stir £k41&jgan Daiiij Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan notes fromi an undergraduate Competition for The Daily by rou andsman -ui 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 19695 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN Playing politics with human dignity THE PLIGHT of the welfare mothers of Washtenaw County should be careful- ly examined by people w h o still insist that needed reforms can be secured by "rational democratic processes." It is a striking history. Last fall, it took several massive dem- onstrations, and 240 arrests to convince the County Board of Supervisors to grant the mothers a supplemental allowance to purchase school clothing for their child- ren. This year, the mothers have m a d e a deliberate effort to employ the socially- acceptable methods of negotiation a n d compromise. And the Supervisors have casually ig- nored both. The mothers, represented by the Wel- fare Rights Committee (WRC), originally requested an allowance of $120 per child for the purchase of school clothing. This figure was based on a survey of a large number of ADC families. In addition, the mothers sought to ne- gotiate for a 25 per cent increase in fixed monthly ADC payments, to reflect the in- crease in the cost of living since 1960, on which the payments are now based. HOWEVER, the Supervisors have refus- ed to even discuss the welfare situa- tion with the mothers, flatly stating they cannot afford to meet their requests. During the only meeting between WRC and the Supervisors, on Oct. 2, the Super- visors merely informed the mothers that the $124,000 county budget surplus would not be used to meet even part of the re- quests. More recently, in drawing up the pro- posed 1970 budget, the Supervisors ignor- ed the request for the long needed 25 per cent increase, insisting that the budget priorities lay elsewhere. The refusals are only a part of the cen- tral issue. What is more frightening is the Supervisors' attitude toward the welfare mothers - which ranges from self-right- eousness to contempt. Perhaps this attitude is best typified by the Supervisors' refusal earlier t h i s month to allow the mothers to attend a high level meeting on welfare operations in Washtenaw County. While standing in t h e doorway after Board Chairman Bent Nielsen (R-A n n Arbor) refused to admit her, one mother blurted out in desperation, "But you're discussing our lives .. ." INDEED, it is this very fact - that the welfare dispute does not deal w i t h money, but with lives - that the Super- visors fail to see. More specifically, the school clothing re- quest is motivated by the mothers' desire to see their children on equal footing with the other students. They fear, validly, that otherwise a feeling of inferiority will cloud the child's attempt to gain the ed- ucation which may very well be his only ticket out of the ghetto. BUT THE SUPERVISORS are business- men and politicians - not social workers. And consequently, they tend to base their actions not on wisdom, but on the amount of political pressure involved. Being both poor and primarily black, the mothers are hardly an effective po- litical force. It becomes obvious, t h e n, why the Supervisors can dismiss them so casually, and why no amount of prodding by the mothers alone can be of any con- sequence. For this reason, professional members of the community h a v e taken it upon themselves to bring the mothers' case to the Supervisors. Today, many will march in front of the County Bldg. while the Supervisors hold a public hearing inside on the proposed 1970 county budget. Oth- ers will speak at the hearing in support of the mothers' requests. IT IS IMPERATIVE that the marchers be joined by all who have any real con- cern for the plight of the welfare moth- ers and their children. It is high time t h a t the Supervisors were told: You have been playing politics with human dignity long enough.. -ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ THE DAILY has been criticized lately for a number of journalistic failings, such as bias in reporting and editorializing, albeit on the editorial page, that addresses itself to only a small minority of the Uni- versity community. The Daily is in good company. The Har- vard Crimson, among other college news- papers, has been the object of identical criticisms in a situation that parallels the Daily's perfectly. The parallels are many and deep, from the papers' internal workings to the ex- ternal situations they fave faced. To wit: -Both newspapers are editorially in- dependent, being limited only by the re- quirement that all editors be students at their respective schools. The Crimson is financially independent, while The Daily does maintain some formal ties with the University. -Both papers had to cover periods of considerable campus tension-the Crimson had a building take-over because of ROTC last spring while The Daily had the LSA Bldg. sit-in over the bookstore this fall. Curiously enough, the presidents of both schools reacted in the same way-imme- diate arest of the offending students by local police. -Both newspapers are producing edi- torial opinions considerably divergent from the attitudes dominant