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 Doily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. The ACLU's 'responsible liberal' circus SATURDAY JUNE 29, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE NISSEN Goin' to Surf City 'cause it's $232 EVERY YEAR (it seems) when tuition is raised there are cries that it isn't really anybody's fault. After all, if the state Legislature had given us what we requested, we wouldn't have had to raise tuition. But after all, if the University had done a better job in presenting their needs and goals we would have gotten the money. And after all, there is a lot of inflation and we do have to raise faculty salaries and what with the new unions and all . . . . Phooey. There is an alternative. It's simple enough. We could leave. Tuition just went up $240 per year for out-of-state undergrads. It now costs $1,540 to go to this school. Out-of-state tuition has gone up 54 per cent in the past eleven months. No one can convince me that educational values received have undergone a similar surge. And the University wasn't that much of a bargain when I came here. A bargain, perhaps, but not that much. Even the lofty reputation of the school has shown signs of crumbling in these past two years. Key faculty members have left for parts known and unknown, and with faculty salary ratings at a new low there doesn't seem to be much hope that the tide will turn. If the trend keeps up, a University di- ploma might carry about as much weight as one from Hofstra by the time it starts making a difference to you. jT MAY INTEREST some of you dis- gruntled out-of-state students who, like me, came to the Mother of State Universities because the costs were rea- sonable to know that the University of Hawaii waits beyond the sea. trips back to the mainland. Tuition there is $232 a year. Room and board goes for less than $750. Standby air fares are $326 round trip from De- troit. Going to school there would result in your saving a total of $1,248; enough for a woody, a surfboard and a few side trips back to the mainland. If you're more academically minded, think for a moment of the library you could buy with $1,248; or perhaps you'd prefer a private tutor. Bad as the school might be, it couldn't be that much worse. And at least it isn't going downhill. -JOHN GRAY By HENRY GRIX THE QUESTION was, what didn't they talk about. The biennial American Civil, Liberties Union convention, which ended here Tuesday, was a circus for "responsible liberals and in- tellectuals." With relish, the 250 delegates debated and defined their views on practically every crucial issue confronting the na- tion. But the ACLU was clearly un- dergoing a transformation during the convention. The union is amending its 'ways in what some say is an attempt to haul the or- ganization out of New Deal lib- eralism and to embroil it in the social problems of today. IN SIX DAYS, the convention- eersproduceda prodigious packet of thoughtful recommendations which rescinded several past poli- cies and called for a reorganiza- tion of the ACLU policy making national board. The controversial recommenda- tions have been submitted to the national board for adoption as policy, but some delegates fear the board might reject some of them for the first, time in the union's 48-year history. Already misread and miscon- strued, the resolution on civil dis- obedience has undoubtedly stirred the most controversy. Reversing a stand taken by the national board last year, the delegates suggested the ACLU should become involved in certain cases of civil disobe- dience.; "There are circumstances uuder which direct violation of an ad- mittedly valid law is a method by which political and social change can be accomplished, and the ACLU might be persuaded in some circumstances to defend vio- lators," the recommendation reads. Last year, the ACLU board passed a negative judgment on civil disobedience without the ap- probation of its constituency. THE BOARD contended "The ACLU believes that the way to correct injustice in a free society is to change valid laws by per- suasion, not by their violation ... "For us, the single question is whether the act involved can reasonably be defended as- an ex- ercise of a constitutional right. If it can, then we will defend it; if not, we will not." If the board accepts the policy, of the convention delegates, it would have to rescind the state- ment it made last year. If the board identifies its interests with those of individuals accused of civil disobedience, it is risking the possibility of becoming identified with radical, and violent, protest. THAT THE DELEGATES tem- pered their daring recommenda- tion by limiting the definition of civil disobedience to nonviolent protest doesn't matter to most legislators and citizens who fear all protest. That they specified the circumstances under which law- breaking is defensible is of no interest to many who secretly feel the ACLU has been subversive all along. Furthermore, by taking on civil disobedienceecases, the ACLU would be venturing into legal quicksand. The national board formerly took on cases which they felt involved the "exercise of constitutional