if~e Mftdigun DaOt Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan TEACH-IN Toward an end to Friday, October 17, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 48104 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. Henry supereedes authority C ECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kis- singer's refusal to comply with a Congressional subpoena goes one step too far. The globe-trotting Kissinger has been hailed as the master diplomat who can solve world's crises with a few choice words and quiet angry combatants with a wave of the hand, but that does not entitle him to flip- pantly disregard the Congress' call. The House Intelligence Committee, which has been probing the Central Intelligence Agency and other clan- destine organizations, had order- ed the State Department to produce a memorandum detailing alleged mismanagement during the 1974 Cy- prus crisis. Kissinger, however, failed to re- spond to the order by Tuesday - the deadline set by Rep. Otis Pike (D- N.Y.) the committee chair. THE EXCUSE PUT forth by Kissin- ger and other high-level State Department officials is that the con- fidentiality of such material must be maintained or else analysts will fear making recommendations that may later be proven wrong and held up in, the public view. In some sense, Kissinger's explana- tion for withholding the memo begs the question. He argues that policy suggestions ought to be kept secret. These pre- sumably would be contingency plans and the like - material developed before and asa crisis actually looms on the horizon. They may rightfully be withheld in the interest of nation- al security. But the memo sought by the House committee is an analysis of U. S. handling of the Cyprus situation - a document written after the fact. Although it might be argued that such a whitepaper would reflect bad- ly on some state department officials, that's part of the game. The public and certainly the Congress have a right to know about such goings on -good or bad. FURTHERMORE, WOULD Kissinger be less reluctant to release the informnation were it favorable to his department's operations? Quite probably the Secretary is merely using a "confidential" stamp to bury critical data - a ploy that has been extensively and effectively used by the CIA, the FBI, and many other branches of government. Nobody should be allowed to get away with it. Editorial positions represent consensus of the Daily staff. BY MARTY LEE A GROUP of students at the University of Michigan have organized a large scale Teach-in entitled "The Bicentennial Di- lemma: Who's In Control?", which will take place on Novem- ber 2, 3 and 4. The Teach-in will focus on the theme of tech- nology, repression, and resist- ance to repressive techniques, covering a wide range of topics such as corporate manipulation, political assassinations, surveil- lance and dataveillance, police repression, subversion of the forces of dissent, nd psychologi- cal techniques of human con- trol (psychological warfare, be- havior modification, advertising, etc.). OVER twenty-five speakers from all over the country will be participating in the Teach-in including: Herbert Marcuse, the leading theoretician of the New Left who has come out of re- tirement to make a final public statement, William Kuntsler, noted activist-lawyer; Mark Lane, the leading critic of the Warren Report; Jeremy Rifkin, director of the People's Bicen- tennial Commission; Chuck Morgan, director of the Ameri- can Civil Liberties Union in Washington, D.C.; Regina Brave Dixon, from the Wounded Knee Legal Defense Committee; Da- vid DuBois, novelist and leading spokesperson for the Black Pan- ther Party; Richard Barnet, the authority on multinational cor- porations; and many more. means of the catch-all phrase 'national security,' or by a dic- tatorial decision made behind closed doors. when the right to know is violated, the short-term and long-term consequences can only be negative. MANY OF the speakers parti- cipating in the Teach-in will also travel to other schools in the area. Programs will be held at Wayne State, Michigan State,. Eastern Michigan University, and a United Auto Workers' Night school in Detroit. During the past year there has been an upsurge of political activity and interest as evidenced by stand- ing-room-only audiences at ma- jor conferences at Boston, Madi- son, Berkeley, New Haven and Los Angeles. PRESENTATIONS will be made in the form of panels, lec- tures, workshops, and keynote addresses, and will continue throughout the morning, after- noon and evening in Hill Audi- torium. In addition to a very im- pressive lecture series, the Teach-in will feature a poetry reading with William Burroughs, Ed Sanders, and John Giorno. A political film series and daily guerrilla/street theater happen- ings in and around the campus area during the week prior to the conference will culminate in an all-day street theater extrav- aganza Saturday, November 1st. THE PURPOSE of the Teach- in is not to put forth a particular political line, but rather to dis- seminate information which, be- cause of the screening process Big Br of the corporate media, is not easily accessible to the public.; It is ironic that an alternative educational experience such as a Teach-in should be necessary in a university community, where education, one would as- sume, is the first priority. The significance of this point can- not be over-emphasized. By stubbornly withholding financial support, the U Administration has made it as difficult as pos- sible for the organizers of the Teach-in. This year, over two dozen