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 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "Never Mind The War-What Happens To The ational Economy Af ter The Campaign Spending Is Over!" ,;;.. tyri WEDNESDAY, JUNE 5, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP BLOCK1 L 5 § .ia . . F - 7- ; f ei i't t, l ' n r7p F . .v . ; ab"' . MM1. K i"t ?.. ;rti ' ' + p 2 K i« ! ' K .df+. h ^N: {di 4 Y' rrl I. t- r of Ann Arbor High THE REAL TRAGEDY of the Ann Arbor High School situation is not that ra- cial violence is needed to promote social change, not that a bitter conflict is being waged, nor that students are missing crucial days of school; it is that admin- istrators are displaying immaturity while students have acted in an especially ma- ture fashion. By taking drastic measures to suppress student activism, the authorities are missing an opportunity to utilize student awareness as an important tool in re- forming the educational process. For students, more than any other group, understand the needs and defi- ciencies of their education. The board should be heartened by their lack of apathy and their sincere desire to im- prove the high school. For the first time these previously docile high school students have begun to realize their educational institution is a bastion of racism and bigotry. And more important, they have realized there is something they can do about it. THE SCHOOL'S initial reaction to black student demands' was highly com- mendable. The administration agreed at the urging of Sperintendent of Schools W. Sc6tt Westerman to call off classes for a day. Instead, voluntary sessions were held where students could air griev- ances. The resulting dialogue served as a healthy catharsis for blacks who used the three-hour session to blast faculty, coun- selors and administrators for racial dis- crimination in academics, athletics, and extracurricular activities. They shocked a pseudo-liberal school system into the realization that racism often takes more subtle forms than call- ing someone "boy" or "nigger." Their de- mands and charges appear to be well founded. Ann Arbor High School has derived an impressive national ranking from the ac- complishment of its top students, while neglecting those on the bottom. The faculty and administration have externally appeared sympathetic and reasonable with regard to the 21 demands of the school's black students, but there is still some question whether any real reforms will come about. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor Michigan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except sunday and Monday. during regular summer sessin., Daily ecept Monday during regular academic school year. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press, the College Press Service, and Liberation News Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.50 per term by car- rier ($3.00 by mail); $4.50 for entire summer ($5.00 by mail. Fall and winter subscription rate: $450 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Summer Editorial Staff DANIL OKRENT ...................... Co-Editor URBAN LEHNER.....................Co-Editor LUCY KENNEDY.......Summer Supplement Editor PHIL BROWN ... ...............Sports Editor FRED LaBOUR .................Ass't. Sports Editor NIG3HT EDITORS: Marcia Abramson, Philip Block, John Gray, David Mann. Leslie Wayne. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Nadine Cohodas. Henry ri, Martin Hirschman. Summer Business Staff In recommending action to the school board on only 15 fairly innocuous de- mands, which were carefully watered- down, the high school's faculty has ne- glected its responsibility to get at the heart of the problem. The six demands that were passed over by the faculty include many substantial grievances raised by the blacks, specific- ally that racism at ?Ann Arbor High School exists because there are bigotted faculty members. The faculty, however, was unwilling to set up machinery to purge itself of these entrenched instructors. And until the, bigots are gone there will be no peace at Ann Arbor High. THE PREVIOUSLY tolerant attitude of the administration toward the black grievances is quickly drawing to a close. It is being replaced by a quasi-police state that can only result in increased friction between the races. The incredib- ly naive decision of Principal Nicholas Schreiber to impose "partial martial law" on his students leaves little doubt about the administration's intent. Imposing suspensions on students for offenses such as smoking or passing out "unauthorized literature" will not regain the respect of the students, nor will threats of reprisals against the editors of the school's underground newspaper, "US". If the administration wants to create martyrs, they are succeeding by sus- pending two students for passing out anti-draft literature. In fact, when asked if1 his school provided for due process in cases of suspension, Principal Nicholas. Schreiber could only say the students had a right to appeal. Often, however, students remain sus- pended even while appealing their