Wit £ir an Dannt Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Positions of 2nd Ward candidates Nancy Wechsler-HRP Mike Morris-Democrat 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. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: SARA FITZGERALD Supporting Afro housing TODAY THE Regents have a chance to reaffirm their two-year-old commit- 'ment to black students on this campus. The Afro-American Cultural Living Unit plan, which would set aside parts of South Quad specifically for those in- terested in black culture, comes up for the Regents to pass or kill at a special meeting of that body today. The proposal was also up before the Regents earlier this month, and they heard two days worth of comments on the unit. Then, as usual, they dodged, failing to rule and sending the plan back into limbo for another few weeks while they thought about it. In every dormitory, blacks are separ- ated in a sea of whites. Racial tensions have grown this year to such an extent that many dorms are completely and bit- terly polarized. Blacks living in South Quad say they have no base from which to function politically or socially. BLACKS NEED and deserve a living place where they can exercise their life style and the cultural unit would be such a place. It would allow blacks and those interested in black cultural ex- perience a freedom of life style in a way which would avoid the conflict that two different cultures clashing on the same dorm corridor invites. The clashes these days quite clearly do not lead to the blissful understanding be- tween the groups that those favoring in- tegration at all costs hope for. But perhaps such understanding could be reached through the development and growth of a black life style in the dorms and the special programs and projects incorporated into the Cultural Living Unit plan for disseminating information and opinion about that life style. Certainly rap sessions an Afro-Ameri- can Cultural Living Unit would sponsor would be more conducive to understand- ing than is the present picture of blacks and whites eating at separate tables in the South Quad dining hall. Two years ago this week blacks and whites together struck for increase black enrollment and increased programs for blacks on this campus. At that time, the Regents made a com- mitment; not only to let in more blacks, but to create affirmative action devices needed to augment their educaional ex- perience once admitted. The cultural living unit plan, proposed not by the administration, but by the blacks themselves, is one such necessary device. It would be a tragedy if they don't realize this and pass the plan at today's meeting. -TAMMY JACOBS Editorial Director By MIKE MORRIS FOR TEN YEARS I was an independent voter. No party was responsive to the people's needs. After moving to Ann Arbor, I discovered the Ann Arbor Demo- cratic Party. Here I found the people who believe what I believe and who are working for what I , " } want to see. Here I found the men a n d women who know that people are m o r e important than property. Here I found the people who know that even small advances do more to make li f e better than a whole fistful of grandiose impossible plans. I have been a Democrat for little more than a, year and am proud to represent my party in the second ward. I have learned that community involve- ment is a difficult and necessary part of loving a city and making it a better place to live. Mose of us are perfectly willing to let the other person do the work. Unfortunately, the otherperson t is usually the landlord, the profiteer, the destroyer. We need the people who really love the city to do more of the work. The Ann Arbor Democratic Party is many of those people. We need to change some of the forms of city government to make it morie're- sponsive to all of the citizens. People need to have more say in the design and operation of those city services and fa- cilities which affect their everyday lives. More people are needed to help with the work of existing citywide boards and commissions. Ironically, it is sometimes even difficult to find people to serve on these. vital but unspectacular poi~cy boards. CITY COUNCIL seldom deals in grand designs. By its nature it acts on seem- ingly humdrum proposals which can make living in Ann Arbor a. little better or a little worse. As your council representa- tive I will work in this framework to build a better city. I will not pretend that I can drive landlords out of town. Instead, I will introduce measures de- signed to make them treat tenants fair- ly. I will not let the city deteriorate while waiting for an ideal tax system. In- stead, I will support the only income tax state law allows. -Meanwhile I will con- tinue the twenty-year-long Democratic fight for a graduated income tax. I will not merely sermonize about the root caus- . es of crime, although I am very con- cerned about them. Instead, I will work 'to institute continuing training p r o - grams to make police officers more hu- mane in their treatment of minorities and more effective in their prevention of serious crime. I will not make grand speeches about the quality of life. In- stead I will support proposals to imprave garbage collection and to begin a city- wide recycling system. The Packard-Beakes highway is a clear issue of people against machines. One of the first accomplishments of the Demo- crats when they took office in 1969 (for the first time in 40 years) was the estab- lishment of a city bus system. Without buses the poor can not get to work and new highways have to be built. My party has Worked hard to preserve that sys- tem against Republican attempts to dis- mantle it. My party is committed to the integrity of residential neighborhoods against traffic. All four Democratic coun- cil members voted against Packard-Beak- es. All five Democratic council cand- idates oppose it. Next Monday's election is