4o t Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan ynard 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 mist be noted in all reprints, ESDAY, JANUARY 27, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: LARRY LEMPERT Battling the 'U' bureaucracy juQy 460aeol'h 0 Ma EDNE .., ALTHOUGH University officials have often declared during student demonstrations that they are open to discussion of issues and demands, the admissions office has made it clear to at least one "protester" that it has a non-negotiable requirement for admission-a Social Security number. Tory Shwayder, a senior at the sururban Detroit prep school of Cranbrook, wrote in his application for admis- sion to the University that he did not have a social secur- ity number and did not plan to get one. Because space on the application is limited, he stopped there, and said he would be glad to explain why if the University wanted to hear. He expected to receive a request for more information, or else notification of admission. But he got neither. In- stead he received a letter from Donald Swain, assistant director of admissions, which explained the number is used by the University students for billing,,apd to make them eligible for student services such as the library and Health Service. "It is not a negotiable item," Swain wrote. instead of letting Tory explain himself, Swain thought he anticipated it: "If you feel that compliance with this request would in any way lead to debaseing your individuality then I can only suggest that you seek out an institution that is small enough to enjoy the luxury of hand-keeping records. At the expense of an incorrect assumption as to the motive of your resistance to obtain a Social Security number, I would also add that if your impression of this institution is one where interpersonal relationships are dependent upon numbers then your research is inade- quate." HOWEVER, IT WAS NOT the coldness of the multi- versity that Shwayder fears. Rather, he-and his par- ents-are concerned with the possible abuse of informa- tion files which accumulate during a person's life. Most, if not all, are easily identified through a Social Security number. That number is necessary on job applications, tax forms, mortgage applications, credit ratings, every- thing; Tory's father has a Social Security number only in order to get paid. His mother continued to refuse one. She has performed as a musician for the University, Y .1 L TT r. } but was not paid because of her lack of Social Security number. Payment was finally made through a third party. Tory, and his parents, believe that the practice of using Social Security numbers should be discontinued by the University and that a substitute identifying num- her - presumably not accessible to the government - be used. It would be one step toward avoiding ending up catalogued in a central governmental file someday --a prospect that doesn't appear impossible to the Shwayder's. SUCH FEARS SEEM absurd to Swain. "Have you ever heard of a case of that happening?" he asked me. "Do you know?" While these fears might seem silly to some like Swain - there is no concrete proof of an existing all-encom- passing central file maintained by the federal govern- ment on all citizens - there are many others who real- ize that the civil liberties we have today can be very easily undermined. One need only examine the increasing problems with credit rating agencies- and job screening investigators. These private concerns keep their information files con- fidential; summaries and evaluations remain unseen and i.. J3vE~isg2}_r 14CHIGAN uncontested for years, out of sight of the individual in (uJ stion. It is easily possible for such files to contain damaging, libelous and incorrect information which might make it impossibie for someone to get a credit rat- ing, or a new job. And not just private agencies. Recent testimony from former Army intelligence officers detailed spying and reporting on law-abiding private citizens and Congress- men. New incidents of government wiretapping and re- cord-keeping continue to come to light. THAT DOES not mean that the University is cdnspir- ing with the Army. The Social Security number is the most obvious identifying number attached to people. It is required by law in most cases. The Shwayders realize that they are fighting a tough battle. The issue is more academic than anything else. Tory eventually applied for a number, sent it to the Univ ersity, and has now been accepted for school in the Fall term. But in lodging his protest, he forced the University to respond and to show its inflexibility. Or maybe the harshness of Swain's reply to .Tory was defensiveness to what he interpreted as charges of inflexibility and im- personality. Tory's experience, perhaps, is a good starting point for a serious and much needed investigation into a tragic trend towards the loss of freedom and the University's role in protecting-where possible--the members of its community. * * * POSTSCRIPT: Recent evidence came to light, which underscored the importance of the student identification number at the University. A friend of mine lost his ID card the other day, and duly went to the registrar's office to request a replace- ment. The fee is $5 - about $5 more than my friend had in cash. He wrote a check for the amount and hand- ed it to the secretary. "May I see your ID card," she said. "I don't have it. I'm trying to replace it. but I don't have the $5," he said. "But I can't cash your check without your ID card." Catch-140-42-5670-0. So you think you're cold? .,.,mv...