balancing teacups Party line with Mitch and Nix nadine cohoda. WE'VE ALL been waiting for the report of the Presi- dential Commission on Campus Unrest. And probably no two in- dividuals have looked forward more to this occasion than Presi- dent Nixon and his sidekick, At- torney General John Mitchell. Naturally, one assumes they were in communication with each other on the eventful day, and the Daily was lucky enough to sneak into Martha Mitchell's upstairs bathroom to overhear on the ex- tension phone t h e conversation husband John was having with his boss. JM: Dick, John . . Well, it's- uh. it's here, Dick. RN: Yeah, I know. Bill brought it over yesterday. I dunno, John did you look at the thing? JM: Yup. RN: Well? JM: I don't k now - do you suppose we could ignore it? We could tell them it doesn't exist. After all, if you remember in July I told them you never said Man-, son was guilty and they apparent- ly believed me. And we told them there was a new Nixon to replace the old, and look where that's gotten you, huh Dick? RN: You know John, you have a point. But Factually, I think in looking over the thing I have a better idea., It's similar to what you say, but goes a little further. I suggest we ignore what we don't like and emphasize what we do. How about that? JM: Not bad, not bad. RN: For example, the report says: When criminal violence occurs on the campus, university offi- cials should promptly call for the assistance of law enforce- ment agencies. When faced with disruptive but nonviolent conduct, the university should be prepared to respond initially with internal measures... Faculty members who engage in or lead diAruptive conduct have no place in the university community. ,Now John, isn't that what I've said all along? We've got to root out those bums, we've got-to get rid of those marshmellows we have for college administrators. We've got to take away t h o s e Communist, Peking inspired pro- fessors so they are unable to make our children sin. Why John, we could even use this report as a basis for starting a nationwide Algier Hiss campaign to get rid of those radical professors. Yessir, I like the sound of that. JM: Not bad, Dick, not bad at all. RN: And a 1 s o, John, doesn't this justify the calling in of troops at Kent State and Jackson State? Doesn't it now? It says there in black and white "university offi- cials should promptly call for the assistance of law enforcement agencies" if trouble comes. Why you know what else John? JM: What Dick? RN: Maybe we could turn the construction workers union into The National Police F o r c e To Keep The Peace On Campus. "Put down your rivets - pick up your guns!" What a motto! JM: Great Dick, just great. You know, this might work, RN: Yeah, I hope so but I have to be honest with you John. Some of this report really burns me up. Sometimes I wonder if they're * talking about the same country I'm running. Listen to this. "Much of the nation is so polarized that on many cain- puses a major domestic conflict or an unpopular initiative in foreign policy could trigger fur- ther violence, protests and, in its wake, counter violence and repression." Can you imagine that John? And after my triumph at Kansas State - they loved me, there they loved me! JM: I know Dick, but what can you expect from those sidewalk diplomats? RN:, Just listen to this part. "They see the Indochina war as an onslaught by a technolog- ical giant upon the peasant peo- ple of a small, harmless and backward nation." John, don't they realize we're helping that small little country become a big, strong country like, us. Don't they know that, John. JM: I guess not, Dick. RN: And they have the gall to say : "The nation has been slow to resolve the issues of war 'and race." Hell, J o h n, I've pulled 75.000 troops out 'of Vietnam in the last 10 months and they're bussing those kids to white schools in the south. What the hell more trey want? We're moving along. You can't just race headlong into these things, you know. JM: I know, Dick. I know. You don't have to tell me. RN: Oh, I don't mean to jump at; you, John, but I get so rank- led at these people when they say things like: "We recommend that the- president take steps to assure'+ that he is continuously inform- ed of the views of students and blacks..." This really hurts, John. I try especially hard here. Why I talk to Julie and David e v e r y day, sometimes twice a day, to see what they're thinking, and Harry Bela- fonte sang, at the White House just last week. What more do they want? Am I supposed to live with t h e m or have them actually come to the White House? Now how would it look for the President of the Unit- ed States to stay in a dormitory or. in a ghetto tenement?. Or what would the Silent Majority think if those long-haireds and dope addicts came here? That's just asking too much, John. JM: Of course it is, Dick. But who said you should. You're fine right here in Washington or in San 'Clemente or down at K e y Biscayne or when you travel to Europe and Mexico. Just fine. RN:Thanks, J o h n. I always feel so much better talking to you. You really understand me, you know that? JM: Sure Dick, I know. RN: Well, John, I guess I still won't decide anything today. I guess I'll check with Kissinger and maybe Klein and maybe he and Ziegler will come up with some- thing for us to say. Good night, John. JM: Good night, Dick. And good night for the United States of America. A Hi Dick.. . Hi John... i WORKERS VS. LEADERSHIP Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 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. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: ERIKA HOFF J. Edgar tells: how to spot the radicals (EDITOR'S NOTE: T h e following "Open Letter to College Students" is reprinted front t h e Congressional Record of September 23, 1970.) By JOHN EDGAR H4OOVER Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation AS A 1970 college student, you belong to the best educated, most sophisticated, m o s t poised generation in our history. The vast majority of you, I am convinced, sincerely love America, and want to make it a better country. You do have ideas of your own -and that's good. You see things wrong in our society which we adults perhaps have minimized or overlooked. You are outspoken and frank and hate hypocrisy. That is good too. There's nothing wrong with student dissent or student demands for changes in society or the display of student unhappiness over as- pects of our national policy. Student opinion is a legitimate aspect of public opinion in our so- ciety. But there is real ground for concern about the extremism which led to violence, lawless- ness, and disrespect for the rights of others on many college campuses during the past year. THE EXTREMISTS are a small minority of students and faculty members who have lost faith in America. They ridicule the flag, poke fun at American institutions, seek to de- stroy our society. They are not interested in genuine reform. They take advantage of the tensions, strife, and often legitimate frustra- tions of students to promo'te campus chaos. They have no rational, intelligent plan of the future either for the university or the Nation. The extremists are of wide variety: adher- ents of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) including the Weathermen; members of the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA), the Trotskyist youth group; the Communist Par- ty's Young Workers Liberation League (YW- LL). Or they may be associated with the Stu- dent Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam (SMC), a Trotskyist - dominated antiwar group. Many are not associated with any national group. The key point is not so much the iden- tification of extremists but learning to recog- nize and understand the mentality of extrem- ism which believes in violence and destruction. Based on our experience in the FBI, here are some of the ways in which extremists will try to lure you into their activities: 1. They'll encourage you to lose respect for your parents and the older generation. This will be one of their first attacks, trying to cut you off from home. You'll hear much about the "failures" and 'hyprocrisy" of your parents and their friends. The older generation has made mistakes but your parents and r- lions of other adults worked hard, built, sacrificed, and suffered to make America what it is today. statements are issued as if they were the fin, truth. You should carefully examine the fact Don't blindly follow course, of action suggest by extremists. Don't get involved in a cau j u s t because it seems "fashionable" or ti "thing to do." Rational discussion and ration analysis are needed more than ever before. 4. They'll try to envelop you in a mood negativism, pessimism, and alienation towai yourself, your school, your Nation. This is or of the most insidious of New Left poisior SDS and its allies judge America exclusive] from its flaws. They see nothing good, positiv and constructive. This leads to a philosopli of bitterness, defeatism, and rancor. I wou like you to know your country more intimat( ly. I would want you to look for the deep( unifying forces in America, the moods of no tional character, determination and sacrifi which are working to correct these flaws. Tr real strength of our nation is the power of me rality, decency, and conscience which right the wrong, corrects error, and works for equi opportunity under the law. 5. They'll encourage you to disrespect tli law and hate the law enforcement officer. Mo. college students have good friends who are pc lice officers. You know that when extremist call the police "pigs" they are wrong. The o: ficer protects your rights, lives and propert He is your friend and he needs your support. 