on campus, atti- tudes especially repulsive to the faculties of the two schools. While the Crimson's editorial board sets editorial page policy, The Daily's does not, but leaves the page open to whoever would like to write, including differing views of staff members and an open "letters to the editor" column. The effect, however, is roughly the same. Even though Daily editorials are individ- ually signed, most readers take a piece on the editorial page to be the view of the entire Daily, though this is seldom so. -The news coverage of both papers has been the object of considerable dissatis- faction, generally unstated. There seems to be the feeling on both campuses that the established student papers give too much coverage to radical groups and not enough to conservative or moderate groups or to the administrations. The merits of these complaints aside, they are identical on both campuses. -Both papers are also developing splits along liberal-radical lines. The editorial and news staffs are both divided between Kennedy-McCarthy liberals and Radical Caucus-oriented student radicalism. Newspapers at Michigan, Harvard and elsewhere, divided as they are in this way, represent fairly well the split in student politics today. For the newspapers it is a split that extends from the editorial page to the front page. The problems of The Daily and the Crimson, whether the criticisms are valid or not, raise three substantial points con- cerning the role of student newspapers on their campuses: 0 What is the obligation of the campus paper, like any newspaper, to be "objec- tive?" * What are the demands of the canons of journalism and the First Amendment on a campus newspaper? 0 What is the obligation of a campus newspaper when it is a monopoly, especial- ly one fostered by the university itself. Is there a solution that can reconcile the demands between community obligations and journalistic integrity? The average reader might challenge whether the news pages can be influenced by the politics of the senior editors of the newspapers. Such a challenge relies on an unsophisticated and naive view of what newspapers are and how they function. The assessment of what is important in the news-decisions news editors must make every day--cannot depend only on some abstract sense of what is important without a sensitive feel for politics and political significance. What should the criteria be? How many people take part in an event? How power- ful or well-known the participants are? How many people are affected by the news? Obviously no such "objective" criteria exist. An editor must judge how interest- ing or important any given piece of news is. Moreover, it is obvious that every two people will view the news somewhat dif- ferently. Should the editor then seek to handle the news the way most of the readers want it? Not necessarily. Each paper must write to a certain read- ership. Most college newspapers today write to and about the student and faculty left-liberal groups. They are the most active politically, they tend to affect events and institution on campus, and so they get the coverage. THIS PROBLEM of political bias is in- dependent of the problems of accuracy and factualness in writing, and no paper should ever be excused for factual errors or deliberate misrepresentation. That is not the same as the judgements, sometimes political, that go into determining the way news is handled. With newspapers viewed thus the other problems of campus newspapers are easier to handle. The problem of keeping a newspaper fair, without being sterile, demands a great deal of the editors. It also gives them considerable freedom, especially in terms of the First Amendment and the obligaitons of newspapers to follow their own integrity. Under no circumstances should a cam- pus newspaper-any newspaper-be re- sponsible to its readers other than to try to sell them papers. For a campus newspaper, it is deadening to impose any other burden, such as an "advisor" or even a review board of any kind. It is censorship, pure and simple, and censorship is no more justifiable when it is done on behalf of a majority or a com- munity than when it is done by a minority government. The source of censorship is irrelevant when an individual is told when he can or cannot write or publish. An indirect means of censorship, such as control over editor appointments, is no better. It merely selects out people who would assert their editorial independence. This is no doubt unsettling for univer- sities that find their campus newspapers far askew from the general mood of cam- pus. And when that newspaper is the sole newspaper, and is somehow related to the university, there are second thoughts to be had. A NEWSPAPER THAT is the major dis- seminator of news on a campus has a heavy obligation to keep its entire de- pendent reading public in mind. But it is an obligation that a university does not have a right to impose on a newspaper. It is here that the Harvard case becomes instructive. The Crimson was the object of criticism similar to that directed against The Daily, and the result was a second overground campus newspaper, the weekly Harvard Independent. The Independent, according