~t~e frI$an Dii 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 "All right now, team-heads up- we can win this old ball game" 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials prirnted in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN GRAY '. - Trying the protesters: A call for reason Al f h C THE FAIRNESS of the court in adjudi- cating the cases arising from last week's demonstrations in support of wel- fare rights is crucial if students are to view the legal system as both legitimate and just. Political motivations must not enter into the deliberations of the judge in determining the guilt of the protesters. An impartial verdict and a fair sentence must be delivered. Prosecutor Delhey now argues that to. press for a maximum sentence for the protesters is the only way to deter further alleged illegal activity. The prosecutor's logic, is at best specious and is designed to improve his political popularity. To show students that the legal system does not dispense justice and discrimi- nates against students only deprives the law of its legitimacy and encourages further infractions by those frustrated in working for social change. TO SENTENCE over 200 students to jail terms, in addition to fines which could range up to $100, is not justice. The violations of the law were indeed only nominal. The danger to county prop- erty was limited. The protesters were in fact on county property after the closing of the building for less than fifteen min- utes. It is to the credit of the demon- strators that the arrests were orderly, almost rouine. It is ironic that the sheriff's depart- ment, under the guise of law and order is largely responsible for inciting the in- cident. Their ridiculous overreaction to the demonstrations only served to polar- ize the situation. The presence of sher- iff's deputies from three counties, loaded rifles, a helicopter flying overhead and German Shepherd police dogs added to the explosive tmosphere. Nothing could have persuaded the dem- onstrators that the police state was upon us more than Harvey's amateurish show of force. His interest was not in the pro- tection of the county building but in the harassment of students engaged in mean- ingful political protest. IN REALITY, it was a political decision on the part of the Supervisors to close the building at its regular time which put the students in violation of the law. If not for the political pressure exerted by frantic county conservatives and the un- sympathetic attitudes of the Supervisors toward the protesters' demands, the building would have remained open and the arrests would not have been made. It can be argued that the trespass law provides protection to the individual. But this case involves a public building where protesters were registering non-violent, non-disruptive political protest. If the protesters had become destructive, they should have been immediately arrested and charged with stronger charges than trespassing. SINCE THE protest remained peaceful, the Supervisors could have tolerated the situation. It is wiser to cordon off protesters in the County Bldg. where they are not disrupting the normal op- erations of the building than to physical- ly remove them from the building, put them in jail, arraign them and try them in what could turn into lengthy legal proceedings. Naturally, this tolerance of non-violent, non-disruptive political protest must apply equally to the right and left wings of the political spectrum in order to insure impartial application of the law. The Supervisors should even now drop the charges against the protesters. Fall- ing short of that, the court must act im- partially in adjudicating and sentencing the protesters if it expects students to view the legal system as legitimate. -MARK LEVIN Editor { . Letters to the. Editor An un-American tradition 'Piggish' polemics To the Editor: WHY DO PEOPLE bother to call the police pigs? It may or may not be true of the Ann Arbor Police, but either way it's un necessary-either they are pigs, and won't change, or they aren't pigs, but will be encouraged to be by the hostility they encounter. I went to Thursday's rally at the jail and Friday's vigil at the County Building, and although both sides were pretty peaceful in what they said and did, there was a small amount of totally un- necessary insulting of the police. It seemed to me that either we should be totally nonviolent, even in our language, or we should have a meaningful confrontation on a political level, not on the level of personal insults. I mean, the students and ADC mothers could conceivably come armed to the teeth, several thousand strong, with a million fanatical Red Guards lurking in the allleys be- hind us, and we could still smile sweetly and call the police "Sir." THE WAY I understand police brutality, it is the. unnecessary use of violence, includingnverbal vio- lence. Calling someone "nigger" is not quite hitting him, but it is brutality because it brutalizes the spirit, and because it is so uncall- ed for. The same thing ought to apply to cops being called "pigs" or "basterds"-as they were once or twice Thursday night, without their doing anything in particular at the time. This was either juve- nile, like the obscenities we re- ceived occasionally on Friday night from passing cars (civilian cars, incidentally), or it was