the unreforned source Two victims of two wars im neubacher by ji 4 I spent my summer at home, laid off from work much of the time, making friends with the crickets which abound in West. Bloomfield Township, Mich. Eventually, high school friends came around to visit. Some you expect tto see, some surprise you. When I saw John Pollack, I was really surprised. You see, John is dead. At least, that's what they said' in March, when I was home. That's what the local newspaper said. John, a year behind me in school, enlisted in the army when he grad- uated in 1968, and eventually made it to South Vietnam, where he drove a tank. On a relatively quiet day in a rel- atively peaceful area, John sat up on the lip of the hatch of his tank;letting his partner drive. In ;the middle of a war. He lifted his face to the after- noon sun and tried to relax. But the enemy wouldn't let him do that. From the jungle which lined t h e road, the enemy watched. A rifle was raised silently, a shot was fired. The bullet sped through the air, entering John's back below the left shoulder blade, narrowly missing his spine, rip- ping through a lung, and destroying a portion of his heart. Despite the damage, despite the ru- mors,. d'espite the newspapers, John. made it. He now weighs 130 pounds, instead of 185. He has a patch on his back the size of a book. He faces a future of restricted activity and dan- gerous operations to rebuild some of the destroyed areas in his body. He exists - a living symbol, a constant reminder of the horrors of a senseless war. Worse, John is a constant reminder of the pressures of society which channel young men into that war. John was brought up in the tra- ditional American style. He was well taken care of by financially secure parents, sent to public schools, en- couraged to grow up to be a "man." He cared more for football and drink- ing' than school and thinking, and up- on graduation, he found his counsel- ors telling him that his options in life were severely restricted by his grades. He enrolled in war, something he had been brought up to believe was man- ly, something expected. He was nearly destroyed. 1 WAS EQUALLY surprised to see Bob this summer. You see, Bob is crazy, flipped out. At least, that's what we all thought when they carted him away to the psychiatric ward of the hospital, sub- dued him with tranquilizers, and spent a long time trying to talk sense into him. I knew Bob because he ran around with my group of kids in school, a group in which ,he Was strangely out of place. While we, for the most part, were "good" kids - the grade-getters who behaved, and were thus assured entrance to the college of our choice- Bob was basically a dumb jock. Or so we assumed. Bob played the- part of the "dumb jock" well. We nicknamed him "Crazy" with prophetic accuracy. Bob had a lot of pressure put on him at home, in one form or another. But it was the pressures of his newly found peer groups and the expectations of society which severely strained his ability to cope with the real world. Near the end of his senior y e a r, Bob's inner hysteria began to mount. His girl friend left to go to school in the South, 1000 miles away. The rest of the group left for Ann Arbor, East Lansing, Kalamazoo and became en- meshed in busy lives which allowed little time for old high school buddies who didn't even make it into college. That, was three years ago. Soon af- ter everyone went away, Bob began to go under. He ended up in the hos- pital, but after some treatment, he got out. He tried community college, a series of jobs, a number of new hob- bies. Nothing worked. He found his inner hysteria building again as he realized that his options in life were being narrowed, that he was being fit into a slot. Seeing his friends in the summer, excited with plans and ideas and futures, didn't help. By this summer, he was worse than ever. He began to build a dream world for himself, and retreated into it. That world was full of success and riches, and he talked about it endlessly. Bob is back in the hospital, h i s hysteria worse. He physically battles his way out of the ward now and then, only to be restrained by the orderlies. He keeps fighting to get out of this world into a world where he can be happy as a person, accepted as a per- son respected as the person he is, not the one he is supposed to be. John and Bob - victims of war. War with society is always a losing battle for those who are too weak to stand against the tide of conformity, the pressures which drive one toward goals defined by the society. The stable, the privileged, the in- telligent, and the lucky emerge from the Darwinian competition in our so- ciety as whole persons who find their own happiness, or adapt themselves to the view of happiness held by our so- ciety with little discomfort. The rest - the weak, the unfortunate, the in- secure, are doomed to lives of frustra- tion and boredom. It is a Capitalism of the Soul in which the culturally rich can get richer and the poor ride city buses all their lives looking out the window at the skyscrapers. A Cultural Revolution is promised us. I, for one, have doubts about whether it will' eventually be more humane and open than what exists now. Is it possible, on a large scale, to treat people as ° individuals, avoid channeling, p u s h i n g categorizing, judging? Maybe not - not on that scale. On a personal scale, it is imperative. Smile on your brother today. 