t amn a t Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Union contract: 'Not much, 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. HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE CHUDWIN 327 anfreedom NO MATTER what the final decision to- day is on the issue of College Course 327, the University must be left with the conviction that such a situation will nev- er occur again.I After nearly two months of red tape, The LSA executive committee has sent the issue back to the curriculum and course mart committees for final resolu- tion. The executive committee called on those committees to consider the situa- tions of the 80 students who signed up for the six sections which were deleted by the course mart committee, ostensibly for bureaucratic inadequacies. LSA acting Dean Alfred Sussman, who heads the executive committee has stress- ed that the important thing is that "stu- dents who are enrolled in the course and who signed up in good faith are taken care of." Hopefully, the committee's decision will be to reinstate credit for the six sections, thereby "taking care of" the displaced 80 students. HOWEVER, MERELY reinstating the sections is not nearly enough. The final decision should not be made only to appease the angered members of College Course 327 and to avoid additional bureaucratic hassles for the displaced stu- dents. When the course mart committee rul- ed to deny credit to the six sections, it posed a serious threat to academic free- dom. The concept of academic freedom has traditionally been used to defend t h e right of professors to teach in the fields of their expertise in the manner, and with the perspective, they deem appro- priate. However, the concept of academic free- dom should go further than that. Under- lying this concept is the desire that the University be a center for the tree and full interchange of ideas. If the University is to be this, academic freedom should not apply merely to the right of experts to hold forth as they wish, but also to the right of' students to study subjects in which they have strong interests, but in which the experts have not been inclin- ed to offer instruction. The right of students to receive credit for courses which they have formulated outside the boundaries of the traditional academic departments, is the foundation on which Course Mart was created, and it is this right which has been threatened by the denial of credit to these sections. In this context, the deleted sections certainly deserve to receive credit. Stu- dents are obviously interested in studying the material involved. It should also be clear that a mistake was originally made in deleting the six sections that should never be repeated. THE COMMITTEES plan to make their decision in a meeting closed to all but organizers and teachers of the course. The closed meeting appears to be a de- vice to permit this decision to be made quietly, to cut the strings in the ball of yarn that has become too tangled to deal with. Instead, the committees should make the decision publicly, and take a strong public stand that part of the respon- sibility of the curriculum committee is to insure that the literary college's course offerings respond to expressed student needs. There is a clearly expressed-student need for these sections. Whether the sections were originally deleted because of the bureaucratic rea- sons given by the committees or because of their controversial political nature is irrelevant. If the committees are to ad- here to the principles of an academic community there can be no excuse for such action. AND IF STUDENTS are to have a voice in their educations at this Univer- sity, then the two committees must decide today to reinstate credit for the six sec- tions, and decide it in a way that reiter- ates the right of students to receive credit for courses created by students to fill otherwise unmet academic needs. -TAMMY JACOBS By SARA FITZGERALD AFTER FOUR MONTHS of negotiations and a two-day strike, the dispute be- tween the University and Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) was re- solved Saturday when the union voted to ratify a new contract. But the close vote, 555 in favor of ratifica- tion and 504 opposed, points out that many of the workers were dissatisfied with the contract they were offered. Having been told that their negotiating team was presenting a wage package with an increase of $1 an hour in the first year, plus extensive benefits, many workers began to set their sights on receiving a pack- age similar to this. Subsequently, they were disappointed when they discovered what the new contract was actually offering in these areas. But it is unclear whether the AFSCME workers could have held out long enough to gain a better contract. Despite the union's ability to draw the vast majority of service employes out on strike, there were serious questions as to how long the workers could stay out. With an average hourly wage of $2.69, and no strike fund, AFSCME employes would have been