to editor Morris Abrams Jr., son of the president of Brandeis University, was funded by faculty and alumni dissatisifed with the Crimson's coverage, but with no strings attached. It will seek to be a second voice on cam- pus, more liberal-less radical-than the Crimson, more willing to present faculty and administration views on issues facing the college. Curiously, an early staff fight on the In- dependent over whether the paper should take editorial positions resulted in two quick resignations and a policy identical to the Crimson's. The Independent is not different from the Crimson philosophically in that re- gard; it will simply have a different edi- torial position. The fact that the Independent took that route implies support for the practice of having editorially independent newspapers. THIS ARRANGEMENT in no way re- lieves either paper of its responsibility as a newspaper-to be fair and complete, to be honest and factual. But it does relieve it of the onus of caring, in a sense, for the entire community. This solution is the best one for this campus. The Daily should not be tampered with. Rather, earlier efforts to establish a second newspaper here should be renewed. It would be best both for The Daily and for the University. ."tJAMES WCSE Beyond M-Daylt IN THE TIME between now and Nov. 3, when he will deliver his hastily-advertised address on Vietnam, President Nixon faces an- other crucial interlude of decision-or indecision. He must choose whether to try to ride out the storm of anti-war protest or concede that time has run out on our investment in the present Saigon regime, It must now be apparent to the President and his more perceptive advisers that they and he seriously misjudged the temper of much of the country when they gambled that a series of gestures-troop with- drawals, draft cuts, reports of battlefield de-escalation-could defuse today's moratorium. Each step, compounded by the blunder of Mr. Nixon's assertion that he would be "unaffected" by the protest, seemed to intensify rather than diminish support for the demonstration. There was a wide- spread sense that he was more concerned about muting dissent than altering fundamental policy; perhaps most important, there was a feel- ing that we had all been here too often before-and that Mr. Nixon was yielding to the delusions that ensnared Lyndon Johnson. EACH TIME that South Vietnam's President Thieu spoke out in intransigent opposition to a coalition government in Saigon-as he did once again yesterday-he damaged Mr. Nixon's credibility. For while many Americans may have long been apathetic about the internal politics of South Vietnam, they have lived with this war long enough to recognize the cast of characters, the familiarity of the lines, the repetitiveness of the script. Another opinion DEMONSTRATIONS and violence which flared on two university campuses last week though far divergent in nature, have in common one dominant and inex- cusable element - the use of force against university authority. At the University of Michigan, protest- ing students invaded and for a time held a university building. At Harvard, Viet Cong supporters, who w e r e apparently outsiders, stormed the Center for Inter- national Affairs, beat and kicked teach- ers and a librarian, then escaped before police arrived. The Michigan confrontation was much the more serious of the two, because it involved students of t h e university. It has, moreover, a baleful significance in that it was the first major student revolt against administrators on a college cam- pus in this young school year. THE MICHIGAN demonstration h a d other disappointing characteristics. Though there were apparently only some 100 students who took over the building, they were given support by 3,000 to 4,000 students who stood outside the building and jeered police. And then there is the final irony: Among the students taken into police custody were the president and vice president of the student government. If they are truly representative of that government -- and they must be deemed so - the student government at Michi- gan is one that advocates revolutionary force and violence to gain its objectives, the v e r y antithesis of the principle of democratic rule of reason which is at the foundation of the government of this na- tion and this nation's institutions. ON THE CREDIT side in this affair is the fact that the president of the uni- versity did, if perhaps belatedly, call in police to end the occupancy of the build- ing. The police arrested 100 demonstra- tors and carted them off to jail. That is well and good, but now comes the more important decision, that involving pun- ishment for violation of the law. To draw the line unmistakably between the use of force and the use of lawful procedure in settling disputed issues between students and administrators, the arrested students must be prosecuted in court as well a disciplined to the utmost by the univer- sity. -DALLAS TIMES HERALD Letters to the Editor Unwilling soldier To the Editor: FROM THE POSTMARK you can see this letter comes from Ft. Ord, California. I thought you should hear the story from the inside. Monday began the "official concern." Indoctrination