Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, September 9, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Govt. faces dissenters Instability plagues national economy in courtroom contest By CHRIS PARKS Although it had its share of riots and demonstrations, this summer will be remembered more for what happened in the court rooms than in the streets with attention focusing on three major trials with strongly politi- cal overtones. , In the past few years the spec- tacle of famous radicals on trial under the glare of nation-wide publicity has been a common one on the American political scene. Black Panthers Huey Newton and Bobby Seale as well as radi- cal leaders Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Rennie Davis, and Tom Hayden have all confronted the government in trials which have attracted national attention. What was unique about trials this summer, however, was not their political overtones or the attendant publicity but rather the end results. In three major trials, various governmental units failed to secure convictions against dis- sident elements. On May 13 a New York jury found 13 Black Panthers innocent of bombing and murder conspir- acy charges, in the longest crimi- nal litigation in New York State r history. After eight months of trial, the jury took three and one half hours to find the 13 innocent of 156 separate counts of conspiring to bomb police headquarters and several other public facilities in- cluding the botanical gardens. This was followed 12 days later by the dismissal of all charges in a case involving the Black Pan- ther's national chairman Bobby Seale. Seale, along with Erika Hug- gifs, was charged with murder and kidnap conspiracy in the shooting death in May, 1969 of Alex Rackley in New Haven. After six days of deliberation the jury was unable to reach a unanimous verdict and presiding judge Harold Mulvey declared the case a mistrial. Two days later Mulvey ruled that massive publicity made the selection of an impartial jury im- possible, and dismissed all charges against both defendants. Once again a governmental unit, in this case the state of Connecticut, had failed to secure the conviction of a radical. More- over, the judge's basis for dismis- sal - inability to secure an im- partial jury - acknowledged a long held contention of defend- ants in such cases. These cases, although signifi- By E. CONOMY With rising unemployment at home, and the quaking of the dol- lar in Europe, the American economy seemed more unstable this summer than at any time since the great depression of the 1930's. Despite optimistic statements emanating from the White House, vital economic indicaters such as the wholesale price index, un- employment rate, and rate of in- dustrial production have contin- ued to tell a dismal tale of eco- nomic slump, and rampant in- flation. With workers caught in a bind between inflation and a business recession, the purchasing power of the average American family dropped for the first time in over a decade. A growing pessimism among government leaders has been re- flected in public statements of various political figures which have often sounded reminiscent of the depression era. Speaker of the House Carl Al- bert (D-Okla) for example, re- cently characterized unemploy- ment as having reached "bread- line proportions". Receiving the brunt of the cri- ticism for the present state of the economy has been the Nixon ad- ministration. George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, has termed the Nixon economic program "a miserable failure." A frequent charge of liberal economists has been that the ad- ministration has failed to curb inflation because of its unwilling- ness to impose wage and price controls in industry and labor. Even Meany, long an opponent of such measures, has announc- ~ ed that he now favors the action. Earlier in the year, the admin- istration's spokesmen had pre- dicted optimistic 'goals of eco- nomic growth including the re- duction of unemployment to 4.5 per cent, inflation to 3.5 per cent, and the increase of the Gross National Product (total worth of all goods and services pro- duced in one year) to $1.085 tril- lion. On June 7, however, Paul Mc- Cracken, President Nixon's lead- Or TM .RENTALS 210.50/mo. NEJAC T.V.I 662-5671' ing economic advisor, admitted the failure of the Nixon program. McCracken cited what he called "the unexpected stubbornness" of inflation and unemployment as reasons for the failure. In effect the administration was forced to admit the charges of liberal economists that the GNP goal of $1.085 trillion was un- realistic. One dramatic sign of the diffi- culties facing the national econo- my came in the late spring when a run of speculation threatened the dollar on the European mar- ket. Economists generally blamed the crisis on the fact that Ameri- cans are spending more money abroad than foreigners are spend- ing here. This deficit in the balance of trade, along with an inflationary price rise for