w.rrw _ _-_ ___ _ s just a song in the wiuid S idtan Daily Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan And now, Ann Arbor by jinn hIeck.-...I.. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in'The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mut be noted in ol reprints. FRIDAY, JUNE 20,,1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY SARASOHN ,. Sheriff Harvey DOUGLAS HARVEY, sheriff of Wash- tenaw County, continues to needlessly provoke and escalate disorder upon South' University. His choice of tactics, his ex- cessive and senseless use of force and weaponry, his intransigent and righteous manner of negotiating with sincere and concerned elements within the public seeking to put an end to the possibilities of violence upon South U, all seem de- signed to engineer turmoil and chaos. Harvey seems intent, to say the least, to raise high the ugly 'specter of a leftist takeover in Ann Arbor, the dramatic un- folding of Michigan's "little Berkeley" in order to further his own political for- tunes rather than soothe and calm crisis. There can be no question that Harvey, whatever transpires in the next few days, will be the only public official to come out of the South University ,disorder ahead. He has the superior weaponry if not the manpower, the better Claim to legitimacy, and, the support of the Ann Arbor com- munity behind him in his struggle to keep the "freaks" off South U. / His excessive employment of force in the field not only deters the "freaks" from once again seizing the street, b u t also attracts a substantial nightly gath- ering of student-spectators. Incidents of police brutality only increase the s y m- pathy of students for "freaks." CONSIDER THE intensive hatred among students for police everywhere in this country - and especially locally for Har- vey - after the brutality of the" Welfare Mothers Sit-In. And then consider the tactics used over, the past few days. A continual employment of an excessive number of police to quell a small disor- der, the utilization of an extensive and occasionally rough pacification of the immediate sidewalks and streets, the un- necessary maneuvering of student-spec- tators into the struggle through contin- ual police forays into their midst with re- peated usage of clubs and gas, seem to be the tactics of larger confrontation rath- er than dispersal. But what could Harvey gain from' a confrontation? For one, he could play upon the wealth of aAil-student and anti-youth feeling among a substantial number of voters in the community who feel jeopardized by the generation c o n- flict. By using such tactics Harvey would be able to quell the rising opposition within the city to his fruitless search for thq in- dividual or persons behind the Ann Ar- bor slayings. And there is that recall campaign begun just last week. By heightening disorder, one might suppose, he would put an end to the evident dis- satisfaction within City Council and the public. QF EQUAL IMPORTANCE, too, is t h e tenuous nature of Mayor Robert Har- ris's position. The heightened struggle brought about by the cohfrontation would certainly do severe damage to the may- or's unblemished, untarnished liberal re- putation. Harris, it must be remembered, was elected upon a platform that implied a return to civilian control of the police. Hence, considering the emphasis he places upon reform of the police, t h e r e might be a certain degree of ill-feeling between Harvey and the mayor. It must also be remembered that the sheriff's re- putation as a trustee of ,the public wel- fare has been less than perfect. If Harris took, any. course that was less than a full enforcement of the law-and if through Harvey's choice of tactics, the struggle' becomes magnified into a student riot -- Harris's reputation would be virtually de- stroyed. To students he would appear as a fas-: cistic "law and order" zealot. To the suburb people he would take on the aura of a vacillating leader in time of crisis. He would lose face among the University- community which feels that student dis- orders must be avoided if the future of the university is to be preserved. His political supporters would vanish, and the election of his successor, certainly a 'law and order' fanatic, would leave }the University little influence in shaping public. policy. 