&Ie Sr~i!fiwu Ntiti Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications Letters: If the parking 16 420 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. WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: MARCIA ABRAMSON Guaranteed income ,and the folklore of individualism THE PRESENCE of hundreds of dis- contented poor people in the nation's capital -- coupled, perhaps, with the dis- closure that military requests to the Sec- retary of Defense for fiscal 1969 are well above $100 billion ($23 billion more than the projected 1968 budget) - has revived the controversy over proposals for the government to provide a guaranteed an- nual income. Within the past few months, the Poor People's Campaign, the President's Na- tional Advisory Commission on Civil Dis- orders, and a panel of 12 business and financial leaders appointed by New York Gov. Rockefeller have all endorsed a uni- versal guaranteed income plan. To that prestigious list Monday was added the names of more than 1000 economics pro- fessors from 125 colleges and universities. Lined up against the idea are complex counterarguments from other professors of economics as well as popular folklore, which cries out against the spectre of "getting something for nothing." The economists should (and no doubt will) continue to hassle over the intricate mu- tations in labor supply curves, etc., in- duced by specific income plans. The folk- lore, however, can be dismissed merely by examining some of the gross statistics. THOSE comfortable middle-class Amer- icans who guffaw over their elegant dinners "if they pass this guaranteed an- nual income, I'm going to quit work my- self" are kidding no one. The Arden com- mittee to Gov. Rockefeller recommended Treasury supplementations to provide a minimum income of $3300 a year for a family of four (yes, there are lots of Americans who work for less - and the work is neither creative nor challenging). Few serious proposals have advocated a substantially higher figure. The risk of an $18,000 a year executive quitting his job to capitalize on his opportunity "to get something for nothing" is so slim that no self-respecting bookie would con- sider handling the bet. But the real myth which must be chal- lenged is the notion that at some time in its history, this nation has ever be- lieved "you can't get something for noth- ing." Throughout the nineteenth cen- tury there were land subsidies for almost any putative transportation-entrepren- eur who could straggle up the Capitol steps. Two railroad companies alone each reaped amounts of land equivalent to the state of Texas. 4 ND IN our own century the spoils have been even juicier. Not only is there money for airlines and airports, there is also additional money to finance every technological change in the industry. The wealthy grow wealthier by taking advantage of the innummerable loop- holes in the tax laws. (The Arden com- mittee's plan would cost an additional $11 billion a year. That, according to a staff study made for Wisconsin Sen. Proxmire as chairman of the Joint Econ- omic Committee of Congress, is what the more blatant loopholes cost the govern- ment now.) Most indecent are the gigan- tic subsidies to rich farmers and agri- cultural corporations. In 1966, one farm company earned over $1 million in subsidies while another raked in close to $3 million. In 1967, according to I. F. Stone, "the 42.7 per cent of our farmers with in- comes of less than $2500 a year received only 4.5 per cent of total farm subsidies paid by the government while the top 10 per cent, many of them farm corpora- tions or vertical trusts in food process- ing, received 64.5 per cent of these sub- sidies." The final, ironic measure of this coun- try's willingness to tolerate the getting of something for nothing is the regular- ity with which it votes to renew the exist- ing system of public welfare - a system which, according to the Arden Commit- tee, covers only 8 million of the 30 mil- lion Americans living in poverty and which is "demeaning, inefficient, inade- quate and has so many disincentives built into it that it encourages continued dependency." ' T LEAST two guaranteed annual in- come plans which would cover all of America's poor and do away with the disincentives by subtracting only a frac- tion of earned income have been pro- posed. They could be financed by dipping into the loopholes, or the agricultural subsidies. But the major job at this juncture is convincing the public that, indeed, getting something for nothing is as American as apple pie. -URBAN LEHNER Co-Editor To the Editor: NOTE that the city of Ann Arbor has considered banning on-street parking from 2 to 5 a.m. I will be leaving the Univer- sity this fall and will not be !di- rectly affected. Nonetheless, I sug- gest the following tactics to deter the passage of such an ordinance, or to cause its repeal if it is passed. Prior to the formal considera- tion of this action by City Council, I suggest that those affectedcall and/or write all of the city coun- cilmen to explain their opposition. The ordinance could be opposed because it is de facto discrimina- tion (preventing those who must live in crowded conditions with insufficient off-street parking from keeping cars). It would also prevent these individuals from patronizing the many businesses which are outside walking dis- tance-an important point for the councilmen who represent these businesses. I suspect, however, that the tac- tics of gentle persuasion will be ineffective, simply because it is political "muscle," not sweet rea- son, that influences political bodies. The City Council may well consider this action to be in its own self interest and in the in- terest of the majority of voting citizens