The lock-in trial: Facts vs. she t thgan a'us Seventy-eight years of editorial freedomi Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan philosophy 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone'. 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writer or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: STUART GANNES I Regents' proposal: Not far enoughl THE DOUBLE-EDGED nature of the Regents' proposal yesterday for a student bookstore is obvious. Their at- tempt to force upon Student Government Council and the student body a specifical- ly worded referendum for a bookstore assessment and an administration-con- trolled bookstore is unacceptable and SGC should not cooperate with the Re- gents under these terms. At the same time, the Regents en- dorsed the establishment of a University subsidized bookstore and-whether they intended to or not-took a major step toward giving students a dominant voice in determining when and how they will be assessed for student activities. Both their endorsement of the project and the obnoxious strings they attached deserve close attention. The Regents attempted to dictate o students not only the naure of the con- trol of the bookstore, but also the exact implementation and wording of a new referendum. While admitting students should decide when they are taxed for a student project, the Regents attempted to control the bookstore through Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Pierpont. The control properly belongs to the cnsumers-the students and faculty --who would agree to tax themselves. rTHE REGENTS apparently doubt the competence of SGC to operate a large bookstore. But the obvious success of the SGC Discount Store, as well as the success of similar stores on a majority of the campuses in the nation, implies otherwise. SGC can and would operate the bookstore both competently and in the students' interest. Moreover, financial responsibility can be insured more satisfactorily than by direct University control. As SGC Presi- dent Marty McLaughlin pointed out at the rally yesterday, students could con- duct audits and receive financial advice. Such methods are employed by the Uni- versity to oversee its financial arrange- ments. THE CRUCIAL question is which interest - administrative or consumer -- will determine the policies of the bookstore. The students want a discount bookstore, with other concerns secondary. Pierpont, or whoever in his office would manage the bookstore, probably would be more concerned with competition from the local bookstores and their reaction Dodgingy the draft RICHARD NIXON deserves accolades for his ingenious public relations maneu- vers regarding the draft. By cancelling draft calls for November and December, Nixon is again playing the champion of draft reform and the crusader for peace. The President has grabbed banner headlines every day in an effort to garner support for his hollow peace efforts. Nixon's gimmickry is probably an attempt to deflate the planned anti-war mobiliza- tion for October and November. By dra- matizing his sincere efforts in behalf of peace, he hopes to discredit anti-war campaigns as needless shenanigans. In the name of draft reform, t h e President should not seek simply to pla- cate those who are now protesting the war and the draft. The draft will con- tinue to exist and operate selectively, ar- bitrarily, if somewhat more predictably. Even a draft lottery, which would not offer alternative means of service for ob- jectors, is not an acceptable, ultimate soltion to the draft problem. INDEED, NIXON'S intimation that he may install his lottery system by ex- ecutive decree is another prime example of chicanery. Apparently he had held off thus far expecting Congress to rubber stamp his proposal and render it a certain legitimacy. In reality. Nixon has demonstrated that the draft issue, much like our in- volvement in the war itself, is solely a to the store rather than to the services this store can offer students. This clash of interests can be solved by giving SGC the power to appoint the store's manager and either set the policy itself or appoint a body to set that policy. This does not relieve the Regents of their final responsibility, for or power over, the conduct of the bookstore. They would have the right, if necessary, to become involved in bookstore affairs if the store begins failing. IN ADDITION to reserving the control of the bookstore to an agent unsym- pathetic to its very nature, the Regents also decided to call for a school-by-school vote of the 16 units on the Ann Arbor campus on whether they would be assess- ed for its financing. Certain aspects of the Regent's de- cision, such as the proposed school'-by- school vote, stand on solid ground. Their decision is, in fact, more democratic than SGC's own position because of its direct appeal to the smallest available con- stituencies. However, certain practicalities out- weigh the virtues of pure democracy in this case. For example, if a certain school chose not to assess its students for the store, would those students then