Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Urban Problems Necessitate a Tax Boost here Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ABOR, MicH. Troth Will Prevail 2 ANR T, N 13R IH NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. Thismust be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH Co 's Poverty War: The Poor Must Participate THE FEDERAL budget is always provisional in that it deals with estimates of what the govern- ment will spend and what itwill take in during a period which begins about six months from now (July 1, 1966) and ends 18 months from now (June 30, 1967). This year's budget is even more provisional and tentative because it involves an attempt to estimate the financial effects of an un- defined war in an unforeseeable future. With the United States engaged in a war which has no fixed political and strategic limits, which is, as the Mansfield report calls it, "open-ended," no reliable calculation can be made about what the war will be like and what it will cost in the next year and a half. As compared with the exuber- ance of the State of the Union message, the budget is much more cautious. The message declared that "this nation is mighty enough, its society healthy enough, its people are strong enough to, pursue our goals in the rest of the world while still building a Great So- ciety at home." BUT IN the budget message we are brought nearer to earth. In it the President declares that "even a prosperous nation cannot meet all its goals all at once. For this reason the rate of advance in the new programs has been held below what might have been proposed in less troubled times." The figures in the budget show that the big health and educa- tional programs are to be expand- ed more or less as originally planned. There is a significant slowdown in the intended advance almost everywhere else. This is conspicuous in the case of the so-called warn on poverty. But even more significantly, new programs to meet the urgent ne- cessities of the Great Society, which reflect the growth of the population and its urbanization, are held down, often to the extent -as is the case in Wednesday's promising message on cities-of asking now for only enough money to plan how to plan. TOday and( Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN And yet even these modest bud- get estimates are based on a Micawber strategy that somehow something will turn up to prevent the war from becoming a big war. THEdBASIC decisionson which the budget has been constructed are, first, that the costs of the war must be met. This is indisput-' able. The second decision is that taxes should not be raised to make any serious inroads on private civilian consumption. The third decision is that public expenditures should be restricted to close the budgetary deficit and reduce the inflationary threat. The underlying belief upon which these decisions rest is that civilian public expenditure is more a ostponable and is less urgent than a further increase in civilian private expenditure. Insofar as public money is paid out for relief, it can, of course, be argued rather coldly that the poor we shall always have with us anyway. But charity is not the essential and urgent need of the new in- dustrialized and urbanized Ameri- can society, and it is not what is cut back in this budget. The urgent need of the great cities is to be made habitable, and this can be done only by replanning and renewing them, which is a gigantic engineering and administrative task and will require great sums of money which can be raised in no other way than through the fed- eral tax machinery. TO OVERCOME successfully the problems of urbanized Amer- ica will require at least the work of a generation, This work is not postponable as being mere "but- ter" which we can do without while we make the "guns." There are, as New York and Los Angeles have learned, explosive urban problemsunderneath our glitter- ing. affluence, These problems must>be dealt wvith, and the choice before us, since the country is so rich, is not between guns and butter, but be- ten raising taxes and neglecting the future. The President should nerve himself to raising taxes in order to make as big an attack as it is possible to make under war conditions on the vital in- ternal problems of the Great Society. In saying that the attack should be as big as it is possible to make t, I have it in mind that in an escalating war the time soon comes when no one can think of anything else. The really difficult problem is not money, which can be found by taxation. The crucial problem is a growing shortage of skilled men to make a Great Society and, above all, a loss of popular interest and support because a people can- not think at one and the same time about destruction abroad and construction at home. ic)a 1966, The Washington Post Co. i THE WAR ON POVERTY in Ann Arbor is still a War About Poverty. "Repre- sentation of the poor," an issue