1T ONLY STANDS to reason that any- one who becomes involved in t h i s situation, as an innocent, gaping bystand- er or a rilitant armed to the teeth, is only acting as a dupe of a Machiavellian political animal, intent upon sacrificing the public good for his own political for- tunes. The way to deal with such a beast is not to fight him on his own terrain, but to use means that are not in contradic- tioil with one's ends. Democratically- oriented means, such as recall, such as the circulation of a petition signed by residents demanding that the Governor remove, Douglas Harvey from office. As long as we keep playing into his hand, there will be no freedom on South Uni- versity or in Ann Arbor. --DREW BOGEMA WASHINGTON THERE IS A QUEER feeling that en- velops you as your campus begins to blow up and you are 600 miles away. It is almost a feeling like patriotism-to the pauses below the disruption. There is the urge to return, to see what is happening. It is expected that one would discover what is already felt: the situation embod- ies repression and the reaction to it. And there are one's personal reactions anger at Harvey and his battalion of ro- bots, sympathy for Staudenmeier - praise for his initial restraint, and identification with those whom you had disagreed with, the White Panthers. And not so ironically, there is a general feeling of sympathy for President Fleming. The image of Fleming walking the streets will long be remem- bered as a eulogy to the times of control-. that sentimental stroll that wasn't quite able to bring back the past. It's all very confusing now. Though many people, Fleming included, expected violence at the University, it came much sooner than anticipated. And it came in a mysterious genre of the times - is- sueless and superciliously flogged by dis- reason. But then, as one arrested rioter in Madison once said to me, reason is a term predicated on the system that exists; when you desire radical change, rational rea- son'is not necessary. BUT VIOLENCE came and the Eastern press is treating our campus like the Midwest press treated the recent violence at Harvard: with the aloof "I told you so." And again the question. Why Michi- gan?7 The answer is simple. It is not based upon the idiosyncrasies of our campus, its, history, or its progress-these factors are not relevant to spontaneous disruption. They tare only relevant when the rebellion is championing issues and substantive de- mands. The reason South University is a battleground is because there are people who have enough power and enough con- viction to Make it one. The rioters may be psychotic. If so, then the mental health of our nation is in grave danger of being diseased by a plague, for this type of disruption is spreading rampant. The rioters may be subversive. But if so, then there are enough American subversives that only revolution will resolve society's unmalleable reaction to their beliefs. And no doubt, they are all revolutionaries, which means simply that revolution is in the offing. It doesn't really matter whether there are issues carrying the fight for the se- curing of South University. It doesn't mat- ter, because apparently the inequities in our society that have promulgated this type of rebellion are innumerable. So in- numerable that one can arbitrarily pick any social institution and use it as the basis for the rioting. This would bring valid justification, but would be mislead- ing, because it would limit the scope of dis- satisfaction. So when there are so many general inequities, one might as well just generally riot. YESTERDAY IN Washington, a report was issued by a group of Congressmen who travelled about the country to scrounge up evidence in support of a tough anti- violence bill for campuses. It was to be the administration's first attempt to se- -cure control over the relatively autonom- ous university communities. But the Re- publican Congressmen changed their atti- tudes with a tinge of embarrassment. As their report states, they suggest the gov- ernment leaye hands off the campus situa- tion, and furher, that campus administra- tors should respond. to the demands of moderate students in order to keep them from being radicalized. The report indicates two interesting phenomena of the student movement. One, that students are being radicalized a n d very quickly. Two, that there is no use in dealing with the radicals - they cannot be .brought back to the flock; therefore, one must deal with the moderates who are not yet radicals. This has forboding overtones. It means if the negotiations with the moderates prove unsuccessful, the only alternative the government thinks it has it to out,- .4 1 rightly repress the radicals and their ideas. This has been rumored for some time as attested by the constant threat of the quasi-mysterious 400 Ray Brown indict- ments that are supposedly already written and sealed. But most iportantly, it means the minds like those of the Republican Congressmen refuse to examine the rea- sons for the polarization of students or the feeling that makes steadfast the rad- ical's beliefs. It means the conservative nature of our country is to blindly per- petuate whatever came before. It disre- gards that "what came before" was dam-' aging to 'many people who only now have the cohesion to do something about it. On