be bar- red fom using the store, and if so how? LSA offers so wide a variety of courses that some texts would be available for each school. Should students who did not contribute to the store be allowed to reap its economic advantages? Such questions can best be avoided by having every student contribute to the store and have the store appeal to each of its separate student constituencies by stocking texts they would need. While the Regent's plan may be preferable, such an approach is not inequitable. More importantly, the Regents should not have tried to dictate to SGC how to handle an internal matter - the conduct of a referendum on a student affair - especially in light of Regent Goebel's tactic to try and reduce student support, by depleting "discount" from the propos- ed wording. AS NOTED above, the Regents have tacitly conceded to students their right to decide on questions of assess- ments for student activities, and students should take advantage of that concession. The Special Events Bldg. fiasco has already been perpetrated on students, and nothing can be done about that. But the I.M. building proposal, as well as the on-going assessments for the Michigan League and Union and the University Activities Center, are still very much open to a hearing before students, and SGC should take the initiative in press- ing for a referendum on those issues. THE QUESTION of appropriate action for SGC remains. They should, first, hold a referendum, an all-campus refer- endum, on the proposed higher assess- ment, preferably for five dollars. That can be presented to the Regents as a fait accompli. It would be unreasonable for the Regents to consider such a re- ferendum invalid. Second, the referendum should include a question as to the priorities of the bookstore. Students should be asked to vote on whether they want the bookstore to be, first and foremost, a discount book- store, or just a bookstore that offers exemption to the state sales tax, which it will do as a minimum. Finally, the referendum should also ask the students whether they want Pier- pont, SGC or a student-faculty body to direct the bookstore. It should be worded specifically to define who would be ad- visory and who would have actual con- trol. The Regents have conceded the legit- imacy of student control over student money. SGC should take that concession and run with it for all its worth. SGC, however, has made some tacit admissions itself. It has gone to the Re- gents --- as it had to -- to get funding. It thus must acknowledge the Regents as the ultimate authority at the University. The auetiomn oewo an c,18,rnk th E wn ig WOO Fa~4u$E - K'(6,(M Enrg Os e i ( RKL~a, - $ L-1 ul -It' Amkcm L- I - - -- -, -.;6 "I A doing something about housing ...!" Cal for rev otoon in prison By PIIILIPI BLOCK John Sinclair poses a threat. Hle oesathreat wh ether he is ins jail or out of jail. In October. 1966 the collective intelligence of the Detroit Police Department trapped Sinclair into dispersing two marijuana joints to a couple of undercover cops. For the next 22 mon!hs Sinclair and his lawyers fought a fruitless battle against the police. the courts and the establishment media only to receive an inout ra te- ous sentence of nin-to-ten years in jail. But Sinclair has shown the police what he could do in jail. Last Tuesday. Sinclair was moved from the state prison at Jackson up to the state maximum security 1> rs)n at %!,rquette in the upper pnisula. It called1Perry Johmon. deputy direct or of the State Bureau of Prisons. to try to discover what they were at raid of. "John is deicated to resist authority." Fine. "The prisoners are so cramp- ed together (in Jackson that there is no way to keep them a part." Thrt doesn't sc em to be Sin- clair's fault. "We are not criticizing a man for complaining. But even the' Supra me Court has said you can't yell 'fire' in a crowded theatre.' And that is exactly what Sin- clair is doing. He's yelling "revo- lution" and Jackson prison is def- initely crowded. Ev.n Johnson admi s it . "This prison iJackson) is Just unmanageable. At Mar- quette the prisoner to staff ratio is about 31. to 1; at Jack- son it is almost 8 to 1. Jackson is so hopelessly huge: it is seven (i eight times as large as it should lbe."' Johnson is saying that condi- Sons are so bad at Jackson that Sinrlair's organizing ability could ''ite the prison to the point of mitsurrection. In the short. time that Sinclair spent at Jackson he succeeded in convincing several inmates that their crimessagainst society were insignificant compared to the crimes that society has committed against them, as indeed they are. A rebellion by inmates conduct- ed in this political atmosphere would hurt prison authorities in more ways than the obvious one. It would both point out the re- forms needed in the prison system and would form the precedent for political rebellions at other pris- ons. Needless to say this is just what the prison authorities are trying to avoid. And this raises the question of vhere to put him at all. Certainly Marquette will not pr~ovide Sin- clair