Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Black Power and Broken Promises -_ ere Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN AROR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NErws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSAY, ULY 4, 166 NGHT DITO: PA --ONHU THURSDAY, JULY'14, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR, : PAT O'DONOHUE Medicaid Helps The Poor And The Not-So-Poor T HE CRY about "black power" which is dividing the Negro population so sharply has oc- curred, we must note, as the bright hopes of last year have given way to a bleak realization that pro- gress is stalled. The argument about "black power" is an argument about how the Negroes can restore the mo- mentum of progress in obtaining better housing and better schools, which were the promises of 1965. THE NEGRO militants, who speak to the deep poverty and wretchedness of the ghettos, are arguing that progress can be push- along only by the use of Negro votes, boycotts and angry de- fiance. The Negro moderates stake their hopes on votes, persuasion and nonviolent civil disobedience and demonstration. The cruel fact of the matter is that neither tactic will work under present war conditions. The basic reality is that the 22 million Ne- groes, though a large number, are only about 10 per cent of the nation. Obviously they cannot coerce the huge majority, and they have no power of any kind which, if exercised recklessly, will not bring on severe reprisals and repression. The Negro minority does not have the votes and it does not have the economic resources to create a "black power" which will bring them the reforms which they need, which they deserve, which they have been promised. THE POSITION of the Ameri- can Negro is in important respects unique. Thus, unlike the Indians who followed Gandhi, the Ameri- can Negroes are not a huge ma- jority resisting a small alien group of rulers. All forms of partition, liberation and independence which have been practiced by other racial communities in Africa and Asia are unavailable for the American Negro. In the end there is for black and white Americans alike no alternative to coexistence, and there is no basis for coexistence except a genuine and sustained progress toward better conditions of life. This progress is possible only if the great white majority Today ant Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN MEDICAID was an obscure product of last year's Social Security amend- ments, but the way it is being received, it appears that it may be an efficient and therapeutic remedy for the real ills of the poor. Medicaid has several powerful ingred- ients. It has "medically indigent" writ- ten into its language, which means that a nearly unlimited range of truly needy Americans can qualify for medical treat- ment they have never had before. Medicaid clears the bureaucratic con- gestion of some previous poverty pro- grams providing special assistance to such groups as dependent children, the blind, and the elderly. MFDICAID WILL STIMULATE states to administer creative and beneficial aid programs. Its main ingredient is health for peo- ple who could never afford to be healthy. It innately lacks the embellishments that have fed poverty program leeches in the past. There will be little free money, few needless expenses. At the top of the program, the federal government will pay at least half of med- icaid costs for wealthy states and as much as 83 per cent of the costs of poorer states. To qualify for the program, states must produce facilities for hospital care, out- patient service, doctors' service, nursing for adults, and laboratory and X-ray serv- ice. But the states themselves can pre- scribe much more, like dental, optical, and rehabilitation service. Administering the programs will be American doctors, who will be tending the poor. They will mail bills to local welfare agencies, who will pay them with federal- state funds. THIS IS WHERE the confusion is. The Wall Street Journal quotes one physi- cian saying "I'll treat them free before I'll get involved in this mess." Insurance dealers are afraid the leg- islation will result in slackening subscrip- tion in private insurance by those who can afford it. Nine states have set up medicaid pro- grams. Two, New York and California, have set such loose standards that legis- lators fear that Title 19 will result in gal- loping endowments to individuals who may be able to pay their own doctor bills. In California, medicaid has more than doubled the number eligible for medical assistance. This will be 13 per cent of the population. In New York, financial eligibility is not related to liquid assets like home and automobile ownership. If their program is approved by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, over 8 million will be eligible, according to Dow Jones figures. THE DANGER-and it may be a pleasant danger-is that some of the not-so- poor may be treated through welfare funds, as well as the "medically indigent." But figures indicate that many pension- ers and others without sweeping insur- ance would be bankrupt by hospitaliza- tion. Medicaid, then, may save the personal economies of many fairly independent senior citizens and workingmen. Some col- lege students may even qualify for med- icaid. ALTHOUGH IT DOES imply galloping spending, medicaid will result in eco- nomical administration of medical assist- ance, increasing funds for medical treat- ment and trimming administration. Its language indicates that it will get into the bloodstream of the poor. And since physicians will be administering it to the