p -NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN- Now even the teddy bears are resisting r::l WASHINGTON ON PAGE 69 of last Sunday's New York Times you can see a very large picture of a moder- ately. small teddy bear in an ad- vertisement for Georg Jensen, the expensive Manhattan spec- ialty store. The teddy bear has a wistful expression in his eyes and on his stuffed arm, fixed with a safety pin, is a black band of mourning. The copy reads, "Some toys hate war . . . no toys teach you how to hate or kill. Not at Georg Jensen they don't." The teddy bear has his toes up and his heels down, as though his feet were dug in. The teddy bear is resisting. Resistance has spread even to the stuffed toys in the nursery. You can feel the stiffening re- fusal to go along, the incipient spirit of sabotage, the conversion of timidly daring thoughts into daylight defiance. The resisters are coming among us. MANY OF THEM were here last weekend and some of them took advantage of the chance of their being in one city to hold a meeting at St. Stephen and the Incarnation Church. They were 100 to 150 strong, in the darkened church looking at eight who sat on a low platform in front of the al- tar. Light fell on the eight and on the large, wooden crucified Jesus who hung in the air over their heads. The eight were "emerging," as they put it, to tell the others and the press about what they h ad done. Michael Donner, a 22-year- old community organizer from a crumbly Mexican section of Chi- cago introduced the others. Jane Kennedy, a 44-year-old woman who is the assistant director of nursing for research and studies at the University of Chicago hos- pitals: a young teenage married couple from Indianapolis; five others, mostly young, mostly Ro- man Catholic and resisting. "We are the Beaver Fifty- five,'" Michael Donner began reading from a statement. "We are single and married, workers and students, young and old. We started from different parts of the country and ended up together in our actions, in our love and in our responsibility - a community of active resistance. We claim re- sponsibility for the actions against the Selective Service offices in Indianapolis on Oct. 31 and the Dow Chemical Company in Mid- land, Mich., on Nov. 7. "Some of us completely de- stroyed 1-A and 1-D delinquent draft files and ledger books in 44 local boards in the Indianapolis metropolitan area. Some of us en- tered the computation and re- search center of the Dow Chem- ical Company and destroyed mag- netic tapes and processing cards used to store and process scientific research into such areas as nerve gases, napalm, defoliants any oth- er secret chemical weaponry. Technical marketing research in- formation for these materials w a s also destroyed." WHEN HE FINISHED speaking a young man with a yeasty brogue named Mike Cullen got up and introduced himself as a mem- ber of the Milwaukee Fourteen, another group that says it has de- stroyed draft records. "I'm proud to be here as a human being, not as an Irishman or as an intellec- tual. It's really a gasser," M i k e said, more in poetry than precis- ion. "Any institution of death has no right to exist . . . It's always papers, papers in files that are the instrument of death," he contin- ued, trying to explain why most of the people in the room felt that these assaults on property were still in the non-violent tradi- tion. Perhaps, but Irishmen aren't Quakers and there is a deter- mination about these resisters that's not militant but military. You could feel it when his talk- ing words gave out and he fell to song. It's something to hear the revolutionary ballad, "Kevin Bar- ry," sung by an Irishman who means it. "Shoot me like an Irish soldier, don't hang me like a dog, for I fought for Ireland's free- dom on a dark September morn." goes the chorus and when he sang it each time the people in t h e church would rise to their feet and silently make the clenched fist. THIS IS VERY HEAVY, very il- legal stuff. It is resistance and re- sistance growing bolder. Calling a press conference to lay proud claim to such acts, that's bold. They did it to use the press as a means of telling people what they were doing and recruiting more into their work. This puts us of the press In a tight position. We should not be anybody's organ to play music on, but these assaults are grow- ing. A couple of years ago, a Mol- otov cocktail tossed at the Berke- ley draft board was a piece of insane uniqueness, but now, in addition to the Catonsville Nine, the Chicago Fifteen, the New York Eight, the Baltimore Four, t h e Boston Eight and the D.C. Nine, we're getting bombings and who knows what else. The media has with no little reason been reluctant to advertise and glamorize these acts, so we don't know much about them ex- cept that they appear to grow in volume even without publicity. People are talking about dyna- mite, people who never did think that way in the past, so we're ob- liged to look at resistance in all its forms. A NOTHER FORM it's tak- ing is in the military. Anybody wandering around Washington this past weekend couldn't help but be struck by the number of soldiers - National Guardsmen presumably - who were flashing the V at the demonstrators. Other signs ought to be noted: a soldier with an anti-war button under hips uniform