hearing of the Michigan violence, former Michigan mnan Roger Heyns, now chancellor of the riot-torn Berkeley campus, uttered a nostalgic, "Well, I'll be / ,damned." Heyns, who has been travelling frequently to Washington for furtive pur- poses has privately acknowledged that "riot plague just might be a good thing." Heyns has two bodies - the one that negotiates - which means submits - to Ronald Reagan, and the intellectual who has retained his interesting and deep in- sight. Unfortunately, however, he has so far been unable to assert his second. f a ce. He greatlyeregrets accepting the Sacra- mento dictum to fence. off People's Park. Fleming's tempered condemnation of police forces Tuesday night is in marked contrast to Heyn's regrets. Hopefully, the mysterious President we still- know little about will take note of Heyn's experiences. THE UNIVERSITY now takes its posi- tion behind Berkeley and Madison. Harvey has accepted his role in the same manner police at Berkeley and Madison accepted theirs. The difference so far has been af- fected by one man, Fleming, who outright- ly criticized the police. Hopefully, he will become the standard here who asserts the students' long overlooked grievances and allows them to be impressed upon the pub- lic. And, if necessary, who allows the movement of the times to go its way, with as little bloodshed as possible. VI 00 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: In response to South Mayor Harris MAYOR ROBERT HARRIS has\ drawn fire from many students for inaction or evasion of the important issues of the past few days. Many allege he has hedged on criticism of the police, support of a police review board, a n d establishment of a "people's mall." - Much of this criticism is misdirected. As a liberal mayor with only a narrow popular mandat.e, his power in Ann Ar- bor is far from absolute. H i s political power in the rest of conservative Wash- tenaw County is almost non-existent. Many condemn Harris for not publical- ly supporting the establishment of a po- lice reviev board. Butt an Ann Arbor po- lice review board has little chance of win- ning public support, and Harris probably knows this. City Council could vote a police review tomorrow by a simple majority. But rightwingers could move to abolish the review board easily by initiating a public referendum. They need only 1200 signa- tures for initiation and a referendum for abolition would almost certainly obtain the requisite 50.1 per cent. HARRIS HAS NO control over Harvey; he has said so h i ms elI f. .The County Board of Supervisors could estab- lish a sheriff's department review board, but again the same procedure of petition and referendum could abolish it. Support for a sheriff's department review board in the whole of Washtenaw County would undoubtedly be smaller. Ypsilanti, Saline and Milan are Harvey country. Harris can't be accused' of harboring; vey would only go further on the ram- page. Outright removal of Sheriff Harvey is the impossible dream. Only Governor Milliken has the power to personally re- call Harvey without his actions being' subject to a referendum. Harvey, unfor- tunately, . will continue to hover over South University in his helicopter-broom for a long time to come. HARRIS HAS ALSO been criticized for hedging on t h e establishment of a "people's mall," and his proposal for City Council to study the problem on Monday is derided as bureaucratic red tape. But Harris can't cordon off traffic by dicta- torial decree.' Reportedly Harris would happily sup- port creation of a traffic-free mall, but would the rest of Ann Arbor echo his sen- timents? Even students voted down the "demand" for the mall, although perhaps they may have supported a 'proposal." Of course not all of Harris' statements were accurate or excusable. His statement early Wednesday morning that only sev- en students were hospitalized was clearly inaccurate; in truth nearly 25 were hos- pitalized. Nor were the Ann Arbor police above criticism as Harris said. Some.;of their tactics, such as the teargassing of t he crowd in f r o n t of President Fleming's home, were hardly exercised w i t h "re- straint." Harris w a s in no position to judge police behavior and consequently should have said nothing. YET SOME OF HIS remarks were mis- construed. He s a i d "almost no stu- Playing games To the Editor: FROM WHAT I SAW, very lit- tle of any clear thinking was done by either side at Tuesday's:Diag rally. There is no question that the police, particularly those un- der Harvey's command, used ex- cessive force Tuesday night, and no degree of distaste for the ob- noxiousness of some of the stu- dents and "street people" involv- ed should be allowed to obscure that. The policy of mass police re- sponse was stupid to begin with, and, to a certain extent, exem- plary of the general