Iiye £wmigzm i td Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ireland: An historical perspective 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 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY JACOBS Jail suit: Let the public see ON THURSDAY at 10 a.m. Ora DuBose, Betty Matthews and Sandra Rich- ardson, unconvicted inmates of the Washtenaw County Jail, will get a pre- liminary court examination on their suit' against all county employes responsible for the .operation of the jail. Perhaps accommodations there are only second rate when compared to a "Holiday InnI' as Sheriff Douglas Har- vey, who is named as a defendant in the suit, .contends. Perhaps one of the reasons toilets sometimes back up is because prisoners, as Harvey also contends, tear up bedding and stuff -the toilets with it. Perhaps one toilet for twenty people is adequate. Perhaps it does not matter that pri- soners must stand in their cells from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. or sit on a small steel bench, but may not lie on their beds. This is so they "will be tired "and not goof off at night," according to orne jail official. Perhaps prisoners should not be con- cerned. that they may talk to their attor- neys for long periods of time and to their families and friends for only 15 minutes a week._ These are only some of the charges and counter charges that are at the crux of this court action. SOME OF THE problems are certainly not new to the record. On January 19, 1971, a State Prison Inspector filed a list ,of at least 18 other items which he found in conflict with state law. However, there is no way to tell how many of these violations have been cor- rected because lawyers preparing the suit for the prisoners were not allowed into" the jail. County residents should not tolerate these ambiguities on the operation of a facility whose purpose is to rehabilitate people, and where a majority of the in- mates are either not convicted, or charged with misdemeanors. Court settlements are not the usual sblution chosen by powerless people in tense situations. But the plaintiffs have to their credit, chosen that route. The result of this decision should be that Washtenaw County residents will find out whether or not the jail is being administered in an illegal and uncon- stitutional manner as the suit contends. To accomplish this the courts must give the suit a fair hearing. BUT JUST a hearing is not enough, if the allegations of the inmates are true. Then the court must also act, as the suit requests, and bring a temporary in- junction against all those responsible for the jail until all illegal and/or unconsti- tutional conditions are corrected. -WILLIAM LILLVIS By BERNARD CULLEN THE COMPLEXITY of the cur- rent.turmoil in the north-east of Ireland almost defies analysis, The conflict is at once colonial, racial and socio-economic; to say that Northern Ireland Catholics Are blacks who happen to have white skins is indeed an oversim- plification, but, in the words of Liam de Paor in his excellent book Divided Ulster, "it is a better over- simplification than that which sees the struggle and conflict in Northern Ireland in terms of re- ligion". The early seventeenth century brought the Jacobean 'plantation' of the north of Ireland, whereby the native Catholics were driven off their land and replaced by En- glish and Scottish Protestant set- tIers. Irish Protestant fears about the succession of the Catholic James II to the English throne in 1685 consequently centered around the threat a Catholic king posed to their status as ascendancy land- owners in Ireland. Because the economic and re- ligioushdivisions coincided, how-' ever, the defeat of James by the Protestant William of Orange at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 readily took on religious over- tones which reverberate down to 1972. WELL INTO the nineteenth century the small Catholic popul- ation of Belfast was not seen as a threat to the livelihood or eco- nomic dominance of the liberal Protestant inhabitants and the friendliest relations obtained. Industrial development changed all that. The Great Famine caused thousands of starving Catholics to leave the land and come to seek work in the thriving linen- mills and tanneries of Belfast. A local leader of the Orange Order --a semi-secret Protestant society led by industrialists and large; landowners - is reported in 1859 to have told his Protestant sup- porters that they must not let these Catholic peasants come and take their jobs. So the Protestant workers-haunted by fears of un- dercutting and economic competi- tion at the subsistence level - turned on the Catholics. And this is the very instinct- the struggle for economic domi- nance, kCloaked in anti-Popery terms - which is being played on by unscrupulous vested interests in Northern Ireland today. It is therefore hardly surprising to find that the last three Prime Minis- ters have all been important land- owners and that ' the present Prime Minister, Brian Falkner, is the prosperous owner of a group of textile-mills. IN THE last General Election in Ireland in December 1918, 78 per cent of the Irish population voted Pr BRITISH TROOPS block road