of Ann Arbor. If SUCH an ordinance is pass- ed, therefore, it is up to those who are affected to demonstrate to the city that this is not true, by implementing tactics that make the ordinance both un- desirable and unenforceable. I suggest the following,: r SGC, in conjunction with the American Civil Liberties Union, should sue the city on grounds of discrimination. At the same time, letters should be written to stu-' dents' home-town newspapers and legislators, detailing these charges. The City Council would no't like to be famous for discrimination. * Court trials should be de- manded for parking tickets. Such a procedure could easily clog the municipal court for months. Since the ordinance would be discriminatory, tickets for over- night parking that are not con- tested before a judge should be systematically left unpaid, This would vastly increase the amount of work required to enforce the ordiance, since it would require licenses to be traced, notices to be sent, warrants to be issued, etc. Those individuals unwilling to risk the legal consequences of refusal to pay can still cause considerable expense by withholding until the first notice of nonpayment is sent. In the event that the previous tactics, did not approve effective, the folowing measures might be tried : 0 An economic boycott. A cam- paign in which students are en- couraged to buy all but everyday essentials in "home towns" or in towns adjacent to Ann Arbor. SGC might organize car pools for shop- ping in Ypsilanti, Milan, etc. " A park-in. Students systema- tically occupy all of the legal parking within four blocks df City Hall at midnight or 1 a.m., leaving their cars until noon the next day. The cost per participant would be one overnight parking ticket, and one expired-meter ticket. * A drive-in. Students who normally do not drive in the rush hour systematically drive around slowly on the most congested streets from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. (e.g., around City Hall, downtown, Packard and Stadium, etc.) The cost would be restricted to gas- oline, as long as the participants are scrupulous in obeying the traffic laws. This could be a week- ly event, with a different an- nounced location each week. * Night raids. Groups of stu- dlents go into the non-student neighborhoods between 2 and 5 a.m. and bring back complaints of overnight parking, to be sub- mitted to police. Complaints would include date, time, license number, vehicle description, etc. This would insure equal enforcement of the law and place its burden upon the voters who elect the City Council. Alternatively, failure of the city to act on these com- plaints would form the basis of a lawsuit dharging unequal enforce- ment of the law, I HOPE that the above tactics do not become necessary. It is always best to resolve questions without open conflict. If that be- comes impossible on this issue, I hope that the tactics suggested here help prevent the passage, or effect the repeal, of what I consider a highly discriminatory proposal, -Philip Katz Grad, Engineering Anti-Semitism To the Editor: RECENT EVENTS in Poland have made it clear that the. present Polish government has openly instituted an official cam- paign of anti-Semitism-this in a country virtually without Jews. Scholars have been dismissed from their-university posts for no other reason than that they are Jews. Official statements speak of "Zionism" when it is abundantly clear to all who are not blind what is meant. The depth of absurdity is reached when teachers and gov- ernment officials are accused of rw is passed.. both "Stalinism" and "Zionism." wise never have1 Despite the extent of this de- ed . . . ." Since wh spisable policy and the attendant the support of tho news about it, I seem to hear no tioning of U.S. pol word of protest from American correlated with th university circles. There is sym- ceptibility. pathy for student revolt in France, Miss Kennedy in.Germany, in Italy, but who has the draft and the made any public outcry against have been even m the vilification and slander that it has." To me it has been officially carried out in more dismal if we Poland? Yes, the pianist, Arthur to make people re Rubinstein, did publish a scath- ness and immoralil ing denunciation of the Polish so truly represents government in the New York -R Times several weeks ago. However, B it behooves us as academics to let our voioes be heard. I therefore call on students and faculty at To the Editor: this/ university to protest this TOHN GRAY'S o latest example of the historical "Quotable Quot aberration known as anti-Semi- tion" that LyndQo tism. Polish soil is soaked in the seemstto have sign blood of its three million who per- siansgn a ghost ished during World War II when Msof the rest of the world stood by, may seem at first perhaps only through public out m cry now that the victims today Consider the pa may be saved from physical jeo- our indomitable pardy. Otto von Bismarck I will be happy to receive the * Each was an names of any persons at this uni- wealthy man who versity concerned with human ford to enter poli rights and willing to be counted the thrill of mar among those who would not re- and nations. main silent. 