A4r £fidPtzn Daily Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan wormwood Presidential commissions are for presidents rb ier mmmmm 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. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE KOPPMAN Abortion counseling at the 'U' FEW ISSUES facing the people of the state of Michigan or the members of the University community are life and death issues. Abortion counseling is one such issue. It is thus comforting, and at the same time exciting, to realize that there are official representatives of the University using their expertise a n d resources to deal with the issue. For the past two years, if not longer, a quiet group of University and community professional persons have been operating an underground abortion counseling-re- ferral service. Professors' wives, psychol- ogy teaching fellows, Health Service per- sonnel, local doctors, and clergymen, have worked hand in hand to make their ex- pertise and knowledge available to preg- nant young women. It is impossible to say just how many improper abortions have been avoided or how many women have been saved from suicide or the shame and guilt of an unwanted, illegitimate preg- nancy. With the aid of the Michigan Clergy for Problem Counseling, the Ann Arbor underground has begun to surface. Bob Hauert, Program Director of the Univer- sity's Office of Religious Affairs (ORA), has begun to make the counseling service more visible, and. consequently, more available to women who need to use it. It is often the case that young women, finding themselves accidently tpregnant, become paralyzed by first, a fear of con- fiding their problem and, second, an in- decision caused by an ignorance of all available alternatives. In making the ORA abortion counsel- ing process available and publicized, Bob Hauert and his team will help to solve both of these problems. YET THEY FACE a problem themselves. Abortion counseling i§ a delicate pro- position in Michigan, which bans all abortions save those necessary to save the life of a mother. It is generally accepted that those in the ORA are operating on the fringe, if not outside of, the laws of the state. In order that the clergymen and doc- tors. of our society can perform their jobs and discuss with pregnant women the im- plications of their situation, and'alterna- tive solutions to it, the laws of the state of Michigan should be changed. Abortion should be matter of decision for the wo- man alone, performed, if desired, by a competent professional physician under sanitary conditions. } Popular demonstration of support for such a measure may provide the needed margin for passage of such legislation ire the next legislative session. Work for it. It can be your way of telling Bob Hauert, and the many like him, how much we ap- preciate their dedication. -JIM NEUBACHER Editorial Page Editor ANOTHER BLUE RIBBON group, the President's Com- mission on Campus Unrest, is sinking slowly into'the sunset. Following the many precedents established over the past few years, it has faded from the news and the public mind as the time and distance between the ini- tiating event, Kent State, et al, have increased. However, the Commission did.surface yesterday, al- though briefly, in a story telling of President Nixon's request for 1,000 more FBI agents to help investigate campus bombings. The Associated Press did it like this: "NBC News reported last night that Nixon did not consult his Commission on Campus Unrest before an- nouncing his proposal." What kind of news is that? By now it should be com- mon knowledge that presidential commissions are only intended to solve the President's problems and no one else's. The tactic works wonderfully well, and for lesser executive types as well as Presidents. A typical commission will begin with what is euphe- mistically termed "a national tragedy." The three which come most readily to mind are the riots of summer 1967 (t h e Kerner report), Robert Kennedy's -assassination j (the Eisenhower report) and the Cambodia-Kent State-} Jackson State sequence (the President's Commission on Campus Unrest). The next step is The Grand Announcement. As the nation reels in the psychic shock of the event, accusa- tions are flying, literally, left and right, many of them landing on-the President himself. Within a few days, The Word comes down that a dozen or so famous people are going to form a committee at the President's request to determine the cause of the tragedy and recommend so- lutions. THERE ARE TWO advantages which accrue imme- diately to the President. First, since to most people the event is inexplicable, there is the reassurance that Some- thing is being done and they need not worry any further, if, indeed, they had been. That reassurance of the per- plexed is important in that it provides the President with a base for dealing with his less-easily mollified critics. If their attacks on him continue, he can always counter by saying, "But we ARE doing something about it." After that, if they still fail to be silenced, someone can always label them "troglodytic leftists" or something esoteric and things tend to quiet down. Through the weeks and months which follow, more subtle forces come into play. At first, while the memories are still fresh in the public mind, reports appear almost daily in the national media. So-an-so famous expert testifies before commission; commission