fi~rlnid i)an Dutj 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 V'Are the dogs necessar By PHILIP BLOCK THE PEOPLE in the halls were singing songs like "Down by the Wel- fare Store" and "Amen." About half of them were mothers and their children. The other half were students. Prosecuting Attorney Delhey entered the hall flanked by Sheriff Douglas Harvey and several plainclothes detectives. "My name is William F. Delhey, prosecuting attorney for this County. This building is closed according to the resolution of the County Board of Supervisors. Under law you are commiting criminal trespass. We will wait five minutes after which you will be placed under arrest." 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. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1968 r NIGHT EDITOR: HENRY GRIX Welfare children:. To school with torn pants NOTHING in the recent past has brought the plight of the American poor to the attention of the general pub- lic better than the Poor People's March on Washington. All too often, however, marches of this kind which attract wide news coverage and public comment lose momentum before they can be translated into meaningful programs for the people. The results of such misfortune are now being brought home to the poor of Wash- tenaw County. The Washtenaw county mothers receiv- ing Aid, to Dependent Children (ADC) benefits from the state say they cannot send their children to school on the $9-a- month allowance they receive for the clothing and personal expenses of each child. They have begun and will continue to demonstrate, sit-in, and if necessary, be arrested to dramatize their demands to the public and the welfare officials. Tues- day's blockade of the social services offi- ces in the County Building gave proof of their determination. The demands for immediate assistance in essential needs were not completely unforeseen by the welfare workers. The mothers report that they have repeatedly expressed their needs throughout the summer to each of their case workers, but that no assistance has been provided. The lack of preparation to meet these demands by the welfare department has shown its ineffectiveness and short- sightedness in anticipating and providing for the needs of its clients. The general assistance fund, originally earmarked for families unable to qualify f o r welfare benefits, has been, at the request of the County Board of Supervisors, taken into consideration as a possible source of funds. This and other possible sources should have been sought out long before the week the children were expected to return to school. ACCORDING to Leon Cohan, Deputy At- torney General for the State of Mich- igan, Attorney General Frank Kelley sent a letter to Bernard Houston, State Direc- tor of Social Services, giving the opinion that if an ADC mother did not have suf- ficient funds to clothe her children for school, it could be considered as an emer- gency under the state ADC act. Under this act the mother would then qualify for emergency funds. There seems to be general agreement among the parties involved as to the va- lidity of the requests of the women, Few questioned their plight related in passion- ate and sometimes tearful accounts.dur- ing the series of meetings held for the past few days. The only barrier t h a t seems to remain is the monetary o n e, which should be resolved without delay. The mothers, as a group, h a v e been meeting with welfare officials since last Thursday. Their time is being unneces- sarily wasted. As of yesterday, the best offer they received was a flat rate of $40 per child instead of the requested mini- mum of $12.0. The mothers will not settle for the lower figure, which they consider unrealistic to the needs of their individ- ual cases. So, while the social services officials and the County Board of Supervisors con- tinue to haggle, many of the ADC child- ren will start school. In last year's pants torn at the knee, and a little cramped in the toes of last year's shoes, they will compete for an illusive but prized spot in our great society. -MARY WOLTER THEN HARVEY spoke to the crowd, but they didn't listen to him very much either. He said that he didn't want anyone to get hurt. One black student got up and said that he had heard that there were dogs downstairs, but he didn't see why-they had to be used, since everybody was being non-violent. Harvey said nothing. I asked Delhey about the dogs. He said he hadn't heard anything about them. Later one reporter said that he saw six police dogs being led into the building just before the arrests. Up to now the mood had been one of optimism. But soon it would change. The five minutes were up, and I decided to leave. As I turned the corner to go down the main hall toward the front of the building I saw what may soon be called Harvey's army. TWO COLUMNS of deputies were walking along the wall toward me. Then I started to think of Chicago--how we reacted to it with great disgust while not knowing what it was like at all. Now I was beginning to see what it was like to force people to put their thoughts into action. I ran around to the back of the building where they would be taking out the arrested protesters. Escorted, dragged and sometimes carried by two deputies on each side, each protester was brought out and thrown into the paddy wagon which was parked at the rear of the building. They some- how forced twenty of them into "w the wagon and drove toward the exit of the parking lot. 4 Police evacua te detonstrators Phoographs by Andy Sacks # ALL OF A sudden the back door of the paddy wagon burst open. Apparently caused by the crush of the people inside. For several seconds