extremely hard-pressed had the strike dragged on for any considerable length of time. Union enthusiasm was also questionable, as only a few hundred of the union's mem- bers came to the meetings to vote to strike, or later to vote to continue the strike until ratification of a contract. Though few if any union members scabbed, only about 300 of the 2,600-member union actually walked picket lines or were active in promoting the strike effort. PROBABLY THE greatest turn-about by the union negotiators was their acceptance of a three-year contract. The union had de- manded a two-year agreement and had got- ten the University to agree to at least a 27- month contract. The shorter contract was generally con- sidered desirable from the union's point of view because it would mean that a review of the union's wages and benefits would come up sooner. But the union negotiators apparently decided that the larger wage in- crease in the third year plus the addition of a cost-of-living clause for that year made a three-year contract worthwhile. But was the wage increase really that sub- stantial? Workers in pay grade one, for in- stance, will only receive increases of 20 cents the first year, 10 cents the second year, and 15 cents the third year over their current wage of $2.20-$2.40 an hour. The wage increases range from 45 cents: an hour over three years to $1.15 an hour increase for those in higher pay grades over the life of the contract. Overall, this repre- sents an average 26 per cent increase over three years-or a roughly eight per cent annual increase. About half the union was, however, re- classified into higher job classifications, so actually they would receive a higher per- centage pay increase. The eight per cent increase represents what President Robben Fleming said was the limit on what the University could af- ford to give workers for the next two years. Fleming claimed during the strike that the union's total package at the time amounted to a 40 per cent increase in the funds the University would be paying. THE EXTENT OF THE benefits the union will receive, as it turns out, seems severely restricted by what the University said was its limit. Having received the eight per cent annual increase in wages, the union did not get much more in terms of benefits. The cost-of-living clause, for instance, will not go into effect until the third year of the contract and will only be based on living cost increases over a one-year period. Ap- parently, the University administraticn felt that by the third year of the contract, the University budget may be significantly in- creased, or inflation may be reduced. Until that third year, the AFSCME worker is still faced with the rising costs that have plagued him for the past three years that he has worked without a cost-of-living clause. The eight per cent annual wage increase barely exceeds living cost increases since the last contract three years ago. The union's new health insurance plan also represents a partial acceptance of the University's offer. The union originally tried to get Blue Cross-Blue Shield coverage fully paid by the University. When the union negotiators made its counter wage proposal the night of the union's walkout, they said they would ac- cept a partial contribution by the Univer- sity, if it would agree to pick up any rate increases over the life of the contract. Under the new contract, the University will make a partial contribution towards health insurance coverage, and will pick tip any rate increases, but will never contribute more than 75 per cent of the cost. However, one concession the union won was that their health insurance plans would be equal to those of other University em- ployes from now on. Yet this limited their insurance in a sense, for the University would thus not give them large health in- surance contributions, knowing they would' have to be extended to all University em- ployes. WITH LIMITED U n i v e r s i t y funds available, the negotiators also chose to drop the union's demands for increased longevity and retirement pay, and increas- ed life insurance benefits. The union also rescinded its demand for a child-care center. While a creditable proposal, the child-care proposal was nev- er viably developed by the union and would have required the exhaustion of some of the money used for higher priority de- mands. Ironically; the union seemed to make its most significant gains before it went on strike, in terms of contract language, 1t a start' than it gained in w.ages and benefits re- solved after the strike. The union was able to clear up some parts of the contract which were disputed in more than 1.200 grievances over the past year. Supervisors, under the new contract, will be allowed to perform union work 20 per cent of the time. The University, un- der the contract, will not be able to dis- charge employes without first consulting with union officials. The union also won changes in the de- finition of a "work schedule" so that em- ployes who don't get two consecutive