lectures and "Americanism" film w e r e squeezed in between bayonet drills and machine-gun practice. Tues- day brought more of the same. It is now 0100 hrs. Thursday 1 a.m,) and my company has just returned from the fort boundary (perimeter?) wet and cold. I re- turned my M-14 rifle, "protective" gas mask, combat field pack, bay- onet and 40 rounds of ammunition to the supply room. I spent four hours protecting . . . protecting what from I don't know. What I do know is that I'm sick . . . sick of being a part of the military, sick of knowing that my future is full of senseless death and pain and sick from the knowil- edge that I might have been or- dered to attack people who feel as I do and have the courage to do something about their feelings, I haven't that courage. I can't sign this as the brass" would take retribution on me. Freedom pn speech exists in America but not in the U.S. military. SITTING IN the UGLI breeds a sense of detachment, at least until the reclassification letter comes. Sitting in an armored personnel carrier with a rifle barrel pressed cold against you cheek destroys that detachment. We're involved in a most immediate senese. Our minds and souls were in step with your even though we marched in military formations. I wrote you so my voic be heard on the Diag. I h return there . . . some day An unwilling sol Oct. 15 To the Editor: ALTHOUGH WE consi Oct. 15 Anti-Vietnam War torium a smashing succes the point of view of the n of people actively partic from The University of M and the Ann Arbor Commin general, some logistical p arose which we hope to a future events. We did not that the Symposium on C; and Biological Warfare draw the interest of thet of people that it did. Unfor ly, large numbers of peop not able to enter the Natu ence Auditorium so as tol pate in this Symposium. organizer of this Sympo apoli 'ize to those people w] forced to back up into the c of the Natural Science B and thus not able to en auditorium. I am certain, however, t message came across very to those who were able to tha the military-industria lex of this nation is. carry research, development, and ble deployment, of meth warfare which defy our il tion in terms of the horror it could inflict upon the pet this globe. IN ADDITION to our tional mission of bringi facts about chemical and1 cal warfare to our audi hope that we will have su e could lope I'll dier Military spokesmen continued to herald the enemy's imminent collapse; politicos insisted that Mr. Nixon would succeed where Mr. Johnson had failed if restive Americans remained quiet; patrioteers (Jj17 blustered that anti-war critics were Hanoi helpers. Some sophisticated journalists began to lament what they decried as a plot to "destroy" the President, ignoring the obvious point that it is prolongation of the der the war-not anti-war protest-that imperils the Nixon Administration. Mora- ss from Now, despite all the diversionary flak, one need hardly wait for lumbers all the returns to come in to know that something vast and unpre- ipating cedented is occurring in Ame'rica today and in the ensuing days before :ichigan Nov. 3, Mr. Nixon's great test will take place. unity in roblems THE PRESSURES on him to maintain a defiant posture will be void in strong. He will be told that the Moratorium may produce a counter- foresee surge of "partriotic" fever; that the peace movement cannot sustain would its present momentum and breadth, and will fragment when radical number groups reassert their influence on Nov. 15. He will get optimistic re- tunate- assurance from his military, as well as more Bunker bunkum from le were the Saigon establishment. Most ominous of all, there will be those who ral Sci- encourage him to resort to a (Joe) McCarthyite counteroffensive, hinted partici- by Hugh Scott's demand that war opponents "tell us which side they As the are on" and even more outrageously expressed in Vice President Agnew's sium. I crude attempt-approved by Mr. Nixon-to pin Hanoi's label on the ho were protest. orridors ter' thQ CAN NIXON resist these new temptations to revert to his ancient style? Will he choose to misread the meaning of today's events, and hat the especially the overwhelming evidence that so many hitherto "silent clearly Americans"-of whom he spoke so often in his campaign-are finally attend, declaring that they are fed up with a senseless war that has poisoned .l com- and paralyzed our nation for a period now as long as the duration of ing out our presence in World War II. I possi- o1(s of One of the most conspicuous if underplayed aspects of the Mora- nagina- torium is the degree to which support for it has not only permeated which America's Middletowns but emerged in such Southern citadels as the opls of University of Georgia. educa- IT HAS BEEN said here and elsewhere before that the President i the could turn today's protest to his-and the nation's-advantage if- he biologi- were prepared to make, a decisive break with the myths of the past. ence. I Its size and scope could be presented to Thieu as clear whrning that eceeded i-d (nv 'nr ,,uninhn. 'j iAithat- h nmus,- makew fa A li. a W O I91Th1 ' 7h4 T4ATW FIW5' - i- ONtVTh WMCARFOoN Fi5 ( 3o ~T 5' my,,JL