right:" cases which were defensible from a legal point of view. But war protest is based in moral indigation and is defended as an act of conscience, not constitution. Nevertheless, the ACLU would be giving support to protest (where it is greatly needed), and be living up to its reputation as a defender of civil liberties-any- one's liberties. r . . . . : . : : : : " i :{ .: .. . ";:" }:. ": : V. "... the ACLU was clearly undergoing a transformation during the convention. The union is amending its way in what some say is an attempt to haul the organization out of New HOWEVER, the ACLU really has no shining reputation of serv- ice to big city, ghetto residents. The union's failure to aid the poor prompted the delegates to take a shotgun blast at urban problems. * The delegates resolved that equal protection under the law means equal access to the law, and suggested that "Judicare" be provided for all who need it. 0 To increase its "ghetto pres- ence," the ACLU has already es- tablished a storefront office in Chicago, but the convention sought board approval to increase the assistance. tended income maintenance is now a civil liberty. Aiming to champion other mi- nority groups, the convention considered the problems of youth, prisoners, the mentally ill and the military. The convention churned out recommendations favoring an 18 year-old voting age, suggesting a Bill of Rights for youth, en- couraging diversity in secondary schools and universities, and ask- ing equal freedoms for alltthese groups, including the military. The ACLU also stiffened oppo- sition to involuntary conscription Deal liberalism and to problems of today."' embroil it in the social both caused and justified the ac- tion. Besides, the union is feeling growing pains. In three years, membership has jumped from 75,000 to 125,000 and the organi- zation's revenues have skyrocket- edfrom $700,000 to $1,650,000. Simply handling the new resour- ces may require policy shifts. Furthermore, the ACLU, like many liberal organizations, is going through an identity crisis in which it must change or be- come identified with the elements vainly trying to preserve the stat- us quo. By its own admission, the ACLU has in the past concentrated on protecting the liberties of the Dr. Spocks and the upper and mid- dle class intellectuals who dared challenge the oppressive activities of government. For example, 1,250 of Michigan's: 5,000 ACLU members live in the liberal and upper middle class enclave of Ann Arbor. But in Ann Arbor this week, the union redirected its policies to include the new form of pro- test by the long oppressed peoples of the nation. In dealing with the reorganiza- tion of the ACLU itself, delegates felt more blacks, who had not al- ready attained prominence, should be serving the national and local boards. The delegates defined blacks not as Negroes, but as those "seeking positive identity with other black men and women." This desperate attempt to i- dentify ACLU concerns with the ghetto would prpbably enrage many blacks who don't see how a white man could presume to think and feel like a Negro. But the ACLU-at least its rank and file- is sincere and con- scientious in what it is trying to do. Because it not only accepts, but searches for change, it stands a good chance of emerging as the champion of those who deserve the benefits of that change. r: :", : r.: r::::. :"::r :"{:::::. :;r.} :?'rtiS~~t;"}}.{s 3s:.}i:":":ยข:g::4'r}:":":>r}:.;"}:"}: "}?':.?":.#s: * The delegates called for com- pensation to citizens whose rights are violated by police, and at the same time suggested increased compensation for police. " The ACLU probably at the request of the convention also ap- point a committee to consider black separatism. * The convention attacked the welfare system which contains "severe and pervasive deprivations of civil lliberties, Delegates also charged the system is based on poor assump- tions and voted overwhelmingly for a program of income main- tenance, or guaranteed annual wage, that would not interfere with personal liberties. THIS WAS THE FIST time the ACLU became involved in an eco- nomic issue, but delegates con- as a violation of personal liberty. "The present draft law as present+s ly administered in the present circumstances violates civil liber- ties and constitutional guaran- tees," delegates said. In the past, the union has said conscription was a deprivation of civil liberties justified only in the overriding interest of national se- curity. The new statement is aimed at "the present circumstances"- the Vietnam war-which the ACLU is plainly judging to be not in the national interest. It would be unfair to say that such definitive and liberal poli- cy statements are not typical of the union. But at the recent con- ference, delegates undoubtedly en- gaged in one of the most dramatic outpourings of policy revisions and updatings. The acelerating pace of history 'You ain't any better than Viet Cong' Thanks for the voting rights but then again ... PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S proposal for a constitutional amendment to lower the voting-age nationwide to 18 is an- other in a recent series of pitches