letter from the editor he 1MKti4gan4 Daf Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Hard-line cops and community don't mix 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 THURSDAY, OCTOBER, 18, 1973 Continuing a bankrupt policy THE RESIGNATION of Thailand's mili- tary dictatorship last Sunday in the face of student riots and demands is added evidence that the U. S. policy of preaching democracy and self-determi- nation while supporting repressive re- gimes friendly to the U. S. is bankrupt. Two days of violent student demonstra- tions in which many were killed and in- jured forced Prime Minister Thanom Kit- tikachorn to resign and a new govern- ment to be formed. Thanom, supreme commander of the Thai armed forces, had been ruling Thailand by decree after abolishing the constitution. Students had demanded that democratic rule be re- ,turned to Thailand. Thanom was a favorite of the U. S. gov- ernment, and had allowed Americans to set up military bases in the country and pursue a bloody "pacification" program. Along with cooperating with American policies in Thailand, he had revoked civil liberties and maintained an oppressive one-man rule. THE SITUATION in Thailand was little different than in any American client state around the world, in which the U.S. supports repressive military dictatorships with massive economic and military aid. American recognition of the Chilean junta is only the most recent example. Business Staff BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager RAY CATALINO..............Operations Manager SHERRY- CASTLE.............. Advertising Manager SANDY FIENBERG ................. Finance Manager 'DAVE BURLESON ................... Sales Manager DEPT. MGRS.: -Steve LeMire Jane Dunning, Paula Schwach ASSOC. MGRS.: Joan Ades, Chantal Bancilhon, Linda Ross, Mark Sancrainte, S u a n n e Tiberio, Kevin Trimmer ASST. MGRS.: Marlene Katz, Bill Nealon STAFF: Sue Desmet, Laurie Gross, Debbie Novess, Carol Petok, Mimi Bar-on SALESPEOPLE: W e n d i Pohs, Tom Kettinger, Eric Phillips, P e t e r Anders, R o b e r t Fischer, Paula Schwach, Jack Mazzara, John Anderson Photography Staff DAVID MAROOLICK Chief Photographer KEN PINK .....................Staff Photographer TOMAS GOTTLIEB.............Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN.................Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI ..............Staff Photographer TERRY McCARTHY..............Staff Photographer JOHN UPTON.Staff Photographer Editorial Staff , CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief DIANE LEVICK........................ Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY..........Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER..............Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH ..................... Editorial Director TONY SCHWARTZ.................. Sunday Editor CHARLES STEIN............ .......uCity Editor TED STEIN .......................... Executive Editor ROLFE TESSEM .................... Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Dan Biddle, Penny Blank, Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Dave Burhenn, Bonnie Carnes, Charles Cole- man, Mike Duweck, Ted Evanoff, Deborah Good, William Heenan, Cindy Hill, Pack Krost, jean Love, Josephine Marcotty, Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seidenatein, StephenuSelbst, Jeff Sorensen, Sue utephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca Warner $AILY WEATHER BUREAU: William Marino and Dennis Dismacheck (forecasters) It would be almost humorous to watch this policy backfire as oppressed people rise up against such governments, to the naive amazement of American officials, if the results of such policies were not so tragic. The client state of Thailand was the major jumping off point for American military actions in all of Southeast Asia, actions which resulted in the callous slaughter of innumerable people. It would be a striking departure if American foreign policy were to change at all. The impetus to follow past poli- cies is dismally strong in officials dealing with foreign policy. But continuing "be- cause we've always done it this way" has become reprehensible and immoral almost by definition. Oh, Henry!. THIS COUNTRY'Symost internationally recognized playboy has now added another feather to his cap. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger is a Nobel laureate. Almost exactly a year after he pronounced that "peace is at hand" in Vietnam, the Nobel Committee of Norway's Parliament announced the award, which will also be given to North Vietnamese Politburo member Le Duc Tho. During the intervening year, Ameri- can B-52s pounded civilians throughout Indochina, destroying hospitals and leav- ing thousands of deaths and casualties behind them. The press disclosed that Kissinger had assented to the wire tapping of several members of his own taff. But that was nothing for the Presidential adviser to get upset about: He invited some of his bugged colleagues to his 50th birthdayy party, a gala event. KISSINGER'S KNOWLEDGE about, and therefore complicity in the secret bombing of Cambodia also became public knowledge in the one year interim. And even a portion of the academic American Political Science Association censured the Presidential adviser for be- ing "an accomplice in the terror bombing of Hanoi" last year, as well as for issuing "deliberately misleading 'peace is at hand' statements on the eve of the 1972 Presidential election." Yet, all this was no matter to the Nobel committee, so Kissinger will be lauded as a warrior for world peace. Perhaps we should feel lucky that the accolade did not go to the President himself. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Penny Blank, Charles Coleman, Chris Parks, Jim Schuster Editorial Page: Marnie Heyn, Eric Schoch, David Yalowitz Arts Page: Sara Rimer Photo Technician: Ken Fink By CHRISTOPHER PARKS ]POLICE CHIEF Walter Krasny went be- fore City Council Monday night to talk about Ann Arbor's spiraling crime prob- lems. In an embattled 90 minute performance, the chief delivered up the same old non- sense about hippies, drugs and permissive- ness. Ann Arbor's thriving youth culture, gen- erated by the presence of the "Big U" has given the city an image of "a town where everything goes," Krasny lamented. Some 85 per cent of all robberies in the city are drug-related, he claimed. And the real problem gets down to good old weed because, as every good Republican knows in his heart, "Where you find one (mari- juana) you find the other (Hard Stuff)." Further, he charged, a significant pro- portion of students are not really here to study at all, but come to the city "for whatever they can rip off." And, as if things weren't bad enough, "The system is now set up so that the criminals have all the rights." WHAT'S NEEDED is more cops and some old fashioned, hard-ass law enforce- ment. Oh, straight ahead Walter! It's not the cop's fault. It never is. And it's certainly not your's. It's all those drugs and hippies and judges who coddle criminals that are messing "This is why Krasny has failed to effectively bring the city's crime situation under control-he's a victim of the old fash- ioned straight line logic of more men, more hardware, and more busts as the answer to all social ills." :VJJ. J.YJ.4t'1: . ::::: " .............1" :::J, :1.,.4 .. ..4;.;t ::"J.:}:::.4'::::::. r:f :" ":'.:i :.+':::::":'::::..... :: ::. ::.:"':::.: :i"::'':':ti..... .........ri things up for all those Good Citizens out there. "Gentleman Jim" Stephenson and his GOP buddies must be just deliriously hap- py with good old Walter. After all, he reflects all their benighted views of society and caters to their narrow-minded prejud- ices. familiar with busting kids, blacks and gays. however. It takes only a little common sense to see that Ann Arbor is an open, liberal, cultur- ally avant-gard community. And the Stephenson Krasny hard headed, straight ahead style of law enforcement is not going to change it. in the past. For example, why not consider the pos- sibility of a more decentralized system us- ing smaller neighborhood substations staff- ed by cops who ride around in VWs or Pintos or better yet, bicycles. Cops could live in the neighborhood they patrol - be a real part of the community. In student and youth neighborhoods, for example, the cops could and should be young and relatively hip. Freed from skin length haircuts, silly uniforms and big guns on their hips, they could.mingle with the community and come to know by name most, if not all, of the people in their area. They would be able to just drop in on people for a beer (or even a joint may- be) and chat about their neighborhood's problems. THESE COPS WOULD have a committ- ment to and an understanding of the com- munity they "take care" of. They could come to be viewed as a positive helpful force rather than a hostile outside pre- sence. The idea that cops must always act as some sort of para-military strike force is antiquated and absurd - especially in a town like Ann Arbor. But as long as cops like Krasny persist in this view of things and are encourged to do so by small minded politicians, there will be no experimentation and the problems of the city will only continue to get worse. Enlightment just isn't Walter's long suit. He believes in strict enforcement of all the laws . . . or at least most of them. At one point in the meeting, Council- woman Nancy Wechsler (HRP-2nd Ward) asked him about harrassment of gays at the