:,_ g p 4 4 4 War With the Wrong Weapons Vol. XII, No. 3 Mirliitrn I MAGA Robert Moore, Magazine Editor Sun (Continued from Page Seven) other protests to Washington to be dis- cussed later. ALL THIS suggests that Alinsky was in- volved in the Syracuse program directly. He was - until Syracuse Uni- versity's chancellor announced 1 a s t month that, his consultant's contract with the University having run out, he was not going to be rehired. In only one city, San Francisco, have the results of such "political ferment" been encouraging. Mayor John Shelley had nearly exclusive control of the city's Economic Opportunity Council and said he could never be persuaded to give it up. Representatives of the poor, how- ever, had control of the neighborhood centers, and refused to approve Shelley's programs unless they got a majority on the council. The fighting came to a close after the Federal official in the city to oversee the antipoverty said that no funds would be forthcoming unless the neighborhood centers approved the way the money was to be spent. Shelley then caved in. Chicago, of course, may be called an exception, due in large part to the po- litical importance of its mayor. Unfortu- nately, it is a very big exception, having received about $21 million in Federal anti-poverty money. 'ITe fact that it is always called an "exception" has general- ly tended to prevent action. But it ap- pears that San Francisco is the excep- tion; the pattern in Chicago is, with some variance, largely the rule. V THE FUNDAMENTAL nature of all these program is, as James Ridgeway of The New Republic said of Chicago's program, they amount -"to little more than an extension of existing social or welfare services which have served as instruments of a policy that results in keepingsthe poor Negroes in walled-up ghettoes. . . (at this writing) the Poor themselves have not been involved in planning the poverty war and have very little to say about the way it is run" The story need not have developed in this way. But the way in which this pat- tern developed is, to say the least, inter- esting. As Loftus noted in The Times, the Economic Opportunity Act is sufficiently vague to allow for some significant vari- ations in the "maximum feasible partici- pation" of the poor. Shriver was evident- ly determined initially that this involve- ment be meaningful. He told a confer- ence of welfare associations that welfare workers didn't involve the poor enough and ought to fulfill their responsibility to do so. THEN, HOWEVER, the nation's mayors, alarmed by the way in which poor people in their cities or in others were shaking up local governments and seek- ing an end to welfare colonialism, realiz- ed that their interests and established procedures, most of them shabby, were at stake, from their parks departments to their housing authorities. The United States Conference of May- ors, meeting in St. Louis in June of 1965, thus wrote a strong resolution attacking the poverty program for "creating ten- sions" between the poor and themselves and for "fostering class struggle" against city administrations was very nearly cer- tain of passage. Earlier in November there appeared a disclosure that the Bureau of the Budget, yielding to further pressure from the mayors, had opposed a role for the poor in the planning (as opposed to execution) of poverty programs. Loftus' disclosure was dismaying, but not surprising, to most observers. But Shriver denied the whole affair, say- ing with a straight face the next day in a speech in Scottsdale, Ariz., "No such change in OEO's policy has been directed or ordered by anyone in the administration . . . Our policy is today and will remain exactly what it has been from the very beginning." (The Bureau of the Budget may also have been concerned about the fact that bringing poor-and hence untrained and managerially naive--people into the pro- gram as planners and workers is less "efficient" than using trained social workers. This is indeed true, as poverty programs in Mississippi and New York City have shown. But it is well to recall once again that the essential aspect of a community action program is the fact that it is a program with, not for, the. poor. And participation of the poor, not high cost-effectiveness, is the only pos- sible way to go about it.) BUT APPARENTLY SHRIVER was un- able-or unwilling-to outflank the increasing and extremely potent opposi- tion to involving the poor. Under pres- sure within the administration and without (he may still want to be the Illinois governor someday), he made a well-publicized trip to Chicago in December. Seated with Mayor Daley at the head table of a poverty warriors' banquet attended by Chicago's Establishment- parently was pressured into dropping Alinsky from the list. For all their criticisms of the War on Poverty-mismanagement, the inaccurate claim that a year in the Job Corps costs more than a year in Harvard or earns more than a year in the Army, and so