deli- berate, designed to provoke vio- lence from the police. Either way, I didn't like it, and several of the other people at the vigil didn't like it either. Maybe we're politically un- aware, insufficiently radical, etc. But we don't intend to be radical- ized in incidents caused by lack of discipline, or by deliberate staging, on the part of a few of our own side. -ANDY FEENEY, 70 Sept. 7 Propaganda. To the Editor: THE RECENT coverage of the welfare mother'sdemands by the The Daily has aroused much excitement and discussion on campus. We are four students who have been at this school for three years and are in favor of student demonstrations and participation in civic affairs, so long as the cause' is justified. However, it seems that in this instance The Daily is guilty of the one-sided propagandized reporting for which it criticizes its contemporaries, Ann Arbor welfare mothers have been demanding $120 per child for school clothes. This amount is supposedly based on a minimum standard. They seem to be in- sisting that it is unreasonable for them to clothe one child for less than this sum. We find this hard to believe since the Detroit Free Press of Sept. 6, 1968 states that the Wayne County welfare, moth- ers were "jubilant" when they wereagranted $60 a piece after a similar protest. According, to the Free Press, the Wayne County social services director reported that, this sum would buy "one jacket, one coat, two pairs of pants, two undershirts, two pairs of shorts, three pairs of socks, one pair of street shoes, one pair of gym shoes, and one pair of boots." Could Ann Arbor mothers justify spendingtwice as much on a sim- ilar wardrobe? IF POLICE BRUTALITY is the issue, why didn't The Daily report all the violence that occurred dur- ing the protests? A secretary who works in the welfare building wit- nessed the disruption of the of- fices by angry mothers. She was thrown to the floor, kicked and scratched by mothers. She reports that personal belongings were alsoE stolen. Social workers and other employes bore the brunt: of the mothers' fury, No mention was made of this. In exposing the "hidden facts" of these incidents, you seem to have neglectedesome obvious ones. -MARIAN KLOPP,'70 -SHEILA SHERMAN, '69 -DONNA VOZAK, '70. -PATTI FREEBURGER, '70 Sept. 7 Out of t he ashes To the Editor: A CONSTRUCTIVE proposal re- garding the current ADC is- sue: Rather than devote time to demonstrations and county monies to maintain "law and order," per- haps the concerned students could collectively organize an agency which would provide the ADC mothers with free services for baby-sitting, nursery schools, house-cleaning, and other moth- erly functions. This, then, might enable many more of the mothers to obtain jobs to better support their families. -CHARLES V. WEAVER Sept. 6 OPINION The Daily has begun accept- ing articles from faculty, ad- ministration, and students on subjects of their choice.. They are to' be 600-900 words in length and should be submitted to the Editorial Director. ----r{. . WALTER SHAP IR- 'Sho days school days.. IT HIT ME yesterday as Tom Mayer was telling the crowd on the diag about the alliance between "the students and the mothers." Ann Arbor radicalism was returning to the womb. There are deep similarities between the current welfare struggle and the radical altruism which spawned the original sit-in movement over civil rights during the early sixties. The radical tactics and massive student involvement should not obscure the predominant fact that the struggle is being fought within the existing welfare system itself. Admittedly the years since the lunch counter sit-ins and the pickets of Woolworth's have affected the tactics of the militant stu- dents. This time the students are being scrupulously careful not to take the initiative and leadership away from the ADC mothers. FOR THE PAST five days I have grappled with the perplexing question of why this welfare protest has aroused a campus relatively unmoved by the seemingly more personal issues of war research and the quality of University education. The potpourri of answers I've heard have hit on a few basic themes-deep resentment over the police tactics in Chicago, frustra- tion over the apparent failure of electoral politics, shock at the un- provoked arrest of a Daily editor, the unstructured idleness of the first few warm days of the semester, and a growing student concern with the forgotten people of Ann Arbor. But somehow I feel it's more than this. In my suspicions, I am not relying on generally observable, em- pirical evidence. Instead I am attempting to chart subtle and difficult to perceive social currents from the egoistic, though necessary, vantage point of my ownreactidns. I saw the police remove each of the demonstrators from the County Building on Friday and, while hours later I saw many of these same students unscarred, the exNerience forbids me forever from giving a dispassionate analysis of what happened. LAST WEEK'S RETURN to militant altruism and Assues over which students once won fondly cherished victories was the logical consequence of the graphic events in Chicago. For Chicago didn't only mean a graphic encounter with police sadism. Chicago was also the culmination of four years of political frustration. While some on the far left are dreaming the chiliastic dreams of violent revolution