that is prominent in such Areas as Chicago and Newark, has now come to the county. The Washtenaw County Citizens Commit- tee for Economic Opportunity has decid- ed to reconsider its proposed Legal Aid, Society governing board, which, under a plan it approved in January, would be composed of five local attorneys, a Uni- versity lav professor and two citizens-at- large. An area Legal Aid Society clinic, man- ned by University law students, has been in operation since August. -Last month, the county committee, which clears all requests for federal anti-poverty money in the area, voted to approve the clinic's request for federal funds and the pro- posed eight-man governing board.. But then the law students, led by George Newman, president of the Law School Legal Aid Association, and poor people fron the area asked, that poor people be represented on the new board. The county committee's vote Thursday doesn't change anything, but at least it offers a chance for change. THE MEMBERS of the local bar associa- tion, who helped form the Legal Aid Society-and who got five of the eight board seats under the plan now to be reconsidered-are said tO be irked by the insistence of the law students and the poor themselves that poor people be in- cluded on the clinic's board of directors in addition to a 10-man "advisory com- mittee." Says one pro-bar observer, "I think they're all a . little sore about the poor biting the hand that feeds them." In this sudden and inadvertent com- ment, is revealed much about' the nature of the way the War on Poverty is being fought-merely as an extension of tihe present welfare industry. It has become increasingly evident that the traditional welfare approach toward the poor, be- cause it is indeed "the hand that feeds them," is unavoidably paternalistic; hencethe particularly apt name of "wel- fare colonialism." However benevolent in intent, this sort of approach has been disastrous in appli- cation, for it strips the poor of their dignity-the "individual initiative" and "private enterprise" of conservatives - and reduces them to utter dependency. Under such circumstances poverty is not ended, but perpetuated. t For this reason, the Economic Oppor- tunity Act of 1964 stipulated that com- munity action programs-like those of the Washtenaw County committee - miust provide for "maximum feasible partici- pation" of the poor. For the new ap- proach to poverty, in fact, the only feas- ible one, is one which is not for the poor, but with the poor. THE IDEA that poor people should have a voice and a vote in their own des- tiny is, of course, as old as the Consti- tution. But some of the county bar's membership evidently prefer to continue, in that picturesque phrase, to be "the hand that feeds them." This is tragic. The poor people of the area are adult human beings; they are citizens who pay taxes which sustain the poverty program just as Ann Arbor's lawyers do; and they,, and they alone, know best their own needs and problems. The issue has become clouded by charges that the poor want to tell the lawyers of the Legal Aid Clinic how to practice law, which is untrue, and that they trusted the bar and did not appear in January when the Legal Aid Society Board was voted on;, which is true and which also isn't going to happen again, particularly if the poor are denied any representatives on the board. But the issue is still fairly clear. "I don't see where it will hurt the local bar to add two poor people to the legal aid board," H. C. Curry, one of their spokes- men, says. "If the money allocated for the pdor doesn't go for the poor, then Wash- ington will hear from the poor." Whether or not that will happen will depend on the county committee's decision, and probably also on a chiange of mind from the local bar. -MARK R. KILLINGSWORTI 1 Letters: Vice-PresidentDenies Daily Quotes To the Editor:. IT HAS BEEN my practice not to write to The Michigan Daily with respect 'to statements made by it which I know to be in- accurate. However, The Michigan Daily in its Sunday edition at- tributed two statements to me, both in quotation marks. Neither statement was ever made by me. -Wilbur K. Pierpont Vice-President for Business and Finance EDITOR'S NOTE: Daily reporter Alice Bloch says that the first statement on the residential college was made to her in a telephone interview Monday, January 17. The other statement was a paraphrase of statements made to several Daily reporters about a year ago, and was erroneously given as a direct quote. -R.J. The Dodd Report To the Editor: BECAUSE the matter they con- cern is of genuine interest to the University community, I sub- mit the following two letters for publication in The Daily.,I would add only this thought: the United States senator to whom the first letter is directed, and from whom the second letter comes, is one in whom the citizens of Michigan may take considerable and right- ful pride. -Prof. Carl Cohen Philosophy Department