£fr4n Dal Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority ofBoard in Control of Student Publications 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich., News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JIM HECK In the wake of the arrests by MARCIA ABRAMSON "(END 'EM ALL to Jackson with the otners, Doug," a man yell- ed out from the safety of a win- dow high above the street across from the City County Bldg. "You're gonna burn," was the answer from the street. (Inside t h e building, a gray- haired woman was spraying a per- fumed disinfectant on the people sitting on the floor. Some of them caught the sickly sweet stuff in the eyes and mouth.) Above, the man began throwing stones from a planter box in his office down on the crowd. They were only small stones; they just stung a little. In retaliation, the black man next to me brandished a Coke bottle in mock fury. "You wait til it gets dark, you up there. You wait." OUR ATTENTION wasso on distracted by the arrival of blue and white police buses. We had been waiting for them. The crowd began a steady stream of curses, taunts and dares, directed at the pigs and thestateand the coun- try, t h a t probably has not yet stopped. (Inside the-building, earlier, the loudspeaker drew laughter when Eric Chester announced, "Every- one who got arrested yesterday better go over to City Hall and get arraigned, O.K.?") The people on the street, most of them black, waited. 'This city is gonna burn now," one man said. He wore a dark suit and carried a briefcase; he had just emerged from an office building. I asked him if there was rom ise going to be a fight. "If it isn't right now, it'll start tonight," he b told me. Two women sitting next t to me on the bench murmured their agreement. i] (Inside the building, the last t, call came for people who didn't p want to be arrested. On the out- p side, the picket line wound round and round. All over the street, e people on the way home from o work were stopping; the streets had been blocked off.) a ii FINALLY THE HELMETED, a nightsticked, revolvered auto- g matons emerged, line by line. a Everyone jeered. Two young black h men standing near me were sur- h prised because they could only a spot two officers carrying tear gas t bombs. "What they planning to li do, anyway?" o. Again we waited. The police uses pulled up in the front of ;he building; the police- moved n, and, working in pairs, began o empty the building. All over, eople held up their hands for eace and freedom as they watch- d. The buses filled quickly. As ne drove by, we cheered. Suddenly a black man s h o t cross the street and disappeared nto a crowd. Six officers took off fter him. "That was Jim!" the irl next to me said. "They've been fter him for a long time. I told im not to come round here, but e thought they wouldn't have ny time to bother with him. I hink he got away, didn't it look ke that?" She got up and went ff in the same direction. ft to protect you' THERE WAS SOMETHING incredibly stark about yesterday's confrontation in the lobby of the county building. Few events mark so clearly the delinea- tion between good and evil, right and wrong as the conquest of the non-violent, singing demonstrators by Sheriff Harv- ey's automaton-like deputies. For those who had never seen such a naked display of force before, it was a grisly and irradicable experience. For those now veterans of many de- monstrations, often with even more brutal denouements, yesterday marked the return of that all too familiar feeling of outraged impotence. But as the long night of bookings, tear- ful reunions, and the long and arduous task of raising bail money began, it was necessary to sort out the issues involved in yesterday's protest. MORE THAN anything, theneed for protests like yesterday's is a graphic in- dictment of the welfare system as a whole. There is nothing unusual in welfare mothers having to beg the county board of supervisors for money for s c h o o 1 clothes for their children. For people on welfare begging, out of necessity, has be- come a way of life. Events in the past have shown that the welfare mothers by themselves are politically impotent. Thus the county board of supervisors has total discretion whether to grant their requests or con- demn them to silence forever. But events have come to a head this week primarily because the welfare mothers have been aided in their efforts by a group of committed students. For, whatever their motivations may have been, their intervention has trans- formed what would have been a rather pitiful plea by welfare mothers into a dynamic and vibrant struggle. IT IS DIFFICULT to sift out whether the blame for the intransigence in grant- ing the needed allotments for back-to- school clothes lies with the county board or in Lansing. But even more than with unheeding boards and uncomprehending bureau- crats, the real evil must be with the na- ture of the welfare system itself. If the poor are ever to have dignity, the need for humiliating spectacles such as begging for school clothes must be totally eliminated. But in view of their present dire need, we must reiterate that we stand firmly behind the welfare mothers in their courageous struggle with the c o u n t y