everybody just stopped and watched the deputies in the front cab get out, curse the pro- testers and close the doors again. Nobody inside the screened wagon made a move to get out when the doors had opened. I ran over to the County Jail across the street so I could see how they would handle the un- loading procedure. As they dragged the ',prisoners" from the wagon,-I heard hundreds of curses being spewed out at the "fascist pigs." Sgon the bus carrying the rest of the prisoners arrived. In the first wagon there were only stu- dents, many of whom had been arrested several times before and almost expected the type of treat- ment that the deputies handed out. In the bus were the ADC mothers and I could' hear their screamingrand crying before they even entered the jail's ;parking lot. pf Rationalizing violence Pickets at County Building Alone after the arrests THE ANNOUNCEMENT that President Johnson's commission on violence will inavestigate the disorder in Chicago dur- ing the convention should perhaps be greeted with wry amusement. The commission, all but forgotten three months after its birth, should have been allowed to die quietly under the weight of its own ineffectuality. But now a rather impotent commission has de- cided that the violence that led to Sen- ator Kennedy's death is not enough of a raison d'etre for its continued investiga- tions. Too often this kind of commission is appointed by political leaders who feel that they must demonstrate to their pub- lic that they are doing somehing about an unalterable and tragic event. The commission on violence seemed doomed to this fate from its inception. The controversy surrounding the Warren Commission's shoddily researched conclu- sions destroyed any aura of credibility for the public. Almost immediately after Johnson ap-' pointed his commission on violence, Arthur Schlesinger Jr. attacked the selec- tion of its members. He said that certain members had already pre-judged the facts surrounding Senator Kennedy's assassination, which limited the possi- bility of an objective investigation. The commission on violence sunk quick- ly into oblivion. Until the announcement that they had volunteered to investigate Chicago, most people had forgotten that the commission even existed. But now it has come back into the spotlight think- ing that somehow it can render the pub- lic some additional service. FROM THE taxpayers' point of view, we should all be grateful to the unselfish devotion of the commission. At least the expense of appointing still another com- mission can be saved. Yet from the point of view of the establishment of the Demo- dratic Party, Mayor Daley and the Chi- cago police - the gain may even be greater. The television coverage of the police behavior during the demonstration in Chicago convinced 'many people that the police acted with undue and often savage brutality. Many think that these attacks were ordered by Mayor Daley and perhaps even by the coterie who were the Demo- cratic convention. Daley, of course, claims that the news coverage was one-sided. Naturally, he and the new Democratic team will appreciate any efforts to absolve them from respon- sibility for their role il the Chicago dis- order. iBut y it seems that the commission, whose existence has certainly little effect onf the amount of violence, will have to do some incredible investigation to pin much of the blame on the anti-war dem- onstrators for all the bloodshed in Chi- cago TOO MANY people saw what happened in Chicago through television cover- age. No matter what the commission finds, it is unlikely that many people will forget the scenes of police and youths flashing on the screen. And once again, nothing really will happen. The commission will not change many minds. The forces of the establish- ment have lost face and now make an attempt to regain prestige. A kindly jesture, but an unconvincing cover-up. -STEVE ANZALONE Changing the raules of party politics By BRUCE LEVINE Editor's note: Bruce Levine is administrative vice-president of SGC and a member of Voice- SDS. NTIL t h e Convention, people with little knowledge of the Democratic Party might sincerely have believed in the possibility of "taking it over" and "making it into the kind of party we want." No longer. The events of the last week in August have dispelled such illus- ions. The police state tactics. The gallery-packing ("We have Mayor Daley!" shouted all the little ma- yor Daleys). The packing of the credentials and platform commit- tees. T h e rather unique gavel- wielding ("Ifthereisno objection wewillallowthe hacksto continue runningthenpartyhearing gone itis soordered"). And of course, t h e s e goodies were only those visible to the TV camera. Hidden was the backstage maneuvering of the national com- mittee, the threats to rebellious local party members of patronage lost and to restive local candidates of endorsement and funds with- held. THE MACHINE MEN are pro- fessionals, and their first conside- ration is to keep power. T h e y would therefore much prefer to run a hackrand risk losing an elec- tion than run an unknown quan- tity, who, while a better bet in November, is also far too irrespon- sible (independent) for machine tastes, thank you. From the point of view of the professionals, it is far better to lose votes than con- trol. To change the Democratic Par- ty from within, therefore, the ma- chine (shorthand for assorted hacks, regulars and ward-healers) will have to be forced from power. Working with it, infiltrating it, coercing it, scaring it - that's dreaming. But even assuming such a coup, what follows? Presumably the ma- chine will not sit idly twiddling its thumbs, smiling like