with the great number and variety of possible activists which he would probably find at Jack- son. But Sinclair will be success- ful at any prison. Prisoners are perhaps our best social scientists. They are the first group to feel the repercussions of an increas- ingly repressive society. For them the brainwashing of our early ed- ucation has completely worn off; all that remains is a hard core realism. It is this realism which enables them to understand the power politics of this society. They not only understand it, but when outside the prison walls, they live it every day. In this case the agents who employ the power are the prison authorities and it is against them that any attack on society will focus. Of course the attack should not focus only on them and Sin- clair knows this. He knows that the real enemies are the people who employ the prison officials-- the state bureaucrats and the corporate bureaucrats. However, Sinclair also knows that one might fight the battle in one's own arena, be it a prison, a ghetto or even a university. Just as the external battle against racism, fascism and economic and political repression will be fought in Che Gueverra's "two, three, many Vietnams,", so too, will the internal battle be fought two, three, many times over by Sin- clair and other "prisoners." By JIM NEUBACHER 1N OCTOBER, 1968, the trials of the students arrested for the ADC sit-in were underway. Trespassing was the charge, and the jury's job was to determine the facts-whether or not the defense had proven "beyond reasonable doubt" the students charged had been in the building in violation of the law. Just the facts. A momentary controversy arose whn it was reported by a juror in a letter to the editor of The Ann Arbor News that his colleagues on the jury had discussed the political ramifications of the case as well as statutory law while trying to make their decision. The judge, S. J. Elden, said he was "astounded." Throughout he had instructed the jurors that their job was to determine guilt or innocence on the basis of the facts and th law. When it came time to instruct the jury at the following ADC trial, Elden was explicit and intimidating as he warned the jurors they must not enter the jury room without "casting away all other considerations but the law." "Passions and sympathies are not to enter your judgement--they are not an element of justice," Elden continued. AS CRUEL AND INUMAN as Elden's instructions may seem, they are consistent with one of the fundamental concepts of our legal system: citizens have the right to a trial by jury of their peers, the right to have their case decided, not on political or philosophical grounds, but on the facts Once a case has been decided in the court of original jurisdiction. the appeal system allows the parties to present more subtle argu- ments which rest, for the most part. on philosophical and political interpretations of th? law. THIS SEPARATION OF the judicial and political aspects of our system of justice has served to prevent chaos, and maintain, to some extent, public confidence in the "fair trial." For decades, the Supreme Court refused to rule on matters of constitutional law they considered "political." The relatively recent "one-man, one-vote" decisions were a major plunge into politics by the high court. The intellectual complexities of the current SDS "lock-in" case now before the Central Student Judiciary are an illuminating illustra- tion of the problems which arise when politics and jurisprudence are combined in the court of original jurisdiction. The only appeal from a decision of the Central Student Judiciary is to President Fleming, which, in the eyes of some, is worse than no appeal at all. CSJ members of lesser integrity and courage might have easily avoided the political questions inherent in this trial. When legal rep- resentative for the defense Ken Mogill asked the CSJ to hear the testi- mony of University military researchers, and accept as evidence of the military connections of the University documents relating war-oriented research here, the CSJ could have ruled it irrelevant to the "facts." M OGILL HAS PROPOSED his "defense of justification" theory. This will consist of admitting the factual transgressions of SGC rules with which the defendents are charged, then contending that the dis- ruption was justifiable. His reasoning is based on the Nuremberg prin- ciple that one must defy authority rather than participate in or tolerate immoral acts. At the same time. attorneys for the plaintiff have demanded the court rule Mogill's planned line of defense "irrelevant." They are in- sisting on the traditional separation of fact and philosophy in the court of original jurisdiction, ignoring the fact that this is not the first court in a long series. I think it is admirable that CSJ chose to consider the entire ques- tion. They have voluntarily decided to incorporate politics into a sticky judicial decision. But it is for exactly this reason that it is important that the Uni- versity community, which has put faith in its infant Central