board. MOREOVER, we must not separate the plight of the welfare mothers from the underlying question of the relationship of the individual to the police whose al- leged function is to protect him. It is quite likely that the brutal at- tack on a Daily editor coming so soon after the impotent rage -generated by the savage treatment of the demonstrators in Chicago played a major role in pro- voking the almost unprecedented stu- dent response to this issue. But the issue of the relationship be- tween the police and the individual tran- scends the mere question of brutality. Despite some unpleasant incidents-and a few outbreaks of downright sadism, the performance of Sheriff Harvey's force in carrying out their assignment yesterday compared favorably to the norm for po- lice forces in this country. Admittedly, this is a far from standard-. But it is important to see the issue is more than just brutality. high. that Street confrontation with theTactical Mobile Pigs By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN WHEN THEY MOVED on the Washtenaw County Bldg. at 5:30 p.m. yesterday, the Tactical Mobile Pigs were carrying rifles and shot- guns-all too long it looked like they were going to use them. These specially trained pigs-clad in their blue uniforms and spaceman helmets-were part of the force which kept demonstrators outside the building away from the other pigs who were carrying, pushing and dragging the protesters out from inside. So when a group of people drew close to the building's entrance and Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey yelled at them to get back, it was the Tactical Mobile Pigs who moved in. (I was in that crow.d) The pigs pointed their rifles and shotguns towards the faces land bodies, yelled to get back, and started walking forward. THERE MUST be a flexibility in the applications of laws to ensure even a shadow of justice. While perhaps it is in the public in- terest for there to be laws forbidding trespass in the county building, it is un- questionably clear that the public interest was not served by yesterday's arrests. While these things are difficult to com- pute, it is quite likely that the eventual jail and court costs, as well as police overtime pay, will end up costing Wash- tenaw County as much as granting the welfare mothers their demands. It must be made clear, both here as in Chicago, that when legal powers are maliciously stretched to arrest peaceful protesters who are in no way endangering public property, the intent of these laws has been seriously mangled to thwart lib- ertarian purposes. What is needed in Ann Arbor, as in America as a whole, in this time of severe national discoird is a tolerance quite alien to either Mayor Daley or Sheriff Harvey. For the suppression of dissent by even quasi-legal means is wholly alien to the values which are supposedly rooted in this nation's fabric. CONSEQUENTLY, we would like to ex- press a deep empathy and a heartfelt gratitude to those students and welfare recipients who sat-in and demonstrated at the county building these past two days. Furthermore, in view of the severe hardship imposed upon everyone involved by the spiteful raising of the bond for trespassing from $25 to $50 per person, we .call upon all concerned with the future of dissent to contribute to the bail fund for these and whatever future arrests may be needed. In many ways this has been a sad and moving day for Ann Arbor and the Uni- versity community and the students and *elfare mothers who have, suffered at the hands of the police. Harvey smiles for newsmen THE PEOPLE in front of the crowd started inching back and some turned around, ducked down low and pushed the people behind them to move back. (I was terrified.) People were shouting "easy" and "don't run" and "move back, keep moving" and the Tactical Mobile Pigs kept walking forward pointing their rifles and shotguns straight ahead. Finally, the group managed to put some space cautiously between them and the tactical pigs, but when they did, there was no very safe way to turn. ALL AROUND, hundreds of pigs-tactical pigs still pointing their rifles straight ahead, regular pigs with riot sticks maintaining a no-man's land on Huron St. and attacking pigs who were "escort- ing" their prey into the waiting pigmobile. (While his mother was confer- ring with newsmen, a small boy, tired of playing marshal with his red armband, took out a well- hidden capgun and began firing. He was remonstrated immediately. "Don't do that!" He looked up with a question on his face and I could see one of the marchers pointing to the rifles on the roof of the county jail.) Yes sir, there's been a good deal of talk about- the ring-a-ding pig state we're living in. Lots of talk. But there it was, an °organic pig state on Huron St. And it was pushing people around and pen- ning them in and twisting their arms and gobbling them up. (I was incensed.) And there were people who watchedtcalmly from the window of the Ann Arbor Bank across from the County Bldg. But not jbeing down on the street, all they saw was worth, exactly nothing. Showmanship played to. a -captive audience By BILL LAVELY SHERIFF HARVEY had his finest hour yesterday afternoon. He was so much in control, so