Seveny-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions i re Free WrepoAreFree, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 D etroit: City Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This moust be noted in all reprints. . .. FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: BETSY TURNER Regents Must Shun Ability-to-Pay Plan MICHIGAN STATE University's unique ability-to-pay tuition formula con- tains so many loopholes and inequities that it must not be considered a logical alternative for the University. The system at first glance appears equitable, in allowing a tuition discount for those students whose families are least able to pay. Students from families with less than $11,800 gross income per year will pay the minimum of $354 for a year's credits. Students whose families gross $16,666 or more per year will pay the maximum of $500 for the same period, a hike of $146 over last year. Students whose family incomes fall between these extremes will pay a flat 3 per cent of the amount shown on their last income tax return. But these are the only provisions of the plan, which was approved on a political basis by the five Democratic members of the eight-man Board of Trustees. The board had discussed alternatives through several stormy sessions, but they failed to examine the plan they approved close- ly enough to see its shoddiness and un- fairness. In the first place, it is appallingly dis- criminatory because it is predicated on the assumption that a family with a large paycheck has surplus funds, and no ex- emptions have been provided for cases of family financial problems. FOR INSTANCE, a large family sending two or three children to college on a $16,666 income certainly has a greater financial burden than a family sending their only child through school on an $11,800 income. Yet, in the first case, the family will be shackled with an increase which might equal a full week's income while the more able family will meet no tuition increase. Besides this, the higher income family is already hit harder in graduated federal and local taxes which support education and the state has now instituted a percentage income tax as well. Secondly, no one is sure how much rev- enue the plan provides because to this time the privacy of a parent's income tax return has been respected. Collecting copies of the returns is the only way the gross incomes may be determined and there is a likelihood that many parents will object to revealing family income and providing a copy of the form for every child. And the trustees are asking com- pliance of the plan in only two months. Furthermore, the plan does not ac- count for the students whose fees are not paid out of "gross family income" and are independent of their parents. But, even worse, students classified as "rich" could avoid higher payments by claim- ing independent sources of income. THIRDLY, the accounting problems will ''- be- fantastic as each student must be processed individually. A large number of new personnel must be employed to han- dle disputes and to process the tax re- turns. Students will all have to be billed, as well, because nobody will know their exact bill in advance. It cannot be disputed that the formula is "unique" among colleges, and so far the six other state colleges which have hiked their tuitions have set across-the-board increases and provided increased aid for students with provable need at any in- come level. The University Regents must shun an ability-to-pay plan when they finally meet and MSU students should fight their administration's plan. -WALLACE IMMEN As life in Detroit staggered back to a semblance of normal- ity, three Daily staffers-writ- ers John Lottier and Stephen Firshein, and photographer Rob- ert Sheffield-spent a day tour- ing the city and the riot-scarred area around 12th Street in par- ticular. They interviewed sol- diers, store-owners, residents, and passersby and have record- ed the comments and their im- pressions below. DETROIT-Twelfth street had a traffic jam esterdy. - After four days of looting, snip- ing, burning, and window smash- ing, it was finally safe to enter the area, and the people flocked to what has become Michigan's biggest attraction. Every corner was manned by a pair of glum National Guardsmen, sporting M- 16 rifles, sleepless eyes, and two- day beards. Negroes, young and old, lolled up and down the street like broadwalk sightseers, care- fully avoiding the glass and debris that littered the sidewalks, and peering in the buildings. In the middle of the sea of traffic, a group of squad cars passed with rifles obliquely showing through rolled-down windows. A bulldozer pulled down the char- red remains of a brick wall; a dead poodle lay covered with flies near a trash can twenty feet awy. The trash basket was filled to the brim with beer and liquor bottles. Two feet of stagnant water had collected inside the still-smoulder- ing shell of what used to be a paint store on the first floor, and a whore-house on the second; the acrid smell of escaping natural gas filled the air. In front, the