>: Blizzard warnings were issued today for much of southwestern Michigan as winds gusting up to 67 miles per hour swept drifts of snow across much of the state. Rural schools were closed in most areas from the Indiana border to Cheboygan. State Police reported that 80 per cent of the freeways in their fifth district were blocked by drifts and side roads were impassable from New Buffalo to Allegan. Virtually all roads around the state were snow covered and slippery, despite the efforts of road crews, The' high winds combined with tem- peratures in the low twenties to make the real temperature more than 20 below in areas. The weather bureau said the blizzard conditions were expected to spread east- ward across the state today before the snow tapers off. --The Associated Press Jan. 26 AS WE AWOKE yesterday, we were greeted by the sound of a howling wind and, as soon as our eyes became functional, the sight of driving snow. That's history. It's also history that more than a few people,greeted the sight with some of the stronger obscenities in their vocabulary. Yet, there should be no cause to complain, if one but turns' his mind northward, where some of us have been compelled to spend more time than we like to recall. In Marquette, on the shores of Lake Superior in Michigau's Upper Peninsula, the natives say there are "eight months of winter and four month of bad sled- ding." They exaggerate only slightly. Snow starts as early as October there, and when winter actually sets in about mid-December, neither the sun or the niercury in the thermometer are seen very much for the next three months. Days like yesterday are normal. Whole Weeks of them are strung together, brok- en only by truly nasty outbursts - such as 17 inches in 24 hours, followed by more of the same. There are those realists, however, w h o will point out that we are notin Hough- ton or Marquette, but are in Ann Ar- bor and it is Ann Arbor's weather which concerns us. That is precisely the point of this piece. Thank God for little favors. -ROB BIER .. . s.., , ,. "''°' r - ' E 4 °. .wz_. . .....,_, . \\ A. j ,, ,, ;: i k - . 9 k f ? A ff 7. ' 9 q r , I ' . / t NA ''. i ''J .rs/ .3 C ... .. Al.+b st..6-'v TTM . l s ftr7. . .. 1 s fti7 . . .. r The inhumanity of W ayne, County's jailyBILDNE By BILL DiNNER ONE OF THE most basic assumptions spelled out by our constitution was that a person, be he rich or poor, must be presumed innocent until proven guilty. Although this scared verbiage is repeated uncountably through the course of any criminal trial, the procedures that precede the trial pre:ent a much different view for the poor and usualy black defendant who are caged in our "modern" big city jails, Investigations following riots at New York jails last fa-ll have un- covered degrading and inhumane conditions. The "hole" that Wash- tenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey used to placate incorrigable pri- soners is a local example of this type of intolerable prison, A group of inmates at the Wayne County Jail have decided to do more than complain about the conditions under which they live. On Monday, they filed a suit in Wayne Council Circuit Court to close the County Jail because of incredible conditions. How do conditions inside a jail relate to the assumption that the defendants are innocent? As presently developed, the legal concept of bail is primarily designed to insure that defendants will appear for trial. THOSE WHO cannot afford bail must remain in jail until their case is tried, often a delay of more than a year. Thus, although they are legally innocent, defendants unable to post bond are denied rights guaranteed by the Constitution. The immediate aim of the Wayne County Jail suit is to improve the present conditions in the jail, but the suit could have far reaching consequences. Though the present system may appear decent on paper, inmates at the Wayne County Jail not differently. In a press statement issued through their attorneys, the six plaintiffs in the suit stated that "As inmates of the Wayne County Jail we live, sixty minutes of every hour, 24 hours a day, in hell. "We are engaged in peaceful struggle in the language of the law -the same law that put us in this hell-hole because we couldn't pay the ransom of a bail bond system that decides our freedom or imprison- ment only on how much money we have." WAYNE COUNTY Sheriff William Lucas, named as a defendant in the suit commented on the conditions that can lead to discipline, psy- chological and even physical disturbances, in the Detroit Free Press. "What the hell do they do up there? There sit and did you notice how young they are? They're young guys, active guys. strong guys . It's hard and it's dangerous. It's dangerous as hell." Charging that incarcerating someone in the prison constitutes "cruel and unusual punishment," the suit says the jail flagrantly vio- lates the Michigan housing and health codes. Toilets are in disrepai, fecal matter and urine cover most of the floor, rats, roaches and insects abound, while rancid odors are common. Ventilation, lighting and plumbing are also inadequate. "Without exception," the suit continues, "every cell or sleeping facility is rotten, dirty, foul, stinking, and dot fit for human habita- tion." J' 4 *: Into a newquagmire SINCE THE FALL of Prince Norodum Sihanouk's government last spring, the Nixon administration has had a deep concern about Cambodia. First, American troops were sent into the country to destroy Vietcong supply depots. When public outcry made this apr proach unprofitable, Nixon adroitly changed tactics. Instead of American troops, the military has relied on U. S. bombers to raid enemy positions a n d American helicopters have provided di- rect support for the Cambodian army and the Vietnamese army fighting on the ground. Altogether, since last spring, the U.S. has allocated almost $200-mil- lion to the Cambodian military effort. The spectre of the death penalty THE ATTENTION focused by most of the media on the details of the Charles Manson case has seemed, for the most part, undeserved. One suspects that there is a misguided belief on the part of many that Manson and his "family" represented the ultimate state of evolu- tion of the life culture. Nothing could be more false, and it is regrettable that the communal way of life has continually been represented in the press by the Manson family. Yet now, with the conviction of Man- son of first degree murder, and the sub- sequent decision by California prosecu- tors to ask for the death penalty, the at- tenntnof the cnda ismore thannwel- Now the consequences of this