lapel; another soldier in- side the Department of Commerce, which he was apparently guard- ing, with his own, home-made "Peace Now" sign in a window. A true resister won't ever give up. You have to shoot him to stop him. Dr. Howard Levy, the Army captain who was court mar- tialed and sent to Leavenworth, never ceased resisting. "I tell soldiers that being in Leavenworth is no joy, but then again neither is being in Vietnam. You can live through a stay at Leavenworth. It isn't that horrendous. You do it by political organizing," s a y s Levy. "The key is to resist. You can resist in one of two ways. You can resist overtly or you can resist by educating yourself. Eld- ridge Cleaver said prison creates great poets or great revolutionists. For myself I can tell you my poetry didn't improve a damn af- ter 24 months in jail." Now that he's out, Levy's still resisting by working with the G.I. Coffee House Movement. There are currently six of these houses next to bases where soldiers can come to learn peace and radical- ism. Three more will be opened soon, according to the doctor, who goes from base to base, c r i s s - crossing the country working with soldiers who're resisting, organiz- ing and radicalizing from with- in. Remember that several years ago some of the most left groups switched tactics and began ac- cepting induction into the Army as a means of penetrating and overthrowing it. "WE'RE STILL QUITE a way from insurrection, but you have to realize that if 10 per cent of G.I.'s oppose the war in Vietnam in an organized fashion, the Army's in trouble; it's not like a college community where you need 90 or 100 per cent of the college stu- dents for effective action," s a y s Levy. "The longer the time goes on, the closer we're going to come to that percentage. "Most G.I.'s do oppose the war. The Army is relying on intimidat- ion and threat to quell attempts at organization, but gradually we're eroding away that fear, through the courts, the under- ground newspapers, the coffee houses, through rallies, and just by showing a G.I. he can stand up for his beliefs and high rights." The government denies all these claims, but how does the govern- ment know? Does it have the in- formation to tell it if a National Guard unit has become politically unreliable? Can it be sure the M.P.'s will tear gas the next Army base demonstration? Howard Levy says his side is making in- roads into M.P. formations. YOU CAN'T TAKE a Gallup poll on something like this. You'll only know for sure that a company or a battalion has switched over to the peace demonstrators if and when it happens. They're not going to tell ahead of time, because t h e y probably don't know themselves. What we know for sure is that with all the talk about the gov- ernment not permitting policy to be made on the streets, it's the streets that have the initiative. The resisters are out in public and audacious while in the White House they rifle through a n d count their telegrams of support when not abstracted by faith heal- ing and football. ,,Los Angeles Times Syndicate LETTERS TO THE EDITOR 9r £ir4ignn ailj Seventy-nine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan The conspiracy of the Ohio State 22,000 420 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 oil reprints. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: ALEXA CANADY Tlhe atrocity trial: Everyone is guilty IN A STORY on the Army's investigation into Lt. William L. Calley Jr.'s alleged massacre of 109 South Vietnamese civil- ians, the Associated Press reported Mon- day: "Army legal experts h a v e said that Calley could be charged with premeditat- ed murder if he issued an order leading to the killing and did not do the actual firing himself." "The Calley case may be unprecedented so far as the magnitude of the alleged crimes is concerned. Army officers said they could not recall another c a s e in previous wars where an Army man was accused of killing so many civilians." IF THOSE forgetful army officers want a few names of notorious mass mur- derers they can start with the men who dropped nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and t h e terror bombers who destroyed Dresden in World War II. Perhaps they should consider the case of Lyndon Johnson, or Richard Nixon, or Harry Truman, each of whom "issued an order leading to the killing, and did not do the actual firing himself." The point is that citizens should not be shocked suddenly by publicity of a single atrocity in a war which is itself an atro- city. And the war is immoral for all involv- ed. It is impossible to condone the actions of a soldier who pulls the trigger on civil- ians. But it is equally impossible to con- done the actions of the command officers who order their pilots to incinerate a 6- year old Vietnamese boy in a napalming raid, or to demolish a North Vietnamese peasant whose rice paddy is next to a strategic railroad line. PERHAPS, however, the news of t h e atrocity and the pending trial of Lt. Calley will be a lesson to the American people. Radical analysts and religious leaders have constantly contended that Johnson and now Nixon are, in f a c t, murderers as guilty of pursuing the war as the generals in Vietnam. Hopefully, the trial will remind Americans that all members of society - and particularly national leaders - share the war guilt and responsibility for the tragic folly of Vietnam, -JIM NEUBACHER To the Editor: THE PUBLIC SAFETY and re- spect for the law have been vio- lated again by a small group of extremists, waving banners, taking over the streets, and creating a riot which engulfed the whole of Ann Arbor last Saturday, Nov. 22. This must not go unchallenged by the Department of Justice. The disorder and violence which swept this town on Saturday had been carefully planned months in ad- vance, by a small group operating across state lines; a major base from which rioters were recruited was in another state, and the ac- tions of Nov. 22 clearly centered on violence, inside and outside of the stadium. AS WAS ONLY to be expected, the publicly proclaimed moral standards of the American people were flouted by acts of gross in- decency, and the lives of everyone who attempted to use the roads were endangered by the crazed and drunken mob which took them over. The police were utterly un- able to prevent or control these flagrant violations of law, decency, and public order, nor could we ex- pect them to have done so in the face of an interstate conspiracy of this magnitude. The Ann Arbor-Columbus con- spiracy cries out for prosecution! -Prof. Rhoads Murphey Center for Chinese Studies Nov. 24 Waiting To the Editor: WAIT till next year. -Richard Ries --Richard Wood Columbus, Ohio Nov. 22 Survival To the Editor: THE ARTICLE LAST Sunday entitled "On the End" pointed to the extent of the ecological crises which threaten to engulf us. Many knowledgeable scientists have in- deed predicted major catastrophes, particularly in population out- stripping food supplies. As ecologists, we would argue with many of the details in the article, but not with the message of approaching disaster. An interesting example of man's ecological ineptitude comes to us from the World Health Organiza- tion. DDT was used to control mo- squitos in Borneo, but failed be- cause of resistant mutations. How- ever, the DDT was eaten by in- sects, which were in turn the prey of lizards, until finally the insec- ticide reached house cats. Rats, freed from predation by cats in the city, multiplied a n d spread disease. (Concentration of DDT through the food chain wiped out most of the predators.) Caterpil- lers also suffered lower predation, and as they increased they con- sumed the thatching from t h e roofs in the villages. Finally, cats were parachuted in to restore bal- ance and control the rats. And this is only one, blatant example of ecosystem disturbance. THE GREATEST perturbation of them all is the world popula- tion problem coupled with t h e heavy exploitation that industrial nations find necessary to support their high standard of living. The true cost of goods goes fare be- yond the cost that the industries and the people pay. It must also include completing the cycleaof utilization by returning clean wa- ter to the rivers, by recycling wastes, by being efficient in the long run, not the short run to which our economy is geared. Prediction of the extinction of Homo sapiens (incidentally, that means "intelligent -man"!) are probably extreme. But there is no doubt that the setting for human life is decaying rapidly. Ironically, the very adaptability that led to man's rapid advance makes him insensible to the equally quick de- cline in environmental quality. There exist only the beginnings of a concerned citizenry ready to deal with these issues. And this points up the necessity of a strong commitment from the University community. AS THE DAILY has already re- ported, a student organization re- cently formed out of concern over these issues. Environmental Action for Survival, or ENACT, is stag- ing a massive Teach-In on the Environment March 11-14. Hope- fully, this will not only educate, but also mobilize both the Uni- versity and the community. A per- manent organization must emerge out of these efforts. Those inter- ested may stop by 2543 SAB or 146F SNR for more information. -David Allan -Doug Scott Co-Chairmen, Teach-In on the Environment Nov. 25 To the Editor: ARLENE WEISZ, the Daily's guest writer 'Nov. 22) certainly scored some cogent criticisms of The Daily's "fashion features." I would like to underscore her criticisms: The Daily's fashion articles cater to the worst in sycophant female imagery, as per- petuated by the Madison Avenue manipulators. Women become newsworthy only as mannequins: an unobtrusive prop for headline fashions. How scintilating: we have nothing to lose but our clothes (although your writers pre- ter the sophomoric titillation of mere-bralessness) . . . SUCH INCANTATIONS to fe- male conformity are atavistic. The Daily is simplicity a co-conspirator in the continuing subjugation of American women. This stand seems in complete contradiction to The Daily's usual position on im- portant socio-political problems. -Linda Greenberg, Grad Nov. 23 Academ ic cartel To the Editor: AS A ROOKIE Faculty Coun- selor in the Freshman-Sophomore Office, my work has been aided continually by the work of the Student Counseling Office in An- gell Hall and students should be urged to become familiar with the services afforded by this office. Their advice to students (and Faculty Counselors) has consis- tently been on-point and respon- sible. No one in any academic