Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of MichiganI under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications The, war, In Gb icago: It's a gas Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 orials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in oil reprints. ',AUGUST 29, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: ROB BEATTIE The politicized student: Tim.efor a new focus iHERALD the advent of the politiciz- ed American student is a risky propo- s ionThecoming has been prophesied too ' many times before. And whether. American students are willing to main- fain interest long enough to achieve a pcsitin' of power and influence ap- 4roahing- that of their European count- or-parts is not yet certain. But 'in this year of great national trag- edy and shame, American students are ctiyely unhappy. And their discontent stems from problems which, cannot be remedied if their commitment is only lshort term, ANY STUDENTS are unhappy o n ly for the ignoble reason that govern- ment 1has intruded into their previously saero-sanct middleclass lives in the form ,of, the coercive draft. Buta significant section of the student community has been harshly shaken out pf;-its socially irresponsible lethargy by the iglaringly' immoral action of the gov- ,erinent in Vietnaml and by the abrupt' 1 c6veriy of long-existent, intense racism throughout society. 'They are also unhappy with a n d in- creasingly aware of the institutions in so- biety which exercise power over t lh e i r IWes. There is a n e w determination to prevent government and society from not only dictating the choices, but, more im- portunitly, subtly determining the alter- natives from which to choose. On the national level, student discon- tent has manifested itself in the fight against the war in Vietnam. Great ener- gies h3ave been expended in the effort to repudiate the Johnson administration's policies. But the defeat of the McCarthy, McGovern and Kennedy forces can only be viewed as the beginning of a long pro- cess. And frustration in the national are- na does not mean that significant change cannot be achieved on the local level. QTUDENTS MUST direct their concerns' toward the institution which most af- fects their lives - the university. Its di- rection, operation and influence on the community in which it operates are the responsibilities of students. It is on this ,level that the chances of affecting both immediate and long-range changes are greatest. Improving higher education not only affords the student a more meaningful and relevant educa- tional experience, an achievement in it- self. But, in the long-run it also makes a major contribution in accelerating the prerequisite changes in society's attitudes. In the past, concern over the academic dimension of the University has b e e n minimal. What then seemed to be the most important fight was the elimination of paternalistic rules and regulations which had allowed the University to in- terfere in the personal lives of students. NOW THE focus of attention m,u s t change. But it is at this point where problems become more complex, demand- ing a heightened expertise and a contin- uing interest on the part of the student community. Student power cannot be ad- vocated unless students are willing to spend the time to study all aspects of the decisions they are asking to make. For example, student participation in curriculum decisions requires that duly elected student representatives not only advocate what would be desirable during their short term of residence at the Uni- versity but what is best for the University in the long-run, considering the avail- ability of funds and ultimate objectives. And this balanced perspective of Univer- sity problems is an attainable goal for students. What has prevented students from as- suming their proper role in determining University policy has been the undisputed fact that most students simply are not interested enough to educate themselves. AS ONE University professor joked, "If we agreed to place 101 students on those 101 subcommittees which supposed- ly make policy, you couldn't find 101 stu- dents who would give the time necessary to educate themselves so they could be- gin to deal with the problem." / Admittedly, students have not had a sophisticated view of the University op-" eration in the past. Student interest hasj been both sporadic and limited. How- ever, these prevailing views have been outdated by the events of the last four years. The American student is undoubtedly politicized for the moment. His entrance into the decision-making process and the responsibilities he will then have to as- sume, may sustain his active interest in the qualitative aspects not only of the University but of the society in which he lives. -MARK LEVIN Editor i -lit j *...I ~,i . . S1 /'; - - Chi AJ- i+ alr w 4 196, The Register "Wilte'srgeat-at-arms pese cl-ar te stret "Wil thesereantat-rms leas clar te sreet . By JOHN GRAY Special To The Daily CHICAGO AUG 27-At nine o'clock Mon-- day night the Yippies got up from their small groups and began to leave Lincoln Park on the city's North Side. They were heading south toward the Loop but no one seemed aware of any organized goal. I fell into step with the crowd and tried to keep somewhere in the middle. On, Sunday night the people at the front and back of the crowd had been the ones who were rushed and clubbed by the police. The Yippies were