an idiot. Forced from control, its very life is threatened. It will fight for that life. Nor are the battle tactics dif- ficult to imagine. Those w h o in have been .ousted f r o m power, deed lost control, will simply pick up and ,get out, open up s h o p across the street, call themselves the "True Democratic Party," de- nounce the opposition as Reds who've grabbed control of the Democratic Party for their own insidious, un-American purposes. Humphrey used similar tactics to destroy the radicals in the Min- nesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party. AND IF, through all this, the storm is weathered, what has been won? Control of the Democratic P a r t y? Nonsense. Presumably, what makes the Democratic Par- ty worth capturing in the eyes of men like Al Lowenstein is that it is already a smoothly-functioning, nationally-operating, prestigious, powerful, and respected organiza- tion. Once the party has been "taken over", it will cease to be all these things. The kind of prestige which it now commands will not survive I , above. The national scope a n d smooth operation will disappear with the machine that makes it possible. With gavel in hand, the reformer will preside over an em- pty hall, having captured only himself. It is time for a new politics. It is time for us to open up across the street, for us to denounce the hacks as manipulators who use people for their own purposes. It is time for us malcontents to identify ourselves as such in no uncertain terms. To make clear to the public that we are not content to work within so corrupt an or- ganism as the Democratic Party machine. That we are democrats (small d), and do not believe in using people for whatever purpose. T h a t in order to make crystal clear that we mean our movement to be democratic, we are starting fresh, from scratch if you please, and that we are going to build a party which will be simply t h e mnvomPnt. fnr npn.t+a with frpPtlnm rm.dittAli7.AM And wbpr t h e smear campaign outlined electoral arm of a much larger confused, the impatie nt and the n woc r movement for peace withi freedom. IT WILL BE a party unlike the Democratic or Republican, one which doesn't spend four years in preparation for a ritual ballot-box -stuffing. We will instead spend those four years working in the community to construct a move- anent and institutions capable of m a k i n g "meaningful social change" something more than jargon. This means such things as mem- bership control over the party, the platform, the candidate, you- name-it. This means a determina- tion to eliminate the ubiquitous gavel-pounder of whatever politi- cal shade. And it means a final abandonment of the dead-end' of "permeationist" politics in favor of the politics of opposition. We are not out to win the Democratic Party's game. We are out to change the rules. We will receive the disgusted, the enlightened, the angry, the radicaized. And whnen we sarz out declaring ourselves as oppon- ents of the system; as activists first, politicians incidentally; as angry radicals rather than bloated Babbitts - with all this clear from the start, no amount of "rev. elations" or "exposures to that effect by the Democratic Party machine can harm us. If we are powerful only through the people, we need make no com- promises except with the people. And if it can't be done with the people, it can't be done. And it shouldn't be done. FINE, WE NEED a new party, a democratic, radical (or radical- izing) party. Now what must be its minimum credentials? Aside from ,democracy, radicalism and militance, thereremains at least one more requirement. Unless' we want to play in-again-out-again with futility, the party's absolute minimum position must include total opposition to the Democratic party and its candidates at all levels. It should be clear by now that this isn't just way-out, far-out leftist dogma. Unless we want to get sucked back into "tactical al- liances" with the machine; into playing hack games; into com- promising issues, principles, post. tions as well as our independent opposition itself-unless we want to be absorbed by a structure far more adept than we are at game- playing and dealmaking (i.e., the Democratic Party)-we must an- nounce as a basic principle a re- fusal to associate ourselves in any way with the standard parties. We cannot deal with them be- cause we cannot beat them at their own game. We cannot make deals as well as they do, confuse issues as they do, fudge cam- paigns, water-down principles with the skill that they have. A two- bit carbon copy of the Democratic Party will never be as good as the original. If we want to play those games, we should stay' in the Democratic Party. THE CONCEPT of a new party outlined above is not utopian. For at least a year people have been working on just such a project. In Michigan, the New Politics Party is already on the ballot. V 4 Not enough for Biafra NIGERIA finally agreed Monday to tem- porarily loosen the deadly blockade it has been maintaining on the inflow of vital food and medicine into the strug- gling secessionist state of Biafra. Now, the thousands of starving civil war refugees can look forward to a ten- day respite from the necessity of relying solely on the bare fraction of needed sup- plies which the Red Cross and other pri- vate groups have been sneaking in by gle thing to preserve human life in Bia- fra. IT SEEMS that the U.S. economy is suf- ficiently delicate that the needs of starving masses in Biafra and other de- veloping nations must be sacrificed to maintain it. Struggling farmers such as Sen. James Eastland (D.-Miss.) must be paid to de- stroy crops desperately needed in non- I ?Si ,Y