member makes statement; hearings convened at new location. Gradually, though, the reports lessen until they fade from the scene entirely, save for incidental- emergencies such as the one on Wednesday. It is now that the Presi- dent's greatest psychological ally comes into play - peo- ple's natural desire to forget anything distasteful. Secure in the belief that Something is being done, they feel freed from any obligation to worry about the events or what they might indicate. WHEN THE ACTUAL report finally comes out, it may be six or more months later. There is usually little fan- fare and the dim memories of the majority of people on all levels works to the President's advantage, whatever, the reaction. If the report attacks him, either directly or indirectly, he can claim the conclusions were incorrectly drawn, impugn the motives of the commission members or ignore it. If it supports him (which has yet to really happen) those who criticize the report will find the President claiming their conclusions w e r e incorrectly drawn, impugning their motives, or ignoring them. The last option in both cases is "ignore," and in the end, that is what happens to any report. President John- son was overpowering in his charge to the Kerner Com- mission, using phrases like "leave no stone unturned in your search" and "do not let partisan considerations in- terfere." (Then, when it came out and said there was white racism, hate, violence and other ills in the body politic, LBJ angrily shelved it. Mayor Daley dealt even more severly with the Turner Commission report on the Democratic Convention in Chicago. Not only did he villify Turner and the rest of the commission, but went to the trouble of beatingsthem to the punch with his own movie on national television. The end result is that the President, or some other executive, has rallied his support forces, undercut and defamed the opposition and given some publishing com- pany the chance to make a few dollars by bringing the report out in paperback form, complete with 20 pages of pictures. THE WHOLE PROBLEM is somewhat parallel to a suspected embezzler asking a group of top law officials to make an extensive investigation of his records. A vio- lent incident of national impact is merely the symptom of very deep and pervasive social ills in the nation. To have a Presidential commission, which is an extension of the President himself, expose those ills is a blatant self-contradiction.-The President, whoever he is, realizes this from the onset and therefore is dishonest from the onset when he leads anyone to believe that something will be done. That sort of thinking, however, is not unique to our current leader. Admissions of error by presidents are ex- tremely rare, and aside from the events which led to them, are majorhnews stories in themselves., isenhow- er's apology to Kruschev for the U-2 incident and Ken- nedy's statements after the Bay of Pigs disaster are the two notable incidents of recent times, and it is signifi- cant that those both were international, rather than do- mestic, issues, AS THE LEVEL of violence in this country /continues to rise, with a subsequent proliferation .of Presidential commissions, their uselessness will finally begin to dawn on larger and larger numbers of people. Whether that holds any hope or not is debateable. Those who have al- ready rejected such studies are immediately branded as "pusillanimous pussy-footers" and accused of "rejecting the systems we have in America for peaceful dissent and change." That's right, gentlemen. 'V p Working with churches for reparations If apathy is what the people want.. . OOD PEOPLE everywhere will feel an. immediate revulsion at the U n i t e d States decision Tuesday to lift its embargo on armament shipments to the military junta in Greece. The U.S., they will say, is perpetuating another dictatorship out of military paranoia. (The decision was based on Greece's importance to NATO amid the strengthening of Soviet naval power in the Mediterranean.) Opponents w il1 charge that, nevertheless, the U.S. could do worse than permit the coming of the Russians and is doing worse by supporting a government which cares neither for liberty nor civil rights, and is denying the freedoms of the many. These critics are, however, assuming that Editorial Sta MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor STUART GANNES JUDY SARASOHN Editorial Director Managing Editor NADINE COHODAS .......... Feature Editor JIM NEUBACHER .. Editorial Page Editor ROB BIER.............Associate Managing Editor LAURIE HARRIS......... ... . . Arts Editor JUDY KAHN. Personnel Director DANIEL ZWERDLING........M.....agazine Editor ROBERT CONROW .......... ........Books Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Dave Chudwin. Erika Hoff. Stevek Koppman, Robert Kraftowitz, Iynn Weiner EDITORIAL NIGHT EDITORS: Jim Beattie, Lindsay Chaney, Steve Koppman, Pat Mahoney, Rick Perloff COPY EDITORS: Tammy Jacobs, Larry Lempert, Jim McFersonR Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Debbie Thai. Harvard valiance ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS:/ Rose Berstein, Mike Cleply; Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Art Lerner, Jonathan Miller, Hannah Morrison, M i c h a e l Schneck, Bob Schreiner, W. E. Schrock, Edward Zimmerman Business Staff IAN G. WRIGHT, Business Manager PHYLLIS HURWITZ CRAIG WOLSON AdministrativeAdv. Mgr. Sales Manager VITA GOLDSTEIN Staff Coordinator M4ARK WALFISH . .. .. .. Personnel AMY COHEN ......... Finance Manager DAVID BELL .. ........ .. . Circulation Manager a libertarian government is what the citizens want. Before excoriating a gov- ernment for denying liberties, it. would be good to consider whether the citizens even care. People generally give little concern for the policies of their government: it's the damn politicians again, they laugh off, and the government's okay if it doesn't interfere with their job,,with their lives.- JT IS not so wrong that the people are denied every right in the book or that the government is run by dictators when the people don't really care about their rights, nor the absence of demo- cracy. The junta should, of course, give the people the opportunity to vote in a free election and make the "free" choice for apathy. Then one could certainly say that if the people "favor" indifference, so be it. But it is doubtful even then whether the people would eject the junta (they might feel temporarily satisfied with con- ditions) or whether many would even vote. One suspects that material concerns would - rightly or wrongly - supercede all else and,- that apathy is the rule in politics, no matter what the government. Perhaps what the critics should be- moan, if they really care for the people, are the things for which people actually care: material matters like wealth, better housing and education for, the children. That doesn't mean excluding the hope that the Greeks will someday care about establishing a more democratic govern- ment. It merely means realizing that this goal involves a supreme value judgment, favoring freedom, a value with which others may agree or simply shrug off po- litely. -RICK PERLOFF By DALE OESTERLE Daily Guest Writer LAST NOVEMBER, following the examples set in New York, blacks presented reparation de- mands in the form of a "Black Manifesto" read in the pulpits of various area churches. The list was long and the demands, often vague, were centered not on im- provement of the poor in Wash- tenaw County (that was one issue in the pverall picture) but on a much broader political base - national as well as local. It dealt with black status, and within that framework fell the demand for increased help and self-determin- ation for the poor of .Washtenaw County. AprilCsaw the formation of the Washtenaw County Black Econo- mic Development League (BEDL), disillusioned with Washtenaw, County welfare agencies, and de- termined to aggressively deal with the situation. The County Wel- fare Rights Organization (WRO) soon joined the effort. These groups joined, claiming to be the "sole" legitimate repre- sentatives of the poor in Wash- tenaw County, and the only agen- cies through which funds should go. The claim bases its strength on the make-up of both groups' board; both are dominated by welfare mothers. It is the only board in the County to have such a "self-help" arrangement, placing welfare mothers in the controlling positions. Soon to follow was the Aug. 19 occupation and sit-in at the First Presbyterian Church which was escalated to a worship serv- ice disruption the next Sunday, Aug. 23. These tactics were ex- panded to include a number of other churches. Seeking additional funds and support (manpower), BEDL and WRO representatives came to the Sept. 16 Student Government Council meeting. They requested $100 for an "educational campaign for the purpose of increasing the awareness {of the student body on the issues raised by the BEDL and WRO and to gain support for those groups." With tht appeal for student support in mind, a need is created for informative decisions on our part. cerned with the benefit of the poor community, and seeks to lob- by the County and state for the reform of outdated local welfare programs. However, BEDL and WRO have refused to join the coalition. The reason is the larger churches have refused to recognize the two groups as representatives of the county poor. Accordingly, BEDL and WRO feel that the churches will, acting on that belief, not dis- tribute their monies exclusively to BEDL and WRO, but include other local agenices as well. BEDL and WRO contend that these other groups have been ineffective and will continue to be ineffective, in the future. ON THE CONTRARY, many such agencies, such as the social services department of the Council of Churches, have had success. This organization alone feeds 54 families and operates the only active free furniture fund in the. County. The groups' claim to be the legi- timate representatives of the poor is equally uncertain. Both groups asked all their "constituents" not to' take clothes from the County of Churches - operated "House by the Side of the Road," which distributes second-hand clothing free. Seven hundred people picked up clothes in three weeks! In addition, BEDL has refused to join the coalition because it fears that the churches will place restrictions on the money given. However, the church administra- tors told me that WRO and BEDL could, if they demonstrated their effectiveness, be the second-hand receivers of some of the monies through the Inter-Faith Coalition. Again, appropriations would pro- bably go to other community groups as well, which BEDL and WRO are certainly understress- ing. IT SHOULD BE noted that the problem has not been alleviated by the donations of