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 Columbia. The seven dy Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail 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. TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1968, NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID MANN Hoosierland uber alles: A study in white bacidash UNLIKE NEW Hampshire or Wisconsin, today's primary election in Indiana will not be an initial test of the national issues and candidates, but a harsh meas- ure of the strength of the backlash against the candidacy and platforms of Sens. Robert Kennedy and Eugene Mc- Carthy. Indiana Governor and favorite son presidential candidate Roger Branigin is leading the backlash forces, and with considerable success. Because the size of the Republican switchover which is Branigin's principal, hope is unknown, few pollsters are making predictions with any certainty today in an election which only a few weeks ago seemed earmarked for a Kennedy victory. Branigin originally entered .,the race as an acknowledged stand-in for Presi- dent Johnson, But following LBJ's with- drawal, Branigin' stayed in the contest amid speculation he was representing Vice President Humphrey, who appears to be the favored candidate of the John- son wing of the party. THE QUALITY of Branigin's appeal comes through clearest in the cam- paign advertisements supporting him. Short radio spots, for example, ad- monish Hoosiers not to let the "outsid- ers buy Indiana." "Don't vote for the soft Americans," they harangue, implying that Kennedy and McCarthy are guilty of everything from cowardice to treason for their anti-war statements. Branigin's defense of the conservative wing of the Democratic Party against the, two challengers is clearly directed more at Kennedy than McCarthy. The em- phasis is on Kennedy's wealth and efforts to "buy" Indiana. "Hoosierland for the Hoosiers," the posters scream. But the slogan is only a front for the real Branigin campaign, an effort to stop Kennedy and McCarthy and the, student "blitz" which has swept them to earlier primary victories.I Branigin isrl't just another favorite son vying for a part in the choosing of the president. He represents a slap in the face to the two men who are challenging the forces that dominated the party dur- ing the Johnson administration. Branigin collects the racists, super.- hawks, and hayseeds who don't like "out- siders" coming into their backward little~ domain. Behind him is an ugly political machine and an equally odious press which has lost any semblance of objec- tivity. The Indianapolis Star's Sunday morning paper carried a banner head which read "BONNA LAGS ON VOTE JOB." Underneath was a story describing how the Bonna Printing Company was late in printing election supplies "because the firm devoted much of its time to print' campaign material for Sen. Robert Ken- nedy." In the same issue there was a front page editorial asking Indiana Republi- cans to cross over and vote for Branigin to show the world "Indiana is not for sale." WHETHER BRANIGIN wins or not de- pends in part on how many Repub- licans follow the Star's advice. Crossing over is illegal but unenforceable because a voter can cross over by simply Signing an affadavit stating that he intends to vote for a majority of the party's candi- dates in the November election. The Republican cross-over will be very large and nearly all of it will go to Bran- igin even though the Nixon campaign has asked Indiana Republicans not to "waste" their vote. Kennedy will run very strong in the black community where his own and, McCarthy's canvass figures show the' New York senator with practically every vote.- But the black community just doesn't normally turn out at the polls, and if Kennedy is to beat Branigin he needs those votes. Although Negroes only con- stitute 6 per cent of the electorate in Indiana, their votes could mean the dif- ference in a close race. And it will be close. Kennedy, concen- trating on Indianapolis ghetto Saturday, told residents at each of his stops, "If you want to change things do it at the polls, not in the streets." Late figures from a sampling of In- diana voters show Kennedy with a nar- row victory. But Republican crossovers could upset the whole election. The strength of white racism and the mili- tarism of the past five years will be tested today and every vote including those of previously apolitical Negroes will be needed to block Branigin's try for a back- lash victory. -STEVE NISSEN By STEVE DIAMOND Liberation News Service First of Three Parts NEW YORK, April 29-A new, more fluid style of revolution- ary activity on the American cam- pus has been introduced by Co- lumbia University students, black and white, who held physical con- trol of the campus for a week. The strategy developed spontane- ously, from the non-violent dem- onstration which began Tuesday, April 23, at 12:30 p.m., on Low Library Plaza to the seizure by the students of four main classroom buildings and the suite of rooms belonging to Columbia's President Grayson Kirk. An additional source of power came from the black Columbia students who bar- ricaded themselves in Hamilton Hall, while the rest of the stu- dents, white SDS members and sympathizers, liberated four other buildings on campus. Although this split was unwant- ed in the beginning, it developed into an unexpected source of pow- er as the University administra- tion felt a greater threat of vio- lence from the hundred blacks holed up in Hamilton (renamed Malcolm X) Hall, and thus hesi- tated acting against them. The white students, however, were at various times surrounded by New York City policemen. The power of the students developed from the complete agreement between the blacks in Malcolm X/Hamil- ton Hall and the whites in the Low Library presidential suite, and Fayerweather, Mathematics and Avery halls that