days off a week or who must work more than eight hours of a 24 hour period are paid premiums. The union is also pleased that under the new contract, stewards can no longer be transferred to different districts. The union has charged that the University transferred its most militant stewards to isolated areas of the campus. YET THE NEW contract makes no signi- ficant changes in the union's complicated grievance procedure, which requires several months of hearings before a variety of University officials. Throughout the negotiations, the un- ion negotiating team placed a great deal of emphasis on new contract language to "guarantee the rights of the workers," as one union official explained But while the union won some changes in the language of the new contract, it postponed significant changes in econom- ic aspects of the agreement. Though the union came into negotia- tions with an old contract put together when AFSCME first organized on,campus -one which proved highly unworkable and provided comparatively low wages, t h e negotiators appear to have felt it impossi- ble to correct the inequities in one new con- tract. State mediator Richard Terepin said he had told the union it was asking for too much because "you can't expect to re- write the entire contract at one time." And the union negotiators seemed to arrive at this conclusion as well. One negotiator explained to a member, "I know the wage increase isn't what we had hoped for, but it's the most we could get from the University at this time." Another one said, "I realize it isn't much, but at least its a start." With much of their contract now re- worked, the union will be back in three years - to demand what they couldn't get this time from the financially hard-. pressed University. 46 h, Angela.Davis: Politics of imprisonment The firing of Robert Hunter THE FIRING of Robert Hunter, Ann Ar- bor's Assistant Human Relations Director, has enraged leaders of the local black community. And their anger seems justified, for the removal of Hunter con- sti'tutes a slap to the entire black com- munity. What is even more despicable about Hunter's dismissal, however, is the cloak of secrecy with which the city has sur- rounded the entire incident. Both the city's leading officials have simply re- fused to accept responsibility for the af- fair. City Administrator Guy C. Larcom Jr. said, "the firing was made by Human Relations Department h e a d (HRD), James Slaughter, with my approval," but Larcom refuses to explain why he ap- proved the action. Mayor Robert Harris says directly that he is not responsible for the firing. But the man with whom the city ad- ministration has placed responsibility for the firing has been little more enlight- ening. In a statement issued last week Slaughter said simply, "Mr. Hunter was no longer performing the required duties of his position in an efficient and re- sponsible manner, therefore necessitating this regrettable action. It is in the best interests of the city and Mr. Hunter to detail no further his release from city employment." Yesterday, Slaughter still insisted "it is not the correct time" to make a more complete explanation of Hunter's dis- missal. He said this in spite of the fact that HRD has already begun to look for Hunter's successor. Thus, the city is ap- parently lending a deaf ear to those who have criticized the dismissal. IN VIEW of the nature of questions raised concerning the firing, however, the city can ill afford to simply disregard the whole affair. Hunter himself has charged he was fired bacuse he caused embarrassment to Mayor Harris and stood in the way of Harris' political ambitions. , , w ,-Ic' ,rn ', fiVTc V]I !mn c iiawh People United, said that Hunter was fired because he was dedicated to helping black people. "The reason the city doesn't like him is the same reason the blacks do," she said. State NAACP Chairman Albert Wheel- er called -Hunter the only man in City Hall who would effectively combat rac- ism. Model Cities Policy Board Chairman Ezra Rowry also called the firing "one of the most racist and overt acts of discrim- ination ever recalled in city hall. APPARENTLY HUNTER is unaccept- able because he is a man who has earned the respect of the black commun- ity through hard work rather than rhe- toric. And the inability of the HRD to cope with such an employe casts serious doubt upon its program as a whole. The Human Rights Ordinance w h i c h created HRD said "The department shall encourage, receive, investigate, and eval- uate complaints from any person of dis- crimination which violates local law, and make public procedures which a person may use to complain of such discrim- ination." As can be seen now, however, HRD has in fact, not even demonstrated its ability to effectively deal with problems in its own office. And if Slaughter's past record is any indication, little improvement is likely in the near future. Since assuming the position of director in November, Slaughter has not made more than a token effort to bring