pun- ishments. It is clear that students at Ann Arbor High School are presumed guilty until proven innocent. THE ATTITUDE of the high school and Board of Education to the presence of non-student protesters has been almost comical. The demonstrators were told by Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny, "If you cooperate, it is possible the school board won't seek an injunction against you." Imagine that, a police chief speaking as legal counsel for the board of edu- cation The board is accustomed to treating students as children who should be seen and not heard. Their inability to stop the demonstrators or the publication of "US" has produced an only absurd stop- gap-ism, for the police action and "mar- tial law" at Ann Arbor High School are at best only temporary solutions to the school's race problems. At worst, the measures are a crass show of strength that will only infuriate student activists. The high school administrators must realize that it is possible and indeed de- sirable for necessary reforms to be eval- uated during the tense atmosphere. The experience of the past two weeks can be educationally profitable to the faculty and students both. But not if repressive actions continue. What is needed is a change in attitude, and only then can further strife be averted. -STEVE NIS SEN -- rDANIEL OKRENT -- Young TuTks and old o redneclis THE STATE Democratic Convention in Detroit this past weekend could very well have sounded the death knell for the party as a progressive social force - something that it indeed once was, but too many years ago. For the Democrats, by honoring their most oner- ous traditions, are trying their best to see to it that once these tradi- tions and the men who formed them fade from view, there will be nothing left. I suppose that the convention, which went through the motions of action but was actually a two-and-a-half day charade, cannot really be cited as a turning point. Few observers, and only slightly more of the progressive, open forces in the party who were summarily gagged and bound in the process of the meeting, actually expected a victory for the "Young Turks." But if the affair was not a turning paint, it was surely a dress rehearsal for a funeral. ESSENTIALLY, two things happened which took the measure of the Democrats: First, the Sixth District (Lansing) delegation, its majority comprised of a loose Kennedy-McCarthy coalition, was denied -by vote of the entire convention-the right to determine its own procedure for choosing national convention delegates. This enabled Humphrey forces, in minority in the district but in clear majority in the state, to name the district's convention delegates by constructing an almost vulgar selection process. Second, McCarthy forces at the con- vention - found mostly in the Sixth and Eighteenth (Oakland Coun- ty) delegations - were neatly excluded from the slate-making caucus that picked the 24 at-large national convention delegates. It wasn't hard for. the Democratic machinery to adjust itself to suit the labors of the AFL-CIO, which still controls the state party. Nonsensical unit rules enabled slim majorities in many district dele- gations to 'deliver large packets of votes for their particular causes. And even those who made use of the unit rules feigned to d'eny the particular value of such procedures. One Macomb County delegate explained it quite forthrightly: "It's democracy - the majority rules. This way, if we've got 100 votes, and 51 of us want one thing, we get our way - and the minority's votes. And if only ten people show up to vote, we can still get the 100 votes that the party gives to our district." THE SADDEST THING about this particularly mindless logic ("It's democracy") is that the man who offered it to me was grinning just as gloriously when he explained it as he had been earlier when former state chairman Zolton Ferency was roundly hooted when arguing for proportional voting. That's how the convention worked, and the flocks of young people who had come to push McCarthy or Kennedy didn't seem too unhappy about it. And this is the tragedy of the Democratic Party. Disregarding the merits of Kennedy or McCarthy, the party needs their backers, for the party's own sake. Prof. Otto Feinstein of Wayne State, a leader of the reform Michigan Conference of Concerned Democrats, put it succinctly: "If the party wants to have young people in it, it will have to change its procedures." . )r 1 y .,, f-(_ f41 { S Iw'... C~ ;w 9e ,~l9a ,i AA4'JT~' ov Y'" A draft for morality DRAMATIC TRIALS provide good drama but little in the way of meaningful social change. As the Spock-Coffin trial draws to a close in Boston,bmore and more people seem to be hanging on the verdict as an indication of the "future of dissent" in this country. My one great fear is that people will become so involved in "sympathizing" with the defen- ants that they will fail to carry out the message of the Boston Five. By ruling out any defense based on the illegality or immorality of the Vietnam war, the govern- ment has succeeded in reducing the trial of the Boston Five