EDITOR'S NOTE: The texts of Professor Cohen's letter totSenator Hart and his reply follow. Dear Senator Hart: I WRITE to call your attention to some recent unsavory practices of the Senate internal security subcommittee, to express the in- tense dissatisfaction with the con- duct of that subcommittee felt by myself and a great many Ameri- cans of every political persuasion, and to request your vigorous ac- tion in bringing such practices to a halt. In a recent report entitled, "The Anti-Viet Nam Agitation and the Teach-In Movement: The Prob- lem of Communist Infiltration and Exploitation," lengthy efforts are made by that subcommittee to establish the "Communist affilia- tions and sympathies" of certain University of Michigan faculty members, largely because the teach-in movement began here. Some of the techniques used by the Senate subcommittee in this report are shocking, dishonest, and genuinely subversive. They subvert the guaranteed freedom of Americans to defend openly what they believe and to criticize those in authority. HERE ARE some examples: a) As evidence of his Com- munist affiliation or sympathy,, one man is cited as having been "active in a faculty meeting held June 15, 1952 at the.University of Michigan which adopted a resolu- tion protesting the policy of the University in barring Communist speakers." The implications of this citation are dreadful. Is one not to protest rulings one believes to be improper for fear of a later report by a Senate subcommittee? Hundreds of University faculty members objected to that policy, and their protest bore no relation to their affiliations or sympathies, except their sympathy for the First? Amendiment to the United States Constitution guaranteeing the freedom of speech, without qualification. Thankfully, the Uni- versity rule thus protested was changed, to everyone's relief. List- ing one's activity in support of that change as apparent evidence of his Communist affiliation or sympathy is despicable, as I am sure you will agree. b) As evidence of their "Com- munist affiliations or sympathies" at least two men are cited as having signed petitions protesting the death sentence of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who were con- victed and executed as spies. .But the possible reasons for signing such a petition are unlimited. They may have believed justice to have miscarried in that case; they may have objected to capital punish- ment in principle, quite apart from the question of guilt.pBut whatever one's reason for signing that petition, such signing can- not reasonably or justly be used as evidence of Communist 'affilia- tion or sympathy ... c) The Senate subcommittee's report intimates that the teach- in movement in general was af. filiated or sympathetic to Com munism. This intimation is false The chief support for it seems tc be that "there is nothing in the public record to suggest" that the movement's leaders demarcatec their position from the Com- munist one, or repudiated Com munist support, etc. This reason- ing is backhanded and vicious First, ,"there is nothing in the public record to suggest" lots of things which happen to be true and the absence of evidencerdoes not convict, either in a court of law or before a just and honest committee. SECOND, the leaders of the teach-in movement didn't have A position on Viet Nam, they hat many and often disagreed with one another. They agreed only ir. being deeply concerned about gov- ernment heolicy and in being an- xious to have it openly discussed Third, the claim (even if true) that one agrees with the Com- munist position on some matter, -say, racial integration-prove nothing about his affiliations of sympathies. Fourth, it was one deliberate aim of the teach-in movement to encourage debate in which there might be participation fromall quarters, the extremes o: political left and right included No point of viev, was refuseda hearing, or condemned prior tc representation and criticism.' Such fully open discussions are what universities are for, and the free- dom to participate in such dis- cussions is our national pride. Indirect accusation and deroga. tion pf character of the kind ap- pearing in this report are inexcus- able. They are particularly shame- ful when practiced by a subcom- mittee of the United States Senate a body in which the principle of full and open discussion has been traditionally honored. I urge you out of your rightful concern for the reputation of the Senate, and because of your obligation to de- f end the fundamental right of all Americans to speak freely, with- out fear of later reprisal by their government. I look forward to your response, and send my very good wishes. Sincerely, Carl Cohen 0 e e if t e a d h n 1. s s r 1. t Dear Professor Cohen: I HAVE DELAYED replying to your letter because I had hoped to obtain an original copy of the' internal security subcommittee re- port. to which you referred, Un- believable as it