1 -Associated Press etic t Ott at 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 iri The Michigan Daily express the individual.opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER Church sit-ins just cause A GROUP of militant blacks, welfare mothers and their supporters have undertaken a major campaign to secure reparations payments from the white churches of Washtenaw County, a move warranting active cooperation and sup- port from members of the University community. With a series of peaceful occupations of church offices, representatives of the County Black Economic Development League and the County Welfare Rights Organization have brought the national drive in support of the Black Manifesto to the area, providing a compelling focus for the struggle against poverty and in- stitutional racism in America. The manifesto was first proposed by James Forman and adopted by the Na- tional Black Economic Development Con- ference in April 1969. It calls for the pay- ment of $500 million reparations by the nation's churches for the hundreds of years of exploitation suffered by the black people of this country. The money would be used for a variety of economic and edu- cational programs run by and for the poor in the community. LOCALLY, THE militants are demanding immediate payments ranging from $10,000 to $100,000 from each religious establishment, depending on the size of its assets. This would be followed up by annual reparations payments which would eventually total $60 million in this county. The initial payments would go toward winter clothing for children on welfare. Ultimately, funds secured from the churches and synagogues would be used in Washtenaw County for housing, day care centers, cooperative food stores, medical care, training centers and other services for the community. These serv- ices would benefit both blacks and the substantial number of white children on the county welfare rolls. CHURCHES AND synagogues are reason- able targets for reparations demands because religious institutions, on t h e whole, have historically acted in support of slavery, and racist laws and social conditions. In, addition, like most white institutions, these religious establish- ments have benefitted financially because of the racist economic situation that has provided their members with higher in- comes. It is not enough that minimal efforts have been made by the government in re- cent years to provide such legal guar- antees as equal employment opportuni- ties. The scars of 300 years of savage de- humanization remain deeply imbedded in the black community,; the economic, educational and psychological advantages necessary for success in America are still largely absent in the black community. Perhaps more important, those acting in support of the manifesto are not simply trying to attain even real equal opportunity for 'blacks. Rather, they are attempting to begin building institutions heralding a society in which no person,' black or white, is the victim of poverty, exploitation or discrimination. -MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Editor Catch 23 m. JAMES WECHSLERII The re markable fight~ of amiable. Joe Duffy RICHARD NIXON'S Administration can claim one incontestable success. It has placed opponents on the defensive and created what portends a failure of nerve. During an August holiday, one heard too often some variation of the same theme: "He hasn't ended the war and the economy is in bad shape and there's violence in the air, but he and Agnew have a lot of people convinced that everything would be all right if those long-haired kids just stopped causing trouble." We have lived through such periods of jitters before. Too many political men who publicly proclaim their "faith in the people" are privately prone to panic when struck by an opinion-pool; once upon a time Joe McCarthy was confused with superman. Certainly there is ample reason for cheerlessness in a week when the McGovern-Hatfield amendment has been finally beaten. But the image of Mr, Nixon's invincibility, adroitly promoted by his press agents, is an absurdity. (Has everyone already forgotten what happened to Clement Haynesworth and G. Harrold. Carswell?) So, too, is the view that the country is now irretrievably captivated - and captured - by Agnewism. To paraphrase a Democrat who did notably well on election days, the thing liberals have to fear is fear itself. This brings us back to Connecticut, and the remarkable fight being waged by Joe Duffy, tle 38-year-old chairman of Americans for Democratic Action and contender for the Senate seat still occupied, despite the censure of his colleagues for