into Newry with armored car as they search incoming vehicles for firearms and explosives. The conflict between Protestant and Catholic factions in Northern Ireland has garnered headlines the world over, and produced a great deal of confusion in the minds of most people. To help elucidate this matter, we have asked three University students from ireland to present their views on the Irish problem. Army. The IRA bombing cam- paign was stepped up. And this gave Faulkner the pre- text on which to introduce his panacea for all Ulster's problems: internment of suspected subver- sives without trial. Five days after the first dawn raids on August 9, the "Evening Standard" carried the Army head- line, "We've licked the IRA." Cruel statistics have proved them wrong. In the six months since internment was introduced under the hated Special Powers Act (one of the original targets of the Civil Rights Movement), some 200 people have been killed, including some 50 soldiers. In this six-month period there have been over 5,000 shooting and bombing incidents, more than one every hour. Ever since the Catholics had the audacity to ask for basic Civil Rights on Oct. 5, 1968, each act of naked oppression by the British and Northern Ireland govern- ments has brought increased alienation of the Catholic popula- tion until today the homogenity of the half-million Catholics in their rejection of all things British cannot be overemphasized. In the process, Heath and Faulkner have 'been the IRA's most effective recruiting ser- geants. Forty per cent of the pop- ulation-equivalent to almost 100 million in the U.S. - are sup- porting the civil disobedience campaign; by withholding taxes,. rents, gas and electricty payments and by withdrawing completely from the machinery of govern- ment. WHAT IS THE way forward in Northern Ireland? It is clear that the present structure of govern- ment, which owes its very evist- ence to the domination of Catho- lic by Protestant, cannot tolerate to sever the link with Britain. The 20 per cent who voted to retain the union (hence the name Un- ionists) were in the North-East and in 1921 the British govern- inent submitted to military and economic pressures and partit- tioned the country into what is now the Irish Republic and Nor- thern Ireland. The latter was given control over its own police force and militia, judicial system and legislature. In the first two years of the province's existence, the militia- the all-Protestant B-Specials -- earned a reputation which they never afterwards lost, shooting dead some 300 Catholics, includ- ing 232 in the year 1922.. The government 'insurance pol- icy' against effective Catholic par- ticipation in Northern Ireland has been an elaborate system of elc- toral manipulation and discrimi- nation in employment and the al- location of government housing. In central government jobs - for example, the Civil Service - no Catholic rose above the bottom rung; while in local government and in private industry, Catholics did not get jobs at all. Unemployment has averaged 40 to 50 per cent in Catholic ghettoes in Derry, Strabane and Belfast. The Catholic population of coun- ty Fermanagh, for example, is 53.2 per cent. In March 1969 the Protestant - controlled county council employed 338 Protestants and 32 Catholics. The Belfast shipyard - the province's main employer - today employs 10,000 rotestants and 300 Catholics. ONE OF the most controversial elements of the Ireland situation is the Irish Republican Army (I RA). The principle reason for its widespread support and, in fact, its very existence, has been the excess brutality on the part of British troops. It is well to remember that it was not until Feb. 6, 1971 that the first British soldier was killed by the IRA. Their bombing campaign did not begin until April. Meanwhile, the much - vaunted reforms were sitting in then Prime' Minister Chichester-Clark's pend- ing tray. When the thoroughly in- effectual Clark was deposed, any slight chance his successor Faulk- ner had of communicating with the Catholic community disap- peared July 7-8, when 'two un- armed Derrymen, Cusack, and Beattie, were shot dead by the a meaningful Catholic voice in the governing of the province. An ov- erwhelming majority of the Irish people - and now the majority of the British people - want an end to British rule in Ireland A Pontius Pilate-like washing of hands by Britain would be an ab- dication of her responsibilities to- wards a lasting peace, founded bn justice, in Ireland. But the IRA has consistently said that it will lay down arms the minute the British release all Do- licital prisoners and set a date for total withdrawal from Ireland.; Then Faulkner and Lynch, the IRA and Paisley, and any other interested party can get together and thrash put a new constitution for a new Ireland. That constitution would have to be completely secular, as would education. Effective guarantees of civil.liberties for all Irish citizens would have to be enshrined in law. Despite the Irish tragedy of Catholics and Protestants being set at one another's throats by un- scrupulous politicians, there are signs that such Protestant leaders as Ian Paisley realize that the British