Teach-ins focusing on covert in- telligence operations and politi- cal assassinations are set for campuses and cities throughout the country. The enthusiastic response to the Teach-in on the part of in- dividuals and organizations in Ann Arbor is indicative of a growing concern among Ameri- cans who share a common fear of certain dangerous trends this country is followning. The or- ganizers of the Teach-in wel- come any kind of support or as- sistance from interested persons who would like to contribute creative energy to this project. Those who are involved with the Teach-in approach politics with the attitude that political practice should be a creative and liberating experience, and that politics is a vehicle for overcoming alienation. This is not the politics of local sectar- ianism or the dreary bi-annual argumentative involvement in American electoral boredom. THE TEACH-IN Committee lother holds regular meetings every Monday evening at 7:30 p.m. at 332 S. State St. Teach-in litera- ture and information is avail- It is ironic that an alternative education- al experience, such as a Teach-in should be necessary in a univer- sity community, where education, one would Kuntsler assume, is Priority." the first BY REFUSING to grant cred- it for the Teach-in as a mini- course, even though it had met all of theerequirements and had been approved by the Curricu- lum Committee, the Executive Committee of the LSA College clearly demonstrated its com- mitment to a policy of indirect censorship and suppression of information. With this latest vio- lation of students' rights, the University calls itself into ques- tion by contradicting the basic premise upon which it rests: the right to know. In a society where democratic institutions supposedly exist, the right to know is paramount. Whether by able in the Fishbowl during weekdays, along with free show- ings of the Zapruder film of the JFK assassination. Tickets for the entire conference are $3.00 and can be obtained at the Fish- bowl or at the UAC tiket desk in the lobby of the Michigan Un- ion. For more information con- tact the Ann Arbor Teach-in at 332 S. State or call (313) 995-0404. Marty Lee is a co-ordinator of the upcoming Teach-in, "Bicentennial Dilemmas Who's in Control?" AFL-CIO Convention Economy takes a back seat Rosenbaum blocks reform TWO BILLS AIMED at reforming Michigan's marijuana laws are currently sitting in the state house, facing an uncertain future as a re- sult of one man. Paul Rosenbaufh, Chairman of the Judiciary Commit- tee, has refused to hold hearings on these bills claiming he is already busy with "more important" things. The first bill, sponsored by Jackie Vaughn would completely legalize marijuana. Though a noble effort on the part of the representative from Detroit, realistically the bill has no chance of passing due to prevalent biases surrounding the marijuana issue. A second bill, introduced by Repub- lican Floor Leader William Bryant, has a much better chance ... so long as Rosenbaum doesn't get a hold of it. Instead of being sent to the Judie- iary Committee, as was the case with Vaughn bill, it went to Perry Bul- lard's .Civil Rights Committee. THIS BILL WOULD eliminate jail sentences and set fine of $100 for use, possession and distribution without renumeration. In addition it TODAY'S STAFF NEWS: Tom Allen, Glen Allerhand, Gordon Atcheson, Steve Hersh, Rob Meachum, Sara Rimer, Curt Smith EDITORIAL PAGE: Michael Beckman, Steve Harvey, Paul Haskins ARTS PAGE: James Valk PHOTO TECHNICIAN: Scott Eccker would be enforced by citation, like a traffic violation, rather than ar- rest. Though hardly perfect, it would place Michigan among the leaders of marijuana reform. But Rosenbaum, upset because he is not being allowed to determine the fate of the second bill, has threatened to take the issue to a vote of the house in order to have it re- assigned to his committee. Last year 18,000 people were ar- rested for marijuana violations in this state. A recent survey shows about a quarter of 24-year-old men in the nation smoked grass last year. In addition there is no medical evi- dence proving marijuana a health hazard. In light of all this marijuana reform is important. Removal of jail sentences for pos- session and use would keep people found guilty of violating law from sharing the same cell with a killer or thief. IN ORDER TO save this legislation, it is important to write your rep- resentative in Lansing, c/o State. Capitol Bldg., Lansing, Mi. 48933 and urge them to support the assignment of H. B. 5627 to the Civil Rights com- mittee, and ask their support of the bill when it comes to a floor vote. Another letter is also in order: one to Paul Rosenbaum telling him to stop his mindless obstruction of this legislation. Send it to Room 303 State Capitol Bldg. Lansing Mi. 48933. By CAROL MARSH SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 13 (PNS) - AFL-CIO President George Meany left little doubt here at the federation's recent convention about what worries him most - and it was not the economy. Meany failed even to mention unemployment or the current recession until halfway through his keynote address. Instead, he devoted himself to bemoaning the "rise in the military power of the communist totalitarian world." "Their purpose is to conquer the world," he said. "What is our purpose? Frankly, we don't seem to have one any more ... That's not wholly true . . . we do have a policy - it's called detente." The delegates found booklets on their tables about "Solzhen- itsyn: The Voice of Freedom", and were treated to a movie featuring the