happy, uncon- cerned with the possibility of being busted or hurt. The police were nowhere in sight. There were thousands of kids walking down the street-a crowd at least three blocks long and filling the street from curb to curb. The U' and its loyalties Hot ti M By THOMAS R. COPI Special to The Daily CHICAGO AUG 27 - At about 1 a.m. Tues- day morning, groups of ippies who had been rousted from Lin- coln Park were still congregating on street corners i nearby Old Town. I went to the corner of Well St. and North Ave. w h e r e two groups of about 20 policemen had gathered, apparently in an effort to disperse the crowd. The police lined up across both sidewalks then started walking south on Wells, pushing everyone before them. People were pulled out of doorways and-made to move south along with everyone else on the sidewalk. P r e s s photo- graphers and reporters followed the police, who were apparentlyP not interested in bothering t h e newsmen. I had n o t yet heard reports that newsmen for the second straight night were made targets of police violence throughout Chi- cago. YOUTHFUL demonstrators on Wells St. were setting fire to the trash cans as they moved south. They tied-up traffic on several oc- casions by hurling the fiery re- ceptacles into the street. At one point, a police car roar- ed up to one such burning obstacle and a blue helmeted cop jumped out, fire extinguisher in h a n d. After several unsuccessful attem- pts to quench the blaze, the cop got back into the car and left, eleaving the burning trash barrel in the middle of the street. MEANWHILE, the orderly line of policemen continued south on Wells, moving everyone' before it, including several people who com- plained that they lived just up the street. They were told to go around \the block. Those people who decided to leave the main cr o wd and go down the side streets were 1 e f t alone. The cops mainly aimed at dispersing the group which stayed on Wells St. After four blocks, the represent- atives of the press were forced to walk with rthe demonstrators in front of the police line. One re- porter who protested, was poked in the ribs by one of the ubiqui- tousnightsticks and quickly did as he was told. 1 After one more block, with about three dozen, demonstrators still reluctantly marching south in front of the oncoming police, the officer who w a s apparently in charge shouted, "Okay now!" At this signal the police broke into a run and charged the crowd, night- sticks swinging. WHEN I SAW what was hap- pening, I broke into, a run, grasp- ing my camera close to my body so that I would be able to run faster. Several of the cops shouted "Get the cameras "and I ran ev- en faster. Behind me, I heard the now familiar sound of stick meet- ing skull, as the police c a u g h t some of the slower members of the group. }About half way down the block I looked up and saw four police cars and a line of blue hel- meted police blocking our only exit, at the corner of Wells and Division. The cops at the corner, bang- in Old Town SUDDENLY the cops emerged from a side street in Old Town, a tourist-night club section about six blocks away from the park;. Two patrols cars came fromop- posite directions cutting the 1crowd in half. About ten cops rushed out, guns drawn. The Yip- pies surged forward in fear but remained pretty stable Then the cops started firing. I was fifty feet from them and they looked like outlaws in old western movies trying to stam- pede the horses so the good guys couldn't get away. Just running around whooping, firing their guns in the air. The crowd went wild.. PEOPLE WERE running every- where, hiding in vacant lots and under cars. Others were just run- ning blindly, going as far from the guns as they could. I ran too. I ran down a side street with about twenty other kids. When we got two blocks away we turned to watch the cops pushing people down the street. I was in what appeared to be a small Black ghetto. People were standing on their doorsteps with boards and bottles inm their hands, waiting for the police to try to get them. As I left the street a girl called out to me, "Go back and fight 'em,; hippy. Kill them." I WALKED back to, the park by side streets, trying to keep out of the way of the guns. I heard what sounded like gunshots or firecrackers. Newsmen around me were{ talk- ing about what I had missed. A photographer taking shots of a beating had his camera smashed and was beaten himself. Even on the side streets I saw groups of lice, who haven't been showing much mercy these days. I WENT OVER to a couple of other photographers and report- ers, who h a d gathered under a street light, and we quickly agreed to stick together, to see w h a t would happen. The policemen be- hind us had stopped running, and had again formed their line across the street. The Yippies had huddled into a group across the street from us and were obviously terrified and expecting the worst. But apparently the worst had passed, as the police held their po- sitions and made no move toward their captives. Those of us with press credentials were allowed to go out on Division Street and told to "get the hell out of here." We waited on the corner to see what would happen to the demon- strators, and after a few minutes slowly worked our way back to- ward them. A couple of officers. apparently under no orders but their own, ordered us back, but reluctantly let us through when we showed him our credientials. Several police paddy