Rubaiyat. She pointed out that such harrassment violates the provisions of the city's human rights ordinance. KRASNY RESPONDED that he w a s "not that familiar" with the human rights ordinance. What that means is he and his depart- ment are "not that familiar" with busting Good Citizens who don't want to be both- ered with pesky minorities. They're very All they can succeed in doing is increase tension and alienation in the community and continue to drive the drug traffic further underground where it becomes far more virulent, nasty and violent. This is why Krasny has failed to ef- fectively bring the city's crime situation under control - he's a victim of the old- fashioned straight line logic of more men, more hardware, and more busts as the an- swer to all social ills. THIS CITY, because it is so culturally diverse, could be a test tube environment for innovative, enlightened experiments in law enforcement. Numerous ideas have been put forward ,-- off the record Watching the war in quiet agony By TED STEIN THE MIDEAST war rages with- in 25 year-old Yaacov G e r- shoni. The strain of worry can be seen in his bearded face when he speaks of Israel, and felt in his husky whisper of a voice. Sudden- ly, he is studying for a social work degree in a country thousands of miles from where his true exist- ence is being played out. The tension shows. He is undoubtedly thinking about Israel and the war as he busily answers phones at Hillel where fund-raising continually goes on, and again as he crosses Hill St. to reach his quarters at the Hebrew Co-op nearby. A year ago Gershoni left h i s iome in Jerusalem'to study here, but now his thoughts are clearly elsewhere. He called home four times last week. Three brothers have been mobilized for war and "when you don't know, the anxie- ty increases. "I'm not dying to fight," he says in his room. "I hate war m o r e than anything. But the fact I am here is empty of meaning now. I can't do any school work. Ifthe war drags on I will have to go back." IT MAY COME to this sooner for Gershoni and otherIsraelibstu- dents. They may be called back at any time, if Israeli authorities feel it necesasry, since they are all in the military reserve. Already, five Israeli students have left their families and newfound lives here to return. "They had duties they believed made it important f o r them to be there right away," says Gershoni. In the mean time, the rest of the Israeli students and their famil- ies live a life apart. The war has forged them into a cohesive com- munity. They come together fre- quently at Hillel now to speak He- brew and share feelings and in- formation. A few of the Israeli students talked about their radically-altered lives recently. There is an un- relieved tension in the room, like a death in the family. The gloom is pierced periodically by t h e business of the day and bulletins of news from the Mideast. THE FEELING of frustration is expressed by Moshe Becker, 30, who is working toward a doctoral degree in transportation safety. "I don't care about victory. So many over." -Yaacov Gershoni "We get the feeling Israel is holding out now without mobilizing their entire force," he says. "?3it of course, I would like to be there. Your imagination usuallytgoes to the worst when you're not." It is difficult to really under- stand the trapped quality of their existence. Perhaps we cannot do it adequately, so filled as we are with abstractions about war. But their statements are not abstract. No "peace with honor" in a distant land. "My father is 49 and he has been mobilized. He drives an am- bulance. My brother-in-law and brother are fighting. How do you think I feel?" says the blonde-hair- ed Becker. Adds Yaacov Trobe, 28, presently at work on his psychology thesis, "We know they are doing it with- out us. Without us doing our par- ticular function. Everyone belongs in a certain slot." UNDERSTANDABLY, Trobe ech- oes Gershoni when he sys, "We have stopped our regular sched- I ules. We don't work. When I go to my office, its to talk with other students about Israel. We j u 3 t cannot do other things." It is not surprising. They have lived under the threat of extinction since birth, and now their coqn- try's ability to survive is once more being tested. They know what this means, hav- ing fought in the 1967 Six Day War. Both Trobe and Becker saw combat action on the west bank of the Jordan River at that time. Only now they are here, not there. No talk of winning in this inter- view, although the Israeli students say they cannot lose. Instead, it is the personal toll of the war which is most lamented. "I don't care about victory. So many people will be killed. I just want it to be over," says Yaacov Gershoni. Letters: City portrayed inaccurately Publishers-Hall