the city's largest employer, the University, under HRD jurisdiction. He justifies this inaction by saying that the University employs "only" 16,000 of Ann Arbor's workers. Placing Hunter and Slaughter in the same department would therefore be like- ly to produce some friction. While Slaugh- ter remains seemingly unconcerned about some of HRD's weaknesses, Hunter seems determined to help black people, and has proved his worth by his rapport with the black community. EDITOR'S NOTE: The follow- ing is the second of two parts of an interview with Angela Davis, reprinted by permission of Mu- hammad Speaks. Questions asked were those asked most often by a sampling of Harlem residents when asked by a Muhammed Speaks reporter which questions they would most like to ask Davis. Most of the papers have said you fled California because you were guilty. Can you clear this up for us? Let me ask you this question. When a slave, who managed to es- cape from the whips and wheels of the white slave master, fled to another state, was this evidence of his guilt? After Ronald Reagan and his fascist cohorts launched the cam- paign to fire me from my job at UCLA-not because there were any defects in my qualifications but simply because I was Black, a Communist and devoted to the struggle for freedom of my people -how could I fail to realize that they were now determined to mur- der me? After all they had al- ready unleased a tremendous re- actionary sentiment against me, simply around the question of my job. Hardly a day passed last year when I didn't receive a death threat in some form or another. As a re- sult of Reagan's actions. I was constantly harrassed by pigs pa- trolling our community. I FLED BECAUSE I was con- vinced that there was little likeli- hood that I would get justice in California. I might add that the Los Angeles Tines conducted a survey in the Black community in Los Angeles and found that 80 per cent of those questioned felt that I was correct in going into hiding, for to turn myself in would have been tantamount to delivering my- self into the hands of my self-ap- pointed executioners-the self-ap- pointed executioners of Black peo- ple in general. If you must stand trial in Cali- f-ornia, do you think you can get a fair trial? The American judicial system is bankrupt. In so far as Black peo- ple are concerned, it has proven itself to be one more arm of a system carrying out the systematic oppression of our people. We are the victims, not the recipients of justice. we can expect to free all our broth- ers and sisters held captive in America's dungeons. This is the only way we can expect to ulti- mately gain total liberation. How is your morale holding up? With all the beautiful sisters surrounding me and with all the sisters and brothers struggling in the streets, I cannot help but feel just as determined to keep on fighting as I was when I was cap- tured. Each day I receive hun- dreds'and hundreds of letters from sympathizers all over the world. The support I have been receiving has almost left me incredulous. THE PRESS FAILED to mention that when I embarked upon a hun- ger strike to protest my solitary confinement here, many of the sis- ters in a gesture of solidarity joined in. I have been in jail for two months. Huey was incarcerated for two years. Ericka Huggins, whom I know personally and admire as one of this country's great Black women, has been incarcerated for almost two years, as has Bobby Seale. When I stop and try to re-in- invent all that George Jackson (the Soledad prisoner) has en- dured over the last 11 years of his life and has still emerged as a powerful leader of his people, and when I think that Jonathan Jack- son and many others have sacri- ficed their lives in our struggle, I am infused with all of the strength I need to carry on the fight. Can you describe how you are being treated in the women's House of Detention? This is a prison and the atroc- ious conditions that characterize virtually every American prison are present in this place. Rather than start with the specific treat- ment I have b e e n receiving, I would like to delineate the cir- cumstances under which all of us are compelled to exist. First of all, the prison is filthy. It is infested with roaches and mice. Often we discover roaches cooked into our food. Not too long ago I was drinking a cup of coffee and I was forced to spit out a roach. ROACIES LITERALLY cover the walls of our cells at night, crawling across our bodies while we sleep. Every night we hear the screams of inmates who wake up to find mice scurring across their bodies. I discovered one in bed tion. This is indicative of the way we are treated here. We spend most of our time in either 5x9 cells with filth and concrete floors or outside on the bare corridors. We are not even allowed to place blankets on the floor where we must sit to pro- tect ourselves from the filth and cold. To talk a little about the li- brary, they have a collection -of adventure stories a nd romances whichttheyshave