both groups must hold out until the common de- mand of amnesty for all persons taking part in the demonstrations is met. On this all are in agree- ment and will not be moved. The solid position of the blacks in Malcolm X/Hamilton Hall caused the university to react, at first, with caution. Although 80 per cent of the blak rebels are Columbia students, the fact that they are black and that they are backed by the black community of Harlem has caused the admin- istration to regard them with tre- pidation. When the black caucus in Ha- milton asked the whites to leave on Wednesday morning at 5 a.m. (after both groups had spend the night there in control of the build- ing), it was because the black students felt that the whites would not be willing to fight it out with the New York City police. As Ci- cero Wilson and Bill Sales of the Columbia Students Afro-American Society put it, "We are ready to die here, .tonight, in Hamilton Hall." The white group, led by Mark Rudd, Chairman of Columbia SDS, agreed to leave the building and, in an attempt to show solidarity with the black students' determi- nation, Rudd and about sixty others broke into President Kirk's stately office in Low Library and ransacked private files, Xeroxing papers which were considered to be useful to the students in their later attempts to bargain with the administration. At around 8:30 a.m., Wednesday, the students were ejected by campus police. At 9:30, about 75 returned and recap- tured the president's office. As soon as it was apparent that Low Library was secure, a large percentage of the School of Ar- chitecture's 400 students barri- caded themselves inside Avery Hall, their principal classroom building. After that, Fayer-weath- er Hall, a general classroom build- ing for graduate students, was taken over, and then the fifth and last "front" in the ever- spreading revolution, Mathematics Building, was taken by students At Columbia: Out of the balcony, into the police from Columbia College, Barnard and the School of General Stu- dies. The following is a day-by-day recounting beginning with the ori- ginal demonstration Tuesday, April 23rd, on Low Library Plaza at noon. TUESDAY, APRIL 23 The revolution began with a routine call by SDS for a massive demonstration for Tuesday at noon at the sundial on Low Libra- ry Plaza in the middle of Colum- bia's ten-block campus. The dem- onstration was called in response to the university's refusal to cease construction of a new gym in Mor- ningside Park, one of the few city- owned parks available to the Har- lem community. _ The proposed fifteen-story gym, which will take up two acres of park land now being used by Har- lem's black community, was de- cided on by Columbia's adminis- tration and the city government without prior consultation with the leaders of the Harlem Com- munity. In addition, SDS's 900 people were out to protest the un- fair suspension of six Columbia students who had protested in- side a university building (it is against university regulations to protest inside a campus building) in a demonstration held two weeks ago against the Institute for De- fense Analysis. IDA is a secret research group concerned with counter-insurgency research in both South America and the black ghettoes of this country. The university had cyni- cally denied that IDA (sponsored by the federal government and with Columbia's President on the Board of Directors) and the CIA had a contractual agreement, but SDS subsequently revealed that such a contract between Colum- bia-IDA, and the Defense Depart- ment and CIA does in fact exist, and that there is a clause written into the contract stating that the existence of the agreement be kept a secret by both parties. THE PLAN for Tuesday's SDS demonstration was to march into Low Library, the University's main administration building, and de- mand of the President of Colum- bia that work on the gym stop, that IDA must go and that the six students who were suspended without a hearing be re-instated. Surrounding Low Library, which had been previously locked by campus security guards to prevent SDS group from entering, were about three hundred Columbia athletes, business and law school students, and a small group which calls itself the "Ad Hoc Commit- tee for an Orderly Campus." For the past two years, a favor- ite administration tactic has been to ignore left-wing demonstra- tions, allowing Columbia's athletes to assume that this lack of official action is their cue to restore the law and order which the univer- sity is either unwilliig or unable to provide. This had previously resulted in brief scuffles between demonstrators and the conserva- tive "jocks." On Tuesday, however, the "jocks" and their well-manicured business-school cronies were hesi- tant in 'attempting to block the SDS group from entering Low Library. Perhaps they were dis- suaded by the size of the SDS group which was more than 900 strong. Others, perhaps, some of them graduating seniors, are feel- ing a little closer toward anti-war demonstrators as their time fast approaches. Whatever the reasons, the SDS demonstrators marched right up to Low, which was locked. Rather than disperse, Mark Rudd, SDS Chairman, leaped onto a parapet and called for the demonstrators to march down to Morningside Park where construction had al- ready begun for the "Jim Crow Gym." Of the nine hunderd, ap- proximately three hundred and fifty continued on to the/ park where they encountered a few New York City police. Demonstrators began pulling down a thirty-foot high fence and after having pulled away a good forty feet of it, they were at- tacked by police with their night- sticks. Fortunately, there were not sufficient police to cause much injury, although one student was repeatedly clubbed and then ar- rested. He was later released on bail. At 3 p.m., the momentous ener- gy which had been growing since noon, showed no