Syndicate, 1973 ,gomm m\' \%. m , To The Daily: AFTER READING Sunday's edi- tion of the Daily I was thoroughly appalled by the article "Cruising the Forgotten Parts of Town". In an effort to let the Ann Ar- borites know of the hidden minority that is present in Ann Arbor, Mr. Papanek painted a picture of abso- lute fallacy. First of all I question Mr. Papa- nek's knowledge of anything other than Ann Arbor's middle class com- munity. The fact that Mr. Papa- nek was a cab driver and took one passenger from a low - income housing site to Ann Street does not make him an authority on the black community. I acknowledge the fact that people should be made aware of what's going on in Ann Arbor, but I think this area should be researched in depth rather than printing some rash statement from a first-day on the job cab driver. There are indeed some social ills in Ann Arbor that go unnoticed. Public housing is a menace that was created by the bureaucracy -f An A..nr nnri t mu +the l.nm its existence. Everyone who does go on Ann Street is not a dope dealer, pimp, or prostitute. Corrup- tion and vice do exist, not only on Ann Street, but all over Ann Arbor. They exist not only with blacks but with white people as 'well. The sad part is that Ann Street is lo- coted between the county jail and the Ann Arbor Police Department -and Ann Street still thrives. This again goes back to a greater social problem. If there was concern about what was going on in the black Com- munity, the great fathers of Ann Arbor would clean up Ann Street. Ann Arbor does not address it- self to the needs of its black Com- munity. As far as Ann Arbor is concerned, all black people congre- gate on Ann Street and are involv- ed in some illicit activities. There is no need to prove this erroneous for we all know there are varying shades of truth, and there is a black population that does not hang on Ann Street that is very seldom heard about. Mr. Papanek mentioned the name of Maddie Moss. Who gives him the Chile things have learned that their po- To The Daily: sition was no stronger than the IT IS difficult to write a "rea- words and the life of their elected sonable" letter when one is inspir- leader, no stronger than an empty ed by pure white rage, the kind of rifle. rage that burns flesh and spirit, Napalm has become the sign of leaving in its wake little but trem- our times. Jellied gasoline and ar- bling and ash. But that is my in- tillery shells pitted against the sim- tention at this time. ple outrage of the starving are the I speak here of our brother na- inheritance that our society has tion to the South: Chile. Chile, the forced upon us. In this land and land that dared to play with the throughout the world the greed of dynamite of both socialism and de- capitalism is rampant. As individ- mocracy at the same time. The sin- uals we are either corrupted or gle nation that attempted to wed exploited by its influence. As a humanism and Marxism in one po- race, the ghuman race, we are time litical program: that of the Popu- and time again degraded by it. In lar Unity government under Sal- this novel, the Chilean coup is only vador Allende. a recent chapter. The idealism of this movement This is not the moment to be- was only too reminiscent of that of lieve in the narcotic messages of our own New Left pragmatism. It owr newspapers and televisions that was based on the blind belief that all is tolerably well in the world right makes might, that the truly (give or take a few thousand dead) powerful forces of society would or that the loss of one or another calmly sit by and, quieted by some president, vice or versa, will im- kind of sense of justice, would give ~ prove anything. It is, and will long up at the very least an inch and remain, the moment to examine in perhaps a mile of their jurisdic- depth the foundations of our sup- tion. posed "rosnerity" in the midst of Cch we havel earned. is not widesmread hunger. cided to open up a Greek Restaur- ant in Ann Arbor! He is RESIGN- ED that it will be as popular as he was. Just thought I'd let you in on this classified news leak. -Larry N. Gever Oct. 17 moody To The Daily: I PROTEST! The way in which UAC - Daystar handled the ticket selling for the coming Moody Blues concert was disgusting. I've listed below two legitimate bitches - now, where can I find out what are the 12 other cities on their tour? I'll have to try one of them if possible. Not everyone can camp for three days to buy tickets, although if I'd known I would have, which brings me to another point. Poor PR resulted in many people not knowing of concert until Tues- day morning (or Monday evening if -, -urp11i pn ilm--a +oapt .; f;i * ' * ,,. % e e t 1 / , \ ,.--° s-^ ,' Ili '"" Y'-'. - ' } .. tip.. \ \\ \ .. .. \\\ :