A s i £Danai Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the Pniversity of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications stuffy school board in need of Ayers 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN GRAY Why in hell is the VW parked on the living room rug. THE REASONS behind a city proposal e l i m i n a t i n g on-street parking throughout Ann Arbor from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. are one-sided, unrealistic and gen- erally specious. Under the guise of pro- tecting the rights of the citizens, the proposed parking ban would turn the current parking situation, chaotic at best, into an unbelievable morass of unpaid parking tickets and impounded cars. Ann Arbor traffic and parking engineer John E. Robbins justified the pending ordinance, currently awaiting City Coun- cil action, on the grounds that it would facilitate street maintenance, and elim- inate mugging on the streets. Muggers, Robbins said, hide between parked cars and then jump their victims. Besides, Robbins continued, olde English common law states that streets are for the move- ment of vehicles, not for their storage. -Apparently, students whose apartment houses are required by city law to pro- vide only one and one-third parking spaces per apartment regardless of the number of tenants per unit will have to find other places to park at night. Rob- bins was confident that students could find spaces in parking structures and lots vacated by University staff at night. He fails to take into account the fact that these lots and structures are often located miles from concentrations of stu- dent dwellings; and must be empty of nocturnally stored cars by 8 a.m. SINCE ROBBINS is so concerned with the welfare of the residents of Ann Arbor and their parking problems, he could easily kill two birds with one stone. By razing alternate buildings on each block, the city could pave the empty lots and use them for parking cars at night while destroying potential lairs for mug- gers. Befpre Robbins puts his authority be- hind so radical a plan, however, he should take a walk on Oakland, or Dewey, or South Forest, or any number of resi- dential streets at 4 a.m. It seems un- likely that he would find the parked cars a great impediment to the heavy traffic flow on those residential streets at that hour. In addition, most of the pedestrians whose potential rights are liable to be violated by muggers will be asleep. If City Council carefully considers the horrendous inconvenience that the pro- posed parking ban would inflict on stu- dents and the permanent residents of Ann Arbor, it will defeat the proposal, and refuse to reconsider it until a more pressing need is met: Supplying adequate parking facilities for the cars which cur- rently park on the streets for lack of spaces in the too few lots and too dis- tant structures. --DAVID MANN By ANN MUNSTER HE ANN ARBOR Board of Ed- ucation seems perpetually en- grossed in the dismal task of laboriously trimming its budget. Their desperate hope is that juggling with a maze of figures will yield an amount sufficient for the school system to, carry on some semblance of operation and be provided for by whatever meagre increase in the millage can be painfully extracted from the voters. One suspects occasionally that all of this' analysis and debate of the "nitty gritty" of the school system's operation is bound to re- sult in a severe case of myopia for at least a few. They are in grave danger of losing sight of the needs of the children they are supposedly trying to educate in the host of fiscal complications which for some reason the process produces. This year's school election, how- ever, promises a refreshing oppor- runity for Ann Arbor educators and voters to be pleasantly diverted from their intricate computations and to behold the spectacle of youth speaking out against op- pression by nerve-ridden middle- aged adults. This is the essential message conveyed by Bill Ayers' campaign slogan "The trouble with the schools is that there are too many grown-ups on the school board." Ayers is director of the hyper- experimental Children's Commu- nity School in Ann Arbor. His campaign for a seat on the Ann Arbor Board of Education is being sponsored by the New Politics Par- ty as an attempt to stimulate de- bate on issues of basic educational philosophy. And in this way to bring to light the need for overall changes in education which has long been ignored in the futile preoccupation with c o m l e x schemes to keep the present cum- bersome system operating. AYERS' fundamental dissatis- faction with the existing educa- tional system amounts to a pro- test against the intolerableness of a situation where the school sys- tem's manifold concerns - the myriad of programs it has pains- takingly inaugurated over the years-all seem to have been ele- vated to the importance of ab- solute essentials. The process has naturally resulted in a severe un- dermining of the schools' sup- posedly primary purpose-the in- tellectual development of the stu- dents. Ayers' campaign, is one of countless manifestations of a growing discontent with the "sys- tem." And it has in common with other radical movements a multi- tude of charges which are so true that they are in danger of be- coming truisms. But the discerning voter will realize that behind Ayers' rather unique call for "child power," his campaign provides a fairly co- gent answer to the question "what do you people want?" for many who seek to completely revamp the present educational system. Ayers and the other New Poli- tics candidate for school board, Joan Adams, are in complete agreement about the grossly un- fair treatment of blacks and