on-the Republicans haven't shown much enthusiasm for ensuring that the law on community action works as it was written. Congressman William Ayres, the senior Republican on the House Educa- tion and Labor Committee, is apparently worried most about getting "a complete and independent audit." In view of the political implications and complications, it is probably sur- prising that the poor have been involved at all. Organizing the poor on the basis of their sharp feelings of resentment against their miserable conditions-for which City Hall is often responsible-is, in brief, teaching the poor. to fight City Hall. And it is unreasonable to expect that City Hall or its allies such as the welfare industry will help people who On November 7, 1965, Saul Aliusky, one of the nain proponents of the organization-of-the-poor philosophy, spoke at Raekhant Amphitheatre here. Anong the things he said then: "If you Saw Watts, you wouldn't question why it blew up. You'd only ask ,why it didn't go in 964, o01. 63, o. 'G." f It is "wi shful thinking" to aSSnin e federal money can correct the gross inequities in tmod- er society. The Negro ghettoes are developing a real hatred towards the poverty program and the "welfare industry." 0 "When we hold a delegate convention of The Woodlawn Organization, we have in the room twice the total membership of all the civil rights organizations in Chicago. This is why Mayor Daley will pay attention to TWO, even if that attention is negatively directed." "X4: AW11V~'. .1 :1"1X 41 ...v 1p"l.. J"1v {'::'i:" }' . . . . . . . ":1 :":": tt:".:".:*.: . .*.*.' . . "4" ."1 4"". " "J1:. ..1 t1~11~i ~1J .4want to1fight1.City1.Hall.1You41do1not1let segregation) and so on. On balance. It is making the obvious obvious to observe that Daley needs the administration more than the administration needs him. Something far more important than offending a few mayors is at stake. As has been seen, the poor are unsure, powerless and deprived by the hopeless- ness of their condition. Although they are, in -the strictest sense, "capable" of using their opportunities, they have been so crippled by their powerlessness and their dependency that, in reality, they are not. As President Johnson observed eloquently in his historic Howard Uni- versity speech, opening the doors of op- portunity-whether by growth or edu- cation-is not enough; a man must be able to walk through them. And hence the necessity for organizing the poor: to do things not simply for the poor, which increases their feeling of powerlessness and insignificance, but with them. Long convinced that "you can't fight City Hall" and get results, the poor will never regain the feeling that they. too, matter, that they, too, have and should take a part in society, unless they are catalyzed by the antipoverty program and can see for themselves. ORGANIZING THE POOR has, it is true, caught the fancy of student activists. But it is a time-honored belief of the most respectable Republican orthodoxy that, given the opportunity to do so, the individual and only the in- dividual can demonstrate, through actions springing from his own enterprise and initiative, that he is willing to be the master of his own destiny. If they really believe in individual initiative and local responsibility, it is incumbent on con- servatives no less than liberals to see that "maximum feasible participation" of the poor in decisions on their destiny is a reality. That the poor do not, in general, now believe it is possible to govern one's fate has been seen. But this condition is not inherent; it does not come from some quality all poor people have. It is en- vironmental, and comes from poverty itself. Having decided their lot cannot be improved, the poor have concluded they are powerless, and so they withdraw from public affairs. In so doing, they become powerless; some of those who acquire power over them exploit them; and the cycle is complete. THE RECORD suggests thatonce the poor are organized-and they can be -and once they realize that there is a definite relation between their acts and their destiny-and they will-then they will begin to participate in public affairs again, and the psychology of poverty will begin to crumble. The role of government, therefore, is to help catalyze this process: to provide economic growth and educational oppor- tunity, and to help organize the poor- to help bring them back into the affairs of the great Republic from which, thanks to the seeming hopelessness of their situation, they have so long been obsent. The possibility that government will cease to work for "maximum feasible participation" of the poor in determining their own destinies is thus tragic-for at stake is the validity and the vitality of the democratic process itself. ltdr gat 4att MAGAZINE Magazine Editors: Robert Moor (layout); Lawrence Kirs hbaum (copy). PHOTOS Andrew Sacks-Cover, p. 5, p. 7 Thomas R. Copi-P. 3, p. 4 Ann Arbor News-P. 2 - Press run this issue: 9100. THE