a4'e mSt ron Da t 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 SDS convention: The road to radicalism A 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, JUNE 18, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: LESLIE WAYNE S pock-Coffi convictions: The politics of justice NOTHER LINK was added to the grue- some chain of political repression last Friday as Dr. Benjamnin Spock, Rev. Wil- iam Sloane Coffin, Mitchell Goodman and Michael Ferber were convicted in Boston of conspiring to counsel young men to avoid the draft. The small degree of shock registered by these convictions indicates how ac- customed we have become to the pres- ence of political prisoners in this bas- tion of the free. The list of those recently convicted on political grounds in this country is staggering. Black leaders ranging from California's controversial Black Pan- thers to the irrepressible H. Rap Brown have been singled out for punishment because of their political notoriety. Over two and a half years ago Ann Arbor was the scene of some of the first arrests arising out of the Vietnam War when 39 students and faculty members were convicted for trespassing after staging a sit-in at the local draft board. Since then, countless others like the over 500 arrested during the Pentagon March last October have been added to their number. A little more than a year ago Captain Howard Levy was convicted by a military court for refusing to train Green Berets headed for Vietnam. He is merely the most famous of the long list of resisters both in and out of the armed forces who have been imprisoned over their objection to the Vietnam War. MANY WILL focus on the constitution- ality of the Spock-Coffin convictions. The intricacies of conspiracy law are such, however, that it would be pre- sumptuous for anyone less than a legal expert to offer a definitive opinion on the constitutionality of the convictions. It would appear that the alleged con- spirators did little more than strongly assert their conviction of the bestiality of the war. Thus, any non-devious inter- pretation of the free speech provisions of the Constitution would protect their statements. Yet it is unwise to expect the con- victions to be overthrown on appeal. The recent string of court cases culminating in the Supreme Court's decision to up- hold the Constitutionality of a law for- bidding the burning of draft cards, in- dicates the futility of depending on the courts to right political wrongs. The major issues behind the Spock- Coffin conviction transcend the rather narrow question of constitutionality. In- stead the discussion should focus on the basis for punishing any political crimes in contemporary America, IN A POLITICAL case such as Spock- Coffin, the aggrieved party is the United States Government. However, as the steadfast and heedless waging of the war in Vietnam has indicated, the government has at its disposal seeming- ly unlimited power to operate independ- ently of any and all checks by the citi- zenry. As a consequence, when one contrasts the awesome power of the government with the miniscule political leverage of a Dr. Spock or Rev. Coffin, the concep- tion of the United States Government as an aggrieved party becomes almost ludi- crous. With the balance of power so unjustly weighted against the individual, the dan- ger to society as a whole from political crimes against the state borders on the non-existent. As a consequence the dam- age to the body politic should be mea- sured against the injury to the defend- ants. Using this scale, the punishments- or any punishments for that matter - levied against the four alleged conspira- tors were manifestly unfair. YET THERE is another form of injus- tice operating within the Spock case.! Justice does not stem from statute law alone. Rather it results from the selec- tive application of statute law by the judge and prosecuting attorney which tempers the legalistic considerations of the written law with human considera- tions of justice. In general, this de facto protection against the dangers of merci- lessly applied statute law has been rela- tively effective in this country. However, when the government is the aggrieved party - as well as the prose- cuting attorney and the judge - it is impossible to apply these extra-legal traditions of justice and fair play. Instead as was the case during the Spock-Coffin trial, opponents of the state are merci- lessly subject to the letter of the law. Although the violations are merely sym- bolic, the punishments are fearsomely real. By convicting Spock, Coffin and the others the government indicated that theoretically all signers of The Call To Resist Illegitimate Authority are also guilty. But there is little indication that the government plans to prosecute any other signers of this heinous document. This is because the government can easily afford to let them roam free in their political impotence. PERHAPS IT IS ENOUGH to live in a country with merely a semblance of freedom. But underneath one must rec- ognize that America's unique libertarian potential has been thoughtlessly squan- dered. -WALTER SHAPIRO Associate Editorial Director By THOMAS R. COPI and PAT O'DONOHUE FEDERAL Bureau of Investiga- tion Director J. Edgar Hoover has called Students for a Demo- cratic Society a Communist in- filtrated if not Communist dom- inated organization and has said its members are dedicated to the overthrow of the American gov- ernment and the American way of life. In reality, however, SDS