6. They'll tell you that any action is honoi able and right if it's "sincere" or "idealistic in motivation. Here is one of the most seduc tive of New Left appeals - that if an arsor ists or anarchist's heart is in the right plac if he feels he is doing Something for "humar ity" or a "higher cause," then his act, even illegal is justifiable. Remember that acts has consequences. The alleged sincerity of the pei petrator does not absolve him from responsibi: ity. His acts may affect the rights, lives, an property of others Just being a student or be ing on campus does not automatically confe immunity or grant license to violate the lam Just because you don't like a law doesn't mea you can violate it with impunity. 7. They'll ask you to-believe that you, as student and citizen, are powerless by democrat ic means to effect change in our society. Re member the books on American history yo have read. They tell the story of the creativ self-renewal of t h e nation through chang( Public opinion time after time has brought net policies, goals, and methods. The individual n o t helpless or caught in "bureaucracy" a these extremists claim. 8. They encourage you to hurl ricks any stones instead of logical argument at those wh disagree with your views. I remember an ol saying: "He who strikes the first blow has ru out of ideas." Violence is as' ancient as t h caveman; as up to date as the Weathermai Death and injury, fear, distrust, animosity, po larization, counter-violence - these arise fron violence. The very use of violence shows th UAW By BRUCE LEVINE Daily Guest Writer SINCE MID-SEPTEMBER t he United Auto Workers have been on strike against the Gen- eral Motors Corporation demand- ing increased wages, an improved retirement program ("30 and Out"), and a return to the cost- of-living escalator on wages (dropped in 1967). It promises to be a long and difficult struggle in which the strikers will have to overcome more than one obstacle to reach their goal. The first and most obvious of these obstacles is GM itself. Even before the start of negotiations, GM top management began mak- ing "tough" noises - not only sneering at union demands but making aggressive demands of its own : for tighter work discipline, the outlawing of strikes over work- ing conditions, reduction of the number of union stewards per plant, etc. The corporation h a s been beefing itself up for the bat- tle and has at its disposal finan- cial resources far greater than those of the workers The second obstacles confront- ing the strikers is the hostility of the politicians. All Agnew's demagogic posturing as the cham- pion of the "little man" shrivels before the steady stream of in- vective pouring out of Washington directed at so-called "inflation- ary" wage demands made by work- ers who are trying only to keep their noses above the tide of in- flationary prices. Nixon put teeth into his rhetoric when he called out the National Guard troops to break the New York postal strike and the Teamsters strike in Chi- cago. THE STRIKERS can expect lit- tle better from their Democratic "friends of labor", the most "lib- eral" of whom have spent the summer calling for government controls over wages and prices. As the UAW knows, such controls at best serve to freeze the propor- tion of national income going to workers; at worst - and in all previous , practice-they simply provide a cover for employer at- tacks on real incomes through speed-ups and ourburdened work procedures. These two obstacles, the corpor- ate and political establishments, are the most obvious ones in the path of the auto workers. There is, however, another one: the un- ion bureaucracy itself. The idea that the union leader- strike: 1 ership over the past twenty-five years demonstrates clearly t h a t their role has been a basically conservative and retarding one: Perched atop the -workers' shoulders, enjoying the p o w e r which that position gives them, and wedded to an ideological posi- tion that says "don't make wav- es", the UAW bureaucracy avoids doing battle with corporation and government and fights (when it is forced to) only around the least controversial issues possible, abandoning even those .truggles before their goals are achieved. In the process, it repeatedly adandons the fight for humanized working conditions, scrupulously avoids mobilizing the ranks during strike actions, stears clear of em- barrassing its Democratic Party "friends" and instantly breaks the back of any movement of- rank- and-file militancy which threat- ens this cozy consensus. This is "business unionism" and its goal is to avoid any conflict that might shake the bureaucrats out of their comfortable "legitimacy" by forcing them into action over such delicate questions on work- ing conditions and who ouhgt to run the plants - management or workers. Where the ranks do break out of the bureaucracy's grip they a r e quickly slapped down. In 1967, for example, an entire local (549 in Mansfield, Ohio) went out on strike against GM demanding im- proved working conditions. The International solved GM's prob- lems by placing the local under trusteeship (i.e., freezing their local treasury and suspending their rights of self-government). The International's representa- tive then informed a local mem- bership meeting during a back-to- work "vote": "There will be no vote at this meeting. There is only one vote in this local and I have it." The strike was broken. Last year, at Sterling T o w n- ship's Chrysler Stamping Plant, UAW members wildcatted w h e n fellow workers were fired for re- fusing to undertake especially dangerous assignments. 