1 Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan friday morning The growing dissent in our armed forces by dalliel zwerdling 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. NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1970 I A judicious solution WITH WHAT IS becoming almost cycli- cal regularity, the Committee on a Permanent Judiciary (COPJ) has swung again from an apparent compromise to an apparent impasse. Ever since they be- gan meeting early in the summer, the committee, composed of administrators, faculty members, students and two Re- gents, has been debating a wide variety of possible forms for a campus judiciary. Not surprisingly, the simplest, fairest and most radical solution has never been seriously considered by COPJ: to forget about a campus judiciary and leave all cases up to the civil courts. COPJ, by its very existence, precludes consideration of such a move. Its search for a campus judiciary is a tacit endorse- ment that students-are some sort of legal and social freaks, .set apart from society at large and singled out for special treat- ment not accorded the larger constit- uency. In the case of a campus judiciary, the question extends beyond the familiar is- sue of double jeopardy. For even if that conflict were somehow resolved, the fact would remain that students are subject to sanctions which do not exist for non- students. In all fairness, the entire fault for this situation cannot be laid at the door of the University administration, although it ultimately ends up there. The general public still sees the university as a surro- gate parent responsible for the morals, conduct and thinking of its students. N AND FIFTEEN years ago, cases of student misconduct were limited' mainly to cheating, plagarism, and sim- ilar academic offenses, clearly in t h e University's purview. But with the advent of the '60s, student misconduct in the uni- versity setting began to shade into civil disobedience and the University failed to draw a line between matters which were strictly its own concern and those which affected the rest of society as well. The result now is that the public is clamouring for university administrations to clamp down on student demonstrators, and without questioning the appropriate- ness of that role, the universities are at- tempting to comply. Now, before we are saddled with a compromise judiciary no one really likes, that question should be raised. DESPITE THE inequities now existing in the civil courts, most of the ques- tions of impartiality and legitimacy now raised concerning a campus judiciary would be eliminated if cases were sent to the courts. Regardless of its final form, a campus judiciary is subject to gross political influence simply because its members are drawn from the very groups which have an immediate political interest in the outcome of the case. While the hearing officer concept offers the possibility of impartiality ,reports from other schools where it has been used indicate that poli- tical considerations tend to influence the selection of the hearing officer. The legitimacy of the civil courts is already established, and they operate un- der clearly defined rules of procedure. The Legislature of this state has pro- vided the University administration with enough legislation to enable them to use the civil courts when dealing with student protest. And thus, despite the problems which plague the legal system of this country, the civil courts offer a viable arena for both administration and student in fight- ing their legal battles. And it should be pointed out to students hesitant to face the real world of civil court that appeal procedures allow a de- fendant much more protection in. civil courts than with a campus judiciary. From a campus judiciary ,the only appeal is to the President - hardly a desirable alternative. IF STUDENTS are not going to pay more than lip service to their demands to be treated as first-class citizens, then the campus judiciary must go. Just as they deserve the credit for draging the univer- sities into the real world, so should they accept the consequences of that action. It is virtually impossible for a campus judiciary not to become someone's kan- garoo, and even an impartial one would still smack of "separate but equal" and "in loco parentis." Aside from purely academic offenses, there is no justifica- tion for a separate set of rules and courts for students. COPJ should issue a one-sentence re- port, "We recommend that there be no campus judiciary," and disband itself, permanently. s-ROB BIER Associate Managing Editor (First of a two part-series) ROWING DISSENT in the armed forces poses one of the most significant threats to Richard Nixon's security when he sleeps at night. That goes for the security of the entire nation as well, when you consider that the well-being of our corporations, our foreign investments, our domestic institutions and the whole United States government rests on a comfortable tacit assumption that young, dedicated men across the country are polishing their rifles and waiting with steel nerve to enforce the American will. But now comes the Presidio mutiny, all the GI radical coffeehouses and underground newspapers mushrooming around military bases, and thousands of battle soldiers smoking dope. You don't read much about them because the Pentagon keeps the news quiet. Perhaps even more significant: the solid officer hierarchy is starting to crack. It started with the Con- cerned Officers Movement (CM), a Washington-based antiwar group formed after last November's moratorium and the first organization