bears very little resemblance to the highly disciplined revolutionary organization that Hoover would have us believe it is. SDS is a mass-based, very loose- ly organized group whose only dedication is to radicalizing Amer- ica and thereby causing a basic change in the way this country operates. A "New Left" organiza- tion, SDS ideology can really only be catalogued as that of the left of the political spectrum. And since its membership policy (writ- ten into its constitution) prohibits exclusion of anyone from mem- bership, nearly all facets of the political left-wing are represent- ed in the organization, This, of course, includes Com- munists as well as liberals, an- archists and every other politi- cal faction left of center. And all the political differences of these left-wing groups are pres- ent within SDS. This is precisely why there is no national political policy formulated by the organi- zation. In this sense SDS resembles the major political parties. But while the political tone of the Demo- cratic and Republican parties can probably be characterized as sta- perialism, anti-racism, anti-op- pression of all peoples everywhere, and the like. All of these are based on the SDS philosophy stated at the organization's inception: "Let the People Decide." That the ideal of participatory democracy is generally accepted in SDS is evidenced by the organiza- tion's fear and mistrust of bu- reaucracy and the elites which bureaucracy spawns. For this reason, SDS has never delegated much authority to its central offices or officers. The or- ganization, as well as the mem- bership is very loose. This loose- ness of organization annoys many of the SDS members who would like to see more direction in SDS activities, and each year at the SDS national convention propos- als to change the structure of SDS are made and debated at length. This year was no exception. At the convention held last week on the campus of Michigan State University, several s t r u c t u r a 1 changes were proposed, but all were defeated after lengthy de- bate. Those who want SDS to formu- late a coherent political stance have, over the years, introduced structural proposals calling for more unity and communication among the various local chapters. They seem to feel that a coherent ideology would flow from an al- tered structure. A PROPOSAL which was de- feated at this year's gathering stated that the "challenge at this juncture in Movement history is to change - the emphasis from building a radical Movement to MANY TABLES were set up at the national SDS convention for the dissemination of radical liter- ature. The distributors did a brisk business. SDS's strong suit in introducing' members to radicalism. And the "general discussion" that goes on within SDS exposes the less radi- cal to the more radical thought of their brothers in the organiza- tion. For example, a middle class The only real problem that the political amorphousness of SDS causes is one for the media, which must have a label. But they find that SDS can- not be characterized as easily as other political groups. The only real problem that the' political amorphousness of SDS causes is one for the media, which must have a label. But they find that SDS cannot be characterized as easily as other political groups. Nonetheless, they attempt to generalize and distortions are in- evitable. Yesterday, for example, the New York Times claimed that the SDS convention "removed any linger- ing doubt about the purpose of its organization." The Times, looking for the label, for the easy analysis,tassumed that since two of the three new national officers claim they are communists (with a small 'c'), the entire organization can also be labeled communist. Just as there are members of the Democratic Party who dis- agree with Lyndon Johnson's pol- icies down the line, so are there members of SDS who totally dis- agree with the specific political philosophy of their leaders. THE TREATMENT SDS re- ceives at the hands of the media has had the effect of making them non-communicative with the "outside." At their convention this year, nearly all press was either barred or restricted (al- though not very effectively). SDS's major function is one of internal education, or radicaliza- tion of its own membership. And the SDS members do talk best with each other, just as is true with other basically homogenious groups. (The members of the Young Americans for Freedom very likely communicate best with each other, too) But this charac- teristic is particularly noticeable in a leftist group like SDS. A long-haired, bearded SDS spokes- man whose political arguments are liberally sprinkled with four- letter words, would have more success in a discussion with fellow SDS members than, for example, with the delegates to the 4-H con- (Continued on opposite page) * tus quoism, SDS's has to be radicalism. JUST HOW radical SDS is de- pends on who you talk to in the organization. But a few basic things are agreed upon, things which in principle are acceptable to all members of the left. They include such things as anti-im- using the -radical Movement in the work of making revolution." This measure criticized the fact that members "talk randomiy about their work and leave the ' convention without any sense for common strategy or even general direction." Yet this very lack of strategy and specific direction has been student who has liberal tendencies can join SDS in good conscience when he would shy away from contact with