five smaller churches to BEDL and WRO. Four of the five were not the objects of the sit-ins or disruptions and all five of the churches are small and could give little. BEDL wanted $50,000 from most churches, these 5 averaged $1,200 - a far cry from the sum asked for. Thus, the thrust of the drive has concentrated on the more in- fluential ten churches, referred to before. These, including the First Presbyterian, the First U n i t e d Methodist, have greater resources available. In my talks with these church administrators, all ten voiced serious reservations about their congregation's consent' to BEDL and WRO's confrontation tactics, and all money appropriations-must be voted on by the congregations. All ,the administrators Indicated that money appropriated directly to the groups' (and not through the Coalition) was a pglitical im- possibility - church members would refuse it, the tactics and legitimacy of WRO and BEDL be- ing in definite question. IF THE poor people in t h e County are really the issue, and not a mere stepping stone to a larger one, it seems as though one would try to do his utmost to maximize their position (monetar- ily) with new self-help programs. Yet the only real existant channel - the Coalition - is being ig- nored by BEDL and WRO. The'Coalition has been pledged $25,000 by the First U n i t e d Methodist Church already - two times the monies BEDL and WRO have received to date from f i v e churches. Some money is possi- ble through the Coalition; none through the confrontation tactics. Further pressure, along t h e i r present policy lines, is merely go- ing to jeopardize WRO and BEDL's bargaining position f o r sums of money, for it will serve only to polarize. A polarization of people is not what the poor need, they need the viable alternatives provided by monies in self-help programs at- tainable through the Coalition. The people of Washtenaw County have been abused by, and, have been the objects of, politics t o o long. Consider the objectives and then the politics, not the politics and then the objectives. (The author is a member of Student Government Council). wi IT MUST first be recognized that Washtenaw County churches have sorely overlooked the magni- tude of these problems and the efforts of BEDL and WRO must be applauded. These groups have been invaluable in dramatizing the problem. But it seems that these tactics - the sit-ins, the building occu- pations - have outlived their use- fulness. It now appears unlikely that the major churches will ap- propriate money directly to BEDL and WRO, and that the two groups have refused to accept a plausible solution to the problem. The answer lies, I think, with the Inter-Faith Coalition, includ- ing about 17 area churches (both large and small) with all and any other l(al groups asked to parti- cipate. The Coalition aims "to insure ways and means whereby the poor and disadvantaged will participate in the :study, decision making, distribution of funds, and legislative activity of the coali- tion." 4 It also hopes td for distribution to obtain money agencies con- Letters to the Editor I-IIAYS 1WS'Ct eTaT 0 (sA FWaOCR CHIU2 AT 06R'.W Y 17165 T$c RCV-T unomQ 8vT t --r 196 vl(e Wce' ELVt~OTr' FREAK5 OUT 11 cifltr. TrHIM. rTAQ 5OFFS JAO6FOMJPA E5A 1W)ONa W6S- t-ACK SWTO'65 MOJ R WHO US LAWS TO BL)PM %W(o MC~ CAMPUS5.k 6tOV O AKWS F 'TO PW5P LW4J IM 'TO S6~T OP A13 & AUTC Off t-W E.Ct JADJ6 WAOJTi' ? aWCOrT 7O 6W ~OfUP7R65 MV OR SV~)OW O TAUeCAMR 'S. v 1 p j ( ila" r 91 A i/1 a x a, ;a a a Gi Oppression To the Editor: OPPRESSION endures until the oppressed claim the liberation that is rightfully theirs. Consequently the Radical Caucus of the Gay Liberation Front applauds and supports the efforts of BEDL to obtain funds for the poor of Washtenaw County and strongly backs Peter Denton in his struggle for a trial by a jury of his peers for hisrparticipation in the BAM strike. Radical Caucus of Gay Lib marched with BEDL from First Presbyterian to First Unitarian Church and expects to attend Peter Denton's trial at the North Campus Commons Thursday at % Language institute To the Editor: AT THE MOMENT there are over one hundred foreign univer- sity students and professional men enrolled in the eight and sixteen week courses of the English Lan- guage Institute. Perhaps because of this international composition of the group of participants. the ELI has remained above the criti- cal process and has avoided the periodic review which is necessary for any university institution. Cer- tain criticisms made to me make it clear that such a review of the ELI is now called for. 1) There is a lack of seriousness in the classes. One professional compound the student's already great problem of learning the English language. 3) The language laboratory is "next to useless." Due to crowded conditions, ancient tapes, mal- functionings machinery, and im- possible noise interference from other users, the language labora- tory is the disgrace of the Ann Arbor campus. BEING AWARE of the past reputation of the ELI at Michi- gan, it is'clear to meAhat this in- stitute is now only "resting on its laurels" of the past. I hope it is not true that my foreign friends "learn only that we will not learn English." --William Katra 1 cT_ j AT W t~FAPCOUT & T T-OLJi'Y ViU(T tY$ALL-FAC- TIONS CMA LOW THE)111 flOLUTTWkL POW G 066V 50 i&KI a ThtLLI Zk7T 15 A IMD !25 ALS9U0- 'FprC2C"4' ' 50~w oot- I I I