poor, it will be potent and person- alized. Prescribed in intelligent doses, medicaid funds need not deteriorate insurance in- vestments of those who can afford and benefit by subscribing to them. MEDICAID IS SWEEPING legislation, more so than the medicare enacted at the same time. If carried out as conscientiously at all levels as it has been by federal authori- ties and several states, it will be a cure far more effective for the poor than chicken broth programs of the past. --NEAL BRUSS Fal-Safe In Virgnia YOU'VE REALLY GOT to feel sorry for Sen. Harry F. Byrd, Jr. in the light of his conservative organization's hefty de- feat at the Virginia polls yesterday. As a matter of fact, he was about the only member of it to survive the primaries, and that by a narrow margin. One would hope he doesn't take the blow too seriously. After all, his isn't the first old machine that's refused to run on new gas. -L.P. supports the progressive reforms and approves of active collabora- tion between the races in carrying out the reforms. In other words, there is in the deeply interrelated problems of urbanization and Negro progress no alternative to a politics of con- sensus. The great promise of the Johnson election of 1964 was that our most serious internal problems would be treated by persuasion and debate and peaceful argument and that we would avoid racial and class warfare. THE HOPE that this highly ra- tional and civilized way was pos- sible rested not merely on the political skill of Mr. Johnson, but on the prospect that with proper management the expansion of the economy could continue. If it did continue,there were in sight sufficiently large surpluses of tax revenue, more than enough to finance the reforms which were promised, These reforms, in hous- ing, schools, hospitals, jobs, parks, playgrounds, were to provide a continual proof that the problems were soluble by consensus. As we know, the tax surpluses which were to finance the internal progress do not exist. The war is consuming them. Although Ne- groes are benefiting from the tight labor market, the movement toward better housing, better schools, better hospitals and the like slowed down or stalled. It is possible to show, as some pro- gressive economists do, that by raising taxes consumer spending could be reduced and the reforms financed despite the war. BUT THIS will not be done, the austere and unselfish policy will not be adopted. The crude truth is that the great majority of us, for the most part white, who are safely beyond the poverty line will resist higher taxes in order to helpkthe poor, so many of them black. The Johnson consensus of 1965 was based on the economic calcu- lation that the reforms could be financed by economic growth. The rich would not have less; they would have even more, but not quite so much more. This was the material foundation of the hope that a Great Society could be built by consensus. THE INDO-CHINESE war (it is no longer merely a South Viet- namese war) has destroyed the material foundations of all the hopes that preceded it. The foun- dations of a progressive society will not soon or easily be rebuilt. For the President has never ex- plained to the nation, and may not himself have fully appreciated, what are the commitments and the costs of the global crusade into which he has plunged us and of the forward strategy in the Pacific which he seems to coun- tenance. (C), 1966, The Washington Post Co. At. $ After Four Years- Well, Whadja Learn?' By MICHAEL DITKOWSKY TOWARD THE END of the fourth year in college, one is inevitably asked, "Well, whadja learn in college?" The question certainly is fair in light of the thousands of dollars in investment and years of preparation and frus- tration that have gone into what some have hoped would be a nec- essary and profitable experience. The rub is, however, that the question is too often posed in terms of observable black and white statistics. the kind which ask for a grade-point and an ac- ceptance slip into some graduate school. Unfortunately, these people have a harmful 'tunnel vision" toward what the educational pro- cess entails. and to answer ques- tions in their framework neces- sitates a flat, "Nothing!" FOR ME the strict classroom experience has been a somewhat stifling and stale process of almost mindless regurgitation on the part of both students and teachers. Perhaps there have been one or two classes that have come close to stimulating an interest in the subject matter, but these have been rare. Grade-point for myself hasre- versed and evolved to a position where it is incidental to what I am really looking for in four years of undergraduate work. In many ways this position can become precarious in a large university; for me it has become a necessary position. It is becoming obvious that the strict educational-classroom pro- cess, (one which too many people think is-the whole) has left me embittered and wanting. Thus, in most instances the mind boggles before the original question, "Whadja Learn?" WHAT HAVE I learned? How do I justify investment. frustra- tion and hopefulness which in some cases has not been my own. A start would be that an aware- ness of what a person doesn't like can be just as valuable as finding what you are suited for, perhaps even more so. If becoming a grad- uate student means a compromise of values and entails skills as a steno, then I have to opt out. In many ways a seemingly nega- tive experience .has prompted me toward a real and valid aware- ness of what my life ambitions are to be. They are not to be with people whom I do not respect nor in a field in which