a crucial one. I believe the voters will choose a humane and realistic vision of the future. I be- lieve you will not be misled by false promises of easy solutions to difficult problems. I believe you will choose real reform. I believe you will vote Demo- cratic. By NANCY WECHSLER THE HRP is a grass roots, open, demo- cratically run party. All our political decisions are made at publicized .o p e n meetings. I as a candidate for the party am committed to the decisions made at those meetings, both during this campaign and when I am on ; council. I am nots running merely as an individual but to represent an entire group of people who have never before been represented in city government - including women, the young, students, workers, and those disillusioned by the other two parties. Presently there is not one woman on city council. Three out of the five HRP candidates ,for city council are women- a good reflection of the position women have taken in the party. It is important that we begin to elect women with good politics to office. If people will get out and vote on Tom Burnham-Republican SGC election inquiry By TOM BURNHAM WE THE students of Ann Arbor have been promised two things by City Council for many years. First, we have been assured that council is sympathetic to the desires of young people and se- condly, that action on student concerns would be forthcoming. I have been at the University for seven years and have yet to see those promises ful- filled. As a councilman, I would plan to < make immediate ap- plication for avail- ,, s able federal funds, to educate, treat a n de rehilitte drug-addicted persons. Having lived in London and Paris for most of my teen- age life, I am most aware of their ad- ministered legalized-heroin-to-addicts pro- gram. I expounded this program long before this campaigntstartedgand am enthused that Rep. Ray Smit (R-Ann Arbor) has recently introduced to t h e Michigan legislature a bill which would al- low this in Michigan. The issue of transportation n e e d s considerable attention. I support a mass transportation system which serves at the least the poorer areas of town. I would. urge the construction of bicycle paths between student housing areas and the campus and the transformation of East U. and South U. into tree-lined malls. I also support satellite parking. THE ECOLOGY of Ann Arbor has been subjected to muh hypocriticalhrhetoric and little action. I spoke at some length with the Director of the Ecology Center and discovered that they are stymied by lack of funds. Realizing that the City could be of little help, I went to Wash- ington last week to lobby for the funds the Center needs. I met with the White House staff and several Congressmen and Senators. They were sympathetic and as a result Congressman Esch will introduce legislation designed to help our Center. It appears that the University campus may very well become a precinct of the Ann Arbor Police Department. I support student representation on a mandatory review board concerning actions of police on campus. I also urge that these police be extremely well trained so as not to instigate any foolish problems with stu- dents. We niust provide low-cost housing to the disadvantaged of this city. Our public housing units must be properly run or it is quite clear that HUD will remove the subsidy and the poor will lliterally be on the streets. I believe the poor should be given a, chance to earn equity ownership in homes and thus I support more "sec- tion 235" housing in Ann Arbor. April 3 it looks as if at least two HRP -candidates will be elected. On Council we will not just vote the right way' but mobilize people in the Ann Arbor community around issues af- fecting their lives. We will actively par- ticipate in local demonstrations and strike support. The budget comes up for discussion right after the election and HRP will make motions to change budget priorities. Rather than enlarging the police force, HRP believes the City should substan- tially increase services such as child- care, housing, and transportation. We will work for community control of these services. WE WILL, as councilpeople, have ac- cess to a great deal of information that is presently not readily available to the public. We will make this information public and readable, so that everyone understands the issues. We will bring up motions and get the other parties on the record on where they stand - on strong anti-strike breaking ordinances, on discrimination based on sex and sexual preference, on drug laws, on ecology. Right now when we go to city council meetings we are ignored. Guy Larcom (who has been city admin- istrator for almost 16 years) and Walter Krasny (chief of police) should be fired. We will work for community control of the police. A referendum should be placed on the ballot for a change in the city's form of government to do away with the post of city administrator and have a full-time elected mayor. The HRP will push to eliminate the ward system which gerrymanders Ann Arbor so that students and lower in- come people have less political power. If this fails we will have input into how the wards will be drawn for the next election and push for preferential ballot- ing, where people could vote for their first and second choice. We can stop future disasters like Briar- wood and Packard Breakes (Ashley- First). I URGE people to join the third party movement in Ann Arbor. It is time we stop voting for the lesser of two evils and cast a positive vote for social change. This election, on April 3, is of local and national significance. More young people and students have regter- ed to vote in the second ward this year than the total number of votes received last year by all the candidates combined. Your vote will count. RECENT All-Campus elections were the ugliest, dirtiest and most incom- petently run in recent memory - which isn't to say there