U.S. goods, re- sulted in speculation which caus- ed a run on the dollar, and an in- crease in the value of European currencies relative to it. This steadily worsening state of the economy triggered a rash of strikes this summer which fur- ther aggravated the delicate state of industrial production. On May 17 the railroad signal- men walked off their jobs, stop- ping the nation's rail system for two days until emergency legisla- tion brought the strike to a halt. About a month later, New York municipal workers launched a strike to press for an improved pension program. Such tactics as locking draw- bridges open, and stalling cars on the freeways, virtually para- lyzed the city for two days. On July 1, the biggest action of the summer took place with the longshoremen striking the entire west coast. Docks were shut down from Mexico to Canada in the most ex- tensive longshoremen's action in 23 years. Simultaneous with the long- shoremen's walkout was a major strike of miners against U.S. cop- per companies. Mines in Utah, Montana, New Mexico, Arizona and Nevada were shut down. Observers have commented that the per centage of workers out on strike this summer was one of the highest since the mass strike wave of the middle 1930's. The local situation has mir- rored and often exceeded the na- tional crisis. The Michigan unemployment rate for the month of June rose to 9.4 per cent, the highest rate in ten years, and well above the national average. The University has been direct- ly affected by this situation with its budget for this fiscal year still pending in the state legisla- ture. The administration has called for budget cuts in all depart- ments in anticipation of an ap- propriation far less than what was requested. University students have been feeling the squeeze in more direct ways, however. Students graduating here, as well as at other schools around the nation, are finding there are no jobs open for them. Even those with masters or Ph.D de- grees are being forced to take nonskilled jobs because openings in their fields are so few. V e t e r a n college councilors have described the situation as the worst they have seen in 30 years. Tom & Marry Say: "Our Waterheds Make People Happy" 214 E. Washington 769-9020 OPEN 7 Days and 7 Nights Approved for dorm use Subscribe to The Michigan Daily, -Associated Press Seale: Radical victory cant, were to be overshadowed a month later by a contest in which the freedom of the press to publish material without prior constraint, despite its contents. was upheld by the Supreme Court. On June 13 the New York Times began a series of articles based on a secret Pentagon study of the Indochina war. The study (see related story, P. 2) was highly critical of U.S. policy, and revealed several heretofore unknown facets of American involvment in Indo- china - indicating deception of the public by the government on matters relating to the war. Although the government was able to secure an injunction against the Times to halt fur- ther publication, copies of the study soon spread, first to the Washington Post, and t h e n around the country to such papers as the Boston Globe, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the Detroit Free Press. Through the process of appeals. the case eventually reached the Supreme Court, and on July 1, in a 6 to 3 decision, the court re- jected the government's conten- tion that release of the study was a threat to national security and allowed the papers to resume publication. Justice Hugo Black, in voting with the majority, wrote "The guarding of military and diplo- matic secrets at the expense of an informed representative gov- ernment provides no real security for our republic". While the defeat of the govern- ment was most obvious in the Times decision, each of the three court cases represented the fail- ure of governmental units to gain convictions against elements which could be considered their political enemies. The implica- tions of this for the American political as well as judicial scene, however, run much deeper than the mere trials themselves. The ability of a government to accuse and hold political oppo- nents for extended periods of time without a conviction still evidences the government's con- siderable power. Using this power as a weapon, defendants and their supporters argue, the government is able to See DISSIDENTS, Page 7 14 t, $5 $5 T r ry 40~ r SY HAPPINESS: bit QfPrds nu.Peetti dt UIVERSITY S. '4 ~APPROVED wateruriu for e ine stud e hosin. tomeepunes 6 hors or sme eopl. Ad les seepor watersofa. Happiness is Paradise: time means more time for study and more INSTANT PARADISE . . . JUST ADD ~time for fun-which means more happy WAER students. WTR Paaiei nyu idto ihqaiyNote: All waterfurniture must be regis- by Pwarfuisen maucur ied ight hueret tered and comply with Student Housing inwA erbority. Manaled ries, new codes. Paradise has everything you'll need bto make them happy, too. know that a waterbed gives you a better b~it fPrds nu.Peetti dt &