glass in a parking meter had melted, covering the coin slot. The fire had spread, we discover- ed, from the adjacent grocery store, causing the cans of paint and lacquer to explode and set- ting the entire block on fire. A fourteen year old boy was buried in the blaze. In the Baptist church across the street, Negroes queued up for the scanty boxes of clothing and food being handed out-we later heard that there were some 5000 homeless in the city. On the cor- ner, a teenage girl tried out her new camera, while her boyfriend smiled with pride. A WJR newsman was ques- tioning a Negro woman and her three young children. "Madam, what do you think of the riot?" "Oh, I think it's just horrible." "Sonny, did you see any shoot- ing?" "Huh?" "Looting?" "Huh?" Fire-gutted stores were inter- mingled with those untouched by the mobs, or merely looted of merchandise, creating a strange pattern at first sight. It seemed- as though Providence had ran- domly determined whetheror not a business was spared or destroy- ed. As it turned out, a modern version of the lamb's blood on the door had been used as a marker for the rioters -"Soul Brother," "Black," "No Lie, We're Black," hadtbeen hurriedly spray painted on the windows of Negro-owned businesses. Troop convoy trucks were park- ed by the side of the road, and guardsmen - we saw no army troops or police walking in this area-were gobbling down sand- wiches and chugging milk and wearily returning to their posts. AFTER WALKING for nearly an hour, we decided to stop in one of the little "greasy spoons" which dot the Negro strip. The owner, after handing over a couple of fruit punch Faygos, warned us not to take the bottles outside, because they "can be used for fire-bombs, and were." Then it was back up the street, where more of the same scenes wvere waiting. Standing on the corner of 12th and Blaine, in the heart of the destroyed area, we talked to a 25-year-old Negro into giving us a tour of the war zone." We then began to understand what the riot had been about. He started, in an authoritative tone: "I want to get one thing straight. This ain't no race riot. The Negroes here are only after the cops: whites was left alone... In fact, whites was looting along side the Negroes. I didn't hear nobody say 'Get Whitey' no time." He went on to explain how he had been around during four days of looting and burning, but had not joined in, "cause I got money whenever I want it. I got a good job, a wife, and two kids. If I want a television set, I can go to the storetand buy one-it ain't worth getting shot in the back for." WE ASKED why he felt the dis- orders had started. He quickly re- sponded: "This has been building up here for over a year. Every- burned-out food store. When pressed, he admitted that the owners were new, and "weren't too bad. But a Negro guardsman was standing in front trying to keep out the looters. They told him to go away, so's they could take the food. He got mad, and started chasin' a kid up the alley, and shot and killed him. The mob didn't even rob it, but just burned it for the kid." "Two other markets were shot up cause they didn't give little kids depositson pop'bottles," he went on. Also it became clear that the rioters had selectively destroy- ed grocery stores which they felt had overcharged them. "See that one," he said, pointing to a char- coal black store, whose protective anti-stealing iron gates had been melted out of shape, "The prices were too high. They also sold rot- ten stuff and tried to pass it off as good." We had been wondering how ef- fective the hastily painted "Soul Brother" signs had been. "See that corner store," our guide said. "Used to be liquor shop owned by a Negro, but he wouldn't even let most people into the store, and * icks the area was well-kept and gave a lower middle class appearance. We found that both whites and Negroes lived in the large brick houses and apartments, and it was disconcerting to imagine the wealth of booty behind the walls. "You can get things real cheap here now," our friend began. "Color televisions for about a hundred; diamond rings for fif- teen bucks . . . mink stoles are worth about twenty. There's a booze black market too-$8 a pint, and $15 a fifth-cause of the liquor ban." HE WENT ON to remark that looting had been done by all age groups-including five-year olds, who would fill bags with goods, and hand them to their parents waiting outside. "Some of these kids never had no bikes or nothing. When they got the chance to get one, they did. Wouldn't you?" We noticed that only a few houses had been burned in the area, and couldn't understand why the rioters had put the torch to their own dwellings. But it wasn't that simple: According to Itself previous uprising, causing much greater damage to life and prop- erty. "I was in Watts, man," our comrade said. "The Negroes there blew it. They didn't know what they was doing, and they was just running scared burning as they went along. Here the Negroes kept their cool. They took their time, and took everything from the places before they burned them. They weren't organized or noth- ing, they just kept their cool." By this time, we had come full circle back to 12th and were de- termined to get the other side's view. We approached the nearest guardsman, who was squatting on an upright cinderblock. "There's a war going on," he started. "It starts every night at nine o'clock. We got some guy last night - Shot the second floor right out from under him; then a tank ran over the house, and if that didn't kill him he's got Jesus Christ in his back pocket." His buddy nodd- ed, as he patted a tripod-mounted machine gun. We sauntered down to the next group of guardsman, about half a block away. "You wouldnt believe it last night. 