anti-communist Russian author, the only movie shown during the convention. THE REPORT of the AFL- CIO Executive Council to the convention had this to say about the Vietnam War: "The war has ended except for the poor mil- lions who must now somehow survive the degradation of the vanquished and the mental and physical enslavement of an ide- ology which for more than 20 years they worked and died to oppose." Meany did finally get around to the problem of unemploy- ment, which he blamed on gov- ernment policies of high inter- est rates and tight money. The solutions he suggested were gov- ernment jobs, extended unem- ployment benefits and lower in- terest rates., The delegates - 850 men and only 22 women - applauded Meany enthusiastically. Most were officers of national AFL- CIO affiliated unions. The differences between the officials inside the hall and the rank-and-file workers leafleting and picketing outside were sharp. One coalition of rank-and- file caucuses - the United Trade Unionists - picketed against a bill moving rapidly through Congress that would set up a national board with the power to intervene in and settle construction trade strikes. THE PROTESTERS saw the bill - the Construction Industry Bargaining Act of 1975 - as a sign that AFL-CIO leaders were more interested in cooperating with industry and government to settle strikes than in encourag- ing rank-and-file mobilization. Inside, the convention dele- gates applauded a speech by the bill's author, Labor Secretary John Dunlop, and passed a reso- lution supporting the bill. Another rank-and-file caucus, the Bay Area Trade Union Com- mittee for Chile, leafleted the convention for several days in- viting delegates to a seminar on Chile, featuring delegate Abe Feinglass, international vice president of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Work- men. Feinglass had been to Chile, seen the abusesbof the military dictatorship, and hoped to unite workers to boycott Chil- ean goods.. The only delegate who came was Feinglass. The convention passed a resolution saying that, "Free-trade unionists did not mourn the departure of a Marx- ist regime in Chile," called the coup a "necessary act, despite the cruel and inhuman suppres- sion of civil rights," and said Chilean dictator Pinochet's re- gime was "on a level with the dictatorships of Castro, Brezh- nev, Mao, Duvalier ..." UNION MEMBERS outside the convention also leafleted delegates about the American Institute for Free Labor Devel- opment (AIFLD), founded and funded by the AFL-CIO. AIFLD has been identified by former CIA agent Philip Agee and oth- ers as a CIA labor front group in Latin America, instrumental in the overthrow of Allende in Chile. The Executive Council's report praised AIFLD, and in no way alluded to links between AIFLD and the CIA. Among AIFLD's achieve- ments, the report cites this in- stance in Uruguay: "AIFLD was instrumental in 1974 in as- sisting the democratic labor movement in Uruguay to enroll its unions in the National Regis- ter of Unions established by the new Uruguayan labor law. Be- fore this registration, the Marx- ist-dominated National Conven- tion of Workers (CNT) con- trolled an overwhelming number of Uruguayan unions." THE CONVENTION dealt with more than 200 resolutions rang- ing from nuclear energy to metric conversion. A resolution supporting the Coalition of La- bor Union Women (CLUW) failed to pass, when it was brought up for a vote at noon while the women delegates rep- resenting CLUW were all absent from the hall. The Resolutions Committee had recommended against it because CLUW in- cludes unions not affiliated with the AFL-CIO. Hubert Humphrey, friend of labor, got the warmest welcome of anyone addressing the con- vention. Other friends of labor who also gave speeches were San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto, U.N. Ambassador Daniel Moynihan, Sen. Henry Jackson, Meany D e f e n s e Secretary James Schlesinger - and United Farm Workers President Cesar C a- vez. Chavez was one of the few at the convention not wearing a business suit. HIS MESSAGE, too, went against the grain. He told the delegates the farmworkers knew from long, bitter experience that the government #sn't a reliable ally of workers and that workers can only depend on their united strength. Carol Marsh worked as a re- porter for several California dailies before becoming a free- lance writer. Copyright Pacific New Service, 1975. Letter's to The Daily THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Field N wape ya v. Is contingencies To The Daily: IF YOUR LOCAL nuclear power plant had an accident and dangerous amounts of radio- active substances were being releasedsinnto the surrounding environment, what would yoo do? How would you leave? Where would you go? Chances are you've never thought about it. This is written with the as- sumption that you do care, feel you have some control over your life, and maybe want to do something about a disturbing situation that could become a dangerous reality. The Nuclear Regulatory Com- mittee (NRC) requires all plant licensees to have plans for evacuation of the surrounding areas in case of an accident. The Commission does not re- quire detailed plans, only a summary of events they hope would take place. The plan us- ually consists of some under- standings between the utility company and local public offic- ials. It is the view of some citi- zens' groups ,however, that ex- tensive, definite plans should be required and made public. The lack of plans may be in part, caused by the industries' reluct- ance to alarm the public