mach the center of all activity, it could only have been gratifying to his ego. Addressing the students in the lobby of the county build- ing, his white pate shining through his black crew cut hair, he came to the students in a halo of frankness and under- standing which was as disconcerting as it was confusing. "If you obey the law and protest orderly, I promise to protect you and to cooperate with you fully." "Oh yeah?", some protestor yelled, and he was about to continue when a hundred impatient students screamed "Shut up!" and "Let him talk!" "I just want to assure you that if you protest peacefully, and if anyone tries to interfere with you, we will ... take care of them." The crowd howled in appreciation of the sheriff's eager- ness to forcefully face any wrongdoers. Harvey laughed. The whole thing was like good-natured banter, a witty duel of understatement and double entendre: The students were putting it on, but was Harvey? I DOUBT IT. Somehow, Harvey exuded the confidence of a man who did not really understand the depth of the situa- tion. Throughout the day, Harvey treated the confrontation with the students like a game, or at least like a theatrical show. Harvey was at his best in the thick of police action. There, with his reinforcements from Livingston and Oakland coun- ties, he choreographed an attack strategy on the county build- ing with the care of an Eisenhower contemplating Omaha Beach. First a platoon of deputies moved in, to restrain the crowd. Then a phalanx of shotgun-toting, mace-swinging, dog walkers for that special show of force. From out of nowhere came the troop-carrying paddy wagons who invaded the building with the efficiency and dedication of commandos. THEN CAME the finishing touch. Harvey himself suddenly appeared in the midst of his men. While the, rest of the officers were obviously apprehensive behind their helmets and riot shields, Harvey waded into the crowd like a Mac- Arthur wading ashore in the Philippines. Finally, as a limp resister was being dragged by, Harvey in a show of manly paternalism admonished, "Why don't you stand up and walk like a man?" l But perhaps it is not futile to hope out of their actions the beginnings far more compassionate future emerge. that of a may -WALTER SHAPIRO -MARK LEVIN -STEPHEN WILDSTROM -ANN MUNSTER -DAVE WEIR -ALISON SYMROSKI A protester is dragged to a waiting bus T choice of realities: To stay put or go free By WALTER SHAPIRO IN A WAY the arrests were anti-climactic. It was shortly after three in the afternoon in the welter of confusion surrounding the vague ultimatums being issued by Sheriff Harvey that the real decisions were made: Who would stay and who would go. "I just don't know," the girl said. "I want to support the mothers, but I'm about to start practice "teaching." That was the choice. The two realities. The sang "America the Beautiful" as they were arrested. At first it was for its rich irony. The irony that is one of pro- testers' few defenses against the steel-helmeted hordes. But as chorus after chorus of that fourth grade patriotic hymnal rang out, it took on a new meaning. It sang of the rich potential of America. There was another girl. She had told me just a few days ago that she was "through with being political." There she was seated on the tile floor of the lobby as the minutes grew short- er. Finally I found her at the door going to join the picketers in the street. "I can't stay, I have a job, it's my livelihood," she wailed apologetically. It was all kind of strange. Everyone knew that even if the welfare mothers won their demands, the world would be little different than b.efore. A STUDENT wearing the red armbands of a demonstrator marshal asked as 5:30 drew closer, "Is anyone here under 18?" There were a few hands raised in assent. Then came the warning, "It's not a good idea for you to stay. You'll be taken to a juvenile home. Bail can't be posted for you." No one left. The county prosecutor William Delhey finally arrived with his standard "in five minutes you will be arrested" speech. He ended with a plea to leave, "I appeal to you as patriotic law- abiding citizens." The demonstrators sang another chorus of "America the Beautiful." And then the nolice came. 4* 'God so loved the world ..' By HOWARD KOHN Associate Editorial Director A siren echoed in the distance. The neon lights made her dizzy. How many times had she warned him? Damn that hot temper of his. Always getting into trouble and expecting her to cover up. I'll beat him to an inch of his life. I told him not to be a cop. Get a nice job driving a bus or working in a packing house. Not me Mao he'd say, I just got to get on the force. It's in my' blood, He was a nice boy really. God knows I raised him to be. It's not my fault he's 'a little on, the tough side. He had to be, grow- ing up on the street... It's those filthy rich bastards from the college. What do they know about life? Why don't they stay at their pot parties and sex orgies and leave my boy alone? They don't belong here anyway. It's our town. We know how to run it. She wiped the tears with her cottonknit sweater. All right, damnit, so he shot one of them. The dirty slut probably had it coming. They all had it coming. I I I