just a song in the wind Where's the sandbox, Susie? Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan ~by jim Iheck.- ....... 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 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. SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN i Congress should clean its own house first IN THE WAKE OF the Fortas resigna- tion "congressional double standard" has justifiably become a popular catch- phrase. Portas' indiscretion pales beside the fi- nancial shenanigans of several legislators who were so quick to point the accusing finger. Fortas resigned under congressional pressure for accepting a $20,000 legal con- sultant fee from a firm later investigated or selling unregistered securities. Fortas faced the additional embarrassment of an impeachment motion which could be introduced by any member of self-right- eous congressmen if he chose to fight it out. CLEARLY FORTAS was foolish at best to risk creation of a conflict of inter- est which could incriminate him at any time. But the puritanical outcry to purge the. corruption in our midst hypocritically ignored numerous and more substantial financial alliances of legislators and out- side business interests. No fewer than 92 of the 435 representa- tives in Congress are officers, directors, or stockholders in banks or other finan- cial institutions. Eighty-seven have ties Marahity play LEST WE FORGET, amidst the brouhaha created by Mr. Nixon's peace offensive (or offensive peace), theIABM still dwells among us. Yesterday, the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Disarmament Subcommittee staged its own dramatic confrontation between two seers of science, Edward Teller, de- veloper of the hydrogen bomb and de- fender of the Safeguard, and Jerome Wiesner, adviser to former Presidents Kennedy and Johnson and good guy. Unfortunately Defense Secretary Mel- vin "King" Laird could not have planned the' hearing better. The two scientists disagreed violently on deployment of the missile system and effectively cancelled out each other's testimony. This means, in considering the systems, congressmen will have no recourse to science; they will have to make a moral decision. Oh dear. with law firms and 61 more are stock- holders in companies with major defense contracts. At last count ten congressmen with di- rect connections to banks and other fi- nancial institutions sit on the House Banking and Currency Committee and six on the House Ways and Means Commit- tee. Rep. Alphonzo Bell of California owns the $12 million Bell Petroleum Company. Yet the House ethic panel didn't see fit for him to reveal this on the form he filed in compliance with the House dis- closure bill. TE DISCLOSURE LAWS of Congress were written during t h e celebrated Dodd case. However, they merely report honorariums, contributions, and certain other financial reports; the latter aren't open for public inspection. Currently senators and representatives are not required to list all their invest- ments and outside business interests. The disclosure law is obviously meaningless. The Fortas resignation coupled with Chief Justice Warren's retirement in June, will radically a 1 t e r the political complexion of the court. The President will undoubtedly appoint two conserva- tives in their stead. The present c o u r t notable, and among conservatives notor- ious for its liberalism, will revert to its traditional pre-Warren conservatism. Fortas' resignation can be valuable on- ly if Congress turns its reforming tenta- cles inward and investigates conflicts of interest among its own members. YET THERE IS NO immediate sign this w i 11 happen. Yesterday Wright Pat- man, chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee, attacked Treasury Secretary David Kennedy's alleged t i e s with the bank he originally headed. Rep. H. R. Gross has retalliated partisan-fash- ion by expressing the fervent hope the House Judiciary Committee would inves- tigate Justice William O. Douglas. Whether Congress will ever get around to enforcing a stronger disclosure law and eliminating conflicts of interests among its own members remains to be seen. The advise from many experts is don't hold your breath. - TOBE LEV PERHAPS REVOLUTION is already here. The growth of violence is so expected and so feared and grows so slowly that we may be hesitant to call our state of affairs revolution. But who will give another name to the situation on the Madison and Ber- keley campuses were the number injured in a 24-hour period of intense battle is al- most twice that usually killed and injured in battlefront situations in Vietnam. If it is not revolution, what is it? Everyone seems to want to answer that question, but our language apparently is too primitive to supply an appropriate aphorism for our confused beliefs. No, it is not really revolution, because while rev- olution is borne of discontent, it is carried by issues, causes and alternatives to op- pression. There are many students who will fight the War, the draft and a capitalistic system viod of humanism. But the students 3 who fight in Berkeley and Wisconsin fight with confusion and malcontent - fight without any valid cause or viable concern. except that of police brutality. AND THE POLICE deserve no better name is Madison and Berkeley than vicious pigs. They are hostile and sadistic; they are maniacs when they begin spraying in- discriminate areas with lethal pepper gas or, drag arbitrarily "longhairs" from the dormitories in order that their billy clubs can be used. This is deplorable. It is facistic and frightening and those who now pretend to disbelieve that this horrid con- dition exists with the police are but maniacs themselves. But the police have guns and billy clubs and the students have nothing but pride. We have reached a situation where is doesn't matter anymore who is right or wrong. As horrible as it sounds, the country has given its support to the militarism of the police. The fact that the Berkeley police can act so animal-like and brutal and that all they receive in criticism is the applause of one Ronald Reagan is beyond belief but confirms the horrible state of affairs. Thus, when such out and out violence begins to decide the fate of issues and stands, then logic is displaced for who has the hardest piece of wood or the pistol with the