low income students in the public school system. Ayers, who is not likely to be the ,,last in a succession of mal- contents, refuses to be satisfied with the proliferationofsefforts and even greater profusion of promises to right at least a few of the crying deficiencies in our schools. His attack on the Ann Arbor schools is more radical than that of Joan Adams, the other New Po- litics candidate. "It disturbs me that there is a lot of concern in this country about education, but that most of I The end of a courtship YESTERDAY the Supreme Court, long revered as the keeper of the sacred flamne,acknowledged publicly that its precious fire had disintegrated into a puff of smoke. In a 7-1 decision, with Justice Doug- las offering another of his lonely and courageous dissents, the High Court overturned a lower court ruling and up- held the constitutionality of a law mak- ing the burning of a draft card worth five years in prison. What the Warren Court found was that draft card burning as "symbolic speech" is not covered by the broad penumbra of the First Amendment and that the power to regulate the use of draft cards stems directly from the gov- ernment's military powers. As reprehensible as yesterday's deci- sion was, it is difficult to deny that the. Court had a point. For as it appears to the layman, the entire doctrine of "sym- bolic speech" and its implicit protection by the First Amendment appears mani- festly contrived and convoluted. PERHAPS a more plausible defense would have been that the law is in itself a "cruel and unusual punishment" since it prescribes up to five years in prison as the penalty for destroying a blatantly non-essential piece of white paper. The problem with such a defense is that it would seem to lead to the logical extension that there are some salutory and quite common penalties for burn- ing one's draft card. The disheartening fact underlying all this speculative talk about legal options is that the constitutional protection for unpopular or dangerous minoriies ex- tends little beyond the bare necessities of freedom of speech, assembly and re- ligion. In light of the weakness of the Constitution when arrayed against the awesome military powers of the Execu- tive Branch, it is difficult to regard the Supreme Court as a significant bastion against militarism gone mad. FVEN WERE the Constitutional provi- sions available to check the prodigal- ity of the Pentagon, there are important institutional barriers which stand in the way of the Court's ever living up to the Recidvism FROM Quotable Quotes on Education (Wayne State University Press, 1968) WISMARCK, OTTO VON. The nation that has the schools has the future (p. 204). touching esteem in which so many who are alienated from other aspects of the governmental system hold it. In a sense the Supreme Court is the step-child of the other two branches of the government, for its membership is almost totally controlled by the Execu- tive and, as the infamous Title II of the Crime Control bill so vividly reminds us, Its jurisdiction is theoretically under the suzerainty of the Congress. This vulnerable position has made the Court understandably wary of intruding further on the toes of the all-too-easily aroused Congress. And despite the epoch- making decisions of the past decade, there have always been serious doubts among many justices whether policy- making, regardless of the rectitude of these doctrines, was the proper function of the judiciary. REFLECTING both of these institu- tional constraints is the Court's pain- ful and embarrassing reluctance in chal- lenging the military decisions of the Executive, no matter how badly they mangle the precepts of the Constitution. This legalistic cowardice ranges from the upholding of the legality of the Ni- sei internment camps during World War II to the Court's inability to see any conflict between the draft and the Thir- teenth Amendment's abolition of "invol- untary servitude." The Court's reluctance to confront the Vietnam war indicates that despite the apparent militancy of the Warren Court, the Supreme Court was never designed to be and never really considered itself the panacea branch of our government. The Court's actions which unleashed Congressional attacks on its "radical- ism," can easily be interpreted within the framework of the Court's traditional role. The Court's most radical restructur- ing came about in criminal justice, the area - Congress to the contrary - that the Court considers uniquely its own. Such landmark abuses as segregation in the schools and prayers in the class- room were blatantly un-constitutional. And many on the Court are quite likely regretting the Court's intrusion on the legislative prerogatives with its series of reapportionment decisions. Thus the Court's actions since 1954 were an often misunderstood boon rather than a viable Constitutional protection of oppressed minorities. THE WAR in Vietnam has tragically illustrated against a sky of fire the .vast unchecked powers at the disposal of the whims of the modern President. The impotence of Congress, assuming it had the will, to do anything but meekly it is concentrated on the problems of black and low income students. The problems of the suburban schools are passed over briefly or are not considered problems at all. Rather, suburban schools are viewed as models for inner city schools to emulate." They have failed abysmally to perceive that many of the prob- lems of ghetto schools, such as the. rigid and irrelevant curricula, the authoritarian teaching and un- responsiveness to; students and community, are actually exagge- rated manifestations of funda- mental ailments in the prevailing American educational system