hasn't been ugliness be- fore. This year the elections were marked by vicious personal allegations between can- didates, ripped-down posters and a wide- spread atmosphere of antagonism. Last Tuesday, the final day of voting, The Daily was besieged with complaints from students who said they had been un- able to vote because nearby polling booths had closed down earlier than scheduled. Representatives from the business school called to complain that their bal- lots had not been picked up almost six hours after their poll had closed. SGC election results were not availablenuntil more than a day after the voting had ended. Results of the LS&A election were not made official until almost a week after the election - during which nearly 200 ballots showed up and changed the out- comie of certain contests significantly. MOST SERIOUS of the charges of fail- ure in the election are those alleg- ing fraud. A significant number of bal- lots were voided immediately. SGC Elec- tion Director Dave Schaper's amorphous explanation was that "the ballots were received in such a way that SGC's Cre- dentials and Rules Committee judged them (to be) stuffed." The ballot stuffing charges have ac- celerated in the last two days as a coali- tion -of the right and the left have brought charges of massive fraud before C&R - charges which will be heard by Central Student Judiciary in the next few days. Joel Silverstein, a Council member, has challenged Shaper to take a polygraph test. Although it would be difficult to imagine that Shaper knowingly and pur- posely fixed the election, such a test might well help to clear the muddled air. It is also important that a new Elec- tions Director be found. Shaper has clear- ly shown his administrative incompetence in this election and in the interest of both smooth running future elections and increased confidence among students in the election procedures, such a change would be advisable. It is not fair to throw all the blame on Shaper, however. He had no experience when he was given the job six months ago and is only a freshman. The sensi- tive position of Elections Director should be given to a person both with experience and with widely established respect. STUDENT RESPECT for both the elec- tion process and the effectiveness of elected representatives is low enough without the added ugly implications of the recent election. -TONY SCHWARTZ 4 t Letters: HRP best on sexism issue To The Daily: THE MEMBERS of the Human Rights Party are to be applauded for their progressive, humanitar- ian platform. Their unique ap- proach to the problems of sexism, drug use, and housing contrasts greatly with the platforms of oth- er candidates for City Council. Their statement on sexism ex- emplifies this best. While their opponents are content, by and large, to let current trends set their pace, the Human Rights Party promises-to Work for the repeal of laws discriminating against homosexuals. They defend the right of the individual to ex- ercise his own sexual prtference. This is a courageous stand and shows well their depth of concern for the civil rights of homosexuals. The other candidates fail to re- spond either from lack of concern or from fear of losing votes. Councilmen of the courage and integrity of Jerry deGrieck, Nancy Wechsler, Genie Plamondon, Da- vid Black, and Nancy Romer Burghhardt will work for the rights of all individuals. We urge all members of the gay community and those sympathetic to the cause of human rights to support HRP in the election on April 3. -Gay Liberation Front Ann Arbor, Michigan March 28 An incident To The Daily: AS I WAS WALKING to class today, an incident occurred which may interest the voters of Ann Arbor. A middle aged "gentleman" (in brown coat, hat and wearing glasses - keep your eye out for him), with a bundle of torn post- ers under his arm, was tearing down Genie Plamondon's cam- paign poster and bumper sticker off a telephone pole. I walked up to him and said: "Hey you fucker ! What're you tearing them down for?" This member of the silent majority didn't say anything but continued tearing down the last of the bumper stickers from the pole. As he left, I made an appropriate remark to the fascist vandal. I bet I lowered his opinion of youth. -Steven McClure, '72 March 28 Vitamins To The Daily: SUSAN BROWN'S article vitamins (Daily, March brought up some points that countering. on 21) need Adelle Davis appears in the ar- ticle as "the high priestess of popular nutrition" - an unfortun- ate choice of terms at best. Any- one familiar with Adelle's w o r k knows that she bases her advice firmly in scientific fact; the black magic connotations of "high priest- ess" couldn't be more out of place. "Popular nutrition" is another ill-chosen phrase. It "popular" means controversial, uncomprom- ising, and against the processed food industry, Adelle's opinions might be better labeled "radical." Soledad: A stacked deck IN DEATH, Black Soledad Brother George Jackson has become a symbolic figure in the travesty of American justice. First. sent to prison for petty larceny, Jackson became well known for a book called "Letters from Prison," which de- scribed the agony of prison life and the social inequity which sends some crim- inals to prison. but lets other roam the streets as free citizens. Jackson's name emerged in headlines in January, 1970, when he and two other prisoners were accused of murdering a white prison guard at the Soledad Prison. Jackson died last August, shot by prison guards at San Quentin, for what they termed an escape attempt, but he con- Editorial Staff ALAN LENHOFF Editor SARA FITZGERALD............. Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS..................Editorial Director CARLA RAPOPORT.................Executive Editor ROBERT SCHREINER................ .. News Editor ROSE SUE BERSTEIN. .......Feature Editor PAT BAUER ...A.......Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY.............Editorial Page Editor MARK DILLENE................Editorial Page Editor ARTHUR LERNER ..... Editorial Page Editor PAULTY'R.AVIS Ar.ii- tinues to command headline space for his link to Angela Davis. Davis is now on trial for a complex charge of murder-kidnap-conspiracy. Ac- cording to the state of California, Davis had plotted to set free the three Soledad Brothers, and to supply the guns for a Marin County courtroom break. Jonathan Jackson, brother of George, a judge and two others were killed in the resulting shootout, allegedly planned to arrange ransom for the Soledad brothers. Although charges against Jackson were dropped when he was slain, the remain- ing two Soledad Brothers stood trial on the murder charge and were acquitted Monday. Exoneration came too late, however, to save George Jackson from a savage death. BUT THE San Francisco verdict that freed John Clutchette and Fleeta Drumgo on the Soledad charges-Drumgo still faces indictment stemming from the violence at San Quentin - can serve as a valuable lesson to at least the two juries that, will decide the fate of Angela Davis and Fleeta Drumgo. The American court system has grave- GUEST VIEWPOINT The police and political harassment If "popular" means bastardized, amateur, or unfounded, the term doesn't apply at all. Adelle Davis must represent some sort of threat to the medical and dietetic professions. Why else would Health Servicenphysician Max Durfee call someone with a graduate degree in biochemistry and 30 years of nutritional re- search expericence "a food fadist with relatively little education?" If Dr. Durfee ever took the time to check Adelle's sources, he would find that the nutritional reseach she endorses appears in the saime august journals whose advice doc- tors everywhere follow (e.g. the Journal of the American Medical Association, Lancet, 'etc.). Adelle says repeatedly in h e r books that people should follow their doctors' advice; doctors know medicine. They don't, however, have 30 years of practical nutrition behind them. Medicine and nutrition are two different areas of specializa- tion. Adelle Davis is not a "food fadist." I think I can speak for quite a few people who know that it does make a difference in your health when you eat the healthy foods that Adelle bavis recommends. --Barton Evans March 22 Burnham To The Daily: BURNHAM is a fraud. He told me last week that he has itept his Republican party affiliation off his campaign materials and newspap- er ads because he wants to win. It is a tactic designed to tem- porarily disassociate him from the Republican oligarchy in 'is city. He realizes that the people of Ann Arbor won't buy that clique of conservative business interests any more, so he's trying some dif- ferent packaging. Don't buy Burnham. He's still the guy who heckled Mayor Har- ris last year, quoting Stephenson and charging Harris with:being too haird on landlords. 1He's run Mfr . EDITOR'S NOTE: The author is a mem- ber of the Washtenaw Organizing Com- mittee, a "revolutionary-socialist group of students and workers." While Ann Arbor Police yesterday did not specifically re- fute Burke's charges, a police spokes- man said picketers were responsible for "quite a bit of malicious destruction" and that the police were at the scene "just to keep the exits and entrances peaceful." By DOUG BURKE ON MARCH 22 I was arrested on suspicion of having tried - and failed - to bend a car antenna. The interrogation I went through afterwards gave me a lesson in threats, intimidation, and lies by the police. It also showed that they seem to be very upset when students and workers begin to get together. It began at the Commission on Professional and Hospital Activities, where striking work- ers and outside supporters were picketing. Af- ter a, scab car went through, almost hitting me (I have been hit by cars there before), the window in the metal door, looked at me, then closed it up again. Then a Detective Bunten came to get me. He started out pretty chummy, suggesting that we talk the situation over and get it sraightened out. We went through questions abou height-weight-a ddmess-age etc., and when he found out I had been arrested in the 1968 welfare sit-in, he got very nostalgic. No kid- ding, he said, he had worked that one too, that was a long time ago. Then came the questions. We only spent a minute or two on my alleged crime; he asked if I had done it, and I said no. He said that might be true, it wasn't for him to say, but anyway that wasn't what he was really interested in. He wanted to know what I was doing there in the first place. FROM THAT POINT ON, as I see it, he. wasn't investigating a crime but doing politi- cal interrogation that was none of his busi- ness.I don't remember the order of it all for sure, but there were some very peculiar things that went on. He tried to make me feel all alone, and stupid as to believe it. Maybe he wanted me to think I was being cheated out of my share. He tried to scare me by talking about a maximum sentence of 90 days and $500 - "plus restitution." I suppose he was telling the truth, but I don't think that kind of use of fear is legitimate. And he asked me a whole lot of questions about why I was at the picket line. What was the strike about, where had I heard about it, did the union solicit me, didn't I think that only members of the union concerned in a strike should picket? Eventually I told him I thought his questions were irrelevant to my alleged "crime." He answered with a vague threat: that if he could show that the union solicited people and paid them to do any damage, he would hang a conspiracy charge on everyone out there. When I said I didn't want to talk any more, he put me in the lockup for a few more minutes, then took my. picture and released me, "pending issuance of a war- rant." I don't know whether they'll issue a warrant or not. 1