to a "civil liberties" contest. The only issues being dealt with are factual questions concerning the first amendment: did they actually "conspire" to counsel men to evade the draft, and did their actions constitute "conduct" that goes beyond the constitutional protection of freedom of speech? THESE QUESTIONS are only peripherally related to the real issue of the trial-the "right" of every American citizen to follow the dictates of his conscience. One of the specific acts mentioned in the indictment against the Five is the signing of the petition, "A Call to Resist Illegitimate Author- ity." The statement reads in part: "We believe that every free man has a legal right and a moral duty to exert every effort to end this war, to avoid col- lusion with it, and to encour- age others to do the same .,." Thus, whether Coffin and Spock are guilty under the law is really academic. They believed that they had a moral duty to advocate re- sistance to the draft. What most people fail to recognize is that having believed they were right, they had no choice except to carry out their actions. It is the conscience not of the five mhen, but of the American people that is on trial in Boston. It is the right of the American people to live out their heritage, to do as our own Declaration of Independence tells us: .when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pur- david duboff suing invariably the same ob- jective evinces a design to re- duce them under absolute des- potism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future secur- ity." THIS "right of conscience" to encourage resistance to the draft has little to do with freedom of speech. It goes much deeper; it deals with the way in which an individual orients his whole life in a civilized society. Certainly, the physical act of separating one- self from the selective service sys- tem by returning one's draft card has some speech content, but it also has more. It involves action, setting up a whole new style of life around the principles of hu- man dignity and the duty of the individual to dissociate himself from those actions of his govern- ment which violate his moral character. The Declaration of Indepen- dence lists as "inalienable' the right to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." How can we be true to "life" while living in a society that must kill people to defend its existence? How can we be true to "liberty" while liv- ing in a society that has to rely on involuntary servitude to recruit manpower for the military ma- chine? How can we be true to the "purusit of happiness" while liv- ing in a society that has to limit people's alternatives so that they will become engineers and not artists? * * * WHAT COFFIN and Spock are saying to the draft-age men of America is that a person has a responsibility to lead his own life, according to his conscience and to those values that guide his life- those values that make him A moral human being. But a person cannot become moral; he must be moral beacuse he does moral things from day to day. Being a human being and not a murderer involves action. Life can mean very litle if it can only be enjoyed while others are being made to suffer in our names. The Boston Five would never have been put on trial had there not been 'men who believed what they said, who took jheir lives into their own hands. Thus, it is these men, the men at the resistance, who are on. trial in Boston. The young people of Resistance know that war is part of the America lives. We know that if there is to be peace it must begin in our own lieves, with our refusal to collaborate with those who make 'war. If we are to be free, and if we are to help liberate our brothers in the ghetto, the army, and the countries America chooses to dominate, we must first remove ourselves from the institutions which seek to divide and silence us all. We must begin to practice the values of truth and honesty which we proclaim, and reject in fact the values that we condemn in words. We must follow the example of Thoreau: "... . Let your life be a coun- ter friction to stop the machine. What I must do is to see, at any rate, that I do not lend myself to the wrong which I condemn." *' * * TODAY, June 5, Ann Arbor Re- sistance will hold a "Celebration of Life." Several young men will be returning their draft cards. In doing so, they will be expres- sing an opposition to the war that is an affirmation of their own lives, an opposition that involves their bodies as well as their minds. They will be affirming their in- tention to express their love for their fellow men through social commitment and intensive social action. They will be following the example of the Boston Five. The Am'erican people cannot sit idly by and watch its conscience be slowly stifled and executed in Boston. They must stand up and demonstrate, through action, that the spirit of human dignity and brotherhood transcends the bru- tality and vulgarity of a govern- ment that dares to put five nota- ble men on trial for advocating freedom. Ferency at the State convention 4 RANDY RISSMAN,.......... Business7 