by na- tional politicians to convince young peo- ple to "work within the system." As such, it is both hypocritical and unlikely to bek very effective. Had the President been genuinely con- cerned with advancing "the moral integ- rity of (the system's) case" (as he put it in his proposal to Congress), his record for the years of his administration would have been considerably different. In a democracy which in theory is gov- erned through reasoned debate and the will of the people, he has shepherded the nation through a highly unpopular war, refusing not only to heed but often even to listen to intelligent and thoughtful critics of his policies. His administration has harrassed powerful and vocal dis- senters with arrests. He has stifled impor- tant information which might have em- barassed his administration. Even now, while appealing to the young to channel their efforts for change through the processes of the existing po- litical system, he and his Vice President are maneuvering to invalidate the suc- cesses students working within the system have scored for McCarthy and Kennedy in the primaries. HUBERT HIJMPHREY'S attempt to win the nomination (in defiance of every expression of the people's will in the pri- mary elections) by marshalling the votes No comment 'THE STUDENTS of Saigon unaccount- ably have launched a peace move- ment of their own, urging political settle- ment of the war . . . What they think they would gain by quitting and letting the Communists overrun their nation is beyond us."0 -Eric Sevareid on the CBS Evening News -D. MICHAEL SHAPIRO Second class postage paid at Ann Arbnr, Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Daily except Monday during regular academic schiool year.1 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). Fail and w (inter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mal); $8.00 for regular academice school year ($9 by mail). Summer Editorial Staff TTRAN LHNERC................ Co-Editor of the pros who will serve as delegates, is far from the only reason for the disen- chantment of students with the political system. But it certainly does add to the questions being raised about the value of the franchise for anyone, much less those under 21. If the power of the voter is as negligible as events in the last four years (including Humphrey's heavy-handed campaign) seem to -indicate, why should 18-20 year old Americans get excited about the prospect of enfranchisement? STILL, whatever the motives of 'those proposing the amendment, students and other young people should and prob- ably will support it actively. As voters, their influence in Presidential elections will be small, but it will still be an influ- ence: perhaps enough to change the re- sults in a few states in very close elec- tions. Furthermore, their impact on Congres- sional and local elections could be consid- erable, especially in university-dominated communities (assuming the absence of laws, like Michigan's, barring the gain or loss of legal residency merely because of student status); Robert Scheer's 1966 campaign for Congress in Berkeley gar- nered 45 per cent of the vote and would have won easily had students under 21 been allowed to vote. The franchise would give students the opportunity to influence the decisions in their local communities which are probably their greatest con- cern-decisions on housing and parking regulations, for example. Finally, they should and will support the amendment because it is based on im- peccable logic. University students and even high school graduates who don't con- tinue their education are at least as po- litically and intellectually mature as half of the adults who now vote. If maturity and political understanding are to be the criteria, let them be applied without ex- ception or let them be abandoned and identified as mere pretense employed by those who irrationally fear for their own overrated political influence. And if President Johnson and those like him wish hypocritically' to enfranchise those under 18, let them; and let the first political acts of those newly enfranchised be to cast the votes which put them out of office. -URBAN LEANER We believe you A NEW YORK CITY policeman was in- terviewed yesterday on CKLW radio. He reported that reports of police bru- tality during the recent uproar at Co- lumbia were greatly exaggerated. He claimed, for example, that a widely- By NADINE COTIODAS 1URSDAY night about 15 people quietly picketed the State Theater's showing of the latest John Wayne movie, "The Green Berets'.' What started out to be a sideshow for the early comers to the 9:00 show soon turned into aheckling spectacle performed by various and assorted patrons of the 7:00 show who were leaving the theater. Richard Cook, informal spokes- man for the picketers, had earlier told me the group was not any particular organization but simply a collection of interested people. He said they had conferred with the police about picketing and all the police asked was that the picketersestay on the sidewalk. The police said patrolmen would be on hand in the event of any trouble, Cook added. The picketers were not what some might exepct (i.e. barefooted, bearded, unkempt and grubby) but rather neatly dressed young men and women carrying care- fully printed signs made with thin black magic marker on plain white'tackboard. Some signs read "Save you $1.75 and join us." Others read "Not misleading but DULL" or "Why glorify violence?" From the onset of the picketing around 8:45, one heckler, who claimed to have sat through five showings, stamped up and down State Street hollering "You're all sheep. You ain't any better than the Viet Cong. You ain't even set foot out of the United States." A little later I asked him why he was so vehemently opposed to the pickets and why he liked the movie. He told me the movie showed there weren't any rules to the game and that everybody should see the blood and the gore. He said it's "kill or be killed and I don't want to be killed." When I asked him if he had already been in service, the man said he wouldn't fight because "I'm a very religious man." Much of the waiting crowd, however, was silent as they watched the picketers. Some f~ -Daily-Larry Robbins Protesting the pictorial peril looked on with amused but toler- ant smiles. Others snickered or shook their heads. About 9:05, however, things picked up. The early show-goers same out and were met squarely in the face with the dozen or so picketers. One group of young men and women shouted a cho- rus of boos and one irate woman in that group yelled, "You big babies !" The most vociferous and most noticeable heckler was a corpu- lent, six foot-four inch young man known only as "Big John." He was dressed in faded blue jeans, motorcycle boots, a grease- stained blue work shirt, a black sleeveless denim vest with a skull and crossbones on the back in- scribed "God's Children," and a large silver swastika hanging from his neck. (Someone later explained Big John is a Califor- nia Hell's Angel transplanted to Ann Arbor.) Surrounded by a group of ad- mirers, Big John ticked off a list of obscenities and hollered about "saving the world myself." He stormed into the picket lines but was admonished to retreat by Lt. Eugene Staudenmaier who was standing calmly and unob- trusively, in plainclothes among the pickets presumably to keep order. I asked Lt. Staudenmaier about the legality of the picketing since Cook had told me the group re- ceived police clearance. Stauden- maier quickly corrected me -- "I can't give anybody clearance. This is one of their free rights- as long as there's no trouble." I noticed that two patrolmen had come to join Staudenmaier and were quietly sitting in a police car in front of the A&P. Before I could ask the policeman nearest me anything at all, he said "No comment. I just came up here to see what everyone. else is looking at." A little later this same patrol- man told the photographer cov- ering the picketing for The Daily, "If you want to keep that camera, Mister, you better turn it in an- other direction. You can't take my picture. It's a violation of my privacy." By this time the crowd had considerably thinned out and the angered policeman and his con- panion left. John Smith, mana- ger of the theater said he had known nothing about the, picket- ing but allowed it was "quite a bit of excitement for an opening night." The picture is scheduled to play either one or two weeks and judging from Thursday's crowd, will probably be held over. Corporal Patterson, a Green Beret back from a six month tour in Vietnam as a demolition expert was leaning against the theater talking to a friend. He had received a free pass to the movie. I asked him his reaction to the movie and the accompany- ing activity. He said the picture was "strictly Hollywood" but it didn't either "play up or down" the U.S. role in Vietnam. Patterson said at times he felt he had "an axe to grind" with "these people" (the picketers), but he said this kind of dissent only made soldiers already in Vietnam fight harder. But I don't think the picketers would have fought, or would fight, any harder at all, no matter how anybody reacted. They marched for something less than an hour, didn't really engage in active ar- gument with anyone, let their views become known, and then disbanded and went home. Noth- ing more. fut Iit Letters to county chairmen. Let- ters to newspaper editors. Meetings with community leaders. The campaign's f e w professionals, would handle delegates; the rest would be for unpaid volunteers. Peripherally, Ganz indicated that McCarthy forces would be backing the Mississippi Freedom Democrats in Chicago in their at- tempt to get their credentials p 4 McCarthy fights the By D. MICHAEL SHAPIRO I-IE McCarthy campaign is, quite evidently, now at the crossroads. dRghnafter the New York primary, m 1h of the nation- al staff gathered in the cam- piagn's New York state headquar- ters on Columbus Circle, and made an effort at figuring what was to come. Harold Ickes, Jr., and the three began talking strategy. The huge pile of problems were abundantly clear. How do we af- fect the already-chosen delegates who have made no public com- mitments? How do we prove Humphrey is a loser and McCar- thy a winner? How do we con- tinue to associate Humphrey with the drastic policies of the cur- . .. '