Wednesday, August 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednescloy, August 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Welfare sit-in: 'U, students vs. the Establishment Poor man's guide to student protests Diag Rally iOct. 7, 1964): Some 200 students, led by Voice Political Party, rallied on the Diag to discuss demands for liberal- ized dormitory policies and higher w a g e s of student employes. Joint Judiciary Council later convicted Voice of breaking Univer- sity regulations in staging the rally without permission. First Teach-In (March 24, 1965): Some 3000 University stu- dents and faculty members held the first teach-in in U.S. history, holding discussions, speeches and movies on the Vietnam War. Draft Board Sit-In (Oct. 15, 1965): Thirty-nine University .tudents and teaching fellows were arrested while sitting at the Ann Arbor Selective Service office to protest the war in Vietnam. On the same day, a Homecoming float expressing opposition to the war was attacked and destroyed during the traditional parade. Bookstore Controversy (Jan. 21, 1966: Students picketed a Regents meeting as the board refused to establish a discount book- store at the University, despite popular student support for the idea Student Power Movement (Fall 1966: Early in the academic year, Voice Political Party staged a number of demonstrations to protest the disclosure of membership lists of student radical groups to the House Un-American Activities Committee. Later, after a referendum showing students did not want the University to com- pile class ranks for the Selective Service System, students staged a series of massive demonstrations in an attempt to force the admin- istration to end class ranks. These demonstrations included the famous lunch-hour sit-in in the Administration Bldg. attended by 1500 students. With finals approaching, and disagreement over demands, the Student Power Movement ended in chaos in mid- December Navy .leeting Disruption tOct. 11, 1967 ): Some 40 radical students *Srupted a meeting between Hear Admiral S. N. Brown and University officials. Later in the term, charges against some of the students involved were brought secretly before the executive boards of the literary college and the graduate school. Under student pressure, however, these charges were dropped Women's Curf~ew Controversy (fall, 19): On Oct. 12, SOC "recognized the right of freshman women in individual houses to set their own curfew." After a long series of minor demonstra- tions, the Regents abolished curfews in January, 1968. At the same time, houses were given the power to determine the times at which visitation by members of the opposite sex would be per- mitted. War Research Sit-ini (Nov. 2 1967): Some 300 students staged a six-hour non-disruptive sit-in in the Administration Bldg. to protest University involvement in classified research, and a $1 million counter-insurgency project run by University researchers in Thailand. Apartments Ltd. Boycott (January - April, 1968): In a fore- runner to the rent strike, SGC committees organized an ineffective boycott of Apartments Limited, demanding that the corporation begin offering eight-month leases to its tenants. The boycott's slogan - "Wait for eight" - never quite caught on, but some smaller realtors did begin offering the shorter-term lease Black Student Lock-in (April 9, 1968): Over 100 black stu- dents, led by the Black Student Union, staged a five-hour non- violent lock-in in the Administration Bldg. on the day of the burial of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King. Demands of the black students --now largely met - included hiring of more black administrators and the creation of a scholarship for black stu- dents in memory of Rev. King. Welfare Sit-inss Sept. 5 - 6, 1968): Over 240 people mostly University students - were arrested during two days of demon- strations at the County Bldg. staged to dramatize the demands of mothers receiving Aid to Dependent Children for increased child- ren's clothing allotments. The welfare mothers won a compromise allocation for increased clothing. Most of the demonstrators (in- cluding about 40 mothers) were convicted of criminal trespass and received fines of about $50 and week-long work sentences. Election Day Deemonstrations (Nov. 4 - 5, 1968): Some 2000 students, led by SDS, massed before the on-campus residence of President Fleming to protest University involvement in war re- search. The next day (Election Day) 200 students held a briel sit-in in the Administration Bldg. Navy Recruiter Lock-In (March 25, 1969): Some 25 members 01 SDS held a five and one-half hour lock-in in West Engineering Bldg., preventing a Naval recruiter from interviewing students. The case is now pending before Central Student Judiciary. By MARTIN IIIRSCIIMAN Student leaders had always half jokingly complained that once they'd gotten a good move- ment going they were in t hi e middle of finals week. But last fall, after only two weeks of classes, almost 200 stu- dents had already been to the barricades, and to jail, for pro- test activity,- without student leaders lifting a finger, It all started with a little not- ed demonstration in the Coun- ty Bldg. where some 40 welfare mothers (recipients of Aid to Dependent Children) were de- manding - and being refused- increased allotments to buy school clothing for their child- ren. At first, University students were not involved. Then, on the third day of the mothers' dem- onstrations, t h e n Daily Man- aging Editor Steve Wildstrom was arrested by Washtenaw County sheriff's deputies as he attempted to enter the County Bldg. Wildstrom. who was alleg- edly bea ten by the deputies, was charged with assaulting the of- ficers as he was protesting har- rassment of Daily reporters by sheriff's deputies. By sunset, 400 students had organized a march to the Coun- ty Jail and a rally on the Diag was scheduled for the next day. Wildstrom was released on bail, but charges were never pressed against him.) The next day, Sept. 5, stu- dents marched down to the County Bldg. to show their sup- port for the welfare mothers. First they threw up picket lines around the County Bldg. Later, at the request of the mothers, several students joined them as they sat-in to dramatize their demands. iff making the arrests at the demonstrations, but his men h a d arrested Daily Managing Editor Wildstrom in the inci- dent which provoked student participation. M o r e recently. Harvey's activities have won him tribute as 'one dumb cop" from a Detroit Free Press edi- torialist. On the other side, the issues involved were like apple pie and motherhood to a mass of con- cerned students. Certainly the allotments of the welfare moth- ers were - inadequate --- t h e y were (and still