Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Report of 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. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER On, campus,.unrest AS UNIVERSITIES t h r o u g h o u t the country open this fall, the awareness that this nation faces one of the greatest schisms in its history presses on all of us. It is a reality with which we all must deal. On many university campuses, last spring, this schism burst forth in the form of student protest against the in- yvsion of Cambodia and the killings at Kent and Jackson State. And part of the tremendous energy released by these pro- tests resulted in outbreaks of violence, both directed at and committed by stu- dents.:; Confronted with t h i s unprecedented schism, which has alienated the best educated and most privileged American youth from the social institutions of the nation, one of the necessary reactions for a President of the United States had to have been the establishment of a com- mission on campus unrest.. THAT WAS last spring. Now we are presented with a document which ser- iously presents its solution for ending campus unrest. We would be deceiving ourselves to shrug the report off as just another administrative whitewash or a rhetorical exercise in denunciation. In' precis, the feelings of the commis- sion can justly be presented as follows: There is an increasing amount of violence and campus unrest in our society. Diversity of opinion and in- tolerance of opposing views has given rise to a significant polarization in the nation. Violence and polarization and campus unrest must be ended.- We propose our recommendations be- cause we believe they will end campus unrest. THE REPORT of the President's Com- mission on Campus Unrest includes a sincere plea for the. establishment of a truly cooperative university community where educational opportunities are not restricted and academic institutions are free from outside interference. It goes on to advocate r e f o r m s in the university -structures which will facilitate equal op- portunities, free a c c e s s for minority groups and various academic improve- ments, The mood of reconciliation is expressed by the commission's belief that it is "urgent that Americans of all convic- tions draw back from the brink. We must recognize even our bitter opponents as fellow Americans with rights, upon which we cannot morally or legally encroach and- as fellow human beings whom we must not club, stone, shoot or bomb. "Violence must stop because it is wrong: It destroys human effort. It undermines the foundations of a just social order. No progress is possible in a society where lawlessness prevails. "Violence must stop because the sounds of violence drown out all words of reason. When students and officials resort to force and violence, no one can hear. Moreover, the commission iflatly advo- cates an end to the War infIndochina the symbol of the nation's moral crisis- along with changes in subsidiary univer- sity related functions such as ROTC. While we feel these objectives are good in and of themselves, the closer we read Published at 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104. Owner - Board in Control of Student Publications, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich, 48104. Bond or stockholders - none. Average press run - 9000. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Editorial Staff 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 ...... Magazine Editor ROBERT CONROW .... .. Books Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Dave Chudwin, Erika Hoff, Steve Koppman, Robert Kraftowitz, Lynn Weiner EDITORIAL NIGHT EDITORS: Jim Beattie, Lindsay Chaney, Steve Koppman, Pat Mahoney, Rick Perloft COPY EDITORS: Tammy- Jacobs, Larry Lempert, Jim McFerson, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Debbie Thal. Harvard Valiance ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Berstein, Mike Cleply, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Art Lerner, the report the more it becomes clear to us that with its philosophy and orienta- tion, the Commission on Campus Unrest has taken it upon itself to become the Commission to End Campus Unrest. We do not believe that this is a wise or even desirable goal. In fairness to the commission, it should be noted that it is perhaps aiming at a broader, more idealistic goal-the crea- tion of a society within the existing po- litical and economic structures in which great strides toward social justice and human decency can be made in the ab- sence of polarization and violent action. We share their dream. In that dream society, the frustrations which drive men to violence might not exist. In that so- ciety we would have leaders who dis- played moralhleadership, and there could be an economic'system without exploita- tion, a cultural diversity without inhi- bitions. But we don't live in that society. Though an end to unrest and polariza- tion may occur in a dream society, it is wrong to assume that ending polariza- tion and campus unrest in and of itself will transform our society into tomor- row's utopia. RATHER, HISTORY has shown that in the absence of dissent and unrest power remains where it is, and tends to concentrate, while injustices go unreme- died. We believe that campus unrest and continuing dissent - to the extent that they are not morally