or massive upheaval which were virtually incon- ceivable five years ago, many others on the student left are beginning to come to grips with the apparent futility of their visions. They have come to the dread realization that sooner or later they will have to make their own personal peace outside of the inflexible political arena. AT FIRST it seems contradictory that the most massive student commitment to civil disobedience in University history coincides with the gnawing recognition of the massive power of societal resistance to political change. But the commitment made by 200 students to civil disobedience, and the partial commitment of the 400 more who toyed with the idea, represents a kind of spiritual rite of passage. For while just hours later they walked around the campus all smiles and apparently little changed, they have made a pact. A pact 'with themselves. They recognize that the future of political radicalism is bleak. But they have branded themselves. By their actions at the .County Building they haveplaced on their record just the sort of morally based stigma that might impair their chances of getting security clearances, ad agency vice presidencies and a smooth, easy road to that palatial split level in the suburbs. Many may scoff and argue that four years after the Berkeley uprising which transformed university life in America there are thou- sands of students with similar arrest records. But they are still an' infinitesimal minority. And one would have to' be sanguine to believe that most employers are so steeped in social consciousness that they regard an "unlawful" moral commitment as a prime job recommendation. THIS IS the tragedy of 1968. This is the bitter taste of realizing there is never going to be a regenerated America. The viselike strangle- hold that materialism has on American values is all but invincible. Wars will go on and ghettos will fester. And the cow colleges and business administration schools will still turn out enough organization men to keep the wheels of industry and government forever turning. But what will become of the rest of us? We can't all retreat intoa cloistered existence and become teach- ers and professors. There is a limit to how many idealists, law, medicine, and journalism can possibly tolerate. All this raises the fundamental question of, how will those who, in the parlance of the times, were radicalized during the middle and 'late sixties adjust to the failure of their political and social aspirations. For this disenchanted generation has found the values of mate- rialism empty. Its radicalism was not begotten by the failure of capital- ism. Instead, its rebellion was born of recognition of the emptiness of its success. While I see friends trying to cope with these depressing realities every single day, I am convinced that it is highly difficult for anyone who has been aware during these turbulent few years to adjust easily to the prosaic life of American affluence. / But what alternatives lie open, to the disenchanted in a society that cannot adapt its economic system to meet the spiritual needs of a subculture of the highly educated? I SUSPECT that frustration over the bleakness of the apparent answers to this basic question played a key role in generating last week's demonstrations. For it seems likely that these demonstrations, despite the un- questioned rectitude of their cause and their unprecedented emotional potency, mark the end rather than the fruition of a period in political radicalism. Yet there is a peculiar virulence to the dreams of the student left and their desperate and so far unavailing search for an alternative life style that makes all predictions somewhat fraught with danger. , But I fear that last week's sit-ins "were merely a final footnote to an age I fear will be doomed to treasure forever as "my generation." But while deeply moving and morally concerned, last week's actions are unfortunately little help in trying to come to grips with the dismal spectre of the future. II 7 4 r'~ M 4 THE TOTAL irrationality of the manner in which the welfare system operates is appallingly obvious. It does not require great perceptive powers to discern that there is something wrong with a system which, ostensibly designed to help people who cannot help themselves, inflicts fi- nancial retalitation upon those few re- cipients with enough defiant courage to try to better their own condition. The cataclysmic decade of the 1930's brought a grudging recognition in this country that people should not be left to starve in the streets. But somehow this did not bring any flexibility in t h e staunch conviction that people should not be given "hand-outs," no matter h o w small the cost or how great the potential benefit. THE RESULT has been the development of a welfare system w h i c h appears very much to its recipients as a conspir- acy to counter any initiative on their part with a strong negative sanction. Any at- tempt on the part of a mother receiving an ADC allowance to supplement h e r family's income by taking a part-time Job and thus start them down the long road to independence from relying on what amounts to a degrading and meagre form of public charity results. in an equivalent cutback in her allocation. And the cherished American value of family stability is certainly not fostered by a system which has