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""M...\1h}::::..}.h0. :. }:1{v}}.":L::V:.":: }.rr:.Y: Newspapers View Detroit Student Rights Statement: laking Students Citizens By The Associated Press The following is a number of excerpts from editorials in papers around the coun- try, on the riots which struck Detroit this week: NEW YORK TIMES The nation has cause for deep concern if the leaders of both political parties are unable to forget political considerations when mur- der, arson and looting are sweeping some of its major cities ... . It is no disgrace to either the governor, a Republican, or to Mayor Cav- anagh, a Democrat, that the situation in De- troit slipped out of local and state control. The fact that Gov. Romney may be the Re- publican presidential candidate next year may explain - but not excuse President Johnson's nervous political posturing at this critical time .. .but . . . the statement issued by the Re- publican Coordinating Committee is a flagrant outrage . . . This shabby statement insults the nation's intelligence when it asserts that President Johnson's veto of a loosely drafted "crime control bill" for the District of Colum- bia contributed to an upheaval a thousand miles away in Detroit. WASHINGTON EVENING STAR The rioting in Detroit, which is just this side of anarchy apparently is being brought under some semblance of control. But it has exacted a fearful toll. Governor Romney and Mayor Cavanagh acted firmly on Sunday when the rioting began over a trivial incident. But it soon became evident that this was not enough and the governor asked the White House for help. The President acted quickly. The President's response was the right one. CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh of Detroit has enjoyed rich praise as a do-something, get- going, resourceful fighter for his inner-city families.... It is a frightful fantasy. It proves nothing except that thousands of Detroiters will chuck away all the civility they have been taught for one chance to vent hostility, to snatch some prize no greater than a pair of pants or a six-pack of beer, a table model radio or a TV set, to burn businesses or families out of their homes . . . Violence can lead only to more stiffening, even to martial law. CHICAGO DAILY NEWS The contest for leadership of America's Ne- groes, and of the civil rights movement, has gone into a critical stage. The extremists are at least temporarily in control: They're having their try at smashing their way to racial equality. Except to satisfy the bloodlust of the instigators, it serves no purpose, of course. But who is to persuade the Negroes that there is another way except their own responsible leaders? MINNEAPOLIS STAR The smoke drifting above Detroit and New York's Spanish Harlem should be a signal for a concerted, bipartisan, no-holds-barred attack on the evils of slums and the lack of employ- ment and education opportunities . . . the blame must be spread nationwide, from the craft unions which have ignored demands for equal employment opportunities to the school boards which have condoned second-class citi- zenship status, citizenship status for minor- ity children and finally to lawmakers at all levels who have tried to make the slums invisi- ble, hoping the festering problems would dis- appear. DENVER POST It is past time to assert with every bit of power appropriate to such a basic task, the supremacy of law and order in the cities of this nation. The young hotheads have had their day-and nights-and have made an intolerable mess of them. It is time for older, wiser and more decent people to force the hot- heads to cool off. SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER What happened in Newark, and now in Detroit, is far more than a simple protest reaction. Such riots are eruptions of utter law- lessness that cannot be condoned in any way. They are almost purely criminal outbursts. They have absolutely no social excuse, and they can and must be contained by whatever measures are necessary. If continuing anarchy requires the counter force of the U.S. Army- so be it. NEWARK EVENING NEWS To a Negro minister standing in a burning street and to President Johnson, reluctantly ordering out federal troops, the situation in Detroit looked the same. In almost the same words both agreed: "It's not a matter of civil rights; it's out-and-out lawlessness." In the case of Detroit, as in Newark and