TIe 3fr4tigan Badig Seventy-nine years of editorwil freedorn Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 754-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY SARASOHN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1969 Justice in Chicago: The way it really is r HE CONDUCT of Judge Julius Hoff- man in the conspiracy trial of the Chicago Eight has been from the start biased and injudicial to a point almost beyond belief. Not content with merely leveling ad hominum remarks against the defense lawyers, Judge Hoffman has prejudiced the case in a number of ways: -By reading the indictment in a man- ner calculated to imply guilt on the part of the defendants; -By refusing to grant a continuance until chief defense counsel Charles R. Garry is well and can be present in the courtroom; --By refusing to question the prospec- tive jurors on anything more substantial than their names ,addresses, occupations, families, and relations to police and gov- ernment; and -By presenting a threatening docu- inent which a juror had not previously seen to that juror in open court, thus disqualifying her for future service. IN ADDITION, the judge has continually harrassed the defense lawyers: -By ordering the arrest of four pre- trial attorneys; --By having two of them actually in- carcerated, without bail, until they were freed by a higher court; -By attempting to force the defend- ants to "ransom" these attorneys by ab- rogating their own Sixth Amendment rights; ----By continually ruling against every defense motion, while sustaining every prosecution motion, sometimes before the prosecuting attorney has even had time to make one; -By holding one defense attorney guilty of "contumacious conduct" min- utes after expressing prejudice against that lawyer in the statement, "Now we are going to hear that wild man Wein- glass;" and -By impounding a motion by attorneys Kunstler and Weinglass calling for a mis- trial, or alternately, for the judge's with- drawal from the case, and reserving it for "such consideration as the court may wish," thus threatening further future contempt proceedings. , rT'HE AD HOC COMMITTEE of Lawyers to Stop the Trial has formed commit- tees working for a mistrial and to im- peach the judge. Defendant Tom Hayden has called for "any action necessary to stop the trial." In light of the. blatant misconduct of the judge (and ignoring for the moment the US attorneys and the FBI), it is important that everyone con- cerned with the fate of civil liberties in this nation do what he can to help. The tone such action takes will depend largely on the degree of committment and courage possessed by each individual. Contributions to "The Conspiracy" (28 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago), letters urging impeachment to congressmen, picketing and civil disobedience in the streets of Chicago are all possibilities. It is vital to all of us that each of us does what. he can, for there are' more than eight of us on trial in Chicago today. -JENNY STIILER -Editorial Page Editor We ifa re By LORNA CHEROT THE FIRST DAY of school is a time of great relief and high expectations for most. Mothers' tensions are alleviated, for now teachers will have to cope with their little darlings for eight hours a day. Chil- dren look forward to making new friends and meeting old buddies as they ride the school bus sporting brand new outfits. But for the welfare mothers of Wash- tenaw County and their children, the approach of the learning season resurrects feelings of apprehension, shame and em- barassment. Anxiously they await the de- cision of 13 men-the County Board of Supervisors-who will decide if their chil- dren will wear new clothes to school like the other boys and girls, or if it is to be another year of ill-fitting hand-me-downs. LAST YEAR THE county board initially offered the mothers $50 for the entire year. The mothers deemed this insuffic- ient, and the Welfare Rights Committee (WRC) presented an alternative plan call- ing for the allocation of school clothing funds on the basis of need and not an* absolute amount. After much haggling the supervisors proposed an increase of $12.50. But from the figure of $62.50 they would not budgo, claiming any further hike would deplete county funds. The mothers endeavored to win public support by publishing an estimate list of needed clothing for the year; their cost averaged $120 per child. Frustrated by a series of rebuffs from the supervisors to reconsider the school clothing issues, about 15 mothers and their allies of 200 students occupied the Washtenaw County Bldg. lobby. The protesters were swept away by Pig Harvey and his pork chops, and all were dutifully fined (by the "merciful Judge S. J. Eiden) anywhere from $70 to $120. But the Board did increase its allotment to the mothers from $62.50 to $70 per child. AND NOW ANOTHER September has gone, and as the month of October begins the welfare mothers are hassling with the county again. But last year's welfare confrontation provided interesting lessons to be learned and questions to be asked of the principles involved. The lessons arv relatively simple: -First, distrust the state when it claims bankruptcy. -Second, the administrative elite can- not ignore the masses for long. --Third, when