CONSEQUENCES OF DISSENT Public reaction to the various Viet Nam protests held here over the last year and a half has often been angry. In letters to Uni- versity officials, the Viet Nam protestors have been called "cow- ards," "pinkos"'and "grossly stupid jerks." Yet despite the pub- lic outcry-and the accompanying financial-political pressure within the state-the University has courageously defended the student's right to open discussion and public dissent. (Page two) and picketed by TWO-Shriver (to the amusement of all) said he couldn't see anything wrong with politicians and wanted to defend the role of the "Estab- lishment" in the poverty war. Shriver's original community action guidebook-khich some disillusioned OEO types now call the "coloring book"-said "a vital feature of every community ac- tion program is the involvement of the poor themselves-the residents of the areas and members of the groups to be served-in planning, policy-making and -operation of the program." And Shriver began by insisting that although there should be no fixed ratio of poor people on community action boards, one-third of the board should generally be composed of poor people. The OEO put out a .statement on January 14 of this year, however, saying 'that the national average of poverty representation on community programs was about 27.5 per cent-which one staff member confided had "absolutely punc- tured" the one-third standard. "The new legend is 25 per cent," he said, "but that's wrong, too." It is possible, however, to be too critical of Shriver. He has very few allies and many enemies, from Daley to the social work industry. He is said to feel that the new Citizens Crusade Against Pov- erty, a new privately-financed group led by Walter Reuther and intended to train community organizers somewhat like the Syracuse program, is the best way to organize the poor since City Hall won't show people how to fight City Hall. Shriver has also set up a national Community Representatives Advisory Council of 28 poor people or their repre- sentatives to work with him, but ap- want to fight City Hall. You do not let other people put you out of business. VI- BUT THE EXPERIENCE of such ef- forts as TWO has shown that the organizing the poor works-in terms of increased human decency, and in terms of tangible results, as witness the TWO- Labor Department training program. The experience of San Francisco and some other cities suggests that politicians and the poor can make a good start at work- ing together. What the Administration is faced with, in short, is a very basic question: to continue policies of consensus towards the nation's mayors, or to strike out on a new path-despite its difficulties, which are certainly not all involved in "maxi- mum feasible participation"-and fight poverty to win. To be sure, there are political difficul- ties involved in orgarizing the poor. Mayor Daley is not likely to be cheered by the prospect of a TWO with substan- tial federal encouragement. He and his Democratic congressmen-whom the ad- ministration needs badly; Rep. Pucinski defected on a crucial vote, a near loss, pn the Omnibus Housing Act of 1965-are vital for the administration, some might say. BUT MAYOR DALEY and his congress- men need the administration as well: urban renewal money, public works money, educational aid (the Office of Education is finally investigating Chicago School Superintendent Benjamin Willis' refusal to act effectively on de-facto CAZZIE RUSSELL Cazzie Lee Russell came here from a housing project in Chicago to become the brightest star on the horizons of college basket- ball. He has done it with size and talent and an intense, lonely drive to be the best. But behind the statistics and records, Cazzie is a sensitive human being facing the problems of race, fame and the game of basketball with his own brand of poise and dedication. (Page three) WAR WITH TIHE WIONG WEAPONS The Federal Government's multi-million-dollar War on Poverty is basically misguided, spending carloads of money to treat the symptoms and not the disease. The basic cause of poverty is a pychological condition, the feeling of being unimportant and helpless in the larger society. The best solution to poverty lies in organizing the poor into self-respecting, powerful groups, even though such organization could probably topple many big city political machines. (Page four) A LONG WAY TO GO Educated in active involvement instead of passive concern, a new generation of students is asking for a greater voice in the r- - decisions which influence them. For years, students here have been explicitly seeking participation in University decision-mak- ing, but have been hampered by an essentially dualistic attitude of administrators: liberalism in philosophy, paternalism in prac- tice. A great step forward may soon be made with student par- ticipation in the presidential selection process. (Page five) Paae Eiaht THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE