Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS FEIFFER d~ifloAre free; 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Will evi NEWS 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. AUGUST 11, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT O'DONOHUE Detroit's Halfway Riot: Less Than Pitiable IM FORL)ARY OF Iapb5' 1) HEAVY HfeP IMH T G[AT ? Heal !~ MArJ A)AY -r KP SWl5 TA1T6Y P V6O Ike} MAWJS GOAD'S succc5s-~ FUx.BOOr1T pip Nor2 66f HAP)OI TO TH6 N)WGO flATfM5 'rAOL$. ''1 WiMoc JOF~ F66, 1k) GET% HAI0Of TABL, MTN QIS5AAY I FOHER5 T STRIKF HAM~O POLO" AT TlU(, VEN ?MONE*J1 MAY MISSIzls T K t WC-° TAF)ThYn A CSC&trag g; 2:. ".YS EFFCCTIVE. W~T M66T OAM, NN far -a ~ IM V hU WIOF rO 6-fT HAW(I 70O -Iff6 v rrT- TA:V OUT CHNkA l UVCA' CAPARlUTP ?AY PGSTrAIDT 15 NT IOCXHAL)sTIltL6e DETROIT - Less than one hundred teenage Negroes stoned cars last night n Kercheval on the city's lower East Side. Detroit hadn't had its first race riot his year and this was not it. The teen- gers involved-and they clearly were not l the kids in the Kercheval neighbor- food-flung the rocks and hooted the ame insults at bystanders and police for ver three hours. During the night a supermarket was ntered, a false fire-alarm dispatched, one nan injured by a brick bat, several stores toned, and at least 40 car windows mashed by the Kercheval teens. [N LESS than half an hour after the first terrified motorists began to reel nto Jefferson precinct near Belle Isle. vith broken auto windshields the Detroit >olice had the mile long trouble-zone ealed off. Its riot-trained, tactical, mobile units vorked on foot through the zone. They brought in carbines and loud-hailers. They asked residents to get off the streets. They moved through side streets and al- eys opening on to Kercheval to get the rouble-makers out.. Indications show that the incident :ould have been much worse if allowed o persist. Police arrested youths carry- ng rifles and hatchets. They caught a ;roup brewing molotov cocktails. The names of the Acme Youth Center, he Afro-American Youth Association vere mentioned as possible instigators. But three hours after the police de- achment reached a full force of 100, the police were pulling out. DURING THIS TIME a man named Her- bert was sitting in his little car on a ide street unable to get through a police >lockade to his home on Kercheval. Herb, a - heavy mustachioed Negro, is in afternoon meat cutter in a Dearborn area supermarket. He and his wife live n a spacious five room apartment. Like nost of the homes in the neighborhood -erb's is old and weather-beaten but lean and cheerful. Its rent poses no hard- :hip to Herb on his meat-cutter's in- :ome. Herb, who confesses he is not bright, earned meat-cutting at a Detroit school. the tuition was $500. In those tough lays Herb and his wife were aided by >ublic funds at a time when they were uilding an income. Herb described his neighborhood as "50- 0; integrated." He says there is no rea- on for rioting where he lives. He says, I'm a taxpayer and I'm not afraid to :now how much this thing tonight is osting me." Herb stood on his porch for a while when he finally got home, watched the police at their mobile headquarters less than a block from him home. At 11 p.m. he went inside to watch the TV news. OUTSIDE, the Kercheval teens were go- ing through the last moments of at- tention. Those loitering near the police center were treating the night the same way as those standing outside a pool hall in a brick-battered block half a mile away. It was a lark to them. They were not angry, they grinned. And all they could do was throw rocks, bricks and and the same worn vile insults. Residents said they could think of only two cars of white people they would con- sider night riders that night. Herb says in his neighborhood it is a lack of intelligence and education rath- er than a lack of work or recreation that was responsible for the outbreak. But he says that the youths in the midst of the trouble were drunk, and that is impor- tant. The police say the violence started when two Negro youths were arrested outside a Kercheval bar for fighting. The routine arrest was used by the trouble- makers as impetus for their embroil- ment. Detroit Councilman Philip Van Ant- werp, a former policeman, was surprised and pleased to see how speedily and peaceably the police were able to gain control of the area. Herb was glad when the police turned off their blue flashers and went back to their precincts. IF IT HAPPENS a second night - and because of intelligent, considerate po- lice work, it probably won't-it will be un- fortunate for the Kercheval neighbors, for they, like virtually every group of Negro and white homeowners and ten- ants, question, do not want, a riot. The Kercheval teens were pathetic, be- cause they were so low in intelligence, sobriety, and dignity. They took their cues from inflamatory remarks and riot- ing elsewhere. Throughout the night they asserted in word and action that they were "cool dudes." Though he wouldn't admit it, though he wouldn't come down on his own, Herb, the only Negro in the supermarket meat department, was blushing in shame to the end of his mustache. The day Herb comes home from work and stones my windshield, I will know that something is wrong with Negro life on Detroit's East Side. -NEAL BRUSS - I 10) VVULIOF 1967, 10) ORWR 7F T HAW(1 To' ITHO ® 011 ?TAT hX 'TA~W (0! TN ?F PAC-Y Nt BZ~N% PEr1 5.