corruptive-serve as vital checks on the system of govern- ment in any country; and are particularly important in this country today. However, as a tactic to effect social change, dissent and unrest must be dif- ferentiated from more violent forms of protest. The commission labels violence as a cancer to be removed from American universities. But unrest. cannot be con- demned categorically, as the commission does. It must be examined within the po- litical context in which it occurs. THE VERY FACT that American univer- sities erupted over the foreign policy crisis last spring points to the reality that no American campus exists outside or apart from the rest of society. And tragically, the society to which the American university is welded, is fraught with injustice often 'pressuring various groups and institutions within its frame- work into confrontation. Indeed, the vio- lence on campus is a reflection of the violence within our society, and a greater violence which is the product of our for- eign policy. None of these issues can be separated. We must condemn the commission for its over-emphasis on ending campus un- rest as the panacea for the crisis in our society. Unrest is a sympton, not a cause, of the problenms in the country, and should not be expected to end until the deeper ailments are corrected. WHETHER UNREST in this country is abated should not be an important factor in the decision to demand an end to the war. The war must end because it is leading to the slaughter of Asian peoples and the destruction of their lands. It must end because it is an example of gross abuse of American political and mil- itary power. It must end because it is an example of imperialism - actions of manipulation of a small country by the larger, with the end justification being the "national interest" of the larger country. Campus unrest must be seen as the result of underlying inequities and injust- ices in our society and should not be ex- pected to end until these ills are solved. It is students recognizing that there are aspects of ur country which are deplor- able, and need correction. It is not yet clear how we can most effectively gather enough leverage to re- distribute power and correct the major injustices in society. But it is certain that we must continue to make ourselves heard, to oppose the absurd and the atrocious in our society, and continue to do so as long as it is necessary. ThVTTM !lTtT2A P£1TV VU Following are the texts of a call "To the American People" and the recommendations of the President's Commission on Cam- pus Unrest as presented in its report to President Nixon Sat- urday. THE AMERICAN PEOPLE THE CRISIS on American cam- puses has no parallel in the history of the nation. This crisis has roots in divisions of American society as deep as any since the Civil War. The divisions are re- flected in violent acts and harsh rhetoric, and in the emnity of those Americans who see them- selves as occupying o p p o s i n g camps. Campus unrest reflects and increases a more profound crisis in the nation as a whole. This crisis has two components: A crisis of violence and a crisis of understanding. We fear new violence and growing emnity. CRISIS OF VIOLENCE ON THE nation's campuses, and in their neighboring com- munties, the level of violence has been steadily rising. Students have been killed and injured; civil au- thorities have been killed and in- jured; bystanders have been killed and injured; valuable public and private property, and scholarly products have been burned. Too many Americans have be- gun to justify violence as a means of effecting change or safeguard- ing, traditions. Too many have for- gotten the values and sense of shared humanity that unite us. Campus violence reflects this na- tional condition. Much of the nation is so polar- ized that on many campuses a major domestic conflict or an un- popular initiative in foreign policy could trigger further violence, pro- (est and, in its wake, counter- violence and repression. The Constitution protects the freedom of all citizens to dissent and to engage in nonviolent pro- test. Dissent is a healthy sign of freedom and a protction against stagnation. But the right to dissent is not the right to resort to vi- olence. Equally, to respond to peaceful protest with repression and brutal tactics is dangerusly unwise. It makes extremists of moderates, deepens the divisions in the na- tion, and increases the chances that future protest will be violent, We believe it urgent that Aer- icans of all convictions draw back from the brink. We must recognize even our 'bitter opponents as fl- low Americans with rights upon which we cannot morally or legal- ly encroach and as fellow human beings whom we must not club, stone, shoot, or bomb. VIOLENCE MUST STOP be- cause it is wrong. It destroys hu- man effort. It undermines the foundations of a just social order. No progress is possible in a society where lawlessness prevails. Violence must stop because the sounds of violence drown out all words of reason. When students and officials resort to force and violence. no one can hear. The nation is denied a vital call to conscience. It must stop because no nation will long tolerate vio- lence without repression. History offers grim proof that repression once started is almost impossible to contain. CRISIS OF UNDERSTANDING CAMPUS PROTEST has been focused