influence has not, done their people much good either. Faced with the enormous prob- lems on the road to peace in Ire- land - which nobody wishes to pretend are not there - it is ter- ribly easy to be cynical (a recur- 4 ring Irish affliction). But cynicism is the last refuge of the defeatist. What Ireland needs now is not defeatism, but initiative, goodwill. imagination and, above all, hope. Bernard Cullen is a graduate student in philosophy who formerly resided in Belfast, Ireland. down the number of Catholics with a campaign of discrimina- tion. The Catholics were encour- aged by the Republic and the Church to ignore political activ- ity which might have combitt d this and to passively await the downfall of the state of Northern Ireland. Such was the stalemate which was only broken three years ago by the Civil Rights movement when the Catholics took political actions in the context of British politics. They have now reverted to their previous position of de- manding complete abolition of Northern Ireland and its WOW- sion in the Catholic Republic. This, then, is the position at the moment. There is little room for sloganeering or swashbuckling on the stage of Ann Arbor.- There may be some solutions possible, but none acceptable to both par- ties as long as the two parties re- main in their present glacial states. The problem can't be dismissed as imperialism or colonialism, but, rather, is the refusal of Irishmen # to accept each other for wht they are. And whatever else is certain, crude propagaldizing in Ann Ar- bor won't help at home. Time to recognize China Ireland: Need ol NOW THAT President Nixon has ar- rived in China, basked in the pub- licity of meeting with Chairman. Mao and Chou-en-Lai, and pledged the two na- tions-in a manner unmistakably Nixon --to "a long march" for peace, it may be a good time to ask our President to in- dulge in some more concrete actions. Specifically, now is the time for the U.S. government to do what its actions in the past years indicate we will event- ually end up doing: recognise the Peo- ple's Republi as the sole legitimate voice of the Chinese people. Endorsement' E HUMAN RIGHTS Party continues to pick up support from unexpected sources. First the Rainbow People's Party joined up, and now Bill Everett, a Fourth Ward Democrat who ran in the City Council primary, has endorsed the "efforts" of the HRP candidates. Everett further said he wished the Democrats had candidates as good in all five wards. Although as of the time this went to print it was unclear whether or not Ever- ett won the primary and is a candidate in the Fourth Ward, it would be nice. For then, he could continue his en- dorsement of HRP by stepping aside for HRP candidate David Black.- Nixon's trip is a grudging acceptance of the legitimacy of a government whose political direction we have failed to al- ter through subversion and attempted "containment." Through the recent relaxation of trade restrictions on our part, we have come further toward recognizing the political reality of a nation that may very well one day eclipse the United States as the world's leading power. Clearly, Nixon does not plan to with- hold official recognition of the People's Republic as the representative of the Chinese people. If he did, then his recent displomatic moves make no sense. The public realizes that these moves mean little in themselves and must pre- sage giving Mao's government the equal accord granted other: nations. In fact, Nixon's moves seem to be aimed at mak- ing several small nations with past po- sitions of anti-communism grant the People's republic full diplomatic recog- nition. IT IS LIKELY that the U.S. government will eventually grant the People's Republic diplomatic recognition. Our "two Chinas" policy was based on the premise that two million mainland- ers on Taiwan actually symbolized a civil war and possessed a government that was somehow more .credible than Mao's regime. This notion has proved false, des- pite millions in U.S. aid and military support. As with Bangla-Desh, full diplomatic recognition of the People's Republic is long overdue. By JOE McKENNA IN analyzing the Northern situ- ation, objectivity places terri- ble constraints on the average Irishman and demands that two almost irresistable temptations be avoided. First, one must shun any glorification of the present vio- lence arising from the results of gross historical oversimplifications and half-truths. One cannot re- gard himself as a valiant fighter against colonialism or as a hero of the third world. The tragedy of the situation should prevent Irish- men from puffing up their chests to share vicariously and safely in the glamour of the situation. - Second, one must avoid any re- version to tribal loyalties. Most Irishmen of Catholic background undergo a process of indictrina- tion in historical falsehoods and hatred of the English, which makes it difficult to think about Irish-English relationships with- out foaming at the mouth. This is something which the average American must bear in mind when listening to Irishmen on Ireland's problems. There are however, a few points which can be made, relevant to the present circumstances, with- out displaying