Student Judiciary's legal competence, be informed about the political splits and philosophies current on the judiciary. Obviously, politics will play a large part in the final outcome of the trial. To begin a trial of defendants whose major line of defense is political and philosophical, and then deny that politics will influence the outcome is naive. In addition, many of the facts of this case were "on the record" before the actual trial proceedings began last Wednesday. The defen- dants willingly admitted at the preliminary hearing that they were involved in the "lock-in." Our CSJ is aware of this. They, of course, cannot help but be. They see the issues lining up. With blatant impropriety, some members have indicated, by action and word, where their sympathies lie in this trial, and were very upset when this was reported publicly last week. But it is equally clear that the CSJ has not decided the fate of the protesters a priori. While many of the CSJ members know already how they feel about the philosophical issues in the trial, no one. but no one on that body has been able to resolve this essential question: Does CSJ have the right to decide a case on the basis of philo- sophical issues, or must It maintain its loyalty to the SGC rules of conduct, and decide the case on the basis of the facts alone? To resolve this larger question, the jurors will definitely be hearing the case, listening to arguments, and wrestling with their consciences. I would not like to be intheir place. THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY has placed its faith in the stu- dent jurors, untried as they may be when it comes to a case of this stature. President Fleming indicated his regard for the motives and ability of the CSJ when he said, in a letter last April, that he would accept the decision of the judiciary on this case, and recognized the legitimacy of the CSJ as the official repository for these cases. But the expression of public faith in the motives of CSJ members does not constitute a waiver of that public's right to scrutinize their actions, criticize their improprieties, and demand they try extra hard to carry out this important responsibility. .; . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Black To the Editor: IN THE COURSE of the Black Man's anaemic struggle to find himself, hie is cotist,,ntly throwr- ing bottlenecks in his own path without knowing he is doing so and maybe without his fault. The black fraternities a n d sororities are a good example of this ten- dency. To be the useful social in- slit tioms that they are supposed to be, they need to be drastically overhauled. Historically, traternities and sororities have b e e n groups or- ganized to promote cordiality among their members.eIn the coorse of time, they have ma- fraternities and their liberalism. In their more lu- cid moments the sororities even think about tutorial projects. But by and large the atmosphere that pervades the black sororities and the fraternities especially is one ot apathy or frivolity. The fraternity puts a premium on being "cool" and on keeping a restless eye on the latest :en but- ton jacket on the market. T h e sorority girls are a little more dy- namic. Their problem is that they are conifused and irresolute and need some direction from their ma l counterparts. Sadly enough that direction never coies be- catse the fraternities are too busy hipi "goil, dents' Union on campus. In fact the Greek names are a little un- fortunate. Not that nomenclature is that important. Omega Psi Phi or Kappa Alpha Psi could be an active body no matter what is was called. But the point is that there is such a sentimental attachment to the Greek appellation that it is conceivable some members will leave their fraternities if it were changed. Besides it is rather em- barassing to himagine a, Greek "dashiki." Th e re is no reason w h y such sentimentality should be encouraged. IT IS about time the black fra- ternities and sororities started be- wasteful Housing snafu To the Editor: THE DAILY reports about fresh- men living in dorms and Mr. Landsman's pointed editorial are bringing to light a point which many students have been faced with, that is the ineffectiveness and inefficiency of University Housing in doing anything in di- rect confrontation with the stu- dents. My personal experiences are in the Married Housing segment of their bureaucracy, a segment whose inability to cope with the demands on it has been noted pre- viously in The Daily. I was prom- elitism finaly setled for our present apart- ment on ,the west side of town at $55 per month moree than the University Housing would have cost. I sympathize greatly with these freshmen; they are experiencing en fasse exactly what I did from the same ignorant people. As freshmen unfamiliar to the va- garies of Ann Arbor and the peo- ple who run the town, they are much less able to respond as I did, and are stuck, Any efforts to organi7e and pro- test. such as sleeping on Fleming's lawn, studying in the foyer of the housing office, and other things nne hersfom the nmn,, mrne.-