(K ," ' / I_ ' 4- AF Automation and Negro Em ployment By ROBERT M. HUTCHINS IN MODERN society work is more than a means to a liveli- hood. It is a symbol of status. If you are working, you belong. If you are not, you don't. Automation and a guaranteed annual income may, gradually change the prejudices of Western man, formed by the teachings and habits of centuries. But today a man out of work is a second-class citizen. He is so in his own opinion as well as that of his neighbors. Therefore, one does not have to be an economic determinist or a Marxist to say that in the United States the unemployment figures disclose a basic disorder in our society. This is so because these figuresreflect something more im- portant than the conditions of production. They show how many people have been thrown out of or excluded from the society and who' they are. BECAUSE OF the war in Viet Nam, unemployment has been steadily declining. But in the mid- dle of June unemployment among Negroes increased over the month before and is twice the general rate. Almost 8 per cent of all Ne- groes are officially unemployed. This is bad enough. But the fig- ures on Negro youth are terrify- ing. In the middle of June 32 per cent of 18- to 19-year-old Negroes were out of work. This was an in- crease of 5 per cent over the num- ber a year ago at the same date. The unemployment statistics do not present the real situation, for they record only those who have applied for work within a given period. They do not include the very large but unknown portion of Negro youth who have given up the search on the justifiable ground that it is hopeless. BECAUSE THE draft law favors' young men who continue their ed- ucation, and because the length of education in this and every other country depends on family income, a larger proportion of Ne- groes is drafted- than of whites. There is some truth in the charge that the war, in Viet Nam is being fought by the poor-and the Ne- groes are the poorest among us. In view of the large numbers taken into the armed forces, the size of the unemployed group among Ne- gro youth is as sensational as it is alarming. It is so alarming that no other explanation of the current dis- orders in many large cities is re- quired It seems a little silly for government officers to be trying to ferret out Cuban Communists among the Negroes in Chicago. There may be some there, and they may be influential. But to blame them for what has been go- ing on in Chicago is no more in- telligent than blaming it on the heat. The _ Chicago riots would have occurred if there had been nobody there but Republicans and they had been knee-deep in snow. DO THE NEGROES aim at re- form or revolution? Do they want to join the society or overturn it? The Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions has listen- ed to the experts and to all sec- tors of Negro leadership as they have talked about this subject for the past five years. I have noticed a change lately. The voice of those who think the Negroes want nothing but admis- sion to the American Way of Life is getting weaker. The Center is hearing more and more often that the resentment of Negroes is reaching such a point that they would not join the white society if they could. This means a revo- lutionary movement. The peaceful settlement of Ne- gro claims depends first of all on a massive effort to provide work and the status that goes with it to the Negro population, and par- ticularly to Negro youth. * * * ALTHOUGH MOST of the dis- cussion of automation has centered on its effects on employ- ment, its consequences for the school and the home are likely to be quite as spectacular and even more certain than the reduction of the hours of labor. The argument still goes on about employment. The official view is that the technological revolution will dislocate labor only tempor- arily. There is so much work to be done that eventually everybody able and willing to work will have a job. This seems to me to underesti- mate the computer by treating it as though it were just another in- vention, whereas it cannot be com- pared with any mechanical de- vice in history. It adds a new di- mension to the powers of men and to human life. TO SUPPOSE that so funda- mental a change can leave the economic system virtually un- touched is to ignore the radical nature of the new instrument that mankind now has at its disposal. I believe that wherever the com- puter establishes itself-and it is rapidly doing so everywhere-it will eventually reduce labor as we have understood it and may re- duce it almost to the vanishing point. It may also eliminate the school, the college and the university as we have understood them. Technology will free education from limitations of space, staff and time. A GLIMPSE OF the future comes from an experiment in pro- gress at Palo Alto, Calif. Some 150 pupils in the first grade are re- ceiving instruction in reading and mathematics from a computer lo- cated miles awayat Stanford Uni- versity. A teacher is on hand to help those who fall behind, but the lessons come from the com- puter over the teletype to a tele- vision screen. The computer submits the ques- tion, states the time limit for an- swering them and reports if the answer is correct. The computer rapidly adjusts to the characteristics, the learning capacity and the knowledge or ig- norance of the individual pupil. The computer could be located anywhere. The screen could be located in the home. The teacher could be like a visiting nurse, call- ing round at intervals to ask how the pupil was doing. The effects on the home could be as