Page 4-ThursdayNovember 8, 1979-The Michigan Daily DENNIS KUCINICH be Mitt4Cbgan B a401 Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 55 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan How populist mayor took on corporate world- : ° '[ { f r.. . ... .u . The Klan's m HEREHAS BEEN a frightening .resurgence in recent months of the one dreaded organization that has most come to symbolize a hatred,. blatant, unmasked racism, and the basest instincts of American society. The Ku Klux Klan has been staging with alarming regularity more open public displays of their own articular brand of racism, with public marches, rallies, and an accompanyung upsurge in violence against those who choose to oppose what the Klan represents. It would be nice if the Klan perfor- imed the vanishing act that President Carter once wished upon the P.L.O.-that they just go away. But unfortunately, the Klan is here to stay, and the organization of fear is showing that it will no longer be content with a low-profile. But once again, as was the case with Nazis in Skokie, the Klan resurgence confronts civil libertarians with a pain- ful dilemma of freedom of expression weighed against a tolerance pf those disdainful . elements in society all reasonable people would like to eliminate. The Klan has a con- stitutional right to hold their marches, their rallies of hatred, as much as the Nazis had a right to march in Skokie. But as Mayor Coleman Young suggested when confronted with the threat of a KKK march in Detroit, the most recent Klan activity-like in Greensboro, North Carolina-has been accomplished by the kind of violence that makes Klan marches as much a real physical threat as they are morally obnoxious. Unfortunately, the constitution protects Nazis and Klansmen in- discriminately. Tolerance of their vile viewpoints must be legally tolerated fbr no other reason than that the alter- Other voices comeback native is a kind of censorship even more potentially harmful than the hatred these groups espouse. Detroit may have been saved from making the choice, since apparently the planned march is someone else's idea of a prac- tical joke. But the larger question is one that will not so easily be resolved, and will hopefully be settled on rational, constitutional--not emotional and moral-grounds. Perhaps~ the saddest aspect of the KKK's comeback-if indeed it ever was gone-is that it is being met not with the kind of vehement opposition afforded such an organization, but with a general apathy, unconcern, and negation 'of the very real threat. Yesterday's anti-Klan rally on the diag, for instance, drew only a few scattered supporters, when everyone on campus who believes in common decency should feel incensed by the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan. Make nomistake-the Klan is dangerous. They not only advocate racism, but would manifest their ugly creed in murder, death and destruc- tion. The Klan is perhaps more dangerous now than they were in their heyday, the 1950s and '60s, because now they are less feared, more tolerated, and for some stange reason perceived as less of a threat. Met by a tolerant, apathetic public, the Klan can stage its comeback unabated, and the time will not be long before this country returns to the reign of terror that the Klan used to symbolize to American blacks in the south. But if confronted head on by an indignant and unreceptive public, the Klan's comeback can be checked now, before it gets out of hand, and with'out the need for laws and regulations that threaten constitutional freedoms. .0 .. Clockwise, left to right, pictures of Kucinich. This editorial appeared November 2 in the Daily Northwestern, Evansville, Ill. 'NU students should o ji tenants' march Monday T HERE ARE A few issues that hit closer to home than housing problems. And for Northwestern students, the housing question has always been a major concern. Housing is not guaran- teed for upperclassmen; a campus housing crunch has always been a problem. \ , But the problem has always been made worse by the fact that in Evan- ston, the housing situation has neven been much better. And it's only getting worse. Making matters worse has been the trend toward making condominium conversions. In a housing market where the apartment vacancy rate is less than one per cent, the number of apartments "going condo" is a serious concern. Before the adoption of a 1978 tem- porary moratorium, almost 1,800 apar- tments had been converted to con- dominiums in the past five years. And since this moratorium was lifted earlier this year, more than 300 more apartments have been converted. The numbers are alarming. Also alarming is the council's overall lack of concern for the city's tenants. *The council's concern for its tenants can be best described as slim to none. But the council has been able' to maintain this lack of concern because, among other reasons, there hasn't been a great deal of tenant opposition to the council's treatment. ThAM T 7rnf ~4c OArC~~i i~ 7 *ueui 'of F .. future of the city's housing market should join the march Monday night. TPE has three major goals : " an immediate moratorium to halt condominium conversions in Evan- tston; * an immediate freeze on rents; " a requirement that landlords must show cause if they refuse to renew a tenant's lease. It is unclear what exactly the alder- men will do when a group of tenants come to the council meeting, deman- ding some action. In the past, the council hasn't been especially sym- pathetic with tenant's concerns. The aldermen will surely not act unless they see that there's a great demand for some change. Everyone interested-and that should be almost all NU students; a n d Evanston tenants-should join TOE members and march on city council. It can only help. EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner.........................EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard Berke. Julie Rovern.........MANAGING EDITORS Michael Arkush, Keith Richburg.....EDITORIAL DIRECTORS Brian Blanchard..................UNIVERSITY EIlTOR Judy Rakowsky. ..................... .......CITY EDITOR Shelley Wolson..................PERSONNEL DIRECTOR Amy Saltzman.....................FEATURES EDITOR Leonard Bernstein.................... SPECIAL PROJECTS R.J. SmithEric Zorn..........................ART.SEDITORS Owen Gleiberman. Elizabeth