longest range. It becomes extremely difficult now not to call for massive retaliation, massive rock-throwing and window-breaking and head-smashing. BUT THAT'S ALL it would be: rock- throwing, window-breaking and occasional head-smashing. The police have rifles, gas and armor and most importantly and so tragically, they have the implied if not ex- plicit mandates of those middle class citi- zens who compose the majority. THUS IT IS PURE folly to resort to violence. It is imposible to win. Beyond the question of whether it is justified when compared to the cause it carries, it has no purpose. It is useless, in vain; the students are mice compared to the power of the police and the disdainful illogic of the populace. And to suppose somehow that students could collect an arsenal adequate to at least forestall complete repression is ludicrous. This is not to say this country can;be renovated enough to adequately support the ideals of the student. It may be that total social revolution is necessary. But the use of violence is a carefully prescriped medicine for a chronic social problem. Its use must be precded by a con- cise analysis of why it should be used. With every but this country becomes more totali- tarian. Therefore, the results of the viol- ence must at least bring to a stalemate the forces of totalitarian repression. The sus- tenance of violence . used in Berkeley to defend Peoples Park and used in Madison to fortify several blocks of streets waste lives and action and politics on trite issues and threatens to end whatever headway-if any-has been made towards alleviating the broader social ills. RIGHT NOW it is difficult for any col- lege journalist or student government of- ficial to go to Madison. Police there are delighted to greet those . carrying suit- cases with pre-arranged warrants arresting the traveler for crossing state lines to in- cite to riot. The bond is $10,000. Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) was ridiculously raided under the most absurd of pretences this week and five of its major members clamped into jail and no doubt will soon be behind bars for longer than the time necessary to raise the ludicrous bail sum. The Justice Department, it is rumored, now has 400 indictments for major campus radicals under the Rap Brown Act. State universities such as those in Indiana are raising tuition to levels several years ago that would have been considered discriminatory. State legisla- tures, most particularly in California and '4 Wisconsin, have passed laws repressing any student activism of any form. The Supreme Court is now susceptible to the ultra-conservative majority President Rich- ard Nixon will no doubt institute. All this is factual and it is beyond reason to delude oneself what temporary resist- ance will lead to massive resistance and that liberation is just beyond the horizon. THERE IS NO student party. There is no cohesion between campuses. There is little cooperation between student groups, SDS, as unscrupulous as it is disorganized, is splintering into nothingness. There is nothing left but a repressive government and frenzied, splintered, individual stu- dents. Students do not have the support of outside groups such as labor or teach- ers. While they are undoubtedly not alone in their discontent and frustration, they are alone in their tacties. Students must develop interaction, co- hesion and communication. The necessary transformation of this student movement into a viable tool for change cannot come until we have. these three traits. If this is ignored, and violence embraced irationally, any hope of change in any form will be squelched by the government as it tends more and more to the dog- matic, silent and fortified stronghold of facistic repression. IT MAY BE possible to argue that this is what we really want anyway - that once everyone in the nation becomes cog- nizant of repression, liberation will be pos- sible. But this is worthwhile at most only as . a last resort, when all the available alter- natives are exhausted. And its risk is pre- dicated on the sometimes unreliable his- toric assumption that people do not remain oppressed for very long. If the issues right now were ones di- rectly of succinct and fascistic repression, perhaps then it could be said there is no time to examine possible alternatives. But the issues that are causing fighting in the streets are trite, forlorn and amazingly silly. In Madison the issue was whether or not student could have a party in the street. Ir Berkeley it was whether students could hold a park they had built. Granted, both these "symptoms" have roots in ques- tions of property and society's right vis-a- vis property owner. But the issues at hand are. the ones right now relevant. For the roots of these trite situations can be dealt with as part of other social inequities on broader and more substantive scales. THERE ARE REAL iproblems that ex- tend beyond the Peoples Park and the Miflin St. area. There are problems of welfare, of economic inequality and auto- cratic politics. And why now do we begin to ignore the War-and racism? Is it because our analyses were so shallow they could not solicit our perseverance? There is no purpose in trying to confront the cops at Peoples' Park. The repression as the state of California clicks one notch closer to facism if for no other reason than it has condoned police brutality one more time-this repression is far greater than the repression of not being able to have a park. STUDENTS SHOULD TEMPER once again and perhaps once too many times again their frustration and anxieties. They need not work within the system, but they need most of all solidarity and unity and communication. How all this will come about in time to save ourselves seems to beg a miracle. But if it doesn't everything looks quite grim. 4IA I Two new star By LORNA CHEROT GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS on the federal, state and municipal level furrow their brows and express verbal dismay over "our deteriorating urban centers." And our cities continue to deteriorate. A major obstacle in their reincarnation is the lack of under- standing between the people and the mayor, the mayor and the governor, the governor and the presidential executives, and be- tween the executives ahd the President. A case in point is the recent conference