dramatic as those on the school. The family might become a learning unit. THE GREAT question about the reduction of the hours of labor always is: what are we going to do with ourselves? One thing we might do is learn; and we might do it all our lives. The new technology could make it possible to develop a learning society. Every home could be equipped with a television set that would give access to educational material of every kind at every level. These devices may strengthen the worse tendencies in education, which are to confuse it with train- ing and the accumulation of in- formation; these are objects they can easily accomplish. They may diminish the attention given to reasoning and judgment; they may reduce discussion; they may promote centralization. BUT THESE RESULTS, which would be deplorable, are not in- evitable. The computer has great flexibility. Everything depends on the conception of education held by the people in charge. That is what determines the educational program today. Hence, it is imperative to begin thinking now about how the enormous power of educational technology is to be guided and controlled. The giant corporations are already moving into the field; the scent of big money is in the air. One of the most important so- cial changes in history is impend- ing. We shall have to develop new social and political institutions to cope with it. Copyright, 1966, Los Angeles Times if TEX- -Stra nge Pen tagon Con trovyersy The Blackout and Electronic Birth Control Pills A RECENT STORY in the New York Times gave an explanation for an un- usually large increase in births in New York hospitals this month. It is now nine months since the great Northeast power blackout. "The lights went out and people were left to interact with each other," was the conclusion of sociologist Paul Siegel. "They didn't have access to the major source of amusement, the television, and it is reasonable to assume a lot of sex life went on." PERHAPS this sociologist has discovered the solution to the birth control con- troversy. A simple, effective means of holding down increasing population throughout the world has been found. The pill is obsolete, just keep that tele- vision on all night. As long as the power doesn't fail, the problem of overpopula- tion can be solved with a good dose of Johnny Carson. Editorial Staff LEONARD PRATT.....................Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER..................Co-Editor BUD WILKINSON....................Sports Editor BETSY COHN................Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Meredith Eker, Michael Heifer, ShiievmRa . at ODonobu.al Knlan.* Certainly it would be more easy to in- troduce such a control in underdeveloped nations than drugs or calendar watching. The United Nations should begin im- mediately on a total program of TV in- stallation, which will not only introduce real culture to the world's people, but will force electrification of all rural vil- lages and educate a brave new generation of viewers in the wonders of "the tube." WITHIN 20 YEARS, worldwide television will be so firmly entrenched that the birth rate will decline to the crisis point. At that time someone will have developed another system for maintaining the hu- man race. Hail to Our Ford. -WALLACE IMMEN Using Force REPORTS HAVE IT that British sanc- tions aren't forcing Rhodesian whites into demanding their government's capit- ulation, thus marking the failure of Eng- land's attempts to use economic warfare as an instrument of national force. This almost certain failure should have been evident from the start. Mature econ- omies are very tough things, as the sur- prising ineffectiveness of the American bombings of Germany during World War II and of North Viet Nam now illustrates. EDITOR'S NOTE: The TFX all-purpose war plane which Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara hoped would save money has been a subject of controversy. An AP writer who has studied the project gives a progress report. By BEM PRICE NEW YORK (P)-The bitter con- troversy over whether Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara forced a second best warplane on the nation's military to save $1 billion is heating up again. This latest outbreak centers around development of the Navy version of the TFX-tactical fight- er experimental-now known as the F-111B. AS A WEAPONS system - air- craft wedded to missile-the pro- gram is 12 to 18 months behind schedule. The first three prototypes were so badly overweight they were useless for carrier operations. Further, the research and devel- opment costs for the weapons sys- tem are soaring although this is not uncommon in projects involv- ing new weapons. The F-111-and there are two versions to date-may not turn out to be the all-weather, all-pur- pose air superiority aircraft orig- inally envisioned by McNamara. The Marine Corps already has told Congress it does not intend to buy the F-ill In either the Air Force or Navy versions for close air support of troops. There have been published re- ports out of Washington indicat- ing that the Senate Investigations subcommittee, headed by Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark), may reopen its still unconcluded hear- quirements although it, too, is still somewhat overweight. The No. 4 has been flown for 80 minutes., A Navy decision of whether to buy the F-111B is not expected un- til December after full evaluation of a fifth prototype, which is due for production this month. Secretary of the Navy Paul Nitze