0 n c e again the International stepped in, and placing this local, too, un- der trusteeship. UAW Vice Presi- dent Douglas Fraser ran the next local meeting, "suggested" t h e membership go back to work, and then took one back-to-work vote after another until the opposition finally broke, shorn of resources, organizational rights, and outside support. bellious militancy by taking its lead. On the other hand he and the rest of the bureaucrats 1 i k e him have been historically unwill- ing and unable to satisfy this mil- itancy by actually leading mili- tant struggles of their own. If he fights the battle which the ranks are demanding, he will be forc- ed into the kind of gloves-off con- frontation with the company which could upset his entire scheme of business unionism. On the other hand, if he fails to do so, he will not be able to give the ranks the contract which they demand - and he will face a larg- er groundswell of rebellion than before. ANOTHER PROBLEM W o o d- cock faces is the possible interac- tion, between young workers and student radicals in the course of the strike. The single most volatile and militant sector of the auto workers it (next to b 1 a c k work- ers in general) young workers. They are the least willing to put and that in order to win their "legitimate gri9vances" (Al's phrase) they will have to combat these power relations, consciously, and deliberately. And since we radicals do indeed hope that work- ers will achieve their goals, we also hope that they will reach the consciousness necessary for them to do so. Tpat is, we hope that the workers will become radicalized, and we believe that the conditions in which workers live, work, and fight can produce that rise in consciousness. This is all we say. Al Reuther,. on the other hand, has more to say. Not only aren't workers "capable" of becoming re- volutionary: Al Reuther informs us further that they are not even, combative, that there is a flat "lack of actual militancy on the part of the rank and file . . That is, they just don'twant to fight at all. And furthermore: "Most auto workers tend to fear the main foci of social unrest these days -- the blacks' struggle for equality . . ." That is, "most" 'he men and the myths "The record of the UAW leadership over the last twenty-five years demonstrates clearly that their role has been a basically conservative and retarding one." ....*................*S......*...*... S ggg ggg ggg up with shop-floor authoritarian- ism, the least awed by the majes- ty of either corporate or union heads, and the most willing to fight back when stepped on. As foremen and union bureaucrats ruefully admit, the past f i v e years of struggle on the campuses has set up sympathetic vibrations within the ranks of working-class youth. The possibility of strength- ened ties between young workers, and radical students therefore is understandable unattractive from the union bureaucracy's point of view. It is precisely such fears which Walter Reuther's nephew, Al, ex- pressed in Saturday's Daily. His article started off by label- ing the attitude of radicals (in the Students to Support the A u t o Workers)' toward the strikers naive, pre-conceived, and "arro- gant." But as we shall see, it is precisely the perspective of the union bureaucrats and of Mr. Al Reuther (who here speaks for them) which is truly "arrogant." Al's point number one: Radicals are all wrong when they "postu- late the inherently revolutionary capability of the mass of work- ers." Certainly, he admits, "the auto workers are exploited eco- nomically" and there is indeed "a sense of outrage which many stu- dents naturally feel upon working in an auto plant and experiencing its dehumanizing conditions.. nevertheless. "the auto workers rank and file clearly lacks a n y revolutionary tendencies .." NOW LET US examine his ar- gument thus far. Conditions in the plants are rotten (Woodcock him- self calls GM "a gold-plated sweat-shop"),, the workers a r e "exploited," their surroundings are "dehumanizing". . . but stu- dents are wrong to credit these workers even with a revolution- ary "capability." Why? Who a r e auto workers are in practice rac- ists. You would never know from Al's article that a full 30 per cent of the UAW' membership is itself black. Also, the workers "fear . . . the antiwar movement. They have deep-rooted attachments to t h e establishment, having purchased homes and served in the army (the young in Vietnam)." Under- stand? They've been in the army and (as Al would say) so "ipso facto" are in favor of the war. You