other American cities wracked by rioting, burning and looting, there is ample evidence of destructiveness to support this melancholy conclusion. This kind of destruction now being prac- ticed cannot build a better life for Negroes in America. LOUISVILLE COURIER-JOURNAL Detroit officials had honestly tried to do something about the problems of poverty and race. They had made some progress. They cared. Today their hopes are ashes in a mind- less orgy of destruction. Why? For one thing, there are people ... who have no regard what- ever for the middle-class values which under- lie our laws and institutions.. . They feel they have no stake in our system and that they have nothing to lose by going on a rampage of pillage and looting.... the poor people got the furniture, I ain't a crook no more, cause I got nothing." We asked if he had tried to use a don't-burn slogan, and he chuckled: "A soul brother I ain't. But Sam across the street, he got to be a soul brother, and they didn't touch him. His store's OK." A fat Negro woman came up to him and he greeted her with a smile. "Come on in, we're open, Sadie. Looks like it's all over- how about a mahogony dinner set." She returned his greeting, and turned to us and pleaded: "They shouldn't pull out the troops, cause they's a lot of wine and whiskey people gonna get drunk on, and we need the protection. Don't let 'em take 'em away." She showed concern about more rioting in other' parts of the city. "Theys still trying to scare us. This morning one fella called me up and said 'You think you's safe cause you haven't been hit yet, but you'll get your.'" EIGHT HOURS in the riot area left us with a number of distinct images. Uppermost is the fact that the riots did not occur in the most run-down sections of the city. We drove down Brush Street --a well-known prostitution and bar area with its near hopeless derelects and shoddy row houses. There had been much less de- struction in that section than in the12th Street area-anoc- casional store, but nothing exten- sive. But at the same time, we felt more in danger there than in the hard-hit area. This brings up a most interesting point: why didnt the people in the worst sec- tions riot? This might be explained by several factors. First, the army patrolled the eastern section of Detroit, and the army is respect- ed by the people. The army troops are well-trained - many have fought overseas - whereas the national Guard is almost completely lacking in experience. Also the Army forces were integ- rated, where the NationalAGuard is almost totally white. A case in point: so far the Army has had to fire a total of only seven rounds of ammunition since en- tering the area late Monday night. More important, however, the residents of, say, Brush Street have always been poorer than their neighbors to the west. With this frame of mind, they may have tended to become less rest- less. They lack the spirit of the Negro who has just begun to taste American affluence and sees all that he has yet to attain. Riots seldom occur in the worst areas of the South, where living conditions are the most deplorable in the nation. THE SECOND IMPRESSION is the complete lack of any guilty feelings among people we saw in the destroyed section. There was an air similar to that which one feels after eating a delicious meal. This was typified by the smile of a Negro mechanic in his Cadillac, viewing the parade in front of him, and by the look of satisfac- tion of people toting new tran- sistor radio playing: "Trying to set the night on fire . . ." They had been slighted by American so- ciety, and felt they deserved the treasure gained from the looting. In fact, they proudly exhibited bandaged wrists and forearms- the mark of the window-breaking looter. In addition, reports of 'formal, pre-planned organization within the riot appears to be without basis. This istnot to imply that there was utter chaos -- small groups of looters worked together for short times, looting in unison, and then burning. Groups of snipers made loose arrangements, situatingrthemselves in more than one apartment house, and draw- ing the soldiers and police into traps to pick them off. If there was any organization, it was after the riot. The West Central A c t i o n Organization, along with the city agencies, and the people were working together to care for those dispossessed by flames. Centers throughout the city, were literally flooded with food and clothing donations, from individuals, milk companies, and grocery chains.. IT LOOKS LIKE the Detroit riot is over. The city has al- ready begun tackling the unre- solved problems: getting business- man back on their feet, providing homes for the homeless, healing the thousands of wounded, deal- ing with over three thousand ar- rested and accused citizens. And most crucial, trying to create some kind of rapport between nembers of the same society. As Malcolm X wrote before he died: "In our mutual sincerity (whites 4i 4 4 ACADEMIC FREEDOM, like peace, is one of those things that everyone is in favor of but no one ever does anything positive to achieve. But