0 Each came fr been concern- hen do we need 'se whose ques- icy is positively heir draft sus- says without side issues that e "1960s might ore dismal than would be far needed a draft ,alizem the ugli- ;y that this war Is. ichard Kaye us. Ad., Grad Parallel bservation from tes on Educa- Bainesk Johnson ned on a Prus- writer (Daily, farfetched as it glance. rallels between President and k.: independently could well~af- tics simply for nipulating men rom, an area of 1 .0. -Herbert H. ?aper Dept. of Linguisties ffiore Kennedy To the Editor: TO BE SURE, there are a couple of sound arguments one can make against a professional army. However, Miss Kennedy certainly has not made any. Even if it were true that the "draft has 'created' many side is- sues," these "creations" should surely, be no criteria for' whether or not military conscription should be ended. When so many sound arguments pro and con have been raised in the past, to resort to fol- lowing Miss -Kennedy's line of reasoning would be extremely shallow thinking and extremely dangerous. Perhaps Miss Kennedy would suggest putting the leaders of the Poor Peoples' March in con- centration camps just to raise an issue that might attract. support from those who may have never been concerned with the plight of the poor. o . Furthermore, Miss Kennedy3 steaks of "thousands of young (draftable) mien who might other- his country known for its large, wealthy estates and general cul- tural backwardness (and who is to say whether the Texas oil or cattle baron is indeed the modern manifestation of the East Prussian Junker?) * Each was noted for his abil- ity to dominate what legislative body existed in his time, one by creating a Reichstag in which he held a substantial bulk of power, the other by skillful logrolling, atimtwisting and hogtying of in- dividual Congressmen. . Each involved his country in a series of "limited" military ven- tues in various parts of the world, including a search' for de facto colonies-usually taken from, the French. Of course, the analogy between Johnson and Bismarck must not be carried too far, for the latter proved himself. of thef greatest statesmen in history through his judicious juggling of the power balance of Europe, while the other has. hardly proved himself to be even a conpetent diplomat. in his own time. -Hansworth Zwigl, '69 I evens off-you'd lose privacy in your homne, but you'd have more than you wanted in a police station." qS. TrAPPU4Q 71/ IL) m'd '7-MURRA Y I EMP Tf: :.. And jries beiee policemen + A blood-stained injustice AS TIME flies, it was only yesterday that an old woman was hanged on Boston Common for stealing a hat and 12-year-olds were being hanged in Lon- don parks for picking pockets. Society has learned a little since then. But relentless repression most surely is taking root again as it always has in periods of unrest. The six-year prison terms to which a Federal judge in Baltimore last Friday sentenced a Roman Catholic priest and another pacifist (with a third getting three years and a fourth a technical term of 18 years) are merely the latest in a great string of bad omens. THE OFFEN'SE charged to Rev. Fr. Philip F. Berrigan is a revolting one as it is described in court documents. He and the others walked into a Federal customs house and poured blood on Se- lective Service files as their protest against a war they deem to be illegal and immoral - a view shared by millions of Americans. But all that this comes down to is a too graphic manifestation of pacifism- hardly so heinous a crime (if pacifism is a crime at all) as to warrant the casual HUH: USA? HUBERT Humphrey has firmly estab- lished himself as one of the last great public servants of our time. We, as Americans, cannot let this fine man be lost from the public scene next November. We cannot and indeed must not relegate him to a closet shelf in history, for if ever a man knew a fox in a chicken coop, that man was Hubert lopping off of six years of a man's life. Convicted thugs and murderers have been treated more gently. Fr. Berrigan is no mortal threat to so- ciety. The threat to society comes from the opposite direction. FR. BERRIGAN gets six years for pag- ifism. H. Rap Brown gets five be- cause he is an agitator and an unplea- sant fellow to have around. Cassius Clay gets five for refusing induction - and being a popoff. In Boston, a convicted draft evader, Robert Talmanson, is hauled out of a church and taken away to start serving three years. In Washington, the poor encamp (so far in vain) petitioning Con- gress to help them out of their intoler- able misery, and congressmen hide be- hind formality, pious talk and police protection in the corridors and on the walks outside the Capitol building. _O IT GOES. Certainly the laws have to be enforced. But vengeance and fright more often than not are the rule. Men are punished for their advocacy. The unpopularity or presumed unpopu- larity of a point of view or even a per- son is the yardstick for measuring the kind and the degree of the reprisal. But this is as much a response and an appeal to raw emotion as is the harangue of the street corner agitator. Courts are ,supposed to be more equanimous than are street mobs. Government in a democracy, especially now, owes more to its citizens than dicta from on high. IT HAS the power to brush off the up- rising poor if it wishes to be so stupid and so inhumane. It can enforce with an p r NEAL B US Ablack ,,day-_ for poliiCs SEVERAL MONTHS AGO when the University had its Choice '68 mock presidential election I voted for Martin, Luther King. That of course was before he died. I voted fdr King because of the several Afro-Americans jockeying.in my mind for that office he seemed the best of those who fulfilled Constitutional nativity and age requirements. I admit this with some hesitancy, mainly because I'm very much afraid of being seen as a guilty liberal white trying -to get together with blacks. Still, the Choice election was a rather ineffectual affair, and because it doesn't have much prestige, I can't lose too much by talking about it. But back then I decided that I could only vote Afro-American. I was very much sick at heart at the historical failure of white Americans properly to lead their country, and I was