the bigotry of ei- ther side. The Irish situation at the mo- ment is not in any way a colonial situation. To describe the long and complexrelationship of the two countries throughout 800 years by one crude emotive word -colonialism-is a mockery of the truth. IN THE EARLY part of this cen- tury, there were in Ireland two communities with largely differ- ing cultures and traditions. The Catholic group opted out of Great Britain, but resented the fact that it did not control the entire is- land. The Protestant group, with the help of the English Conserva- tive party stayed in the United Kingdom, controlling an area 40 per cent Catholic. This division excited hatred and suspicion on both sides, and it is this which is causing the prob- lems at the moment. Only three years ago did the Catholic Repub- lic renounce' the use of force as a means of i subjugating the North- ern Protestants. (The present constitution of the Republic claims jurisdiction over the entire island.) The Catholics refused to take any part in the Northern com- munity and hoped that their su- perior birthrate would eventually make them the majority in the area, after which, heaven help the Protestants. Worse still, in the Republic, the Catholics gave the Protestants in- timations of things to come. They set up a Church state which de- nied elementary civil rights to non-catholics and in which tax money was used, for example, to buy vestments for the Pope! The Protestants in the North. meanwhile, were busy keeping Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or deliveredtor a ry Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted. o --T.J. --MARK DILLEN Joe McKenna is a graduate student in mnathernatics and is a graduate of the University College, Dublin. CATHOLIC YOUTHS flee as a gas cannister explodes in their midst during disorders in the Bogside district of Londonderry. Ireland: The political manipulations By BRIAN MALLON TODAY'S CIVIL disorder in Ireland is the direct - though delayed result of the 1921 political fiasco known as the "Partition". This "settlement" de- creed that the Irish nation was to be "temporarily" divided. There were to be separate parliaments for the six north- eastern counties (Northern Ireland) and for the remainder of the island (Irish Free State). There was to be a joint council, with representatives from both parliaments, set up to work out differences and pave the way to reunification. This council was never established due to a decision by Ulster's ruling Unionist Party not to send delegates. In viewing the partition one must re- member that Ireland had been one na- tion for over 2000 years and remains so. The vast majority of the neople Ireland, began stirring up old religious animosities through unfair employment practices and hired demagogues. Had it not been also for the 12 Con- servative members of parliament which the Unionist Warty supplies the Conser- vative Party in Westminister, justice might have been done. The partition was inaugurated, sup- posedly, to prevent the Irish Protestants from "becoming" a one-fourth minority, in an Irish Republic. Apparently no one in London was concerned that Britain was simultaneously subjecting a pro- portionately larger number of Catholics to becoming a one-third minority in the newly contrived state. There is a familiar but twisted ring to the recent words of Ulster's prime minister Brian Faulkner, who says that it would be undemocratic to let the minority (the Catholics) alter the boundaries or con- stitution of his "nation". political parties in Northern Ireland to form along sectarian lines; a reaction- ary Unionist Party whose sole platform was the maintenance of its constitu- tional arrangement, versus a powerless Nationalist Party dedicated to achiev- ing a nonsectarian all-Ireland govern- ment. This unfortunate situation has nurtured religious dissociation, and has prevented, any and all economic and social progress. The government of Northern Ireland is, in its very essence, the institutional- ization of sectarian hatred. Through its creation and maintenance, the English government has said, in effect, the Ul- ster's Protestants do not have to toler- ate or cooperate with the island's Ro- man Catholic majority. A harmonious atmosphere is made virtually impossible in the North while the partition persists. The larger birth rate among Catholics causes Ulster's mandering. This art has been mastered and implemented to a scandalous de- gree in Ulster. An obvious example is that of Lon- donderry which has a substantial Cath- olic and Nationalist majority (29,000 votes out of 47,000). It was split into two areas, one of which was merged with an area extending eight miles into the country in order to counterbalance the Nationalists, and ensure Protestant Unionist control. Such proceedings are no more con- sistent with a free democracy than are the "Special Powers" denying individ- ual liberties to the opposition. These powers are presently responsible for the incarceration without trial of over one thousand Roman Catholics. PRIME MINISTER FAULKNER has answered critics with vacuous plans to eliminate discrimination and gerryman- dering. But he refuses to discuss the 4, 0