it- self. "It is not the obvious kids who are being ruined," hessays. "Far more important are the ways those of us who succeed have suceeded." AYERS SPEAKS primarily for those who have "made it" in the public schools but who have failed to find any significant rewards in their success. He contends that although pub- lic schools are still producing 'successes" as well as dropouts, success in the existing educational institutions is worse than mean- ingless-it signifies the ability to function within a system built upon a totally perverted value structure. Ayers' model is proferred as the outgrowth of a radical analysis of the failures of the public school system. He points out to an in- tellectual oppressiveness in the very core of American education. This consists essentially in the tyranny of structure ove content, of arbitrary categories and re- quirements over broader concerns. This is a problem that many have long bewailed but to which virtually no coherent solutions have as yet been offered. THE PRESENT generation par- ticuarly finds it difficult to en- vision what the basic ends of education could possibly look like, in a clearly drawn format or what realization of those ends would mean in concrete terms. And its poverty of imagination is equalled only by its formidable fear of proceding without fixed guidelines. The result has been an obsessive clinging to a structure which seems to have largely lost its function. "It is my belief," says Ayers, "that kids in the schools are being oppressed in some very funda- mental ways. They are being done a grave disservice by being led to believe that learning is a process of gaining knowledge-of picking up facts, collecting wisdom, filling themselves up with what someone else has to offer.' "Learning becomes a way of tricking the guy who knows the answers into giving the answers. Thus .kids are robbed of growth and development in very fund- amental ways." Ayers' value here seems to be above all a kind of spontaneity and naturalness. And the under- lying assumption, however vaguely articulated, is that there is some sort of spiritual nature of man- kind which is ironically being stifledbymanmade institutions. The driving thrust of all of Ayers' educational theories is toward liberating the human spirit from the fetters that currently bind it. Like most ,constraints, they, spring from certain unwarranted fears regarding human nature, and with respecti to schools, cer- tain misconceptions about chil- dren which are the inevitable re- sult of viewing them from a warped adult perspective, "IT MAKES a lot more sense," Ayers contends, "to allow kids to develop their own structure with- out the imposition of adult values. Kids should be given the freedom to decide what kind of learning they want to do. This will succeed because there's not a kid alive who's not curious. What kids fun-. damentally want to do is to make sense out of the world." Adult objections to this meth- od generally include the notion that there are some kids who - don't want to do anything. But Ayers insists that "every kid wants to do something and' that some- thing, whatever it may be, is in- variably tied up with growth." Ayers places incredibly high hopes in youth as a potential source of moral regeneration for society. He sees children as un- corrupt beings and believes that if they are rescued from an edu- cational system -that continually stifles them, there would be no predicting the bounds in terms of the intellectual and social ad- vancement of future generations. AYERS' peculiarmbrand of utopianism consists mainly in a refusal to substitute weird and , wonderful new constraints for the outmoded and decrepit existing ones. It takes, rather, the only remaining. alternative and de- mands an extreme variety of in- dividual self-determination - an order in which the growth and development of each individual becomes the ultimate value - alt order that naturally demands a child-centered educational system. Bill Ayers and the New Politics Party generally are exceedingly aware of the close link-up be- tween the educational system and the overall social 'system. This realization is one of the key rea- sons, besides the indomitable American'faith in youth, for this particularly energetic school board campaign. Lacking 'a detailed blueprint for total social trjns- formation, they consider it all the more important to find specific areas to work in. "The ultimate goal," says Ayers, "I suppose, is some sort of jus- tice. None of us knows what that looks like or how we are going to get it." A PARTICULARLY significant phenomenon in this rather broad- ly based movement, which seems to feel no need for clearly defined tactics or clearcut goals, is its ex- traordinary emphasis on a local kind of democracy. "Community control is essential," says Ayers. "In order for any institution to be democratic, it has to be controlled by the people affected." This unusual stress on local control is one of the reasons for Ayers' carefree attitude toward the election results. Although \he' cheerfully asserts "There's no rea- son I shouldn't win. Things are so bad in education nationwide. that anything with a breath of life to it might catch on," victory does not seem to be an obsession with him. AYERS is just as carefree in his assertion .that "It would be a lot healthier if people started los- ing elections so that in the long run they could -start accomplish- ing something." .He envisions his campaign as an excellent oppor- tunity to do some organizing among students, teachers, parents, and other concerned persons in the community who are radically dissatisfied with the current edu- cational system. He is orimarify interested in