to give officers a public plat- form against the Indochina war and Pentagon policies. Since the beginning of the summer, COM has been spreading tentacles to bases across the country. It's up- setting top Pentagon brass. COM was original called Officers Resistance, but the name was discarded as too radical. It didn't arouse much publicity or concern util July, when the Navy premature- ly discharged the Secretary of the Navy's two top intel- ligence briefing officers, who admitted belonging to the antiwar group. Since then, press coverage has spread the COM name, letters are pouring in from officers stationed around the world, and chapters are forming in Norfolk, Pensacola, San Diego, and Grand Forks Air Base, home of the beloved ABM. moderate Americans and the higher reaches of the military." So far, COM functions as little more than a weekly political discussion group which meets in one of the of- ficer's apartments (that's how Lenin got started). COM members have been publishing newsletters (the first declared that "the officer corps is not part of a silent majority") and they're trying to raise funds to purchase a full-page ad in the New York Times to proclaim COM's existence to the nation. COM members are considering sending active duty officers to speak with community groups and to seek support from Congressmen and retired officers. Imagine hitting the local Rotary Club and Elks Lodge with a Mari~e colonel who wants immediate out in Indochina. That's not the American Pentagon speaking. And, once they get a bit more security, the concerned officers want to confront issues beyond the war, like internal military reform. "Let's eliminate officer clubs, separate messes, and subservient practices like saluting," suggests one COM organizer. TO THE PENTAGON, any kind of dissent poses a dangerous threat. Defense Department regulations for- bid service personnel from lobbying "in combination" or publicly complaining about specific grievances-that would aply to COM members taking any stand as a group on military or political issues-and from conduct "pre- judicial" to good order and discipline. The Pentagon is worried, all right, but it's trying desperately to kill COM behind its back while facing the outside world with a blissful smile. I wandered around the Pentagon recently, down halls plastered with old posters inviting young men to fight in tropical South America or the mystic Far East, trying to discover just what the big brass think about growing officer dissent. They're anxious to pretend COM doesn't exist. In- ternal officers told me that they haven't even heard of COM, then without blinking added that so far, they haven't taken any disciplinary action against COM mem- bers. That's not true. Three weeks ago, five officers from COM stood outside an Episcopal Church not far from the White House and told TV cameras and newspaper reporters why they believe they have a right and a duty to dissent. The next days, Navy ensian Robert Brown, who has been working under a top security "Q" clearance on nuclear power projects with Admiral Rickover, was fired. Within a week, Army Major Alan Braverman was "persuaded" to resign from his post at Walter Reed Medical Center, MY MOST ENLIGHTENING interview was with Navy spokesman Capt. W. S. Busik. He said: to get the record straight, the United States Navy does not acknowledge that an organization called the Concerned Officers Move- ment exists. "Now, we have been talking to some con- cerned individuals," Busik said. "We need to talk to them to give them guidance. Otherwise, they'll get in trouble if they don't know the rules of the game." Busik and I played a paranoid hide and seek. I quickly learned that every time I mentioned "COM," I should qualify my question with "if such an organization did in fact exist" Busik would then begin his answer by say- ng that no organization does in fact exist, but if it did ... Finally, peek-a-boo: Busik offered me proof that officers of the United States military are not organizing to dis- sent. "I've asked some officers for a COM membership list," he said, "and they say they don't have one." Anyway, Busick finally said, COM members represent only a very small smattering of the service. He opened up and offered a candid last warning. "If COM keeps going in the direction they have been, we'll have to take. account," Busik said. "It's one thing for individuals to express their private opinion, but when they go public and take advantage of the unform, it's another." LET'S GIVE SOME credit to the Navy: they're handling this hot potato with some strategic cool. In- stead of court martialing COM members and raising a stink, Naval brass are quietly discharging them. Routine business. That's what happened to the two intelligence briefers in July. When the Secretary of the Navy dis- covered his top intelligence men belonged to an antiwar organization, he transferred them to routine jobs in a division which didn't have any job openings. Not surprisingly, the two officers were quickly dis- charged along with 1200 other nonessential personnel to facilitate budget cuts. The Navy insists that the officers' 1 COM ISN'T WHAT any means. It doesn't you would call a radical group, by flatly oppose the military estab- COM membership had nothing to do with their dis- charge. "They set themselves up for it," Busik told me, however. He argues that if the officers hadn't joined COM in the first place, they wouldn't have been trans ferred to insignificant jobs and consequently wouldn't have been dumped. THE BIG QUESTION which keeps COM from ex- panding its organizing and