sign of letting up. Rudd;,again reacting in the beau- tifully spontaneous fashion which has characterized the entire re- bellion, led the jubilant demon- strators back up to the campus and into Hamilton Hall. Many classes were just ending and forty or so college administrators in the building's main, floor were preparing to leave. The demonstrators swarmed into the main floor lobby, and Rudd, with a portable bullhorn, announced that SDS was going to hold acting Dean of the College, Henry S. Coleman, as hostage un- til at least the first demand, that the six demonstrators against the IDA be given re-instatement, was met. Rudd explained that if 'the university was really going to meet with the students, it would have to agree to the first of the demands in order to show the stu- dents that the administration was going to act in good "faith." Vice-President David B. Tru- man, who was in contact with Dean Coleman by phone, said that the university could not possibly agree to any demands which were called for with "coercion." As the word rapidly spread around cam- pus, students began entering Hamilton°lobby and joining the take-over of the building. Secre- taries and other office personnel were allowed to leave, but Cole- man had to stay as SDS students had completely surrounded his door. Action on first "front" had begun. Later in the evening, around nine or ten o'clock, a large con- tingent of black Columbia stu- dents arrived in the building. Black students at Columbia have notoriously and conspicuously been apolitical, joining neither anti-war nor pro-war groups. But this was their fight, too, because of the "Jim Crow Gym" issue and the university's ever-increasing encroachment on the tenants of the Morningside community, many of whom are black. Many black militants from the New York City area also entered the building Tuesday night and it was rumored that pistols and much ammunition had been cached throughout Hamilton Hall. On either side of Dean Coleman's door were taped huge personality posters of Stokely Carmichael and Malcolm X. A picture of Che Guevara with the inscription "In the Revolution One Wins or Dies" went up on the wall and the stu- dents cheered vigorously. On each of the seven floors of the class- room building, students were stretched out on the floor, many with blankets and large cartons of ,foodstuffs. Wednesday, April 24 At around four a.m. Wednes- day morning, the Black Caucus, composed of black Columbia stu- dents and New York militants, de- cided that they were "playing for keeps." John Shabazz, SNCC or- ganizer, announced that the black people were going to "take over the show to take care of busi- ness." After a brief meeting of white students. Mark Rudd de- cided that the best thing was for the whites to leave the building and to show solidarity with the blacks by taking the revolution elsewhere, spreading it to other sectors of the campus. Rudd left with all the white students, leaving almost two hun- dred blacks, students and non- students alike, in control of the building. They immediately bar- ricaded the entrances with chairs and bookcases so that in order to get through one would have to climb over small hills of furni- ture and debris. A small sign went up in the glass-panes of the door announcing the Malcolm X Build- ing of "Malcolm X University -- A.D. 1968." Inside the plush office of Presi- dent Grayson Kirk, several beauti- ful American would-be Che Gue- varas with long hair and beards sat behind wide, well-made ma- hogany desks puffing on expen- sive cigars, especially made for President Kirk in Tampa, Florida. Students were busy weeding through stacks of confidential files and Xeroxing important doc- uments for possible use later as bargaining and embarassing ma- terial. Only the four rooms of the presidential suite in Low Library were occupied. Around nine-thirty Wednesday morning, a small crew of NYC police and campus cops entered a different room in Kirk's suite and removed a $45,- 000 Rembrandt and several other objets d'art which the university holds in high regard, such as two golden shovels used atean official ground-breaking ceremony 'in 1867. But SDS was in control, and one could not help but be remind- ed of the photos of the Sierra Maesetra rebels in Batista's Royal Havana Palace in 1959. Several Barnard' SDS girls left Low Library to buy food for the duration. They returned, via a not-too-perilous window-climb, with several cartons of bread, sandwich meats, orange juice and cigarettes, plenty of cigarettes. The same sort of activity was tak- ing place in Hamilton/Malcolm X Hall, where black men and wo- men from the Harlem Commun- ity were bringing their brothers cartons of home-made food and provisions. Rumors were started that the blacks were also bringing in the ingredients for Molotov cocktails, but these rumors were never ver- ified. Around noon on Wednesday, Cicero Wilson of the Students Afro-American Society announced over Columbia's FM radio station WKCR that there had been sev- eral guns and a "hell of a lot of ammunition" in Malcolm X/Ham- ilton Hall, but that they had been removed at the 'students' request. There was no question but that the black college students were running the show. LNS reporters saw several of the more militant blacks (non-students) leaving the black-held building Wednesday afternoon and many of them were carrying bulky book-bags which did not seem to be filled with books or food. Both the black-held building, and the white-controlled Low Library were models of clean- liners. Both groups had assigned garbage details to keep the build- ings clean, - and periodically huge plastic bags loaded with garbage were lowered out of the buildings. TOMORROW: The middle game A 101 *1 1 Another View Be kimd to your (in loco) parents WHAT THIS country needs is a "Be Kind To Administrators Week," with some rubbing off of the gentle balm on- to other weeks of the year. If it doesn't come, there's a good question as to who will run the schools and colleges ,in the next decade. College placement offices tell you that their files are jumping with applications . from administrators who want to return to teaching. Others are taking early re- tirement. Choice administrative posts, in the public schools and in colleges and The tenth goes... PALO ALTO, Calif. (CPS)-"Nobody on campus considers the student presi- dency seriously," says Mrs. Victoria Reich, "so why not have a naked girl to make some use of it." Mrs. Reich is the naked girl-38-22-36 -and she's running for the student presidency of Stanford University. "My biggest support is in the men's dormitories where I make personal ap- pearances," says the blonde Palo Alto student whose campaign posters-which show her posing in the nude-are rap- idly becoming collector's items. She is also well supported by patrons of San Francisco topless clubs who know her by her professional name, Vicki Drake. According to the Stanford Daily, Dean of Students Joel Smith commented, "While Miss Drake's campaign has barely begun, it promises to be diverting. She clearly is a young woman of conspicuous talent." universities, are not attracting as many candidates as formerly, and it can be assumed, too, that the quality will suffer along with the quantity. There was a time when unrest on the college campuses centered as such places as Berkeley, Madison and Ann Arbor, but it's hardly news any more when protest demonstrations halt classes at the small- est denominational institutions. Com- munity colleges are not immune. The public school superintendents found in the postwar boom enrollment years that schools of education hadn't adequately prepared them for handling the myriad problems associated with millage, bonding and school construction. Now they are discovering that psychology isn't enough for meeting some of the new challenges coming from students, pres- sure groups and organized faculty. College administrators must sometimes long for the days when their greatest problems came from incompetent or po- litically minded school trustees. Now it's black power, militant students and mili- tant . faculty. The average classroom teacher has always had a measure of dis- trust for the administrator, and it is one of the reasons why merit pay systems wouldn't work in the schools. THE TURNOVER in school administra- tion isn't all bad. Some of the new challenges may be forcing changes that were needed, and many capable admin- istrators are taking better jobs with foundations and private business. But the pace of change is too rapid to be a healthy condition in education. Too many good men are saying, in effect "Life is too short to take this, day in and day out." 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Dir. 1967-68 PREVIEWING, last week's ' dis- orders at Columbia-that sep- ulchre of knowledge carved out of Manhattan's upper west side- one gets the notion that the ad- ministration here may have dealt itself a soon-to-be-felt blow in the construction of the new, student- funded administration building on Thompson Street next to West Quad. The eight-story structure - slated for opening in the early fall -is a veritable fortress. Its solid, stodgy appearance is enhanced by the total absence of windows on the first level save for those in the wc tRomanesque -arched entrances. Between the portals on the ground floor runs a. singular passageway, similar in appearance to those that populate Ann Arbor's modern -apartment, buildings. This thin hallway is not only the ;Hain chan- nel, it is the only one with spa- cious office rooms lining the sides. The infrequent windows that grace the ediface also constitute a deviation from the norm. They are not the open, expansive panes turn, can take advantage of its peculiar form. With the ever-growing role of active dissent rampant on this nation's campuses it may do us well to ponder some of the many possibilities inherent in the scheme of the new building's structure. No longer will it be necessary for those of a more radical orien- tation to acquiesce to the liberal- majoritarian tactics of the sixty- minute confrontation based on numbers without organization- and' without results. With the grand opening of the new admin- istration building it will be more than just possible that only fifty well-supplied students could take over and halt the bureaucratic ap- paratus indefinitely. By either chaining the double doors together or otherwise ef- fectively blockading the two port- als protesters would preclude any ground-level entry. While locked inside the students could set up their own free university in the hope of continuing the learning process, they could create their own co-ed dorm system in the of- fices, bring in camping stoves and the only remaining possibilities for entry are from above and below as the buildings windows are too small for human entry, and can be easily defended. It is no secret that the Univer- sity includes a complex under-, ground network-one that is sure to connect with the near-com- pleted structure-as one of Michi- gan students' favorite pasttimes has been "steam tunnelling" in the Minos-like labyrinth that winds beneath the surface: But there must be only one entrance to the tower and. that can be easily ob- structed preventing entry to the blue-uniformed mole people. That leaves us with the possi- bility of an attack from the sky. While no one mentions it aloud everyone realizes that the roof of the building is perfectly suitable for heliocopter landings. And while neither the University nor the Ann Arbor police are in possession of even one flying machine capable of a vertical landing the conceiv- ability of such a maneuver can- ' not be ignored. But what to do? One alternative would be to 'stack piles, of desks on top of each other radically