now five national student, faculty and administrative or- ganizations have produced a six-page Statement on Rights and Freedoms of Students which just might bring a bill of rights to the campus. The statement, drafted by representa- tives of the American Association of Colleges, the American Association of University Professors, the National Asso- ciation of Student Personnel Administra- tors, the National Association of Women's Deans and Counselors, and the National Student Association, has yet to be offi- cially ratified. Final approval will be a major step in guaranteeing freedom of speech, press, assembly, protection against over-zealous administrators and student participation in university decision-mak- ig processes. These guarantees include a long list of due process requirements in major cases, student independence in inviting con- troversial speakers to campus, the right to participate in off-campus political ac- tivity (such as war protests) without fear of administrative reprisal, a student press legally and financially autonomous and free from university censorship and protection from "arbitrary and prejudic- ed" grading. THE MOST IMPORTANT portion is a statement that "the student body should have clearly defined means to participate in the formulation and appli- cation of institutional policy affecting academic and student affairs," followed by a section which says that students can be disciplined only for violation of rules that "significant student participation" helped frame. Ratification and acceptance of the statement is vital to finally bringing full citizenship--with the rights and respon- sibilities it entails-to the student. -JENNY STILLER I Don't Advertise Riots THE ARGUMENT that sensationalist re- porting is unavoidable during a sen- sational incident is a weak one when the adrenal glands of a community are fired by what they see on television no what The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.00 per term by carrier ($2.50 by mail); $4.00 for entire summer ($4.50 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Summer Editorial Staff LAURENCE MEDOW ......................Co-Editor STEPHEN FIRSHEIN...................Co-Editor MARK LE.VIN ........Smmerpplen1#ment Editor they are vaguely aware of on the other side of town or in another city. If our purpose is to stop the violence the media must acknowledge its con- tributory function and handle its re- porting activities accordingly. If, how- ever, our purpose is to give the public wide coverage and insight into the vari- ous causes of the disturbance then we must be prepared for the resulting sym- pathetic reaction to yesterday's news. The right to know must be balanced in this case against the clear and present dan- ger of further destruction and killing. NE SOCIOLOGICAL interpretation of our ghastly summer city phenomena is that is represents 20th century man's search for identity in a world character- ized by normlessness-anomie. If this is the case at all-and no one interpreta- tion will fit adequately-then the people involved in that day's looting and sniping, .t>...,..,.:.4h,,. .«..........4".,.,..v r..;{:a,....:t{.... ... . . ."v.... XWW.".f.~AA. . brought the booze to the door. So we burned him out. But that shop across the street is owned by a Jew, and we let him alone cause he's always been fair to us, and we know he's a good man." It became apparent, that during the riots, the "Soul' signs had been painted as much by the passing looters, as by the store owners themselves. We saw whole blocks of untouched stores with identical handwriting on the glass windows, and in the same color paint. For example, one cluster of stores would be marked "Black," while another would say "Negro." The most creative signs-"No lie, we're black," and "Super Soil," were probably done by panicked proprietors. our guide, "People from other parts of town came down here to loot and burn. That's why they's so many houses burned. I saw one guy here looting and wearing his green beret. He said he was just back from Vietnam and didn't want to miss out on the action. A lot of houses caught fire when the wind blew the flames from the burning stores." SNIPING STARTED late Sun- day night and according to our friend, the bullets were not di- rected specifically at whites but at policeman. "The snipers was trying to get the police and burn them to the ground." Then the lilly white National Guard came to the aid of the police, and "it 30 room mansion, so we called in two tanks and blew them all to hell." There did seem to be some dis- content among the guardsmen. One complained: "Every eight hours those army boys change shifts. I've been here since 6 this morning, and there's no relief in sight. I only got three hours sleep last night, and I want to get out of here." Another guardsman didn't mince words in his criticism of the fed- eral troops: "Them dudes didn't roll in till Tuesday-we had the. place cleaned up by then. The Army gets credit for everything we do, and they don't do crap. We shot two guys the other night, and they got credit for it." 4