on three major ques- tions: war, racial injustice, and the university itself. The first issue is the unfilled promise of full justice and dignity for blacks and other minorities. Blacks, like many others of dif- ferent races and ethnic origins, are demanding today that the pledges of the Declaration of In- dependence and the Emancipation Proclamation be fulfilled now. Full social justice and dignity-an end to racism, in all its human, social and cultural forms-is a central demand of today's students, black, brown and white. A great majority of students and a majority of their elders oppose the ' Indochina war. Many believe it entirely immoral. And if the war is wrong, students insist, then so are all policies and practices that support it, from the draft to military research, from R.O.T.C. to recruiting for defense ihdustry. This opposition has led to an ever- widening wave of student protests. A third target of student pro- test is the shortcomings of the American university. The goals, values, administration and cur- riculum have been sharply criti- cized by many students. Students complain that their studies are irrelevant to the social problems that concern them. They want to shape their own personal and common lives, but find the university restrictive. They seek a community of com- panions and scholars but find an, impersonal multiversity. And they denounce the university's relation- ship to the war and to discrimina- tory racial practices. BEHIND THE student protest on these issues and the crises of violence to which they have con- tributed lies the more basic crisis of understanding. - Americans have never shared a single culture, a single philosophy or a single religion. But in most periods in our history, we have shared many common values, common sympathies and a com- mon dedication to a system of government which protects our diversity. We are now' in grave danger of losing what is common among us through growing intolerance of opposing views on issues and of diversity itself. A "new" culture is emerging, primarily among students. Mem- bership is often manifested by dif- ferences in dress and life style. Most of its membefs have high ideals and great fears. They stress the need for humanity, equality and the sacredness of life. They fear that nuclear war will make them the last generation in his- toryy They see their elders as entrap- ped by materialism and competi- tion and prisoners of outdated social forms. They believe their own country has lost its sense of human purpose. They see the In- dochina war as an onslaught by a technological giant upon the peasant people of a small, harm- less and backward nation. AT THE SAME TIME, many Americans have reacted to this emerging culture with an intoler- ance of their own. They reject not only that which is impatient. unrestrained, and intolerant in the new culture of the young, but even that which is good. Worse, panel 4. Y .:.:.i'"k dreams of their elders and their forefathers. In all Americans there has always been latent respect for the idealism of the young. The whole object of a free gov- ernment is to allow the nation to redefine its purposes in the light of new needs without sacrificing the accummlated wisdom of its living traditions. We cannot do this without each other. MAJOR RECOMMENDATIONS FAR MORE important than the particular recommendations of this commission are the underly- ing themes that are common to all ! Most student protestors are neither violent nor extremist. But a small minority of politically ex- treme students and faculty mem- bers and a small group of dedicat- ed agitators are bent on destruc- tion of the university through violence in order to gain their own political ends. Perpetrators of violence must be on 4' unrest -Associated Press "We urgently call for. reconciliation. Toler- ance and understanding on all sides must re- emerge from the fundamental decency of Amer- icans, .from our shared aspirations as Americans, from our traditional tolerance of diversity, and from our common humanity." ization within the university has rendered its response ineffective., The university's own house must be placed in order. 0 Too many students have act- ed irresponsibly and even danger- ously in pursuing their stated goals and expressing their dissent. Too many law enforcement offic- ers have responded with unwar- ranted harshness a n dforce in seeking to control disorder. * The nation has been slow to resolve the issues of war and race, which exacerbate divisions within American society and which have contributed to the escalation of student protest and disorder. 