doing intense work with Whatever number of people can be reached. Ayers also feels that this type O of campaign has definite possi- bilities for "starting people who are criticizing the schools to think about what's wrong in, general." He fully recognizes his campaign is an "essentially radializing ex- perience." And that it "makes radical demands upon the school A system and on people's concep- tions of what the school system is supposed to be." Besides Ayers inherent interest in education, his campaign for a seat on the Ann Arbor school board was inspired by the fact that "It is a, good base issue be- cause white middle class people are already hung up on it." The middle class in!America, perhaps more than any other, devotes a large portion of time and energy in- educating its children. By pointing up the fundamen- * tal rottenness which oermeates one of their deepest dailybcon- cerns, Ayers hopes to be able to "build to broader issues." MOREOVER, a revolution in education itself would be a high- ly significant one because it is t an area where the sources of dis- content with the total system are found to 'be most manifest. The conflict between means and ends which crops up in so many pro- test movements is perhaps most intense in the educational sys- tem. And the opportunities for bring- ing processes into harmony with ultimate goals are more abundant in education than in any other social institution. There is prob- ably no greater potential any- where else for the practice of pute democracy. And the impact of a reform which strikes at the heart of the distorting influence of so- cial institutions is incalculable. i' " n.-.Andthey" said it A couldn't beadone N A LIFETIME hardly graced by a record of infallibility, the one dogma to which I cling now is that there are no sure things.-in history, in politics, in Wall Street, in games or any other area of the human condition. No voice is more repugnant than the one beginning: "Look, I per- sonally like your idea, but it's obviously impractical and unrealistic." I heard that refrain anew the other day when I was arguing that the U.S. should publicly and vigorously propose a cease fire in Vietnam while the talks continue. My point was no more complex than the notion, repeatedly advanced' by this newspaper, tlat perhaps the cruellist casualties of war are those suffered during the interlude of peace negotiations. "I entirely agree with your sentiment," a learned friend said, "but you know the other side would never really go along with it. It's just not workable." The remarks brought back memories of so many other conver- sations, utterances and published pronouncements in which men with recognized credentials proclaimed their certainties. HEREWITH is a random recollection of such assertions, recorded with no claim of my own prescience in disputing these prophets. A .......... .v:::rxr: ".vr."r :v,: ur::.;:; ,.... :: .::. ................... ".v:.4:v::.v: Y44... "r: rr ............ r.....:... r....... }:{{{{{ ::..., ,. n.. r,. .......,.{.?";":"}::: }1{ :}}}:};,;":i. vor.....,...,... rrrn;:; . .. .:.. .. ra: rr:.a:Y:: r{:.;:;Yr::{:};::;:::'}}}4'{:?Y ~. }. .. }:.7C: d{.". .. r..e {". r} ,r.} ..~ .... :: rr." ~rr:.;:Y:::r:rrf.:?'~.'Y.:~': ~t:::,: ...... r... r.: ....... { ................. ~....A... ". {'.. 1.Yr.: ;'"}:". ... .'.?."'.'{:: :: }}': YY .Y: ' ... r.. .. ...~~::t~r.".'~:r..:1'.:^r..rl.r~. :~:.'r:r:.1,::'."r.:".':.:;.,...:.r..{'.V~::.. ~.. ~. tPt... r.'.S:Yr... .. ~~ Y::. ~.. ~J. ...i'.:........;\.....,. ~..' ..~.:...:{.,..4}.'AL4:44':.1..{..{'}.Y.L ~. .Y: ~..4. ~ '}.}:V}:. t 3 wf i 11s I U. s Senate' 11*r)i i I jii l y L a f'j U I, H. 1 #11 I 1938: "A Nazi-Soviet pact? That's the damnest nonsense I ever heard. It just couldn't happen." (Pact signed Aug. 22, 1939.) 1940: "I certainly admire Churchill, but you have to admit Britain is through. We've got to look out for ourselves." 1942: "Anybody who thinks this war will be over in less than 10 years must be dreaming." 1943: "Is Henry Wallace really out of his mind? Now he's talking about 60,000,000 jobs for Americans after the war. What crazy thought will he have next?" 1948: (Spring): "I just ran into this guy who says he's convinced Harry Truman will win. Some people just can't face reality." 1948: "You don't really take seriously those rumors about Tito breaking with Stalin, do you? Any high school kid knows that you don't have splits in the Communist world." 1951: "Look, I don't like Joe McCarthy methods either, but you know any politician who stands up against him iscommitting suicide. He's going to be around for a long time-hell, he's only 42 now." 1954: "People who say there could be a Sino-Soviet split are just playing the Communist game. Didn't you read what Dean Rusk said the other night?" 1958 (Spring): "You know the only reason they gave Rockefeller the nomination is because they know the Democrats have it in the bag." 1960: "One thing is sure-Jack Kennedy won't take Lyndon John- son as his running-mate. There'd be a rebellion." 1965: "I don't blame anyone for admiring John Lindsay, but every- one who knows anything about New York politics knows a Republican can't win in this town." 1966: "Does Hanoi really think it can hold out now that our planes are really hitting them? They must be out of this world. Did you read Joe Alsop yesterday?" 1967: "You bet on the Red Sox to win the pennant? You must be a masochist. 1968 (January): "Johnson decide not to run? You must be living in Disneyland... 1968 (February): "Look, he may be a very decent man but you know McCarthy will be knocked out in New Hampshire. It's obvious." * A I rl- 11 4 d , 6; . I -f / t +I i ,% u ' ., Im ,,'s " P. IM r I R"MAMR, *a I ..,.,4;.