political activities-and keeps timid dissenters from joining in the first place-is how far military officers can go in their dissent and still remain within the protective limits of the Frst Amend- ment. The group has considered asking a federal court to issue a declaratory judgment defining the rights of officers and all servicemen to speak their minds in public. The organization's lawyers, the Washington firm of Arnold and Porter, is ready to file suit but some of the officers who first planned it have either been transferred or persuaded to drop the case. COM isn't a powerful 'group by any means, and its membership is tiny when compared to the gigantic military octopus. But for the first time, it's giving officers the courage to dissent. From bases around the world, COM members in Wash- ington are receiving letters from lone officers who have kept their protests simmering inside of them and now feel ready to confront the military. COM claims it keeps con- tact with some sympathizers at top levels of the military, big brass who works in positions too sensitive to jeop- ardize now by associating with the organization. "Most officers are afraid to stand up and say What they believe," Lehman says. "And for good reason. If you're a career officer, it's suicide." (Next Week: thousands of GI's are deserting, ap- plying for inservice CO's-or shooting their officers in the back. k1 Illustrations by Rivers/Atlantic lishment-that's the business, after all, which gives COM officers their livelihood-but it does oppose current military policies and wants to agitate for military re- form. COM wants to functon purely as an officers' organ- ization, unaffiliated with GI groups which are generally more radical. "Officers have a unique position which should be used to advantage," says Navy Lt. Phil Lehman. a COM organizer discharged early this summer. "We want to convey to Middle America that there are people very much against the war, whose loyalty can't be impugned." COM's tactics and rhetoric will stay moderate. "We can't indulge in rhetoric like 'smash the brass' and 'off the pigs,'" Lehman told me. "We want to influence On separatism and the crisis in Canada Child care demands: The establishment fails again "TUT WHAT has higher priority t h a n children?" an angry voice from the audience asked the Regents during the open hearings last Thursday. From the back of the room, another voice respond- ed to the query: "Guns!" The eight month old issue of child care at the University was once against raised at last week's open meeting by the Child Care Action Group. The group had pre- sented a similar demand - a free 24-hour center jointly funded by the University and Ann Arbor communities - six months back. After the child care group presented their demands they asked for regental response. But the Regents sat quietly and asked no questions. President Fleming explained the Regents silence. "T h e y haven't had time to fully consider your proposals," he said, mentioning the all- day sessions they had been attending. Ex- pressing his own views on the proposals, Fleming said that child care, "however desirable a service", would require a very substantial addition of funding - an addition the University could not meet. The following afternoon the Regents delivered their verdict - a rejection of the demands. Though describing the pro- posal as "laudable," Regent William Cud- lip explained the Board's action: "It is simply a case of no resources for this fine purpose." The meeting then passed on to more important matters - distribution of trusts, faculty appointments, commit- tee reports ... The day before he Regents made their decision, Fleming argued for more time to asked for., their experience was not drawn upon. President Fleming must have provided all the information upon which the Regents based their decision. T h e future of child care was decided in a closed session with only one side repre- sented. It appears very evident that 'neither a complete, thorough nor fair investigation into the proposal was made. The plan in- cluded a joint University-city funding. A call to Mayor Robert Harris's office re- vealed that no attempt was made by Re- gents to test the feasibility of this aspect of the proposal. Both Fleming and the Regents cited lack of facilities, yet at the same meeting they discussed plans on what to do with guest rooms in the Mich- igan Union. Currently the Union is loosing money on its hotel facilities, and the Regents dis- cussed plans to use these rooms for office space or student housing. Both are legi- timate uses for the space, but couldn't this extra space also be utilized as a start for a child care center? IT IS NOT because the University is so short on space that the child care proposal was rejected, but rather the University's set of priorities which puts child care at the bottom - if even on the list. As for funding shortages, the Regents consistently say that students are always asking for more money to do this or that, but certainly students' re- quests are minimal in comparison to ad- ministrators and various departments re- quests for funding of their pet projects. "It is obvious that nothing we say will By DAVID RAYSIDE Daily Guest Writer TUESDAY'S FISHBOWL RALLY protesting the im- position by the Canadian government of the War Measures Act was a tantalizing event for many of Canadians on campus, in part because the circumstances surrounding the enactment have elicited from virtually every citizen of that country a highly emotional reaction of some sort, andtalso because nationalists from across the border tend