N Tuesday, January 18, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven 17 rI RADICAL GROUP Ann A By HOWARD BRICK A group of Ann Arbor young people have been attempting for about a year to raise the politi- cal consciousness of the city's youth. Ann Arbor Youth Liberation, a group of some 35 young people ranging from 11-19 years old, is dedicated. to liberating youth from the family, the courts and the schools. The group func- tions mainly in the city's high schools and junior high schools. The organization has drafted a fifteen-point program calling for an end to "adult chauvin- ism", full civil and human rights for youth, freedom for young people to form communal rather than nuclear families, and the right to determine their own education. The group also calls for an end to the male chauvinism, dis- crimination against homosex- uals and racism tley see in American society. Youth Liberation centers its attention on what it terms adult rbor youths seek 7iberation' chauvinism, defined as "the way people treat you because you are young" An organization c i r c u 1 a r states: "We believe ideas should be judged on their merit and people on their wisdom or kind- ness. Age in itself deserves no recognition . . . age might once have led to wisdom, but the old men have proven themselves un- able to deal with present real- ity." "If the human species is to continue," it goes on "the young must .take the lead." Last year, the group applied pressure on the city council to abolish curfew laws forbidding youth 16 or under to be on the streets after midnight. After a meeting with coun- cimen in which the -group's members voiced their com- plaints, the council voted 6-5 to reform the laws. Young people between the ages of 12 and 16 are now allowed on the streets after midnight as long as they are not "idling, congregating or loitering." At present, Youth Liberation is aiming most of its efforts at the status of youth in local schools. Students' Unions are being established in most of Ann Arbor's junior and senior high schools. Keith Hefner. a Youth Libera- tion member who has taken part in forming the new Pioneer High School Student Union, says the union's main goal is "to insure that students get proportional representation in the school." Stud, nss should have decision - making power, he said, and should have more voice in school affairs than teachers, "because their (teach- er's) lives aren't at stake." Another member of Youth Liberation, Martha Bowerman, said, however, that no progress has been made toward giving students in Ann Arbor more control over their own educa- tion. "I also don't believe that Pioneer II (the new experi- mental free school) really meets anybody's needs," she said. "It's just a bourgeoisie, upper mid- dIe class finishing school:" I Man Adapting to the Small Planet JEROME GOLDSTEIN, Executive Editor, Rodale Press "Organic Force, Social Practice, and Harmony With the Environment" Jan. 20, 7:30 P.M.. U.M. UGh Multipurpose Room Sponsored by Ann Arbor Community Organic Garden & the Ecology Center - . ElectSion-year Congress to face rigIhts issues as session opens U of M Students, Faculty and Staff GET LOST I WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate will be caught up in civil rights controversies with the be- ginning today of the second, election-year s,, ssion of the 92nd Congress. The issues of job discrimination and school busing are at the top of the Senate's agenda, with a scrap over rights for women just over the horizon. First up in the House are com- promise election reform and for- eign-aid authorization bills that the Senate passed before Con- gress adjourned last month. In a break with tradition. both branches plan to swing into ac- tion without waiting for President Nixon to deliver his State of the Union address Thursday to a joint session of the Senate and House. In addition to any new pro- grams he may present. Nixon is expected to appeal again for wel- LUNCH-D; TUESDAY, January 18 U.M. INTERNAT fare reform, revenue-sharing and, in the1971 session provides, as the other 1971 proposals left dangling administration recommended. for by the Democratic - controlled enforcement through court actions Congress. rather than giving the EEOC The first bill up in the Senate cease-and-desist powers. would broaden the ban on job The fight