other organizations represented in SDS. But after several years of exposure to and acceptance of radical ideas, he may find that he ridicules as hope- lessly backward the liberal he once was. Poor People's Campaign: The meaning of success , WALLACE D. LOH Daily Guest Writer SIX WEEKS ago the first ply- wood tent of Resurrection City went up, and three weeks since the Poor People's University was inaugurated, and there are now many people originally sym- pathetic to this venture who fear that"the last chance for non- violence in America" is destined to fold-up with a whimper. There are, to be sure, real grounds for disenchantment with the way the Poor People's Cam- paign has taken its course. From the start, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference failed to single out specific demands and to concentrate on them. They presented, instead, a patch quilt of grievances which, however valid, was tactically unsound be- cause it prevented the develop- ment of a climate favorable to a negotiated solution by smothering the always limited ability of fed- eral bureaucrats to think ra- tionally about their faults. From the start, too, much of the potential and dynamic of the campaign was squandered in leadership squabbles. The Rev. Jesse Jackson was removed from his office of "City Manager" and sent back to Chicago as "field di- rector," because, as one campaign marshal put it, "a cult of per- sonality" had developed around him. In his place was named the Rev. Hosea Williams, an equally eloquent preacher, but a more ef- fective organizer and less sen- sitive to personal wants of the city residents. Rev. Willams' in- temperate remarks on Bayard Rustin's role in the Solidarity Day "March and his argument with Reies Tijerina, leader of the Mexican - American contingent, over financial matters in the mid- dle of a press conference, under- mined the image of a united lead- ership of the poor people. The Poor People's University, the student adjunct of the Poor People's Campaign, is also plagued with organizational and admin- istrative problems. The lack of coordination between the two or- ganizations is underscored by the encounter of Dave Dellinger, or- ganizer of the Pentagon Mobil- ization, with Rev. Andrew Young, a top SCLC staff member, while strolling along the Reflecting Pool on Memorial Day. Since Young expressed surprise at his presence in Washington at this time, Dellinger explained that the Poor People's University had asked him to come down and lead some seminars. "The Poor Peo- ple'e University," e x c 1 ai m e d Young, "What is that?" Given this dissenssion and dis- organization at the higher eche- lons, it is a marvel how the uni- versity and Resurrection City have come to be at all, to say nothing of the relative smooth- ness with which they manage to carry out the day-by-day opera- tions. ALMOST 500 college, students have been registered with the University (though not all at the same time) to attend workshops on racism, non-violence, and pov- erty, led by outside speakers and local faculty members from Howard and George Washington Universities. And the daily chores of the city-sanitation, food serv- ices, entertainment, s e c u r i t y, child-care-are somewhat accom- plisched, and with surprising ef- ficiency, by the haphazard process of bellowing for volunteers over the P.A. system when a job needs to be done. The fact, then, that there is poor planning and weak leader- ship, that the Solidarity March on June 19th will draw numbers nowhere near that of August 1963, and that the present Congress will not respond meaningfully to the demands of the poor, has resulted in the disillusionment of many supporters of the campaign who feel that this last hape for non- violence has, on the whole, been a failure. My feeling, however, is that de- spite poor organization and Con- gressional inaction, Poor People's Campaign has accomplished something creative. Indeed, the MSU: Instigating a revolution THE MOST outrageous aspect of the response of the Board of Trustees to the recent demonstrations at Michigan State University at their meeting Friday was that the students' demands were completely ignored. Instead of responding to those de- mands, the board was swept up in the paranoia which characterizes the atti- tude of most middle-class adults con- cerning student activism. The result: The board tightened up its already harsh restrictions on student demonstrations and issued a unanimous warning that disruptive activities "will not be tolerated." Perhaps the board feels this response will deter students. from continuing with the protests in the fall. In making this judgement, however, they have sadly miscalculated the nature of student sen- timent. Many MSU students feel they are liv- ing in a police state - a situation they see in the country as a whole, but one they feel is especially apparent and es- pecially odious in an academic com- munity. The sentiment of the students is, in- deed, grounded in their day-to-day experience. They point, for example, to the campus ....7:....