to view American pronouncements on such issues with a critical and sometimes hostile eye. The rally's first speaker was in fact a Canadian- Mark Van der Hout-and although in the pastwIhave been in considerable agreement with much of what he has had to say about other issues, I thought that some aspects of his analysis were somewhat confused, and that the factual underpinnings for his explanations surprisingly inaccurate. He began wisely by distinguishing between recent terrorist activities and the French-Canadian separatist movement as a whole, and in this light he dwelt on some of the legitimate bases of that movement. But he seemed at the same time to narrow the focus of blame for the oppression of French-Canadians too much in a single direction. THERE ARE to my mind three sources of the plight of French Canada: the supremacy and discriminatory practices of the English speaking sector of the population, especially in Quebec; the oppressiveness of the controllers of capital in general; and the dominance until recently of a traditionally oriented French-Canadian elite. Van der Hout seemed to focus primarily on the first, or at least he implied that the capital factor and the English factor were completely coterminous. He pointed with justification to the marked income differentials of English and French Quebecers, and he indicated some of the specific instances of French-Canadian powerless- ness in the face of English power. But then he proceeded to point to the role of the federal government in con- tinuing that level of inequity, drawing in the main on mythical facts and misleading implications. For example, he attributed the very small number of low income housing developments in Montreal, as compared to Eng- lish-speaking Toronto, to federal discrimination. While it is true that Ottawa contributes funds to such projects, it merely responds to initiatives taken by local and pro- vincial authorities. The fault, therefore, lies within Quebec. THE THIRD FACTOR impending the emergence o' French-Canada lies wholly within it. Until the late 1950',, considerable power in Quebec was wielded by a traditional French-Canadian elite more concerned with the health of the institutionalized church and with the maintenance of their own seats of power than with the need for more widespread educational opportunities and for more posi- tive governmental activities in the promotion of social welfare. I sympathize with the Quebec separatist movement, but the danger in failing to distinguish the various roots underlying the ongoing crisis of Canadian federalism is that separatism may be regarded as a panacea, even though by itself it answers only the first of the aspects of the problem cited above. As Robert Frost once wrote, 'LETTERS TO THE DAILY "Before I built a wall I'd ask to know What I was walling in or walling out." The specific focus of Tuesday's rally was on the War Measures Act. The handbill distributed in conjunction with the meeting seemed, like Van der Hout, to dis- tinguish between the terrorism of the past weeks and the separatist movement, but the federal government's action was linked by it to the latter, not the former. It was claimed in fact that the enactment was designed to repress all radical activity in Canada. IT SHOULD be kept in mind that the government is ostensibly dealing only with the Front for the Libera- tion of Quebec, an organization that by no stretch of the imagination encompasses the entire separatist move- ment, and that the government would have to specify any criteria for the making of arrestsbeyond affilliation with that organization, and would have to lay such spe- cification before Parliament. Above all it should be made clear that while the Act does admittedly contain the potential for near dictatorship and full martial law, its application needn't be so extensive. I am not saying that I suppdrt the government's action completely-and certainly I am no great admirer of Pierre Trudeau-but I am nevertheless mindful that the spectre of political assassination is an entirely new phenomenon in Canada. In that light, I am willing to suspend judgement of the government for what it has done for a little while longer. And I think that Americans who wistfully look north to find comfort in the possibility that there exist in Canada a regime as horrendous as the Nixon -administration and its predecessor might well temper their accusations-at least for the moment. *4 4 . George H. Brown Jr., '71, s trikes back 0' To The Daily: THE DAILY has recently taken issue with the fact that a number of U.S. corporations with opera- tions in South Africa are actively recruiting on campus. I assume that those who oppose this re- cruiting sincerely believe that they trying to "escape" into South Africa to work in the mines there. If South Africa is a huge con- centration camp, then it surely must be the only one in the world where hundreds of thousands are forever clamoring to get in. IN VIEW of the fact that racial and ethnic problems have not yet been adequately solved anywhere in the world, who can really say that the South Africans do not have a viable alternative? Is the tribal slaughter in the Congo and Nigeria such an alternative? the first to be deprived of their opportunity to prosper. -George H. Brown, Jr. '71 Oct. 17 To The Daily: IN THE OCT. 13 Daily Mr. Let me assure Mr. Schneck that life under foreign military occu- pation is fully as onerous and humiliating for these Palestinian Arabs as such a situation has ever been throughout history. Even a nodding acquaintance with the recent history of Palestine will re-