may seem,I have found that the permanent record copy in the Senate Library is still at the binders and the subcom- mittee is absolutely out of copies. The subcommittee staff has in- formed me that there are some substantial revisions being made in the report prior to another print- ing of it. While I am not a member of the subcommittee, I have become increasingly aware of a number of instances of errors or sub- stantial misinterpretations of fact appearing in materials published by the staf or in official subcom- mittee documents. In* some of these instances f have called the errors to the attention of Senator Dodd, who in recent years has, been the "acting" chairman of the subcommittee. In at least one instance, corrections were made. What else one can do in this situation I do not know, but even at this late date I did want you to know that basically I am in agreement with the points made in your letter and will continue to do what I can. With best wishes, Sincerely, Philip Hart The Degree Grind To the Editor: IT USED TO BE that a college degree and 10 cents could get you a cup of coffee. Now with the price of coffee up to 15 cents in most Ann Arbor restaurants, It can't even get you that, -Sanford Roth, '67 Aid the NLF To the Editor: I WOULD LIKE to commend the Young Socialist Alliance for distributing buttons in the fish- bowl labeled "Peace in Viet Nam, Support the National Liberation Front." All mankind craves peace, and what better way to end -this ugly war than to aid the NLP and thereby its dedicated action committee, the Viet Cong? How silly are the U.S. capitalists who say, "Let's achieve peace by going to the negotiating table.' The NLF has a far better idea which we hear in their spirited cry, "We'll win this war if it takes 20 years!" By aiding the NLF we can help, kifl more .Americans, South Vietnamese, South Koreans and Australians in a shorter period of time, thus accomplishing the NLF goal more quickly and bring- ing peace to Viet Nam. A big bouquet of pink roses should 'be sent to this wonderful group, the Young Socialist Alliance. -Dennis Thompson, Grad 0 4 The New left: Cause in Search of a Movement: Students Should Ap~r1eit 'U ferings s 4, ANUARY 11, the distinguished scholar from Yale, Robert O. Tilman, spoke on "Political and Social Change in Ma- laysia." Contemporary' conditions being as critical as they .are in Southeast Asia, a moderate contingent of undergradu- ates might be expected to attend. Yet the turnout was the same as that for many fine speakers last semester-a mere hand- fu. of undergraduates came., This is indicative of the lack of appre- ciation University students render for what the school provides. Few universi- Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM, Managing Editor JUDITH FIELDS , ..... ..... .... Personnel Director. LAUREN BAHR ......... Associate' Managing Editor JUDITH WARREN.........Assistant Managing Editor ,SAIL BLUTMBERGO................... Magazine Editor TOM WEINBERG.................Sports Editor LLOYD GRAFF .......... Associate Sports Editor PETER SARASOHN ....... Contributing Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Carney, larence Fanto, Mark Killingswnrth, John Meredith, Leonard Pratt, Harvey Wasserman, Bruce Wasserstein, Charlotte Wolter. DAY EDITORS: Babette Cohn, Michael Heffer, Merle Jacob, Robert Moore, Roger Rapoport, Dick Wing- field. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Alice Bloch, Deborah Blum, Neal Bruss, Gail Jorgenson, Robert Kfivans, Laurence Medow, Neil Shister, Joyce Winslow. ASSISTANT DAY EEDITORS: Richard Charin, Jane Dreyfuss, Susan Elan, Shirley Rosick, Robert Shiner, Alan valusek. SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Rick Feferman, Jim La- Sovage, Bob McFarland, Gil Samberg, Dale Sielaff, Rick Stern, Jim Tindall, Chuck Vetzner. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning. $usiness Staff CY WELLMAN, Business Manager ALAN GLUECKMAN............Advertising Manager SUSAN CRAWFORD ..... Associate Business Manager JOYCE FEINBERGA... ss........ BFinance Manager MANAGERS: Harry Bloch, Bruce Hillman, Marline ILuelthau, Jeffrey Leeds, Gail Levin, Susan Perl- stadt, vic Ptasznik, Elizabeth Rhein, Ruth Segall, Jill Tozer, Elizabeth WirEman. ties in the country attract such a num- erous and diverse quantity of speakers. Yet very few students in proportion to the enrollment of the University take ad- vantage of these lectures. Why? Because, unfortunately, the es- sence of "higher education" for most seems to lie in the next exam or party. The ,grade-point is exalted and deified. Courses which might prove meaningful and interesting aren't even considered because they might be relatively rigorous. The typical student's attitude is exem- plified by this remark, "My recitation professor is wonderful. When it comes to grades, she's cake. She never says any- thing in class and has assigned no term papers." O BE SURE, there is some degree of