are) based on 1961 price levels. And that the specific allotments i n v o l v e d were for children's school cloth- ing made the issue seem all the more clear-cut, In late fall, the mothers or- ganized the Welfare Rights Committee and began to seek bargaining rights with th e County Social Services Board. Despite several meetings with the board since then, such rec- ognition has not been granted. The welfare mothers have a ntumber of complaints with the welfare system as it functions in Washtenaw County and in the country as a. whole. And these complaints are not com- pletely tied to inadequate allot- inents. The mothers also sight provis- ions in the welfare laws which make it difficult to work one's way off welfare roles, and in- competence of some case work- ers in advising clients concern- co c r-ing the law, As t h i s supplement goes to press, the welfare mothers are preparing for further disputes and possible confrontation over allotments for the coming year, and recognition as a bargaining agent for ADC recipients. And who knows, when stu- dents return to Ann Arbor in early September, it might be just that time of year again. Shteriff's deputies escort Daily Manuging Ed itor Stere Wildstrom to jail With about 100 deputies on hand, Sheriff Harvey and Coun- ty Prosecutor William Delhey initiated legal proceedings with a five minute warning. T h e n the deputies moved in and be- gan arresting the demonstrators one-by-one and- pushing or dragging them to waiting police vans. Deliberations between t h e welfare mothers and the Coun- ty Social Services Board con- tinued the next day, but no so- lution acceptable to the moth- ers could be reached. And when closing time came at the County Bldg., several hundred students were already sitting-in in the lobby in sym- pathy. The mothers decided to stay - some of them would be arrested both days --- and they invited the students to j o i n them. When the five minute warn- ing came this time, some 195 people, mostly students, refused to leave t li e building. Sheriff Harvey brought in about 300 of- ficers from a number of neigh- boring counties and again the arrests began. The welfare mothers met over the weekend with county offi- cials and, miraculously, a set- tlement was reached on Mon- day, thus averting new demon- strations. And after a surprising spurt of protest activity and student involvement in community af- fairs, the campus returned to normal. Why did the welfare demon- stration provoke such wide- spread student concern? A num- ber of factors were involved. First, t h e demonstrations came only two weeks after the massive street confrontations with police in Chicago. Reports of violence surrounding the Democratic National Conven- tion polarized the views of many concerning the police. And local politics had provid- ed students with t h e perfect object for this hatred -- Sheriff Harvey. Not only was the sher- Harris wins in Democratic sweep -E('lUnml d truni t'&gI two incidents involving alleged beatings amd unfair treatment of blacks by the police The mayor soon established an ad hoc committee which has been making recommnendations for strengthening ties between the police and the entire com- munity. Harris has set as his prime objective t h e establish- ment of "a new and better state of police-community u n d e r- standing than has existed in any city in the land to date." One of the incidents involved Human Relations Commission staff member Ray Chauncey who charged that Ann Arbor pa- trolman Wade Wagner beat him after Chauncey was arrested for alleged disorderly conduct while making an HRC discrimination test at a local bar. After a city mvestigation which substantiated the charge that Wagner had struck Chaun:- cey, the patrolman resigned from the force. (The next day Washtenaw C o u n t y Sheriff Douglas Harvey hired Wagner.) Barely a month after the in- cident, however, the city issued a report criticizing the HRC for resorting to public exposure of the conflict before an investi- gation could be made. Although charges against Chauncey were dropped, the city' report also criticized the staff member for "inappropriate" behavior dur- ing his test of the bar and at the police station. The other clash, just six days after the Chauncey incident, in- volved the arrest of two blacks charged with obstructing, hin- dering and resisting police - a high misdemeanor, The two men. John Abrahams and John H. Bingham, w e r e arrested twice, first on Tuesday, May 13, w hen they were imnmediately re- leased, and then on Thursday, May 15 on warrants charging them with the high misdemean- or After a special session of Ann Arbor District Court, the sec- ond night, called at Hart'is's re- quest the two were released on bond, Since taking over council Ap- ril 14, the Democrats, occasion- ally with Republican approval, have given both financial and moral support to several com- munity improvement programs and to Human Relations Com- mission projects. In May, for example, Council approved by a 10-1 vote the Mo- del Cities ordinance which form- ally establishes the six-year federally funded urban improve- Inent program in Ann Arbor. Prior to t h e April election, there had been considerable doubt as to whether or not the Republican council would ap- prove the program. Similarly, on two occasions, the new council granted addi- tional appropriations to the Hu- man Relations Commission for community projects, d e s p i t e strenuous objections from two of the Republican councilmen. The city's new $10.7 million operating budget also reflects Harris' concern for establishing greater services to the commun- ity. 't'hrough a series of working sessions, the mayor added $100.- 000 to the city's Transportation Authority for establishing a temporary bus service and an eventual full time service f o r the fall. Bus service in Ann Arbor had been discontinued after the city was unable to secure suitable arrangements with an out-of- state firm when a local coin- pany went out of business. The Democrats hope to intro- duce a local income tax within the coming months to replace. in part., the current regressive property tax. Many residents claim the proper'ty tax unfairly asseses the lower income citi- zen and does not adequately tax wealthier residents. The Democrats have been in office barely four months, and Mayor Harris h a s established some difficult goals for his par- ty to achieve during his two- year tern. The democratic (small "d", bureaucratic process always ne- cessitates relatively lengthy pro- cedures for change. Bu t the Democrats seem on the way to achieving the progress they have aimed at, and Ann Arbor- ites seem to have good reason to expect delivery on the goods Harris has promised. 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