com- munity has a monopoly on advice. The requirement system used by this University as a basis for granting degrees has an almost bewildering number of in's and out's (the often cited "alterna- tives") and in many situations there are different ways of look- ing at things that represent hon- est difference of opinion and not effort to mislead. The Student Counseling Office then provides another channel of communication, an important new dimension of service available to the University community. IT IS unfortunate that The Daily article did not mention that Cause Evaluation is available ex- clusively through Student-Coun- seling, This information is very useful to students who are seeking some quatitative index of student re- action to courses. Its only draw- back is that all courses have not been evaluated. -David Rodgers The ay it is on E. Ann St., Ann Arbor R igh1t on, professor WHEN VICE PRESIDENT Agnew made his homespun blast at television two weeks ago, little did he know or suspect he would create a new cult, which James Reston calls "Agnewsticism." Imagine his surprise, therefore, when he opened the Boston Globe last Tuesday and read how he had driven a Nobel Prize winner to invest in the tube. The Associated Press reports: A Nobel Prize winner says he has bought his first television set because of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's criticism of television news coverage. Prof. S. E. Luria of Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, who two months ago shared the Nobel Prize in medicine, wrote a letter to the Boston Globe savini: weeks ago, when I received the Nobel Prize for medicine, I was one of the few remaining 'effete snobs' who had gone through life without watching television. "rODAY, AFTER reading Mr. Agnew's speech in The Globe, I bought myself a cute little television set. I look forward to watching TV network news from now on, and get my fill of those 'distortions' that roused Mr. Agnew's bile so much." "Keep up the good work, TV networks," Luria's letter concluded. Happy rpj _ u* By DREW BOGEMA I T'S NOT the most popular or picturesque block in Ann Arbor. The case could easily be made that for as long as automobiles and concrete plague the public passion no American city will be able to restore beauty to the condition of the urban man. But this is a question for the future. On this block lies the sorrow of the past. Its shabby, decayed appearance presents a stark contrast to the glitter of those gaudy architectural monstrosities that so infect the city's flourishing commercial center. Chancing upon it, one won't see a continual parade of fashionably-clad businessmen and bureaucrats hurrying to make a conference or meet a client. And, their stylish, urbane women, always seemingly bustling about for the latest artifact of high-priced craftsmen, wouldn't brave fate for all the treasures in the world and walk down this block. The city dicks, perhaps recognizing the explosive potential of their presence, avoid the area like a plague, except when the booze flows too fast, glass litters the street outside, and the street folk get uppity, and then, its riot-helmets, night-sticks, deathly terror (Will the blacks rise and cut off our heads?). Nor, for that matter, will one find a large collection of white, hipsters or long-hairs among the clientele when the evening comes and thekbars begin to swing. Love and good times here come only for blacks. FOR THIS IS East Ann, one block off Main. On its westernmost corner lies the Red Shield store, where the Salvation Army diggers disetribute l p atias iprtc ~eof t+e mirir1._r14.c 4to+ the nnn .uht material deprivation of the Ann Street misfits but the merchants and managers of an expanding commercial center, One block west is the County Jail, home for Doug Harvey's elite cadre of brownshirted storm-troopers. It's not the best of locations and in the Derby one might chance to hear the long-standing line that the influx of the municipal honkie has severely lowered property values. BUT THE BLACKS who come here somehow make do. They're not the latest models of the corporate-groomed Negro bourgeoisie, but the always-invisible, trampled-upon, kicked-around proletariat. Their only opportunities lie in the personal dealings of their own tightly-knit social commune and they're numb to the language of material and geographic adventure that the honkie speaks. They're loud and irreverent, belligerent and aggressive, tense and angry. It seems as though the crushing legacy of poverty, racism. and exploitation has crowded most into a maze of frustration. "And all the doors are shut baby." comes the reply, "all the doors are shut." "If you're black. stay back,.. goes the phrase. But somehow they make do. A radical transformation of the Babylonian distribution of wealth could come about tomorrow, should come about tomorrow, will come about tomorrow. And the most tragic consequence may very well be the peculiar joys of black congregation, unless the cold, inhumane manner of the urban white man is somehow destroyed, unless this fiercely competitive private search for wealth that is called life in this country is somehow abolished. It's not easily described and many may not even notice the loss. One feels its depth equally in a black Baptist church and in an all-black