designated the library. It is important to realize that although the prison popula- tion is 95 per cent black and Puerto Rican, I found only five or six books about black people and literature in Spanish is extremely scarce. I COULD GO ON and on but perhaps now I will turn to the specific kinds of treatment I have been receiving myself. I am con- been done in the hope of breaking me but I continue to give notice to them that there is absolutely nothing they can do to break my determination to keep struggling. THE ONLY WAY they can ac- complish this is by taking my life and then they would have to face the wrath of the people. The same holds true for Ericka. Bobby, George, the Soledad Brothers. etc. What is your relationship with the other prisoners? I have never encountered such an overwhelmingly warm and cor- dial welcome. Obviously the rea- son why the prison authorities iso- lated me was the enthusiastic wel- come I received. Each time I go from one area of the jail to an- other, the sisters hold up their clinched fists and convey expres- sions of solidarity. While I was in solitary confine- ment, the sisters on the floor con- ducted demonstrations in my be- half. When I embarked upon a hunger strike, many of them joined. AFTER I WAS transferred into population, some of the sisters on my corridor, with whom I had spent a great deal of time, were helping me answer letters from the outside. They were all imme- diately transferred to another floor but we still find ways to com- municate with one another. I have already mentioned the state of the so-called library. Af- ter many requests and arguments, I was told that if books were sent directly from the publishing com- pany I could receive them. Now the authorities allow me to bring up five of these books at a time per week. The sisters are im- mensely interested in the reading material I receive - everything from George Jackson's prison let- ters to works by Lenin. The books circulate all over the floor and are the occasion f o r many a discussion. Since the au- thorities have indicated that they are totally insensitive to the de- sires of the inmates, I would hope that brothers and sisters in the streets take it upon themselves to donate relevant literature to the library here. What were your feelings when you learned that you were on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted List? I expected t h e Nixon-Reagan clique to resort to any measure to suppress their critics. They are confused about the meaning of this. Can you explain w h a t it means? More and more black people are being incarcerated not because they committed a crime but be- cause of their political beliefs and the activities they undertake to bring our people together to strug- gle for freedom. Counterfeit charg- es are invented, outright frame- ups are increasingly becoming the rule. George Jackson was arrested 11 years ago at the age of 18 and convicted of stealing $70 from a gas station attendant. He was giv- en an indeterminate sentence - one year to life imprisonment. Because he evolved into a revo- lutionary and began to organize his fellow captives, he was denied parole year after year, and finally last year w a s framed-up along with two other brothers -- John Clutchette and Fleeta Drumgo - who had demonstrated a d e e p concern for destiny of our people. George Jackson, John Clutchet- te, Meeta Drumgo a r e political prisoners. Their real crimes lie in being absolutely devoted to the liberation of black people. Bobby Seale is a political prisoner. Ericka Huggins is a political prisoner. Martin Sostre is a political pris- oner. I AM A POLITICAL prisoner. The government intends to silence me, to prohibit me from further organizing my people, to prohibit me from exposing this corrupt, degenerate system byconvicting me on the basis of a crime I hlad nothing to do with. Political prisoners are set up as examples to the rest of the people. George, John and Fleeta were set up as examples to the rest of the Soledad population - examples vividly spelling out the fate of any and every captive who fol- lowed in their footsteps. The same holds true for Ericka, Bobby, the Soledad 7, Martin Sostre, the Panther 21 and myself. The government intends to ter- rorize our people by railroading us into the electric chair, g a s chamber and long prison terms. There is only one way political prisoners can be liberated, mil- lions of people must serve notice to the government that they in- tend to use every weapon at their disposal to secure the freedom of their, captive warriors, and even- tually to secure the total libera- tion of black people. *gr 4 vinced that the authorities in this place h a v e been instructed to make life as difficult as possible for me, probably in order to con- vince me to stop fighting extra- dition. Of course after the courts over- ruled them and they were com- pelled to release me from solitary confinement and 24-hour guard, they had to seek other ways to as- sert their dominance. T alir te tprwoe wor $