unwillingness of those who run America to pay any serious attention to'those who question t h e ultimate worth of middle class values a n d institu- tions, exemplary of their blind de- termination to constrain and re- press the assertion of other values and institutions. Moreover, everyone that I have talked to has said that relatively few people were throwing things at the police, and that once the clubbing and gassing began, it quickly became almost entirely in- discriminate, deliberately catching up not only bystanders. but also people merely on their way home from other parts of the campus. THIS, OF COURSE, has become standard police practice through- out the United States. And clearly, Harris' response showed little at- tempt to view the situation openly. and less concern with protecting students and street people from the repression and viciousness which police are so eager to dish out. Hopefully this will help to teach genuife liberals that only when the Left can exert sustain- ed, organized pressure on liberal politiclans can these politicians be expected to live up to their pro- fessed values. All of this not withstanding, the position being taken by the White Panthers and others calling for a "people's" takeover of South U. is even more asinine than the posi- tion taken by those supporting the police. I would love to see these guys go into the ghetto in Detroit or into a village in Vietnam and try to convince the people there of how important it is that we be allowed to get drunk and do mo- torcycle tricks in the street - of how revolutionary it is to fight cops for control of South U. T'h e idea is ludicrous - it is worse than that; the idea that we should devote time and money and resources to this cause while an- other generation of blackchildren is being maimed by our society, while poor people throughout the Third World are being murdered by the thousands under the aus- pices of our government, is con- temrntabhh and n won~rthv of anv other people have legitimate in- terests in how these streets are to be used - t h e White Panthers w a n t to go from a situation in which only the businessmen's in- terests determine how the streets are used to a situation in which' only street people's interests are heard). Rather the issue is that our so- ciety serves the needs of minority groups and dissidents only with the barest leftovers and serves the needs of the people in general only in ways consistent with the vested interests of dominant elite groups. The issue is that even the most liberal politicians are not genuine- ly responsive to requests that this situation be altered and are will- ing to repress independant at- tempts to alter this situation. The issue is that our society is pervaded by a double standard to- ward violence - police violence against independent action by mi- nority groups or dissidents is le- gitimate no matter how vicious, relatively trivial violence by mi- norities or dissidents trying to as- sert their rights and needs is a threat to civilization and must be crushed no matter what the cost. The issue is that a society which operates this way at home will be disposed to operate analogously abroad - and when the society is the most powerful on earth, this means repression and death for tens of thousands, indeed, for whole populations. THE WORK that needs to be done to bring these issues to the fore and to b u i l d a movement around them is, of course, a lot harder and a lot es s dramatic than simply arousing hostility to- ward the -police and arousing the desire -to raise hell and be obnox- ious. Some legitimate relation can be drawn between the real issues and the events of Tuesday night, but not in any direct, clear-cut or ab- solute manner as t h e Panthers would have it. Nevertheless, it seems to me that these are the kinds of issues on which we must focus. People of good will must be brought to un- derstand that while it is proper and necessary t h a t we criticize those who act irresponsibly (if this word can be rescued from liberal rhetoric) in trying to buck t h e system and p r o m o t e radical change, the ultimate irresponsibil- ity lies with 'those who have cre- ated and who maintain the situa- tion which makes some sort of revolutionary effort inevitable and legitimate. In the United States as in Viet- nam, criticizing a n d condemning revolutionary excesses will not change this situation; only a con- certed attack on elite obstruction- ism will do that. THROWING A ROCK at a cop does not make you a r a d i c al. Those who would have us fight for control of the streets at this point (or anytime in the near fu- ture) are not making a revolution, they're playing games, doing their ego-tripping thing, when what the situation demands is a great deal of very serious work. -Bill Barnes, Grad June 19 Bourgeois