftly reverse what has happen- ed. THE MOST SERIOUS pressures on Moscow will come not from spurious saber-rattlers in our Pentagon but from the Commun- ist parties of Western Europe and f r o m the neutralist nations so long wooed by the Soviets. For the moment Moscow's dom- inant faction has concluded that the peril of the Czech "liberaliza- tion" example was larger than the discord this aggression would stir within t h e world Communist movement and in the democratic left in non-aligned nations. But the ensuing uproar may be achieving dimensions underesti- mated by the Russians. The Mos- cow monolith that was once world communism began to disintegrate long ago when Tito defected: the division sharpened with the'Sino- Soviet split (so long derided by Dean Rusk). Now it is more ex- plosive than ever. In so brutally punishing t h e Czechs for their limited adventure in libertarianism, the Russians may momentarily mute some at- tacks from the China-oriented "old Bolsheviks." But they have lit other fires that -could get out of hand. LEAST OF ALL do these s a d hours in Prague afford any latter- day confirmation of Russian rig- idities. What renders the U.S. pe- culiarly impotent and irrelevant at this juncture is not merely the implausibility of any activist mili- tary role. It is our moral estrange- ment from the varied forces of the left and center - in Latin Ameri- ca and Asia as well as Europe - now shaken by the cold conquest of Czechoslovakia. The 'primary but not exclusive reason for our vulnerability is Vietnam where, to much of the world, we appear as intransigent intruders helping to prolong a war that most Vietnamese detest. But such misfortunes as our lamenta- ble excursion to the Dominica4 Republic and our cynical tolerance of the Greek junta have also con- tributed to the decline of the voice of America. Conceivably George C. Wallace will be the biggest immediate ben- eficiary of American rage over the Russian coup. But such fevers are transient. For what must become increasingly apparent after t h e initial hysteria is that American prestige and influence have been recklessly squandered in Vietnam. Even more basically, it must be clear that only a far more respon- sive diplomacy, sensitive to the radical subleties and ferment of a world we never made, can get us out of the rut. It is current cliche of political writing thatthe U.S. is gripped by a growing conservatism. B ut that is not the condition of most of the world. We stand alone and ineffectual on too many occasions because (among other things) we have tried to apply consensus do- mestic politics to world affairs; we are alternately viewed as in- sufferable or inept. The horror- story in Czechoslovakia is an af- front to mankind. But the bombs over North Vietnam will not ease the anguish of Prague. * I V* 'A N EAL BRUSS---- Ti IT WILL SOON be fall, and this year the unhappy expectation is that certain persons, like the leaves, will be falling. Persons like Robert Morrison, of St. Joseph's Episcopal Church, Detroit. Morrison first surfaced t h i s summer - outside the Detroit mayor's office in an all-night pro- test against cops who allegedly charged Poor People's Marchers at Detroit's Cobo Hall. IUS MOST joyous summer ac- tivity probably was officiating in his church at the marriage of two Wayne State University area ac- tivists. The ritual was a combina- tion of the Hindu and the Episco- pal. The groom was active in the !e fall o~ say he felt he was merely waiting to be arrested. As he stretched one July afternoon across his desk in his' office, a telephone repair truck pulled up outside. "Here to change the taps on the phones?" Morrison asked t h e re- pairman. "Not this time," quipped the other. MORRISON HAS HAD more serious thoughts and conversa- tions in his book- and poster-clut- tered office, which is in a con- verted house behind his church. He came to Detroit from rustic Traverse City two years ago- about the time Detroit's black people were beginning to take control of their struggle. Episco- palean Morrison, whose football nWaving at Harvard gained him a 1 Morrison is not out to solve the "Negro problem." He is more interested in 'the white problem. He constantly lectures on white racism iin the opulent albino con- gregations of Detroit's suburbs. He will address an especially com- placent group of white churchgo- ers as "fellow honkies." HE TELLS IT this way. "I have an 'I Have A Dream' bumper sticker on my car, and I drove in- to a gas station. The black pump operator challenged 'What's your dream?' I'told him, 'My dream is that white people will get them- selves together and leave black people alone.' " Morrison worked with a group of young prosbering lawyers and "black pride lounges" in commun- ity centers, places where teenagers can shoot pool and read about their heritage. MORRISON HAS SPENT hours in courts, especially federal courts, watching the legal defense of an Ann Arborite mysteriously picked up one June night for se- lective service violations or of a black power leader charged with counterfeiting savings bonds. He has begun to believe that he will soon be watching his own trial. That is, if he lives that long. A commander of Detroit's major right-wing organization publicly told Morrison he'd hang him from a lamp post outside the Detroit federal building. publicly detail Bob Morrison's struggles with and for draft re- sisters, black liberation workers and the white and black popula- tions at large. Morrison certainly is not that unusual when Ann Arbor guys in the Resistance are working on the Free School and hunting for apartments as time runs out between freedom and ar- rest and trial. SO IT'S almost fall, and one day we may find that something as fast and as indisputable as Jack Frost will have taken up Bob Morrison and those like him. There is, however, something mistaken in speaking of people like Morrison in metaphors of fall- ing leaves to be raked up and i brned-i our discontented I STEPHEN WILDSTROM Managing Editor URBAN LEHNER Editorial Director DAVID KNOKE, Executive Editor WALLACE IMMEN News Editor PAT O'DONOHUE.....................News Editor