determined not to help continue their mandate. Briefly, traditional white rule had given brutal, entrenched poverty to some and certainly an equally obnoxious super- luxury to others. White rule had significantly enhaiced rather than alleviated the personal misery of millions of souls abroad. I FOUND THAT black leaders, and especially those truly in touch with their black constituencies, spoke and acted for the type of America I wanted. They were the men to decide foreign and domestic policy, to try to make some settlement with the Vietnamese, to try to make life in America worthwhile. I mentioned this to one of my friends., "That's reverse racism," he replied, "for to say that white aren't fit to govern is as bad as saying black people are shiftless and lazy." I replied that while I felt that the inability togovern wasn't genetically determined it could be the result of the white environment. And that there was something about the white. han's political pro- cesses that resulted in the best of white leaders Nachieving very little. ON THE OTHER HAND, even the most agressive of black leaders had shown a concern for human rights far surpassing that in the white leaders. I had found that even among the most boastfully open minded and liberal of whites were the fears and fallacies of racism. Much to my despair, I had found in merely talking to black students strong traces of racism even in myself. I'M PRETTY CONVINCED that it's a mistake if not an outrage today for a white to assent that he is fit to rule, that he can bring about the type of America blacks all so desperately have wanted for so long. Whether a white man is fit to rule should be determined by blacks. Also, I'm fairly certain that black people in office might 'even- tually teach white people how to rule. For a number of reasons I though Martin Luther King should be president. My white friends had accused him of being an opportunist. But I feared for their racism and decided that as a minister and a Noble laureate he'd probably 6e less corrupt than the prominent whites in public office who from time to time are exposed in huge financial abuses. And it seemed that the taunts against King by black power ad- vccates were only concerned with methodological hangups which would no longer arise the momen'tKing arrived at the White House. AND SINCE OTHER BLACKS should be taking public offices in city halls, state houses and university regencies, the politics of the excluded black man would become obsolete. I have tremendous faith in the black man, ironic because for so long the black has had great faith in' whites who ultimately have failed both the blacks and themselves. I have met many whites with great educations and high positions and have seen most of them belittle, fear or villify the Negro. On the other hand, I have never seen the ' I ,AKLAND, Calif. - It is im- possible to judge the guilt of the Black Panthers, which is a mystery of those nights in West Oakland where only they and the police carried guns in the open and where only they and the po- lice know the beginnings of what happened as a result. There were only three Black Panthers two years ago - Huey Newton, who had gone to San Francisco Law School; Bobby Seale, a foreman in a car wash; and Bobby Hutton, a high school" dropout who was only 15. NEWTON and Seale were sum- mer youth workers for the Rich- mond, Calif., poverty program then: "Trader and technical skills, which added, up to a little black history put in by me and Huey, and then cleaning lawns, repair- ing houses, chopping weeds," Bob- by Seale says. Seale and Huey Newton moved on to the North Oakland Service Center and with patience might have had careers in poverty. But they were always in arguments, One night they shepherded a youth group on a tour of Oak- the gun," Bobby Seale says. " took to patrolling the police. Whenever there was an arrest,. we would show up with our guns and just watch. I remember one ight they were arresting a drunk. Thev saw us standing there; the drunk pulled back a little and this con said, very politely, 'You gott a 't in, Joe,' and he did." This was not a balance of mu- tual tolerance that was likely it last. Last May, Huey Newton tooK 20 Panthers with their guns to the State legislature in Sacramento as one way, he said, of showing other Negroes how little they had to fear. That display made the Panthers famous and, for the mo- ment, a compelling piece of the fantasies of the New Left; they may have a thousand memoers now. THEN IN October, there was an exchange of shots between Huey Newton and the Oakland police; a policeman was killed. Huey Newton is waiting to be tried for murder. In April, the police caught eight Panthers, gutted a house in which two of them had hidden and had to kill Bobby "Free Huey Newton" buttons, which are among the most strik- ing emblems of California's but- ton culture, and the posters on the walls of Stokely Carmichael, Rap Brown, LeRoi Jones, and Huey Newton, a gentle young man workin gat the radiation of power with a spear in his left hand and a rifle in his right. THE afternoons are long. The day's great event is the visit to the brothers in prison; occasion- ally some white youth or other will come by to talk enthusiastic- ally about Fidel's achievements or severely about Che's mistakes; the Panthers are polite but ulainly distracted by private sorrows. One of them sits down, opens his copy of Mao Tse-tung, leans his head back and sleeps. But Bobby Seale, the /last of the three who began, cannot sleep, being simply exhausted. What is curious is how drained he is of rhetoric, although he occasion- ally rests himself in conversation by giving a speech. THE SURVIVING chairnmaa of the revolutionkiy vanguard wnich