wagons soonearrived on the scene and the Yippies were put inside and taken a w a y after nbeingthoroughly searched. When the' last of them had left the police also left and the street was reopened. As I walked back up Wells ESt. I saw the proprietor of one of the Old Town restaurants boarding up his windows. He said that he was closing his business until after the convention. up to ten police dragging demon- j strators to waiting paddywagons. I got back to the park only to see the group preparing to leave again. This time the demonstrators were wary, even fearful. All the police had to do was swing clubs and run, and they succeeded in herding everyone back into the park. Now it was only on hour before the park's 11 p.m. closing time when the police vowed to herd everyone back out. THE PARKING area on the southwest side of the park was filled with newsman and groups of onlookers. Many of the more frightened Yippies were standing in line along the west end of the park, waiting to see the confron- tation they knew would coine. At ten or fifteen minun dter- inaes the 3,000 people inside the park would start shouting and runnning towards us. The news- men would then move in. But nothing developed from any of those stampedes. No on~e knew what had caused any of them and the Yippies soon quieted down and returned each time. By 12:30 1' was ready to leave. I talked with a Newsweek reporter and a lady from the neighbor- hood who was opposed to the Yip- pies. The Newsweek man said he was almost ,glad there was~ so' much brutality, because with so many reporters and photographers there the public was going to believe the worst about the police. A FEW YIPPIES were saying that they were glad the press was being brutalized. Police had al- ready sent two cameramen to the hospital and were obviously beat- ing newsmen not in spite of their credentials but because of them. The Yippies reasoned that it was police brutality that had rad- icalized the blacks and politicized many of the hippies. The thought that maybe the press would start being more honest, now that they knew what the abuse could be like. The woman who didn't like Yip- pies said that she wasn't afraid of the police. She was, she said, law- abiding and didn't believe that the police hit people without provo- cation. The yelling ,in the park started again but no one tpaid much at- tention. I looked around and saw the Yippies runing, screaming with smoke behind them. I had heard no. warnings from the po- lice. Then the, wind carried a blast of the tear gas into my face. I was blinded for a moment, con- fused. My face stung and my eyes burned. I ran with the lady who wasn't afraid of police. She was scream- ing and crying and cursing. 4.I~~-fIN! "FEW PEOPLE are aware of 'the extent to which the worlds of higher educe- tion, big business, and banking are link- ed through interlocking relationships. among professors, college presidents, and trustees, industry and government ..." So writes James Ridgeway in the cover article of the September issue of Harper's Magazine. His piece - studded w i t h names of men'and companies, yet care- Pall and winter subscription rate $5.00 per term by carrier ($5.50 by' mal);.$9.00 for regular academic school year ($10 by mail). The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Editorial Staff AMARK LEvIN, Editor fully unsensationalistic - recounts with a dull t h u d the lamentable extent toI which those relationships exist. Rare is the institution where no mem- ber of the faculty or administration is in- volved in them. This university, for ex- ample, 'has spawned several "spinoff" corporations, and for years some of its administrators held positions in corpora- tions and financial institutions with Uni- versity dealings, until such relationships were ruled illegal. THE MORAL and legal questions that t h e s e "interlocking relationships" raise are where the professors 'and ad- ministrators place their loyalties, wheth- er they stand to derive inordinate finan- cial gains f r o m the relationships and whether competing firms are unfairly eliminated by them. Yet the moral and legal questions are not the only ones, and in the past they have been overemphasized during the finger-pointing which has followed dis- closures ofdextra-curricular business in- volvements. ONE OF the major victims, as Ridge- way correctly observes, is the student, especially the undergraduate. As he puts it, "Teaching undergraduate students is not especially interesting compared to working on the outside in one of the new companies.' Indeed, the major f 1 a w in this chapter from Ridgeway's upcoming book is that it does not elaborate ade- quately on this point. That these relationships exist is no se- cret. Yet few people indeed are aware how A STEPHEN WILDSTROM URBAN, Managing Editor Editorial DAVID KNOKE, Executive Editor LEHNER Director WALLACE IMMEN .. .....:.. News Editor PAT O'DONOHUE ........ News Editor CAROLYN MIEGEL .......Associate Managing Editor DANIEL OKRENT ................, Feature Editor LUCY KENNEDY...............P'ersonnel Director WALTER SHAPIRQ......Associate Editorial Director HOWARD KOHN ........Associate Editorial Director NEAL BRUSS.................... Magazine Editor ALISON SYMROSKI ...... Associate Magazine Editor AVIVA KEMPNER ..............Contributing Editor DAVID DUBOFF ...............Contributing Editor. ANDY SACKS......................Photo Editor Sports Staff. I :.: ,, .. m W"N rM.