0 All of us must act to prevent violence, to create understanding and to reduce the bitterness and_ hostility that divide b o t h the campus and the country. We must establish respect for the processes of law and tolerance for the exer- cise of dissent on our campus and in the nation. WE ADVANCE our recommen- dations not as cure-alls but as ra- tional and responsive steps that should be taken. We summarize here our major recommendations, addressed to those who have the power to carry them out. We-urge state and local officials to make plans for handling cam- pus disorders in full cooperation with one another and with the universities. We urge the states to establish guidelines setting forth more precisely the circumstances that justify ordering the guard to intervene in a campus disorder. We recommend that the Feder- al Government review all its cur- rent policies affecting student and universities to assure that neither the policies nor administration of them threatens the independence or quality of American higher ed- ucation. At the same time 'Gov- ernment should increase its inan- cial support of higher education. We urge public officials to re- ject demands that entire univer- sities be punished because of the ideas or excesses of some mem- bers and to honor their responsi- bility to help preserve academic freedom. WE RECOMMEND that the De- partment of Defense establish al- ternatives to R.O.T.C. so,that of- ficer education is available to students whose universities choose to terminate on-campus R.O.T.C. programs. We recommend greatly increas- ed financial aid for black colleges and universities. All agencies cf Government that support such in- stitutions should massively in- they reject the individual mem- bers of the student culture them- selves. Distinctive dress alone is enough to draw insult and abuse. Increas- ing numbers of citizens believe that students who dissent or pro- test, even those who protest peace- fully deserve to be treated harshly. WE URGENTLY CALL for rec- onciliation. Tolerance and under- standing on all sides must re- emerge from the fundamental de- cency of Americans, from our shared aspirations as Americans, from our traditional tolerance of diversity, and from our common humanity. We must regain our compassion for one another and our mutual respect. There is a deep continuity be- tween all Americans, young and, old, a continuity that is being ob- scured in our growing polarization. Mvost dissenting youth are striving toward the ultimate values and identified, removed from the uni- versity as swiftly as possible,,and prosecuted vigorously by the ap- propriate agencies of law enforce- ment. * Dissent and peaceful protest are a valued part of this nation's way of -governing itself. Violence and disorder are the antithesis of democratic processes and cannot be toleratedpeither on t h e na- tion's campuses or anywhere else. The roots of student activism lie in unresolved conflicts in our national life, but the many defects of the universities have also fuel- ed campus unrest. Universities h a v e not ade- quately prepared themselves to re- spond to disruption. They have been without suitable plans, rules or sanctions. Some administrators and faculty members h a v e re- sponded irresolutely. Frequently, announced sanctions have not been applied. Even more frequent- ly, the lack of appropriate organ- crease their grants to enable these colleges to overcome past short- comings. We support the continuing ef- forts of formerly all-white univer- sities to' recruit black, Mexican- American, Puerto Rican, and oth- er minority students, and we urge that adequate Government-spon- sored student aid be made avail- able to them. We recommend that in the process of becoming more representative of the society at large universities make the ad- justments necessary to permit those from minority backgrounds to take maximum advantage of their university experience, Bombing and arson pose an In- creasing threat to lives and prop- erty on campus. We urge prompt enactment of strict controls over the sale, transfer and possession of explosive materials at both the Federal and state levels. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT W E HAVE DEEP sympathy for peace officers, local and state police, national guardsmen a n d campus security officers - who must deal with all typesof cam- pus disorder, taunts and assaults without reacting violently and whose careful conduct has pre- vented violence and saved lives. Much depends on their judgment, courage and professionalism. We commend those thousands of law enforcement officers who have endured. At the same time, we recognize that there have been dangerous and sometimes fatal instances of unnecessary harshness and illegal violence by law enforcement offi- cers. We therefore urge that peace officers be trained and equipped to deal w i th campus disorders firmly, justly and humanely. They must avoid both uncontrolled and excessive response., Too frequently, local police forces have b een undermanned, improperly equipped, poorly train- ed and unprepared f o r campus disturbances. We therefore urge police forces, especially those In smaller communities, to imiprove their capacity to respond to civil disorders. WE RECOMMEND the develop- ment of joint contingency plans among law enforcement agencies. They should specify which law en- forcement official is to be in com- mand when several forces are op- erating together. Sending civil authorities to a college campus armed as if for war - armed only to kill - has brought tragedy in the past. If this practice is not changed, tragedy will come again. Shoulder weapons (except for tear gas launchers) are very rarely needed on the college campus; they should not be used except as emergency equipment in the face of sniper fire or armed resistance' justify- ing them. We urge that the National Guard be issued special protection equipment appropriate for use in controlling civil disorders. We urge that it have sufficient tacti- cal capability and nonlethal wea- ponry so that it will use deadly force only as the absolute last re- sort. R ECOMMEND ATIONS 4 4 4 m