I am not in- terested. Hopefully it will be in an area where a premium is put on creativity and honesty. Thus, in four years, a word like integrity has become less loose and ephemeral and more an at- titude which looks for a construc- tive and searching appraisal of how four years of school will af- fect my life. THROUGHOUT the better part of high school I had an empty angry feeling in my stomach. I did not really feel like plotting for my future or studying for my col- lege boards as a freshman. Hence. rebellion of a sort. Last week I went back to my high school and was asked for a hall-pass. The same empty angry feeling came back, yet, four years at the University has enabled me to answer why I feel this way. I was and am angry because of the way students are herded and coerced into a production line that begins in grammar school progressing into all levels of edu- cation and finally "society." It makes me angry to see the way many students have to suffer because of an unbelieveably tyran- nical and wasteful system. I will not be given a grade-point for these attitudes and feelings, nor will a certain amount of invest- ment insure a constructive anger. I have learned that, while young people are still young, they can get into ruts which have no real quali- tative differences from the ruts of forty-five year old businessmen. I have learned that a few years away from school might and can be a fruitful experience, and I have learned that this responsi- bility lies primarily with myself. THIS LAST POINT reminds me of a series of questions Paul Good- man was once asked at Antioch College. Upon being asked the value of the high school, Good- man retorted that it must alleviate the harmful aspects of the gram- mar school. He was then asked the value of the college and univer- sity. After a momentary reflection Goodman answered, "Well, I guess it's to alleviate the harmful as- pects of the high school." The next question never came but it does follow, "Who or what alleviates the harmful aspects of the col- lege?" Hopefully, I have learned that it is a responsibility that lies with the individual, and one that can lead to a more fruitful and stimu- lating life. It doesn't show up on transcripts or in money invested. 'Turning On' to Our Modern Realities By LEW ALPREN collegiate Press Service "C'OME ON IN. son. Put down your picket, take off those dirty sandals and make yourself comfortable. Sit over there on the couch. I see here that you seem to be having a few problems. Well don't worry about a thing, son, we'll have you well adjusted in a 50-minute hour." "Look Doc, it ain't me that's having the problems, it's the rest of the world. War, bigotry, im- morality, conformity, that's what I'm protesting about. I'm one of the few well adjusted ones." "WELL THAT'S JUST what we are going to talk about. I want to ask you a few questions, so just relax and answer them as honestly as you can. You can smoke if you like." "Can I turn on?" "If you feel you have to. No, thank you, I have my own. Let me ask you this, why do you smoke those thingsr?" "Oh, when I turn on, the world becomes beautiful?" "Oh, so you think this is an ugly world?" "Exactly. But when I turn on, man, its Central Park in the snow. It's F.A.O. Schwartz at Christmas time. It's Cape Cod at dawn. The stars shine, the wind blows, and the rain feels fresh and cool." "BUT ALL THESE things exist in the real world. Why do you have to turn on to enjoy them? Why don't you just go up to Cen- tral Park instead of having nar- cotic fantasies?" "Because, Doc, if I go up to Central Park, I'm not going to be able to have jelly applestand carry balloons. I won't be able to make faces at the monkeys at the zoo. And even if I'm by myself and sit by the lake, someone on the other side will spit in it. How can I go up to Central Park, Doc; there's people there," "What's the m a t t e r with people?" "People spoil everything, Doc. They talk during moments of silence, they move when every- thing is still, they sneeze. they wheeze, they stutter, they lie . ..!" "So you hate people, huh? Well, there must be a reason. Think back and try to remember, what is it that makes you hate people?" "I think it's because they were always betraying me," "Betraying you? What do you mean by that?" "WELL, ALL MY LIFE they've been betraying me. When Batman became my hero they called him a homosexual. They fed me cran- berries with my turkey, then they said it caused cancer. They told me to share my candy with my friends, then they changed Three Musketeers, so I couldn't. They made me watch Wink Dink but they never let me draw on the screen. Everything I loved, every- thing I cherished, they spoiled." "I see what you mean, son, but everybody goes through it. It's part of growing up. How do you think I felt when I was a boy? People trading in horses for auto- mobilies. The World Series being fixed. May Day riots, getting chas- ed home from school by the other kids because I wore knickers. How do you think I felt when kick-the- can went out; when Coolidge chose not to run? I screamed, I Protested, but in the end, I ad- justed." "But how can you adjust, Doc? The Bathroom Conference: White House Cure-All STOP WORRYING-about Viet Nam, the airline strike, the heat wave - there is a panacea, to be supplied by LBJ as usual. That old standby, the bathroom confer- ence, is a tactic that will prevail once again, as it did in the steel negotiations. Prophets have envisioned-probably ac- curately-a "White House intervention" to settle the strike of the AFI-CIO ma- chinists against five major airlines. Now, this his been accompanied by a feeling of dread on the part of some many observers and participants. RELAX. ALL OF YOU should be happy. After all, "intervention" is too strong a word to apply to the situation. Why don't we call it an attempt to reach con- sensus? And, this will merely be one phase of a master plan (Project W.C.") for world consensus on everything. After a speedy conciliation with union Editorial Staff LEONARD PRATT ........................ Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER ................... Co-Editor BUD WILKINSON...................Sports Editor BETSY COHN . . .. .... Supplement Manager NIGH'IT EDITORS: Meredith Eiker, Michael Hefter, Shirley Rosick, Susan Schnepp, Martha Wolfgang. Business Staff SUSAN PERLSTADT...............Business Manager members and airline executives in the ground floor John (with sunken toilet) of the Texas White House, Johnson will quickly hop to a newly constructed powder room in the wing of a Saigon temple- for a high level conference with repre- sentatives from Russia, China, Britain, India and France. The delegates will con- sider and are expected to settle vital tac- tical and moral questions on the Viet Nam conflict, nuclear disarmament, birth control and homeless beagles. AND NEXT COMES the universe. John- son will squeeze in a confrontation with God to complain about recent rain squalls and unbearably high temperatures and ask for conciliation with the under- world, demanding either a heavenly air conditioner or a new Lethe-where all can forget just anything unnegotiable. -SHIRLEY ROSICK Confusing The Issue IT APPEARS that "Soapy" Williams is going to win the Democratic nomina- tion for the Senate seat left vacant by the death of Pat McNamara. The only con- crete issue between Williams and Cav- anagh is the war in Viet Nam, and Mich- igan residents are too confused on the issue to differentiate between the two How can you adjust to twisting young minds and poisoning pure+ souls?" "I know it's tough son, but that's part of the responsibilities of be- ing an adult. "HOW CAN YOU say that, Doc?+ Can you see me telling kids about the poor starving children in Europe, then just stand by and watch them napalm the hell out of those poor starving kids in Southeast Asia? Can you see me reading fairy tales to my kids and then telling them that fairies don't exist? Doc, can you see me telling my kids what fairies really are?" "It's a cruel world, my boy, but it's all we've got. Believe me, I know how you feel. Discovering there's no Santa Claus; having to watch my old man sell apples on Spanish E By CAROL STARR Collegiate Press Service THE SPANISH educational sys- tem is a direct reflection of the economic, social, and political structure of the "modern" para- dox of Spain. Franco has succeed- ed in instilling a national attitude of complete passivity towards any kind of intellectual development. At this point the Spaniard feels there is little place for intellectual enrichment in his society and be- cause of his inability to obtain the maximum benefits from edu- cation, expects little from it. This is not too amazing that the Spanish educational system has little to ofer the average man. The secondary and higher institutions of learning are monopolized by the still small middle and upper classes, and the limited influence of the industrial revolution now beginning in Spain encourages an even more restricted system of education. THE BASIC problems of the system as it now exists are the ab- sence of a broadly based educa- tional program and the lack of adequate institutions in which the people can fully participate. A couple of weekends agouwhen I was in Toledo, a group of friends and I passed by an open door which was labeled "escuela primaria." We walked into a dimly the corner. Experiences like that can ruin anybody's life." "But Doc, you can't just give in, you have to fight it. How can you look your kids straight in the eye and tell them that 'Winnie the Pooh' is not great literature? How can you face a responsibility like that? Wouldn't you like to find some way to escape?" "Everyone would, son, this being grown up is hell." "WELL THAT'S WHY I turn on, Doc. It's sort of like changing places with Peter Pan. Can you blame me?" "No, as a matter of, fact, son, I can't. But personally, I find gin and Pablum a lot more effective." (Alpern is a staff writer for the Washington Square Journal at New York University.) ducation: fly Passive' classrooms out of the 106,000 pub- lic elementary school classrooms in the country. THE GOVERNMENT'S role in relation to education has been direct; perhaps directly passive but direct. The short-lived Re- public concentrated much of its program in the educational field. One thousand new schools were built in 1938 alone in the midst of war, and in Republican Spain in 1937. Apparently the acute shortage of skilled labor was brought to the attention of the government. A new five-year program was begun in 1957 to build 16,000 new class- rooms by 1963; although the num- ber was not reached, construction continues. Elementary teachers' salaries were raised 100 per cent (now they earn $1,000 a year; high school wages vary from $2,300 to $3,000 annually). Many new labor tech- nical high schools have been built to train skilled workers. Five labor universities, with attendance bas- ed on scholarship only, have been constructed to train factory man- agers and technicians. ALTHOUGH the future holds promises of a more industrialized society, it holds little promise for improvement in the intellectual development of the people's minds. t .r ~~~,k 4-uI t-*4 YFtl bmA~4~~ 1 0