you are poor, the authori- ties don't pay any attention to you. A question to consider is what are the attitudinal interrelationships among the Social Services Board and its director, the supervisors, the WRC and the Aid to De- pendent Children mothers? The goals of the WRC are two-recog- ntiton as the legal representative negoti- ative body and distribution of funds on the basis of need. GEORGE STEWART, legal counselor and spokesman for the WRC, explains the position of the SSB in these terms, "The county has certain statutory responsibili- ties and recognition of the WRC would be the equivalent of delegating these re- sponsibilities to the committee." So, in July, Stewart submitted a joint statement of intention which included 15 recommen- dations for increasing the role of welfare recipients in deciding county policy. Stew- art says the proposal was "designed to get around the problem of semantics when considering negotiating and bargaining agents." At any rate the proposal was tabled until the school clothing controversy was settled. STEWART IS HIGHLY critical of the SSB's handling of surplus monies last year. Says tewart, "their hearts were in the right place but their actions clearly were not in the best interests of welfare recipients." tewart's main objections are that the social services board did not consult with the WRC and that the board has yet to sensitize its procedure to WRC's needs. Specifically Stewart thinks the surplus should not have been given to everyone on welfare in the county, but should have boen held in reserve for a school clothing fund. The WRC contends that establish- ment of a school clothing fund is an "in- vestment in the future" so welfare chil- dren won't be embarassed to go to school. But the WRC is not the only critic of the SSB. Bent F. Nielsen, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, called the three man board "unimaginative" and possessing "poor administrative" judgment. Nielsen said that he also suspected a "lack of communication between recipients and the Board and between the Board and the director (of Social Services). YET THE QUESTION of who talks to the mothers is still left unanswered. Niel- sen explains, "When I said we wouldn't negotiate with the mothers that didn't fight: Questions and lessons mean we wouldn't talk to them." Anyone can ask questions after a scheduled meet- ing. Yet Nielsen remains firm on the posi- tion that financial negotiations be con- ducted between the SSB and 'the super- visors only. Nielsen also complaines that the super- visors have been forced to do much of the work that should be done by the SSB. Nielsen claims he has made two trips to Lansing in order to solicit ,more funds from the state, and that Supervisors Bill Lands and David Byrd have proposed a number of plans designed to supplement the state's meager allotment - $16.50 matched by $11 from the County - for this year. ONE PLAN CALLS for the enrollment of welfare families in the federal, food stamp program. A family of four would receive $96 worth of food stamps for $72, providing an additional $24 a month. In addition the county would give each fam- ily a bonu$ of $50 for registering in the program during the first month and $30 for those who joined in the second month. Yet criticisms of the food stamp program are many. One is that psychological prob- lems are fostered by the program. Welfare recipients find it demeaning to use the food stamps. Says Stewart, "The food stamps single them out as welfare recipi- ents and they are harassed by clerks." The other problems are practical. Re- cipients can only buy the stamps on the second and fourth Mondays of the month, and they only are obtainable from the Ann Arbor Bank. Also, $36 worth of stamps must be pur- chased each time-if not the family is dropped from the program. This accounts for much waste of food, if the family has no place to store $36 worth of food. Out of 12.000 families only 114 registered. NOR WERE the mothers amenable to Supervisor Lands' plan for a cooperative clothing store fashioned after the one in Detroit. The mothers objected to this on the basis that the one in Detroit was nothing more than an "ecumenical rum- mage sale". Clothing donations are made by local churches and the mothers selected what they wanted. The mothers were equally contemptuous of a suggestion that they buy their cloth- ing from the Salvation Army. Ena Burton of Ypsilanti queied, "If he had a daughter going to high school would he want her to wear Salvation Army clothes?" THE MOTHERS FEEL put upon because their fate is decided by men not cognizant of their position and needs. Nielsen claims his board searches for men with adminis- trative ability who are sensitive to the problem. Nielsen cites the appointment of Rev. Emmet Green, of the Second Baptist Church and the first Negro appointee to the Social Services Board, as an attempt to provide representation for the black community. But the mothers find Green completely inaccessible. Some suspect he is controlled by Social Services Board Chairman Brose Barnett, others consider him an Uncle Tom only interested in his political future. Meanwhile, no one thinks the state's appropriation of $27.50 adequate. Says Nielsen. "I personally don't think $27.50 