Slowik..... MAGAZINE EDITORS STAFF WRITERS-sara Anspach, Julie Brown, Richard Blan- chard. Mitch Cantor, Sefany Cooperman, Amy Diamond. Mari- anne Egri, Julie Engebrecht Mary Faranski. Joyce Frieden, Greg Gallopulos; John Goyer. Patricia Hlagen, Marion Flalberg, Public Square is Cleveland's open space downtown where obligatory monuments pay tribute to Civil War Dead, and the city's founder Moses Cleaveland; and old men in thin grey suits feed pigeons. But just a jaunt across any of the four streets bordering the square are the grand department stores, the banks, and the cor- porate offices that established Cleveland as a major commer- cial and industrial center. IN THE EARLY years of this century Cleveland had it all. It had the jobs offered by com- panies like John Rockefeller's, and it had the wealth which led to the establishment of the prestigious cultural attractions such as the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Cleveland Orchestra and several fine colleges and univer- sities. At the same time, however, the city thrived on a populist spirit of municipal democracy best captured in the person of progressive-era mayor Tom Johnson. But like all the big, old declining cities of the northeast and midwest, Cleveland has fallen on dark days, if not the darkest of all the cities in its fiscally decrepit league. With massive service cutbacks, two defaults, and a river thattactually caught on fire, the troubles plaguing Cleveland are so bad outsiders can only laugh. And Cleveland, the mistake-on-the- lake, has become just that, a-national joke. When things were good in Cleveland, when there was money to build things like the or- nate downtown auditorium, Public Hall, the people who lived on the city's sprawling residen- tial neighborhoods worked 12- hour days in steel mills and refineries that still ring the city in an ugly polluted wasteland. They went to work, church, and in the summer met for Italian, riots ripped through Cleveland's east side in the late 60s and the city's tax base fled to suburbs like Beachwood, Lyndhurst and Pepper Pike; that happy coexistence between business en- trepreneurship and municipal democracy has disintegrated in- to the angry side-choosing of the City's recent mayoral election. Dennis Kucinich-for whom politicians and journalists have devised a tiresome stable of key adjectives such as feisty, -beleaguered, and maverick-is perhaps most responsible for the polarization of the city's fac- tionalized community. The city's worst, and most crippling split is along racial lines which Kucinich has tacitly approved at least up until the last gasps of the campaign when he pulled in former Cleveland mayor Carl Stokes in from his New York television job for a string of last-minute commercial endorsements. But in his two years as mayor Kucinich did lit- tle to conquer the racist attitudes that thrive on the city's west side where he grew up. The city literally is split in two by the fiery Cuyahoga River : Whites to the west and blacks to the east and each side is equally uncom- promising. Other Kucinich decisions resulting in increased fac- tionalism include his continued opposition to community organizing-which many urban theorists view as the last hope for city neighborhoods-calling organizers "outside agitators." Kucinich's political appointmen- ts of young relatively inexperien- ced officials loyal only to him have also brought fire from all sides. NO ONE CAN blame Kucinich for the defaults which even the Senate Banking Committee pin- ne onfnrmnr mav~nrs uwho ilged By Sue Warner so many issues. Despite his inability to solve Cleveland's problems, and a major problem that is, Kucinich has raised legitimate questions about corporate control in urban policy making. While the mayors of Detroit and New York win praise for their ability to revive corporate interest in urban problems, Kucinich questioned how much control they ought to have. In both those cities mayors have successfully been able to wheedle revitalization projects out of the corporate community which are said to benefit both the company and the community. The problem is that no one asked the people or the government structure which is supposedly in charge of administering such policy and planning decisions. IN NEW YORK AND in Detroit's New Center area, the complaints are common now that the development which will no doubt return revenue to the city coffers will at the same time, leave poor inner city dwellers homelew if the advantages of the corporate development outweigh the displacement of a few in- dividuals then it oughtto be done. But those decisions must be made through the channels already devised, with the benefit of citizen input, not by benevolent mayors and corporate boards. For whatever reason, a genuine belief in his authority as the people's elected represen- tative, or some personal ego trip, Kucinich stood behind his position as an elected official and refused to allow the city's developmental decisions to be made in corporate rooms. But genuine compromise on issues such as these are needed if the nation's dismal urban areas are ever to be revivied. Kucinich was unable to make the corporate community invest in the city through ways that may well have been best for the people living there. But at the same time, he did not permit the cor- porate community and gover. nment to swing deals which may have led to increased corporate benefits and been perhaps har mful to the city. Now that his tenure is ended Kucinich, at the age of 33, as probably far from finished in. politics. The prevailing rumor _i that he aspires to become gover- nor of Ohio, which would probably result in the- same disasterous personal style whic. left Cleveland in a stalemate during Kucinich's term a. mayor. He is not the type of politician who ought to bie placed in sole charge of a par ticular constituency such as a, city or a state. Kucinich recently has been seen lunching with Tom Hayden. in Washington and it seems' there is a place for him in a nation~l role either through interest- groups or perhaps another stint in Congress, both of which might be the best place for Kucinich who has the right ideas, and the ability to voice them, but lacks the political savvy to get them accomplished. Sue Warner, Daily editor- in-chief, lived in Cleveland last summer. 1 F t } M I Y