over this bill is to be discrimination and strengthen followed by another over a $23- enforcement powers of the Equal billion higher-education measure Employment Opportunity Com- to which the House attached anti- m'ssion (EEOC). busing amendments that were The commission, now limited to stricken by the Senate Labor Com- the use of persuasion and concil- mittee. iation in trying to prevent job Sen. Sam Ervin, Jr. (D-N.C.) discrimination, would be empow- plans to lead a fight to put in ered to issue cease-and-desist or- even stronger anti-busing pro- ders. visions. An aide said Ervin's key And the prohibition against dis- amendment would strip the fed- Armnthryprohibtiesoagaind x-eral courts of power to order bus- criminatory practices would be ex-in if they found that pupils tended to include state and local were assigned without regard to government employes and alsore s employers and labor unions with race.jr eigt o moe eploes r mm- Majority Leader Mike Mans- eight or more employes or mem- field (D-Mont.) said that once b rs. Only employei's and unions the measures are acted on he will with 25 or more employes or call up a constitutional emend- members are covered now. ment to guarantee women equal Legislation passed by the House rights with men. The House already has approv- ed this but in the Senate. where it SCU SSION was fatally filibustered in the pre- vious Congress, it faces another 12:00 Noon stiff fight. IONAL CENTER In addition to the organiza- tion's school program. Youth Lib. ration is planning to start cox:sciousness - raising sessions shortly. The sessions will be open signed to help young people "find out what their family's doing to them and what they can do to stop it." "The nuclear family doesn't work . . . because it's built around a society that doesn't work. It's an economic institu- tion in a dying economic sys- tem," says Dave Kaimowitz, an eighth grade member of Youth Liberation now living in a col- lective on Washtenaw Ave. with some fellow Youth Liberation members. The collective serves as headourters for the or- ganization. The organization views the nuclear family as unjust be- cause "young people are now consid,r d property to -be molded in the image of their narents," according to one mem- ber. Youth L beration believes that yours people will be in- strumentalinsconducting a rev- o'ution in this country, "Youth will make the revolution." they declare. "Ycrth will keep it young." However members of the or- ganization say that this does not mean they wish to exclude older people from the revolu- t onary movement. "Youth can lead, but there's no way they're going to make a successful rev- olution on their own," Kaimo- witz said. Kaimowitz said that most people in the organization are sociaits or anarchists. He de- scaib'd himself as the latter, ,nd caled for social. organiza- tion on n .dcontralized, com- menity bas. Youth Tbhration offers local high school students other serv- ices. includina the Cooperative Hi-h School Tndependant Press vr di-ate (CT-TIPS). which pro- vide- help to students who have ste rte*'0o' vrho wish to start indoendpnt newspapers in their hi-h sch^o's. and Freedom; Peace. and Solidarity (FPS), a biwe'ek'y newsservice providing news and graphics for inde- pendent high school papers. The organization also prints its own newspaper. Youth Ris- na. and numerous pamphlets on subjects of interest to youth. .6%1 .1 W IP & % I .I SUBJECT: "U.S.-Japan Relations: Prospects for '72" Speaker: DANIEL OKIMOTO, Author of AMERICAN IN DISGUISE Cost: 50c For Reservations Call 662-5529 Sponsored by: Ecumenical Campus Center 1 BLACK & AFRICAN STUDIES The African Diaspora and the Concept of Charisma THE EMERGENCE OF AN IDENTITY AND A PEOPLEHOOD OF GROUPS DISPERSED BETWEEN TWO CONTINENTS AND SEVERAL WORLDS. Political Sc eace 495-Underg aduate Seminar in Political Theory FIRST CLASS MEETING: WED., JAN. 19, 2 P.M. 6602 HAVEN HALL Heavy Duty Steering and SuspensionParts " BALL JOINTS " IDLER ARMS * TIE ROD I BR'DGE CLASSES BEGIN TODAY ,See details in Personal Column .I 'f L SAVE! up to 3313% Buy USED TEXTBOOKS Prices on Levi 's are going up Feb. ist On Dec. 3, 1971 Levi Strauss (with permis- sion from the government) raised their prices to us. As of Feb. 1st we are raisina our orices to AT FOLLETT'S Michigan Book Store State St. at North U. N. I . l