is enough. When asked if he thought $27.50 sufficient to clothe children for the year, Barnett replied "certainly not." Welfare mothers have been shamelessly ignored by the state legislature, Governor William Milliken and the State Director of Social Services Bernard Houston. The legislature passed a bill last year which gave power to declare emergencies to Houston rather than Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley. So far Houston has failed to do as Kelley did last year. One-hundred welfare mothers were ar- rested in Lansing while protesting ADC allotments. Mothers have been arrested in Detroit for the same reason. The mothers are tired of being ignored and shuffled from department to department. Referring to last year's demonstration, Gloria Fuller, a WRC representative, says, "We've got to scare the money out of them." There has been no change in welfare allotments in the state of Michigan since 1959. THE MOTHERS have exhausted all means of redress provided under demo- cratic processes. When asked about the possibility of demonstrations and the amount of support expected, Thelma Klein said in reference to the citizens committee, "It's hard to say. They're new and haven't been tested." Miss Klein, who is working with the welfare mothers of her own ac- cord went on to comment that, "We need faces and bodies." One thing is certain, the state and county has money somewhere. They lied last year when they said they didn't have money. As it turned out there was a $50,000 surplus, but it took force to compel the supervisors and state to release it. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ANOTHER OPINION Note to white, pocket book revolutionaries A voice from the provinces HOODLUMS WHO are vandalizing Uni- versity of Michigan buildings to force establishment of a so-called "discount" bookstore might do well to take a look at the experience of Berrien county's Lake Michigan College. On its handsome new campus, occupied just this fall, LMC has a beautiful book- store -- one that is operated by Fowlett's (sic) book store of Ann Arbor, home of the University of Michigan. LMC operated its own bookstore f o r several years -- and lost money, quite a bit of it. So the board and administration contracted with Fowlett's (sic) to operate the LMC store. And the private concern can sell books at the same prices LMC did, offer wider and better service, and make a profit. Says Dr. James Lehman, president of LMC: "We learned by experience. We are in the business of education and not in the business of retailing. We a r e happy to hand over the job of book-selling to qual- ified merchants who are much more pro- ficient at it than we are." FOWLETT'S (sic) the LMC bookstore operator, is one of six private b o o k stores in Ann Arbor selling books to Uni- versity of Michigan students. Some U-M students think the prices for books are too high. For the past eight years there has been an intermittent effort to estab- lish a student-operated book store which would provide books at lower cost. In March U-M students voted 4 to 1 in a referendum to 1 e v y themselves $1.75 each to establish the store. The Univer- sity Regents failed to recognize the ref- erendum. The Regents proposed that a business- man be appointed to run the store and decide whether to g i v e discounts. The student government has proposed instead that a student-faculty committee run the bookstore with the advice of an adminis- trator. Last Thursday night, several dozen peo- ple staged a sit-in at the Literature, Science & Arts building in support of de- mands for a bookstore operated by stu- dents and faculty. They held the building for 12 hours and caused an estimated $1,- 300 damage. Robben W. Fleming, Univer- sity president, failed to convince them to 'nin nit i- rlfin l n1 -illa iA -n nl inn viction for which could bring $100 fine, 90 days in jail, or both. Police said they could identify immediately o n ly 43 of those arrested as University of Michigan students. They included the president and vice president of t h e Student Govern- ment Council. Fleming said afterward: "We didn't w a n t police action if we could avoid it. Nothing is more agonizing than to make that decision about the po- lice." Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey, who helped roust the demonstrators - and wanted to do it much earlier, had a different view. He said: "If Fleming had not b e e n so wishy- washy to start with, he would not now have to face the damae those young peo- ple have done to the inside of the build- ing." Fleming agonized further that evicting the demonstrators "may erode student confidence in me" . . . and "may destroy me ." Crew-cut Sheriff Harvey, who may nev- er have read Hamlet, didn't agonize over his political prospects. He just figured it was his job to maintain order. And he was a lot closer to the truth of the situation than Fleming. Vandals deserve to be treated like van- dals, not mollycoddled. To pussyfoot sim- ply suggests weakness and invites more assaults on the administration. 