Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 6, 1968 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 6, 1968 Plan noon Diag rally MOTHERS MAY SIT-IN TODAY: County committee rejects welfare plans to sup ort. (Continued from Page 1) aging Editor Steve Wildstrom by Washtenaw County sheriffs. Wild- strom was directing Daily cover- age of the welfare mothers' dem- onstration Wednesday wheli he was arrested for assaulting an of- ficer. He was later; released on bond and no charges have yet been filed against Wildstrom. Larry Hochman, New Politics Party candidate for Vice Presi- dent, was the lone voice among the speakers who favored an im- mediate march to the County Jail. Police jail protesters J ADl plea Instead of immediate action, most speakers urged students to organize. "We must build a new white radical movement," said New Poli- tics Party Congressional candi- date Burt Garskoff, "We must build support and reach more stu- dents." He .urged the rally to "get over the idea of supporting the other guy 1 "It's our fight," Garskoff ex- plained, "it's our lives, its our future, it's our bodies." The rally ended at 9:30 p.m. and as students broke up into four groups - McCarthy supporters, Voice-SDS members, Mobilization members and New Politics mem- bers. The McCarthy group decided to push a write-in campaign for the Minnesota senator. The o t h e r groups discussed the implications of local events and possibilities for future action. No specific plans were made beyond those for today's rally. Last night's rally was originally scheduled as a teach-in on police brutality in Chicago, but speakers preferred to relate their remarks to the local crisis. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily texcept Monday during regular academic school year. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year 4$9 by mail). (Continued from Page 1) apply for their needs" and not just "delved out money by the head."_ The meeting became ve'ry vocal, the mothers explaining, "you can't just get a winter coat and books and pants and socks for $40." Paul Wasson, acting chairman of the Washtenaw County Com- mittee for Community Action (WCCCA) charged the entire sit- uation "is a direct result of the state office tabulating needs in 1968 with figures from 1961." Sheriff Douglas Harvey entered the meeting at 3:30 p.m. and the first recess occurred shortly after- Robert Harrison. chairman of the The mothers then delivered a board of supervisors, announced second proposal to the board ask- he had contacted a representative ing that the $72,000 be distri- of the governor and charged the i state with the responsibility for buted according to need on a first the "demonstrations and violence come first serve basis until the ensuing from this meeting." funds were depleted. Harrison claimed the meeting WMC rejected the proposal and with the mothers and WMC "is the meeting was adjourned at taking place under duress and 5:30 p.m. coercion." The mothers left the room and He placed the blame for the joined the approximately 80 per- situation on the "inadequacy of the state ADC program," and said the b u r d e n of responsibility! "should be put back on the state H ELD FO UII where it belongs." FaUOVR When the meeting reconvened OVER 375 No. MAPLE I shortly after 4:30 p.m. Lundy an- __ TRES E RQD-7691: 0 WED.-FRI. 7:15.9:15 SAT-SUN. 1:30-3:25-5:20 7:15-9:15 . sons lining the corridor of the second floor of the county build- ing and began to sit-in. After announcements by County Prosecutor William Delhey and Harvey. the demonstrators were forcibly removed and charged with trespassing. WMC has scheduled another meeting for 1:30 p.m. today, but the mothers have not yet said whether they will attend, -Daily-Andy Sacks Clearing the corridors of the County Bldg. wards, with WMC and the mothers retiring into closed meetings for deliberations. Shortly before the first recess, (Continued from Page 1) they first pulled out the female students and then the ADC mothers., With a dozen of the women re- maining to be taken out,.several mothers resisted the officers and were not subdued until deputies returned from their last trip to the paddy-wagon. Harvey acknowledged that po- lice dogs were on hand although they were never employed. The sheriff called the dogs a "last resort." He told an early evening press conference the officers under his command "acted very properly" and handled the arrests with "finesse." ADIJC recipients define stand nounced the mothers' proposal for funds based on need was rejected and that the $60 per child pro- gram had been adopted by the committee and would be recom- mended to the board of super- visors. Lundy said, "I could clothe my children adequately with $60," but refused to answer a question: "Is that from scratch?" I.a statement Those of us who submitted to the arrests of Sept. 5 in the Washtenaw City-County Bldg. did so because of our support of the ADC mothers' demands that the minimum clothing need of their children be met. We supported them then, we support them now, and we will continue to support them until these needs are met. SIGNED, William A. Copi, David L. Duboff, John H. Neumerster, James W. Macbridge, Jack David Marcus, Jack McCormick, Charles Thomas ,Jr., Dennis W. Sinclair, Allen Cofman, Dave Berry, Sandy Setzen, the Rev. Father Paul F. Fettig, Bert J. DeLeeuw, Darryl Dmytriw, Michael Alaimo, Charles Penn, Paul M; Haywood,, Stuart Katz, Paul Popper, Michael R. Husted, David Shapiro, John Leveranz, David Dillman, Bruce Thomas, Michael Buckley and Frank Crantz. A demand for increased wel- fare by Washtenaw County mothers has triggered arrests, demonstrations and , heated controversy. What the mothers really want was expressed yesterday by Mrs.- Shirley Haywood, chairman of Ypsilanti Wel- fare Action. "The welfare mothers' group wishes -to make clear its posi- tion regarding the need for a supplemental welfare grant for the purchase of school clothing for our children and our at- tempts to obtain these grants: "The amount of ADC assist- ance which we regularly re- ceive, no matter how carefully budgeted, simply will not stretch to cover the purchase of school clothing for our child- ren. This is because the ADC grant is based upon the cost of living in 1960-not the cost of living in 1968-and because the cost of living in Washte- naw County is abnormally high. "We want our children to go to school. We recognize that the education of our children is the way to end poverty. But we want our children to be able to go to school with the dignity and self-confidence that re- spectable clothing permits. "Therefore, each of the ap- proximately 40 of us has care- fully prepared a statement of the minimum clothing needs of each of our children. Over the past summer, these state- ments were submitted to our caseworkers together with the request that the necessary sup- plemental grant be-authorized. "In each case, we were flatly rejected. "The key to the problem, we were told, lay with the County Board of Supervisors which has authority to appro- priate the additional sums to the general relief fund neces- sary to meet our reasonable re- quests. "Since Thursday, August 29, one week ago, we have been at- tempting to meet with the Board of Supervisors to pre- sent our case. We are citizens with a grievance. We have a problem which has become an emergency through no fault of ours, and which requires emer- gency action, We therefore went as citizens to our court house to meet with out duly- elected representatives. "The response has been eva- sion and stalling and consistent harassment of women and children in their own court house by helmeted and armed sheriff's deputies. "Promises have been made to us, and then not kept. Under- standings have been reached and then denied. We want no more than to put our children in school. We ask no more than fair and prompt consideration of our requests. Instead, we are referred to committees, told legal meetings must be held, limited in the numbers of re- presentatives we may have, told that a committee doesn't want to meet With us after 5:00 p.m. and offered a stop- gap solution with promises of further meetings at some un- defined time in the future. "While we are meeting as peaceful and orderly citizens, we are surrounded by sneering and snickering police officers, as if to remind us that we are not really citizens like everyone else. "We are resolved to carry this issue to its conclusions. This is for our children and their dignity and their future. Stalling and intimidation will not make us or the problem go away. We want to be reasonable and peaceful. We ask only that Washtenaw County let us be." 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