illusion' To the Editor: THERE IS A war in Vietnam, a quasi-war in the Middle East, a dangerous. military "defense" sys- tem being approved by the gov- ernment of the USA; military dic- tatorships are dotted over the globe, and racism is rampant; half the world is starving - and all Ann Arbor's "radicals" are inter- ested in is whether South U shall be "free." This is supposed to be revolution? Down with this puer- ile bourgeois illusion. -Rachel Costra, Grad June 19i '1 Doug Harvey To the Editor: LAST TUESDAY night while visiting the home of a friend whose' apartment overlooks, the South University-Church street area I cU. con had an opportunity to observe at first hand the confrontation be- tween police and young people. I admit that my observations only sampled a part of the total num- ber of incidents which occurred in that area on Tuesday night and may not reflect an accurate pic- ture of the total situation but in any, case I feel that my observa- tions are instructive. My first impression was the ob- vious difference in behavior be- tween members of the Ann Arbor Police Department and members of the County Sheriff's Depart- ment. The Ann Arbor police per- sonnel were well disciplined and reacted with restraint and intelli- gence to the incidents that I ob- served. In contrast the Sheriff's Depart- ment men seemed to be undiscip- lined, rude, belligerent and stupid. Their use of abusive language and maltreatment of citizens who of- fered no provocation was. appal- ling. One individual in particular stationed on the south side of the, Church Street-South University intersection waving a splintered club was particularly belligerent and caustic to passersby to the point w h e r e he seemed almost pathological. If any serious trou- ble erupts in the city this summer part of the blame must be laid at the feet of men such as he whose asocial behavior infuriated e v'e n reasonable citizens observing him. THE QUESTIONS which arise in my mind over such incidents are the following. In joint opera- tions which involve several police departments,who haseoverall con- trol and authority? W h o is re- sponsible for the deputies' behavi ior and actions at the scene of a disturbance? Where were the of- ficers in command of individual patrolmen? Are we to have an Al- gier's Motel-like incident in Ann . Arbor? C4 n deputies charge around like enraged bulls inflict- ing injury and damage on citizens without supervision of reasonable and intelligent commanders or was the supervision encouraging the wanton acts of violence and abuse? I observed that the Ann Arbor police seemed to work in units under the command of an officer who held the behavior of his men in check. No such supervision was observed on the part of the Sher; iff's deputies. Sheriff Harvey is fond of refer- ring to the training and skill of his men but to watch the depart- ment in operation last night was to observe an undisciplined, bru- tal, and vengeful mob rather than trained, disciplined men. If major incidents a r e to be avoided this summer without the loss of life the citizens of t h i s community must demand that the law enforcement agencies charged with preserving the peace be well disciplined and under t h e ade- quate supervision of competent, intelligent, and reasonable com- mand officers. PAST EXPERIENCE has shown that armies are only as good as their officers. The same can be said of police agencies. The behavior, of Sheriff's depu- ties last night indicates that the command structure and attitudes of the Sheriff's 'Department is in need of revision and restructing if they are to function in the best interests of all citizens with 'e- spect for the rights of fellow com- munity members. -Name Withheld upon request Blaming street people To the Editor: THE EDITORIAL by Abramson and Anzalone in Wednesday's Daily suggests that "the thrust of anger over last night's senselessly Violent clash betwveen police and members of the community be di- rected against city officials . . I respectfully suggest that the thrust of any anger (regret; might be a more appropriate emotion) generated by the events of Mort- day and Tuesday nights would be better thrust at the street people, hooligans and others (members of the community?) who caused the sorry incident. To my wife and me watching from our University Towers apart- ment window, it was clear that the police action came about only as a response to provocations a n d antics clearly intended to precipi- tate such a response. NO AFTER-THE-FACT talk about freedom of the streets can justify this mob action. In t h e first place in what sense is the disruption of motor and pedes- trian traffic, the setting: of fires and the raucous profanity a part of the definition of "freedom of the streets?" In the second place, there seemed to be little motiva- 7ict 4 A 4