between President Nixon, HUD Secretary Romney and the big city mayors. In characteristic form, Mr. Nixon displayed political astuteness and sincere concern by re- Lorna ducing federal assistance to the cities. Ch erot Unfortunately when most of- ficials use the phrase "deterior- ating urban centers" they are using euphemistically to gloss over the human problem, which is the real issue. The problem of the poor, the problem of the minorities are phrases that can be 'used interchangeably with "deteriorating urban centers." THE MOST TRAGIC aspect of the urban problem is that the mayor is often rebuffed by the governor. At best the governors concern themselves with changing the corporation tax to prevent mass exodus of industry to other states with more favorable tax Washington and New York systems. The issues of adequate housing, community control of schools, air pollution, crime and suburban migratory patterns are left to the mayors to solve-even though the state has the final decision. Two examples are the relation between New York City and the New York state legislature and between Washington D.C. and Congress. New York City has a population of eight million while the state has only a total of 16 million. The state imposes a six per cent sales tax only two per cent cent of which goes to the city. With the aid of public hearings where community residents, school board officials, and representatives of the teachers' union made recommendations, Mayor Lindsay drew up a decentraliza- tion plan. The State Board of Regents also submitted a plan. A group of upstate legislators dissatisfied with both plans formulated their own, and all three are currently under debate in Albany. When the state cuts aid to city schools, it jeopardizes the quality of New York's city college, which is free and the finest in the nation. College administrators cannot admit a new freshman class, nor can they implement a comprehensive course in Afro and Hispanic studies. THE STATE ALSO cuts out welfare appropriations and fi- nancial assistance to city hospitals. In fact the state allocates only 57 cents out of every state dollar to be used for social services, to be distributed among all the cities and townships. If New York City were to be the only beneficiary that contribution would be but a mere dxop in the bucket. All of this does not make Lindsay's job any easier, and much of it can be viewed as a direct slap at New York's poor, black and Puerto Rican minorities. But Lindsay has promised the city more aid from the state and federal government. Lindsay cannot hope to keep the people of Harlem, Manhattan's Lower East Side, Bed- ford Stuyvesant, Spanish Harlem, and Corona soothed with empty promises. TTnfortunately the state legislature is insulated from' the brunt of the city's anger. A resident of New York City whose average net income is between $6,000 and $10,000 pays $40 plus one per cent tax on all income in excess of $6,000. Yet he must also pay the state either $160 plus a five per cent on all income in excess of $5,000, or $260 and a tax of six per cent on all income in excess of $7,000. NEW YORK'S MAYORS since the Walker adminstration in the early 30's have been pleading for more home rule-without effect. City residents are tired of suffering these injustices, and they cost units, city officials opted to build it in an all-white suburban area. There was considerable protest on the excuse it was too far from central means of transportation and shopping centers. Yet city o f f i c i a 1 s ordered the construction crews to begin work. But the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment would not release the funds it had set aside for the project, on the pretext of studying it further. Finally city officials raised the full amount and the city ordered construction of the housing units. It is not fair that the will of the citizens of Washington should be subject to Congressional approval-especially since its members do not live in the district but in the suburbs of Virginia and Maryland. What this amounts to is slavery, Twentieth Cen- tury style. The idea of New York city seceeding from the state and ap- plying for statehood is not absurd. In 1863 the western section of Virginia petitioned President Abraham Lincoln to confer state- hood on that section because it felt its will was being ignored. The western section did not want to join the Confederacy. LINCOLN OBLIGED and the state of West Virginia stayed in the Union. New York City is in a similar position. The state has continually ignored its populace and their needs. Both New York City and Washington D.C. have sufficient population and experience at self government. Statehood therefore should not be denied to them. ,r O fr A'tp "Speaking of non-negotiable demands, what's new with the SDS . Y LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Right from the tongue of Ar A9 To the Editor: WHO ASKED Martin Hirschman to apoligize for anything, ex- cept perhaps his condescending vapidness in his column "No, No. NO." Christ, in reading it over again these incredible phrases drool out from the page and I ask myself, incredulous, did he really SAYthat? Anyone who, at the age of 20. defines himself as an 'apologist for the radicals," or who can claim radicalism as the em- PLEASE, MARTY, write an- other column once you create your "formidable liberal left" and let us know about it. Hopefully, it will be in the New York Post, after you take over from or turn into James Wechsler. "Every traditional is merely a mature radical' says Hirschman righteously. What a piece of horse- shit! "WE ARE ALL IMMA- TURE," then, by Hirschman's 45- year-old rhetorical s p e w i n g s. oposite sides. POWER TO THE PEOPLE. -Kenneth Kelley Editor, The Ann Arbor Argus May 14 Commercial bugaboo To the Editor: IT SEEMS we can't get away from commercials these days. The specialization now-a-days seems to be the soft sell. It is a rarity, however. when a sponsor "Shaw Whitney" obligingly stood up, loudly protesting that he -had a deferment. Math 473 is not a literature course. However, I fail to see the amusement, the propriety, or even the place of such sickly melo- drama in any course. A sad com- mentary on the present state of affairs if we must conclude from this that someone thinks we are so mindless as to be unable to form our own opinions. g