- - --...... - - --1 _ _ A VA V ctr~ When students sat-in at the school's administration building after the regu- lar closing time, they were automatical- ly breaking an MSU Ordinance and, without consulting any university offi- cial, the campus police were able to call in officers from four state and local forces to help make arrests. TO REMEDY this situation, the demon- strators have proposed the formation of a faculty-student committee which would have complete control of the cam- pus police. Some may doubt the validity of the demonstrators' complaints, but clearly, by ignoring them completely, the board has only further alienated the students and faculty. No attempt was made to justify the existence of the campus police except that they help maintain "order and discipline," so the university may continue to stand "for freedom of speech, freedom of inquiry, freedom of dissent and freedom to demonstrate in a peace- ful manner." And by tightening the restrictions on demonstrations, the board has only further demonstrated its unwillingness to meet with the protesters on peaceful grounds. MSU will be peaceful his summer. But question of success or failure must be asked in the context of the current black liberation struggle, with the recognition that the crit- eria by which success and failure were defined in Birmingham and Selma are no longer applicable in Washington, D.C. The often heard statement that this campaign is the last stand of non-violence in this country is partly false, and partly true. It is sheer tommyrot to conclude that failure of the campaign would imply the end of non-vio- lence. If failures of military cam- paings are blamed on organiza- tion, strategy, and resources, rather than on war itself as the method, shouldn't the failures of non-violent campaigns also be ac- counted for by its leadership rather than by non-violence as such? Considering the Poor People's Campaign a last stand of non- violence is valid to the extent that it recognizes that the liberation movemtnt has entered a new phase, and henceforth, the simple repetition of old actions under these new conditions is not going to be effective. For example, in 1963 in Bir- mingham there were three dis- tinct actors on the scene: the forces of SCLC; the local polit- ical, business, and police estab- lishment; and a mediating third party that included the Attor- ney General, the Defense Secre- tary, and the president of U.S. Steel, among others, who put personal pressure on the local leaders to accede to the demands of the protesters. BUT IN 1968 in Washington D.C. there is only one distinct ac- tor: the poor people under SCLC. The demonstrators have tried, in vain, to resurrect another "Bull" Connor, to have a tangible symbol of their oppression. First this symbol was the Secretary of HEW, then it was the attorney general, now, on sudden inspira- tion, a round-the-clock vigil has crystallized outside the office of the Secretary of Agriculture. The character and conditions of confrontation today, then, are quite different from what they were five years ago. At that time, a specific figure blocked the side- walk to the five-and-dime for a cup of coffee; now, the confron- tation challenges the distribution of economic power of the system itself, and assaults the racism em- bedded in the social and educa- tional institutions. While SCLC is fully aware of this new phase in the struggle, thus far it has continued to re- peat old actions and failed to create new alternatives to meet the changed situation. able in Washington D.C., so too must the criteria of success and failure be redefined. Five years ago, when the de- mand that the local five-and dime lunch counter be opened to all was met, this was defined as a victory. But today, when the demand for guaranteed annual income for those who cannot work is ignored, it cannot be defined as a failure. ' In this beginning phase of direct confrontation with the system itself, immediate and clear-cut feedback cannot be expected. However, if by success we mean an awakening of white Americans to their complicty-either by in- action or uncaring-in the sys- tematic exclusion of poor people from the political and economic life of this natiop, if we mean a dawning that it wol d be to their own interests to clear the ghet- toes and have a strong, viable black community,* if we mean a re-examination of one's own at- titutdes-not the arousal of the sense of charity but the sense of justice-and the new awareness that whites as well as blacks and browns are in need of liberation, if by success we mean the begin- ning of any of these things, then the Poor People's Campagin has indeed been successful. THE CAPACITY to listen, es- pecially to unpleasant facts, has never been an American virtue. White Americans typically have to be forced to pay attention to the injustices around them. It requires riots to communicate to whites that ghetto dwellers are hurting badly and that they are not being heard. The Poor People Campaign is a creative,, dramatic attempt at communicating the problem of poverty. The Time cover story on hunger, the CBS report on pover- ty, the vogue of terms such as negative income tax-these and like events have been directly pre-, cipitated by the Campaign, and as such, they are witness to its at- tempt at communication. REV. JAMES BEVEL, the young, fiery director of non-vio- lent education of SCLC ,accurate- ly pin-pointed the purpose of the Poor People's Campaign when he describedtResurrection City as "a live theater to educate the Amer- ican people." Most people, he said, are so used to vicarious experiences that they don't even recognize a live thea- ter when they see one. "The poor people in Washington are a live theater. They are a drama about reality, about a country that does not have the capacity to face the truth, a country where we have more proteins than we can use 41 t !e we I .,. . ! °... Nr f; ",-1 A _ k n i.+ V Aj