justification for not attending vari- ous lectures or enrolling in certain "rele- vant" courses stemming from too much "Michigan pressure" or total lack of in- terest in the subject matter. However, the primary reasons lie in the fact that most students are merely using their four years at the University as a means to an end-either as a springboard to graduate school, an "MRS. degree" or both. It is only too easy here to succumb to the social pressures which can precipi- tate an almost total involvement with these ends alone. There is nothing wrong with the afore- mentioned goals, but to make them the one and only function of college is a mistake. Surely there appears on this campus one lecturer, at least every other week, speaking on a topic that should hold some interest for each individual. Having attended for two years a small school which was prohibited by a dearth of funds from providing a variety of speakers, I find it exceedingly difficult to comprehend the relative apathy of f l4 -- . , n ,. Y" \ 1 t 11t'1, ' .. ... 4 7 .! '.C S f -(. T" .i 1, E:; t; i ',' y s J , By ROGER EBERT Collegiate Press Service JRVING KRISTOL, himself an elder statesman of; American Liberalism, was asked to report on the teach-ins and the New Left last summer for Encounter maga- zine, and found he just didn't know what in hell the students were up to. "Itis a strange experience,," wrote Kristol, "to see a radical movement in search of a radical cause." The young American rad- icals, he explained, "are in the historically unique position of not being able to demand a single piece of legislation from their gov- ernment." So there you have it. Radical causes cannot exist apart from legislation. The task of radicals is to demand such legislation from the government. The New Left is not playing the game of Republi- can and Democrat. Well, strictly speaking this is not true. The student left woul welcome a congressional review ,of the war in Viet Nam, for exam- ple. But what Kristol and lib- erals of this generation are look., ing for is a radical program, a list of legislative goals, a faith in legislation as a means to solve the problems of society. BUT STUDENTS are concerned more with style of life than leg- islation, more with direct partici- pation of citizens within their communities than with political manipulations in Washington. Many of the members of Students for a Democratic Society, for ex- ample, are genuinely afraid of. power; workers in the SDS na- tional office complain they're los- ing touch with the roots. By con- trast, it is now Young Americans for Freedom which is supporting conservative congressional cam- paigns. The political spectrum has gone topsy-turvy in the past five years, at least at the student ley- el. Student radicals are now clos- er to classical liberalism than ever before, while conservatives have been won to a belief in centraliza- tion, organization, big business and hizo vernmnent al and social)? Surely we are, but the message which the New Left brings is that the demands of human initiative and self-determination require dimovement in almost the opposite direction: away from centralism and toward community denocra- cy. It is the New Left, not the lib- eral establishment or the conserv- ative revolt, which has taken as its motto, "Let the people decide." KRISTOL does not' find the is- -sues behind this new movement because he looks for them through, glasses tinted. with the New Deal- liberal socialist definition of what an issue is. The conservatives miss the issue because they define the New Left in cliches left 'over from the thirties. The fact is that the New Left ideology has itsaroots in classical 'libertarianism and an- archism. This is indeed a NEW Left, with new approaches worked out ex- perimentally in the South and with ideas about the structure of society that reach back to Proud- hon and Kropotkin among classi- cal anarchist thinkers, and in America to Jefferson, Thoreau and the original elements of Popul- ism. The modern philosopher of this position is Paul Goodman. It jis hard for the establishment to understand that there can be a Left which finds Marxism ir- relevant and uninteresting. It is no coincidence that the, Spanish Civil War, having disillusioned a generation of Marxists with its political in-fighting and hair- splitting, is now attracting the at- tention of a new radical genera- tion primarily because of the an- archist societies which were set up and flourished in Aragon and oth- er places before being wiped out by Communists. The theme of this lesson from history is "self-determination," a word which has equal meaning for student radicals whjen applied to Viet Nam, the south and the urb- an ghettoes. As Goodman explains in his recent book, "People or Personnel" "Mere 'consent' or 'participation 'is not enough; there must be a measure of real AI : , .' V gw ' f 'I ' I ,ca ,. F°; ' ' I a a 1 W~M~T~7A~U U'~k~ ~'~'i~E~U' ML -171 4,a T"jWiI