BARBARA SCHULZ.......,.Co-Advertising1 SUE LERNER .............Co-Advertising1 PHYLLIS HURWITZ............Classified7 DEBBIE RIVERS .............Circulationl Manager Manager Manager Manager Manager The new Nixon's new coalition EVERYTHING about Richard Nixon is new, or at least looks new. His appearance on TV is much improved: now one might conceivably buy a used car from this man. His new character over- flows with the milk of human kindness and spouts a dialogue that is as funny at times as a Lucille Ball script. If this contra- venes all we have been told by the psychologists about people in their fifties, Dick may claim to be a shining exception. Most important, the fellow has a new coalition - and it's a humdinger. Nixon has picked up where Barry Goldwater left off,' and since Barry is clumsy while Dick a large proportion of its unneeded Negroes - reinforced the ele- ments of racism in the Goldwater coalition, just at a time when civil rights were in the ascendancy. Another weakness was that the elements in the Goldwater line- up had no strong cohesion, and G ldwater's campaign blunders finished it 'off. THE NIXON coalition looks even more thinly stuck together; but in a year of confusion, and with Nixon's incomparable gall as a binder, it is not to be under- estimated. Its components are liberals, Black Militants and the New Scuth. The cement contains White America, he says, has sought to buy off the Negro with welfare payments, when what is needed to make the ghetto a Great Society is "the economic power that comes from ownership, and the security and independence that come from economic power." Ev- ery Negro a capitalist! And of course no Black Militant, having somehow grown rich under Pres- ident Nixon, will think of exploit- ing any other Negro -- not only because the other *egro is a Soul Brother but because the other will be rich too. This scheme has been taken apart before. What chance, in a Goldwater, Nixon will not be alienating the Negro voters en masse. NIXON'S bid for "liberal" sup- port falls under the heading of what the CIA would call a "cover story"; that is, it is designed to make him appear much more "modern," much less "extremist" than Barry Goldwater. By pur- porting to find a parallel between some of his views and those of Daniel Moynihan (and the paral- lel does exist), Nixon hopes to succeed in convincing the gullible that he is much less intransigent than Goldwater. And so he is, in the sense that he is an opportun- is't andlfiGoldwauter is nolft. In a the support of the New South, he makes his simultaneous plea for the support of the Old South much less palpable than was Goldwater's wooing of that element. In brief, the talk about Black Capitalism, the New Liberals, and the New South is all by way of putting a gloss on the ideology of Gold- waterism and covering up the underlying presuppositions on which the Goldwater coalition was based. There is really nothing new in the idea of a coalition which takes these basic facts into account. All Nixon has done is to dress up the racial part of it by a phony appeal to Negroes gullible enough, or Feinstein couldn't be more correct. Eventually - like maybe within three months, when the exodus of youth from the party after Hubert Humphrey wins the nomination will possibly exceed the influx after McCarthy's victory in New Hampshire - the new blood that offers the hope of revitalizing the Democratic Party 'will have been washed down the drain. You don't have to love McCarthy, or even admire him; his position as possible savior of the party is secondary to. that of those whom he has lured into party politics. THAT IS the crux. Hopefully, the grinning unionists who controlled last weekend's convention, men who still wear Soapy Williams bowtie pins in their lapels, men who are the closest thing to rednecks that you can find north of the Ohio River, men whose past and present affiliation to one or another of the parties is predicated more on the affiliation's ability to control half of a state's politics than it is on ideology, hopefully his configuration of power within the party can be replaced. Feinstein said after the convehtion Sunday that the Con- cerned Democrats have entered candidates for precinct delegate in over 2000 of the state's precincts; hopefully, the August 6 delegate election will change the tenor of the party. SADLY, THOUGH, it probably won't. Each year for the past ten, Feinstein has spoken of grandiose plans to take over the Democratic Party. This year, he is more desperate than ever (the party currently is in the worst shape it has been in during the past decade), and the McCarthy candidacy has offered a vehicle for his machinations. But estimates of the Concerned Democrats' chances can only be based on history. And this history has taught us that the major parties never open up to new movements; rather, as demonstrated Sunday, they just rally to repel an outside challenge, close ranks, and spend the rest of the campaign in masturbatory self-congratulation after they h~av heatnoff the infidels. What's worse. this year's infidels are', in I