widening involvement are beginning to leak out. Plans have been developed to send a "mil- itary equipment delivery team" to Cam- bodia to check on how equipment pro- vided by the United States was being used. Defense department officials main- tain Americans will not be authorized to tell the Cambodians how to use the equip- ment. However, there is little difference between overseeing the use of equipment in the field and giving advice on more ef- fective ways of deploying it. Cambodia's armed forces are likely to need a tremendous amount of aid in us- ing new 'weapons. Until Sihanouk's fall, the army was almost nonexistant. Troops now serving in the field generally have less than a year's experience and are tot- ally unfamiliar with sophisticated Amer- ican arms. THIS MAKES an expansion of the "mili- tary equipment delivery team" like- ly as the American commitment rises. Shortly after the Lon Nol government came to power last spring, the United States military aid program totaled $9 million. Soon it increased by $40 million, then by $50 million and finally by $100 million. In the American embassy in Pnompenh, the military-political office has recently jumped from three to nine with prospects for seven more. Only 16 men are projected for the new "military equipment delivery team." If this group is to effectively supervise the use of all American equipment in Cambodia, it will need to be expanded almost immediate- ly. . . The Son of Superman *1 I t Letters to The Daily i Edgars To the Daily: THE Curt Gowdy they all look alike to me Edgar goes to The Michigan Daily for calling the San Diego Rockets the San Diego Padres. -Don Anderson, L' '73 Jan. 24 AFSCME strike To the Daily: UNIVERSITY WORKERS have been "organized" in an unorgani- ized AFSCME union for two years. In these two years, the wages of AFSCME, workers have barely kept up with the cost of living. Recent months witnessed mara- thon negotiations between the University and AFSCME's bar- ,gaining committee, culminating in last week's abortive strike. The fact surrounding these ne- gotiations and' strike activities suggest that greater union rank and file militancy could have achieved large gains but that the union leadership discouraged such militancy. AFSCME has decided to submit to binding fact-finding by a state- appointed mediator. This fact- finingniroce mav tke a month, to public employees who usually receive 1 ss pay for doing the same work than those in private emn- ployment. In fact, public authorities can always find more money for wages and benefits if they have to Two weeks ago Chicago's teachers staged a city-wide strike. The Chi- cago School Board had already been running a deficit for thatl year and the board insisted the no money at all was available for wage increases. After the strike, the teachers' demands were met and the Board went off to city and state governments to lobby for increased appropriations. Why then did the union agree to binding fact-finding? It should be recognized that the union facet: the threat of state intervention in the form of a court injunction pro- hibiting strike activity. An in- junction could have jailed union leaders and banned picketting. But the union leadership, far from pointing out that workers can fight injunctions and can win gains through striking, made clear its reluctance to engage in a mili- tant strike. AT NO TIME during the months of negotiations did the union lead- ership inform the membership of what was happening at the bar- to go back to work until a new contract was ratified. Faced withrsuch militancy, the leadership did call a strike the next day but ended it a short two days later. 'The leadership's failure to plan for a real strike was re- flected in the very poor organiza- tion of the picketting, with some workers standing in the cold for hours without relief. WHEN THE union leadership ended the strike by agreeing to binding fact-finding it violated the mandate of the membership not to go back to worke until a new contract was ratified. The union meeting that was called the next day to accept or reject the fact- finding was handled so undemo- cratically that it was difficult for those workers who wanted to con- tinue striking to be heard. Union President Charles McCracken held the microphone throughout the meeting and would not allow any- one who opposed fact-finding to use it. The result was that workers' at- tempts to shout questions and pie- sent arguments for continuing the strike were lost in the noise and confusion of a large meeting room, with only the Union President be- ing heard. The unionavote to ac- cept fact-finding was approxi- 44 SPECIFIC DEFECTS are spelled out in detail: "The filthy, sardine-packed cells, the grossly inadequate medical care, the total lack of exercise facilities, the contaminated food, the arbitrary, punitive and unlawful summary discipline, and the unlawful restrictions on visitation, communication, association and privacy." Also, the suit accuses jail personnel, "including high ranking offi- cers," of being "overt racists or sadists, or both." "The damage caused to prisoners by the jail conditions outlives their stay therein. Long term psychological damage results from degredation and demoralization secondary to the intense lack of adequate recreational facilities, the long hours of idleness, the de- ficient health programs, the almost total denial of contact with the outside, and the continuing harassment by jail personnel," the suit continues, "The atmosphere thus created deprives plaintiffs and their class of all dignity while creating a great possibility of damage to their mental and emotional well-being. "Substantial numbers of persons," the suit states, "who would never plead guilty if they were freedon bond or imprisoned under tolerable, constitutional conditions do, in fact, plead guilty solely because of the extraordinary and coercive pressure to get out of the Wayne County Jail." As a terrifying testimony to the horrible conditions, 17 inmates of the jail committed suicide last year - all who were supposedly 'i . ,.no n t n l l /Ar d I