'THE FACT IS that toe student bookstore issue is a phony one. From time im- memorial, students have been griping about three main issues - the price of books, food and housing. Every student would like to get something for nothing - it's human nature. Rabble rousers bent on disruption purely for its own s a k e, play upon these traditional areas of stu- dent discontent. When they say t h e y want books at a discount, what they're really saying is that they want books be- low cost. If that happens the taxpayer will have to foot the subsidy. Michigan taxpayers already are shell- ing out plenty -- huge amounts - to sub- sidize a great statewide system of higher education. Students pay only, an estimat- ed one-third, perhaps less, of w h a t it costs to educate them. The vast majority aDnreiate theo nnortunity nrna on ri_ To the Editor: JIM FORRESTER was essen- tially correct when he said that: "Michigan is a pocket-book school" (Daily, Oct. 1). Point of information: it was and still is 'both to student conservatives and to so-called student radicals. The real telling point in the stance of the student "radical" as opposed to that of the student conser- vative is his non-conformist, con- formist acceptance of the ancient American art or imagery in polit- ical matters. If he does not shave, or better yet,,grows a beard; if he lets his hair grow long enough to curl; if he wears dirty old blue jeans: and maybe no shoes today; and is extremely adept as slogan- eering (Right on, huh?), then 1,e really knows where it's at. Or does he? I doubt it. The same student radical who can say; "The prob- lems of blacks, workers, and other oppressed people in the society are systematically, bureaucratic a 11 y shuffled to the bottom of the deck," can be as two-timey as Mom and Dad. THIS IS PROBABLY what scares him into hastily seeking issues to pounce on systematic bureaucrats about. He may not have a very significant issue. His priorities may be as lop-sided as those of any son or daughter of a forgotten" American in terms of improving conditions for the riass of truly oppressed blacks and poor people. Deep down, he believes that whatever they win, he loses. And maybe this is his essential prob- lem. There is a tremendous am- bivalence on the part of most so- called student radicals. The tre cause of their haste in supiosedly seeking "power to the people" is their fear that if they do not change society by the +ins, that they must retreat from the sanc- tuary of the Big "U, ' they will have to symbolically and literally cut their-hair. AND WHAT WAS Samson N ith- out his hair? These Samsons know that deep down, there is a car~zon copy of Mom and Dad inside, and when that hair comes off, out steps another Big Daddy Regent. And what's so bad about being a Regent twenty years from llow? Fraud fluence was as weak as the ex- cuses of the Regents as to why the To the Editor:i idea should not be given a trial. CATCHING UP with such non- At the same time, the Regents pro- sense as Steve Nissen offered in fess to want student participation his "Fraud of University Open- but they really do *1ot want Mich ness" on Thursday is virtually im- participation in any worthwhile possible, but the following m a y amount. helst, he complans about sup- HOW CAN OUR University be pression of the University survey great if our students are merely on drug use. By the time this let- units in an educational production ter is published, the public already line? will have read the story. The Uni- In every life, and in the life of versity News Service attempts to every group there are moments of givetall media a fair b r e a k on truth when either there is an stories from the University. That awareness of the importance of a is why the drug use survey was situation, followed by action, or given to the News Service to write they succumb and acceptalower a news release. The full survey and inferior way of life. was also offered to media, along The University is great because with the summary release. Simul- its students, both past and present, taneous release is common prac- have something of the element of tive in t h e field of information greatness. Our University is being and media relations, as Mr. Nissen weakened and harmed, its prestige surely ought to realize, even as a diminished by the Regents' belief student journalist, that the student body is too un- As Mr. Nissen says, the Regents aware, too concerned with their discussed the question of the book- own personal interests, too afraid store in private and came to an to become involved. agreement on a compromise. That Should this be proven true, it is was after consultation with many some evidence that we no longer people in the University commun- have a great University.' ity, several studies made public, -A. Huxley Priebe, '30 Law and public discussions and hear- Prosecuting Attorney ings. Subsequently, in public ses- Benzie County, Michia sion, the compromise was put on Sept 30 the table and the Regents public- ly explained their positions. That hardly seems suppression. For ROTC MR. NISSEN also complains o the Editor; that - without telling students THE LOCAL CROP of Left -- the administration was gather- radicals - hiding its internal ing non-confidential information bickering behind an "Ad Hoc about the University at the re- Committee to End ROTC" - has quest of the Huber investigating hit upon a pseudo-issue to justify committee. What the Huber com- another season of disruptive mis- mittee