to the licensing requirements for evac- uation procedures for every nu- clear facility. THE NATIONAL PUBLIC Interest Research Group (PI- RG) has begun a campaign de- manding public distribution of plans and actual test drills of +1. c ni nn Ta n..aC+nn +thpn meet the same guidelines. A letter to Pirgim member Marcy Bohm from NRC, on Feb. 21, 1975 about evacuation plans, states, "The (emergen- cy) plan must include provisions for suitable arrangements to be made with state and local of- ficials and prompt notification to them in case of an emer- gency. The detailed procedures for carrying out the plan are audited at the site by our in- spectors and it must be shown that the licensee does in fact have the appropriate arrange- ments and means of notifica- tion of appropriate officials." "Neit-er the NRC or the li- censee, however, has any au- thority to direct the activities of the general public outside the facility site boundaries. Re- sponsibility for emergency re- sponse plans offsite is vester in state and local government." IN ANOTHER LETTER written to Ms. Bohm. by the Michigan State Police dated April 1, 1975, they state, ". . - the actual emergency evacua- tion plans for those plants do not exist on the state level . . ." Yet, the foremost safety committee of the Nuclear Reg- ulatory Commission, (called the Advisory Committee for Reac- tor Safeguards (ACRS), stated in a memorandum dated April 1, 1975, "On the basis of its evaluations, the Committee has concluded that an effective emergency plan can play a sig- nificant role on the protection of the nearby population in the unlikely event of a major ac- cidental release onfraiac.ntive these problems is the fact that Federal funds to lend support to the development of state re- sponse plans, which the Com- mittee understood were to be made available through the eFd- eral Disaster Assistance Admin- istration, have never material- ized. Although there have been several candidate states for the development of model state plans, no such plan has yet been completed." IT IS OBVIOUS from the above that the federal govern- ment grants the licenses to the utilities, the responsibilities of evacuation and safety outside the plants walls is left up to state and local governments, the states have either no complet- .ed plans or unsafe existing plans, and for the states to have adequate plans they need ex- pertise and money, something the Federal government hasn't provided even though it has been requested. If the lack of evacuation plans distresses you, if you care enough to do something about it write to Secretary, U. S. Nu- clear Regulatory Commission. Washington, D. C. 20555. Attn: Chief, Docketing and Service Section. Write to your Congress- people and Senators. Get in touch with your local or state Pirg office. Show some interest. Michael Yellin Oct. 15 women's prisons To The Daily: I AM WRITING in re the ex- ploitation of Michigan's women nrionrs hbv n rivatp neraann- their members and non-mem- bers cut - rate prices for serv- ices rendered and use women prisoners to do the work. Thie clubs then pocket the profit. The Prisoners' Progress As- sociation (PPA) is now planning' to start a chapter at DeHoCo, so women prisoners will have an avenue to begin exercising their rights as both humans and as women. Knowing of- your interest in the area of prison reform, I thought your readers would like to know that our women pri- soners are not only slaves of the state, but also slaves of private organizations! Women in prison have been neglected too long. The PPA plans to bring their plight to both legislators and the public. WE NEED VOLUNTEERS and donations to help us regain rights for the neglected wo- men prisoners of Michigan. Hence, I request that you print my letter in hopes it will in- fluence your readers to help us stop the exploitation of women prisoners. Should anyone care to lend a hand in helping PPA bring hu- mane treatment to women pri- soners, they will be more than welcome to do so. For more in- formation on this matter, con- tact me at the address below, or Claudia Cines, 413 South Di- vision, No. 1, Ann Arbor. Bigotry by corrections offic- ials must be stopped now; ex- ploitation of women prisoners by private organizations must be eliminated. These women "just borrowed" To The Daily: AS A CONCERNED, conser- vative parent of a University student who usually disagrees wholeheartedly with your edi- torial policies, may I say "Bravo to the Daily!" for your front-page expose' of the Uni- versity's professorial "borrow- ers" of library books, by Ralph Vartebedian. Had Mr. Vartebe- dian "researched" any of those 7,500 versions of the Bible in the University library ,he would have found quite another, view of 'borrowing" - two thieves were crucified beside of Christ in those days. Apparently they frowned on "borrowing" then! The hypocrisy apparent in your example before our young people is probably part of the reason so many of them have no respect for people or proper- ty -- or for the moral values of the older generation. I, agree with Mr. Downes that some "ideals" are more valuable than the books involved, but I would question whether letting pro- fessors get away with this type of wholesale "borrowing" is teaching anyone the proper ideals. PROF. POWERS compares his "borrowing" to the me- chanic who "borrows" tools from the factory he works in- in most factories, a worker who "borrowed" tools for six years and was caught would certainly be fired. But then Prof. Powers is a "scholar" - that makes it all right. 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