would never know from this about the growing anti-war sentiment which exists among workers, with auto workers in the lead, and among working-class GIs. You'd never know that Walter Reuther, at the same time as he publicly endorsed last year's anti-war Moratorium, felt it necessary to warn (hawkish?) UAW members not to down tools and join t h e antiwar marches. Never mind, the verdict is in: workers are non-re- volutionary, non-militant, racist hawks. BUT AL IS NOT even nearly through pointing out the errors of the "arrogant" student radicals. Not only is our view of the auto workers overoptimistic, "pre-con- ceived and naive." Our image of the union bureau-, er, leadership is completely wrong, too. "We are asked to .believe," Al writes, "that the UAW leadership is composed of complacent, white-collar bur- eaucrats who are out of touch with the needs and desires of the rank and file." This, he contin- ues, is nothing but "intellectual garbage." (Al is by this, p o i n t huffing and puffing with ill-sup- pressed fury.) First of all, he says, the union leadership is 100 per cent demo- cratic. They are elected by their membership, are in close touch with their members' feelings, and represent the wishes and desires UAW Intetrnational which has marched with the blacks a- Selma, Birmingham, Washington, Mem- phis, and Atlanta . . ." In short, the leadership is not only demo- cratic, it is also anti-racist, mili- tant, and anti-war. ANYONE NOTICE a problem in Al's scenario? On the one hand he presents the UAW ranks-non- ,militant, racist, and pro-war: the swinish multitude. And on the other hand we have their leader- ship-militant, equalitarian, anti- war and . . . scrupulously repre- sentative of their ranks? Of course, it's a fumble. Al has been a little too free with his (non-arrogant!) smear of the rank-and-file auto workers and, shall we say, somewhat indiscreet with his whoops and huzzahs for the UAW bureaucracy - and he has wound up in a paradox. But then, this is a common problem with special pleading masquerad- ing as analysis. But after all, the same paradox exists within the UAW bureau- cracy for whom Al has been loyal- ly thumping the tub. They enjoy spouting militant rhetoric and masquerading as sparkplugs for the otherwise non-militant ranks -at the same time as they smash organized militancy whenever it raises its head. Alternatively they try to pacify that militancy with- out involving themselves in the kind of really militant and (dare we say it?) radical struggle which the attainment of the ranks'. de- sires would require. In the meantime, Woodcock (like Reuther before him) prides himself on being among the most far-sighted of the labor leaders, and so lends his name to all sorts of liberal causes-so long as the ranks don't force him into actual struggle, around those issues. For the game reason-and because he shares most Establishment-liber- als' concern with student radical- ism-he announces his hope that supporting the auto strike will be "in" on campus this year. It must be a non-political support. Al sternly suggests well-meaning stu- dents are. "welcome" so long as they keep their "arrogant" mouths shut. Woodcock's (and Al's) dilemma is not a new one, of course. It re- appears each time a "leader" finds himself perched atop a movement which threatens to go further than his own intended destination. This is not, after all, the first time a labor bureaucrat has brpken his back trying to brake the militancy of his ranks. IT SEEMS only yesterday - May-June, 1968, more exactly - that the French trade union bureaucrats (the French "Com- munist" Party) were caught in such a bind. And it should not sur- prise us that in frantically trying to separate radical students from militant young w o r k e r s, the French 'Stalinists employed a by- now familiar line of argument: "Of course the support of stu- dents for our strike is welcome! Only leave your leaflets home. And your banners. And your ideas. And should you find yourself in a parade with our workers, keep yourselves well away from them -you with your arrogant(!) be- lief that you know better than we leaders what is good for this Awl 4r "What some of us do believe . . . is that in the course of combatting 'exploiting' and 'dehuman- izing' conditions, workers come face to face with power relations which define capitalism and that in order to win their 'legitimate grievances' they will have to combat these power relations consciously and deliberately." MWWmm2%Ememaammmma a ship itself is an obstacle before n the workers is a startling one for e most students - although it is n. increasingly accepted by the work- ers themselves from their own m bitter experience. For year after e year, contract after contract, the U IAW leadrship has pat-ientlyv de- THESE ARE only examples. Si- milar stories can be told about the International all over the country. Wherever militancy threatens the bureaucracy's peace, it is slapped down. That is, it is slapped down when