is investigating and the in- behavior. Their letter to this pa- formation it has been seeking per, with all its sophistries a n d have hardly been secret, as a per- rhetorical bumbling, leaves little usal of many newspapers for the doubt that ROTC is merely an ex- last several months would reveal. cuse for radical aggrandizement. In summary, Mr. Nissen seems Their message, shorn of ver- to be unhappy that he didn't get biage, is: ROTC "symbolizes" the an exclusivenonathe drug survey, military and supplies most of its that he is not a member of the officers; the military does unde- Board of Regents, and that he sirable things; thus, by getting rid missed some stories on the Huber of ROTC we reduce t h e officer committee. corps and, with it, America's ca- -Jack H. Ha'milton pacity to wage war. The argument is so slovenly that any of a num- Assistant Director her of arguments easily crushes it: University Relations 1. THE FACT THAT the mili- tary may currently be used to sup- Student power port bad policies is no excuse for To the Editor: preventing it from supporting any policies. ROTC and the a r m e d IS THE UNIVERSITY here for forces are ethically neutral in the students or for the Board of themselvpee xepnt to n aifists - major manpower procurement method, its destruction would merely shift the burden from ROTC volunteers to enslaved draftees. ROTC is valuable a n d vulnerable precisely because it is voluntary, and usesrincentives in- stead of force: destroy it, and the almost - indestructable Selective Service System will fill the gap in a far more brutal and totalitarian manner. Everybody of draft age should be doing everything possi- ble to encourage volunteering; we are cutting our own throats by harassing people out of ROTC. Af- ter all, where is the logical place to look to replace college-educated ROTC men? College, obviously; and while SDS. and the Radical Caucus may glory in their martyr- dom, the rest of us shouldn't have to be nailed up next to them. 3. ROTC DOES provide certain positive benefits to this Univers- ity. It offers a number of gener- ouis scholarships which assist many students; and it is, after all. a kind of career training - which a university with a law school and a dental, school' can hardly criti- cize (isn't the legal system an in- tegral part of the Establishment?). Rather than persecute ROTC and its instructors, we should be reassured that many of our mili- tary officers will have spent four years in liberal universities rather than in the military academies -- many m o r e of which could be built; and, unlike this University, they would be u n d e r Pentagon control. The final radical absurd- ity is that their attack on ROTC would provide an excuse-in fact, make it necessary - for the mili- tary-industrial complex to further augment its already - excessive power. -Robert C. Black Sept. 10 Diversion To the Editor: THE SEIZURE of the LSA building was a childish act. It did obtain publicity, but the wrong kind. Most people probably look upon this as more of a childish tantrum than an act of intelli- gence. This act is a serious mis- take in Michigan, where the up- tight white legislature just made an "investigation into campus un- rest." President Fleming's child- ish decision was influenced by it. tional potential by striking on Monday. INSTEAD, WE should let the voters of Michigan know that we are frustrated by t h e Regents' contemptuous attitude and !fail- ure to respond to the needs of the community which they serve. We should inform the taxpayers that the Regents' failure to act on such basic matters is costing money, that they are virtually supporting a monopoly in the Ann Arbor ar- ea which is causing an excess rise in the cost of education to both the student and the taxpayer. As a registered voter in Michi- gan, I plan on informing my friends and relatives of the situa- tion ond putting political pres- sure on the state government. I also plan on doing everything in my power to prevent the Regents from being re-elected. If others do the same, we shall see the true meaning of Student Power. -Gregory P. Andrus Sept. 29 Watching heads To the Editor: TO A LARGE extent, University and public reaction to the occu- pation of the LSA Bldg. and the use of police to evacuate it has been tempered by the general be- lief that the evacuation did not result in widespread violence or personal injury. But at least nine people were brought to the first-aid station at the SAB with injuries resulting directly from the police action. Of the nine, seven had head injuries. These people were clubbed. And one other had been slammed in the shoulder with a rifle butt. The ninth person fell and scraped his knees badly while moving away from the building when the police arrived. This last individual was the only one not sent to the hospital for stitcheseor further examination by a physician. ADMITTEDLY, the medical stu- dents directing the operation of the first aid station were less con- servative about advising further care to the injured than they might have been if there had been more injuries. But there is little room for nonchalence under these circumstances. Blows to the head are no joke. Invisible injuries to the head can, and do, cause severe disability and death