said on July 27 that the F-111B was a weapons system "we must make work." THE CONTROVERSY over the TFX, or F-111, began in 1962 wheyx McNamara overrode the recommendations of a 235-man panel of aircraft experts four times. The panel had recommended ac- ceptance of a design submitted by the Boeing Co., of Seattle. McNamara selected the General Dynamics design on the grounds that it offered the best chance of producing an aircraft with a high degree of what he called "com- monality"; that is, identical parts. The defense chief characterized the Boeing cost estimates as un-, realistic although Boeing had been working on a design for a variable sweep wing aircraft, such as the TFX, since 1959. In the original competition Boe- ing proposed to build 23 research and development aircraft for $466 million. General Dynamics' pro- posal was $543 million. McNAMARA TOLD the McClel- Ian hearing the purchase of a sin- gle warplane for use by the Air Force, Navy and Marines would save at least $1 billion. Subsequently, when the subcom- mittee asked the then Comptrol- ler General Joseph Campbell to check McNamara's savings claim, Campbell reported he could find testimony that to buy 1,704 TFX warplanes with spare parts and spare engines would cost around $7.8 billion. As matters now stand, Rear Ad.. miral W. E. Sweeney told a House Appropriations subcommittee last March the Navy F-111B research program was running about 30 per cent higher than estimated. Further, Sweeney said, overall research, development and engi- neering costs had climbed from $84 million to around $210 million. ONE OF THE MAJOR delays encountered in the program has been development of the Phoenix missile. Research costs reported- ly have climbed from $137 million to around $240 million. The TFX, or F-111, comes in two versions-the "A" for the Air Force and the "B" for the Navy. Gen- eral Dynamics claims the two ver- sions have 85 per cent commonal- ity. The F-111B is being built for General Dynamics by Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., on Long Island, N.Y. Both versions employ a wing which will sweep from 16 degrees off a right angle extension, or nearly straight out, to 72.5 de- grees for high speed operations. The Air Force version has a wingspan of 63 feet and is 73 feet long. The Navy version has a 60- foot wingspan and length of 66.8 feet. The Air Force has bought the F-111 as a fighter-bomber, while the Navy plans to use it as a long- range interceptor Since their missions differ, the electronic equipment, or "black boxes," differ radically. THE AIR FORCE version is de- signed to travel at two and a half at its Fort Worth plant. There is no weight problem with the F- 11A. As for the Navy versions, the No. 3 had a 78,000 pound gross weight, a fact which set off the current controversy when the in- formation became public. After an intensive weight-reduc- tion program, Grumman turned out a slimmed down F-111B in July with a gross weight of 64,778 pounds, according to one source. This was still higher than the maximum of 55,000 pounds set by the Navy. ON THE BASIS of information gleaned from assorted sources in Congress, among the military and in industry, here is the way the No. 4 F-111B compares with the original specifications. The Navy asked for an empty weight of 39,000 pounds. No. 4 weighs 43,000 pounds. The Navy specified an aircraft which could land on a carrier an- 'shored in a dead calm. This re- quirement was changed by Mc- Namara to an arresting wind- over-deck of 10 knots, or 11.6 miles per hour. The Navy originally asked for an aircraft which could "loiter" for more than three hours at a distance of 750 miles from the fleet. This was reduced by the Pentagon to a range of around 500 miles and a loiter time under three hours. No. 4 is expected by Grum- man to meet the compromised loiter and range requirements. THE SERVICE ceiling of 55,000 feet has yet to be met by the F111B. A Grumman spokesman. said the No. 3 was never taken to its ceiling because Grumman knew if uns mr..un.,annt Anr+ onA nonn.- tion but what the Navy would not take them. We now think we have one hell of an aircraft and the Navy will buy it." One of the chief sources of the controversy concerns costs and in this area there is a welter of often confusing and conflicting figures. Both Davis and Lemlein say there is now no way to assess unit costs. They contend the unit costs can be ascertained only after a decision is made on how many aircraft will be built. . The Pentagon has announced a plan to buy 431 F111s, 24 of which will be for the Navy. This figures out to a unit cost of $2.3 million. General Dynamics original unit cost estimates, based on an order of 1,704 aircraft, with spare parts and spare engines came to $2.9 million each. WHAT MAKES the Pentagon purchase order unusual is that it was announced before a final de- cision on the F111B had been made and even before the No. 4 improved model had been turned out. Davis said in the telephone in- terview the only contract lie had in hand was a research, develop- ment and test one for $460 mil- lion with an allowable overrun'of 10.09 per cent. Any costs. above that, he said, will come out of the company's pocket. Actually, the number of aircraft the Pentagon proposes to buy has varied considerably. While the original costs centered around a "buy" of 1,704 for the latest fig- ures reportedly under discussion call for a purchase of 950 for the Air Force and 231 for the Navy plus 50 for the United Kingdom and 24 for Austraia:~ p4 j