encouraged a large number of low income husbands to leave their wives because the women would re- ceive more money from ADC than the husbands were making. RUT THE real obstacle to reforming this system which so obviously needs it is not that too many people are satisfied with it, but that its very existence runs contrary to the whole American way of life. The welfare system survives on t h e very fringe of legitimacy in this country. Its existence is even considered subversive by a fairly large segment of the American public. The danger of "creeping social- ism" has by no means disappeared from part of most of the American public. This country was built upon an ethic which measures everything in terms of material achievement. And the large af- fluent middle class which has arisen, by dint of good fortune as well as Ingenuity and occasionally less honorable means, simply cannot understand why a few poor black mothers without education and saddled with children can't do the same. MOST OF TODAY'S middle class is sec- ond 'generation middle class anyway and has always lived in comfort. Self- segregated into pleasant, attractive ghet- toes, they have no comprehension of and very little interest in the problems of wel- fare recipients or indeed of any other so- cial group. But what is probably a more formidable obstacle to the necessary overhauling of the welfare system is the hostility of the' lower middle class. For although the gen- tile upper middle class has little symp- athy for welfare recipients, it is generally willing to concede that it is easiest and cheapest 'to give them a small dole and forget about them. The situation of the lower middle class in America is entirely different. They are caught in a trap which they do not re- motely comprehend. Although less suc- cessful than the upper middle class, they are nonetheless imbued with a middle class ethic. And probably because they can find no realistic justification for it in their own lives, they strive all the more ferociously to practice the middle class work ethic and to force it on those below them on the socio-economic scale. FREQUENTLY, the only real difference between the situation of the 1o w e r middle class and that of welfare recipi- ents is their ability to hold down a mean- ingless routinized job a n d the burden they are forced to bear by being compel- led to pay a disproportionate share of their meagre income in taxes - taxes which they are acutely aware are used in part to support welfare recipients. Until the basically humane upper mid- dle class in America is somehow forced out of its ivory tower and the understand- U *I The Myth of Nouveau Nixon T HE WORDS and the rhythm unintentionally parodied the formula of a television ad, but the flavor of the remark was tho- roughly Nixonesque. There at the Pittsburgh news conference Sun- day stood the scarred veteran of such legendary battles as Check- ers, missile gap, and Quemoy- and-Matsu, completely and forth- rightly parrying a reporter's sug- gestion that the veteran's latest Presidential campaign lacked spe- cificity : "I have now taken positions, and completely forthright posi- tions, on 167 major issues in this campaign, more than any of the other candidates in the primaries and the final campaign." Sobbing softly on the sidelines as Passe Nixon unloaded this grave line was the remnants of Nou- veau Nixon. He had listened pati- ently as Nixon blathered for an hour on phantom jets to Israel and the non-proliferation treaty, but the enormity of this remark finally overcame him. I met him nlID nIITDQ fxinq V(h c -not thp "You know, of the 167 major issues. More bird baths on inter- state highways. Changing the masthead on the Congressional Record. Providing increased bene- fits for veterans of the Spanish- American war. Painting the inside of the White House red, white, and blue. Why, the competition to come up with 167 absurd issues will be harder fought than the Army-Navy game. How could he have said that?" "He is Passe Nixon," I said pro- foundly. "How could he not?" And even as I was speaking the words, Nouveau Nixon assumed before me a ghastly form, and withered away into the ether. * * THAT THE return of Passe Nixon should be heralded by such a traditional Nixonism as "the 167 major issues" comment is en- tirely fitting. For the mythology of nouveau Nixonism had always been more concerned with t h e former Vice President's personal- ity than his position on any par- cadences reminiscent of John Kennedy, was the child of Nixon's essential gravity. It seemed some- how forced, as if the man, seized by a doldrum of doubt, suddenly looked up and saw his reflection in a mirror. Taken aback by the pallid coloring, the gaunt features, he took himself aside and said, "Nixon, you're entirely too serious. You're going to have to acquire a sense of humor." OUT. OF this confrontation with a looking glass was born Nouveau, a personage whose evan- escent characteristics have al- ready been indicated. For months. Passe was miserable. He winced each time Nouveau with what seemed unconscionable merri- ment, would trot out one of the Nixonisms and offer it up for the amusement of the public. Finally, quietly, but firmly he decided that Nouveau had gone entirely too far. Spurred by his nomination, he devised a more appropriately mnyr. a. c'.h an, fr . a a p I T -ill