assorted financial escapades, by Tom Dodd. * * * * WHEN DUFFEY,'a soft-voiced, boyish-looking figure entered the Democratic primary, the experts quickly pronounced him an amiable loser; although Dodd avoided the primary (later deciding to run as an independent), Alphonsus Donahue, the choice of John Bailey's machine, was listed as a clear favorite, with State Senate Majority Leader Ed- ward Marcus as his major challenger. Duffy was pictured an inevit- able casualty of 1970 - doomed by his liberal associations, his forth- right antiwar stand and the "anti-student" backlash. But he and Anne Wexler, his gifted campaign manager and partner in the revolt of the Eugene McCarthy "amateurs" that exploded in Connecticut in 1968 and brought Duffey into national prominence, refused to be intimidated by the obituary notices. On Aug. 19 the returns showed Duffey 79,355, Donahue 67,259 and Marcus '36,055. What was most impressive, it was agreed, was not merely the fact of the upset but the coalition that made it possible. Duffey, of course, ran strongly in Fairfield County, theheartland of the 1968 upsurge. But it was his success in key industrial areas as well as black communi- ties that confounded the defeatists. He did not retreat on the Vietnam issue. But neither did he conduct a one-note crusade. MOST OF ALL, Duffey's victory was a triumph for the proposi- tion advanced by Sam Brown, an early organizer of the Vietnam peace movement, in the Washington Monthly: "The outline of a successful antiwar strategy is clear: the appeal must be made in such a way that middle-America will not ignore the substance of the argument because of an offensive style." It is Duffey's quiet genius that he can voice deep convictions in tones of reasonableness, neither "trimming" to appease a critical audience nor permitting shrillness and self-righteousness to alienate the undecided. This demeanor may violate the canons of, demagogy, but he has already rewritten a lot of the rule books. THE CRUCIAL TEST comes in November and - as before - Duffey hears prophecies of doom. Now he faces both Dodd and GOP Congressman Lowell P. Weicker (who defeated rightist John Lipton in the Republican primary). Some of the wise men who buried him when he began are now explaining why he can't win the main bout. Dodd, they contend, will draw away too many conservative Democrats and thereby insure Weicker's triumph. Even in conventional political terms, there is a flaw in the argu- ment; Dodd will attract right-wing Republicans, too, and some of the Democrats he will take away from Duffey might otherwise have gone to Weicker. In short anything can happen, and the contest acquires increasing national importance. For if Duffy wins the big one, running with painfully limited financial resources, he will have even more drama- tically challenged many of the stereotypes now dominating the political wi Letters to the Editor Inaccuracy To the Editor: THERE IS AN inaccuracy in your September 2 story on the ap- pointment of Professor Knauss to the post of vice president of stu- dent services. T h e Daily stated that each of the five people nom- inated for the office by the stu- dent-faculty committee withdrew from consideration. In fact, Mr. Peter Steinberger did not with- draw himself from consideration though the other four did. Mr.Steinberger's personal phil- osophy was simply that he was willing to be considered by and willing to speak to President Fleming if, and only if, such ne- gotiations w e r e not cloaked in secrecy. He felt that anything in which he took part, including Re- gents meetings were\ he to be ap- pointed to the post of vice presi- dent, should be a matter of public record. If this situation were oth- erwise, he felt he would not have, and would not deserve to have, any credibility with the students. This attitude was quite unaccept- able to President Fleming, and evidently Mr. Steinberger was not OKCA NAM). 'I considered any further. Mr. Stein- berger did not, however, withdraw himself from consideration. AFTER WELL OVER a year as one of the brightest and hardest working lawyers in the history of t h e local Legal Aid Clinic, Mr. Steinberger left Ann Arbor two weeks ago f o r a trip to-Europe with his wife before settling down into a small town practice in New England. -Joseph Sinclair Law "71 Sept. 2 Taken aback To the Editor: I COME FROM CHICAGO - to be more precise, from a white, middle-class community. I haven't associated with blacks because there are none living in my com- munity, and'I have only spoken to two blacks in my life. On Tuesday, I attended the sem- inar 'Black Unity: A Reality or Myth" to find out about the black community and how it relates to the rest of America. A few min- utes after I entered the Union Ballroom and sat down in one of the numerous empty chairs. About a half hour later, a black, presumably one of the seminar leaders, approached me and said, "Would you please move to the corridor because this meeting is mainly for blacks. 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