4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 1, 1985 The Michigan Daily a a 4 1IE AtI"dpgan tax1 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Protesters talk about jail Vol. XCV, No. 101 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Rebu lding the party N PROFESSIONAL sports, when a team keeps losing, even though it may be the players who are at fault, the manager or coach is the one who gets fired. In politics the tradition is the same. Consequently, it is Charles Manatt who will be replaced by a new party chairman by the end of this week. Excluding Jimmy Carter's narrow victory over Gerald Ford in the 1976 election (one which featured a battle between party reputations more than a contest between individual can- didates), the Democratic Party has faced three disastrous landslide defeats in a row. The Democrats in the past decade and a half have been maimed by the very purposes on which they have chosen to exist. In 1972, at a time of great political tension and activism in this country, the party was captured by George McGovern, who appealed to those interested enough to attend con- ventions or work at the lower levels of the campaign process in order to achieve their goals. As a result, those who put the party together chose a staunch liberal who did not represent the views of all those who called themselves Democrats. In the 1984 election, the very existence of a labeled faction in the Democratic party, Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition, was evidence that the whole was going to suffer badly for failing to sufficiently unify its parts. The problem seems to be paradoxical. Can a party which is comprised purely of various minorities unite long enough and thickly enough to win a presidential election? Of cour- se it can, provided that party can find a man, a personality, who can not only understand and work with all the elements of the party competently, but who can rally people, appeal, and cater to their emotions. Somebody like Ronald Reagan. For nearly one half an hour one day last July, Mario Cuomo managed not only to unite all factions of the Democratic Party, but to exude charisma and personality. Cuomo, however, is not the only Democrat in the party with the ability to do this. Essentially, the Democrats have taken a beating for their inability to find one man rather than their inability to unite as a whole. The Republicans are not so in- vulnerable either. Although a wing of their party has been captured by the fundamentalists, certain respected and powerful Republicans see through this conservative fanaticism and refuse to cater to fundamentalist's whims. When a new party chairman is chosen his first priorities should be to search for all personalities they need and to create an organization that unifies - rather then fragments - un- der pressure. The Republican fortress is not so strong as it seems. In fact, it has built its strength through its charismatic leaders, and single celebrities alone are not powerful enough to keep the majority of the American population, which is ac- tually a conglomeration of minorities, from obtaining its political goals. The only issue is whether the new party chairman will be able to work quickly enough - because more youths are joining the college Republicans every day. By Jonathan Ellis Since early December, about once a week, I have been driving to Corunna, Michigan. It takes less than an hour-and-a-half on the highways, but I've tired of that route so I take the smaller road going up. Through towns like Byron, Argentine, and Durand, the drive is over two hours, but the farmhouses and the fields, the small stores where roads cross, begin to make me feel at home in Michigan, though I have already been in Ann Arbor fifteen years. Corunna is the site of the Shiawassee Coun- ty Jail, past the courthouse with its clock- faced dome, less than a block from the Cavalier Bar where I warm myself. On the outside, the jail looks more like a public library, a one-story white brick building, but inside it's very much a prison. Two University students-Ken Jannot and Brian Larkin - are in jail in Corunna and today is their fifty-seventh day behind bars. All day, each day, they sit, lie down or pace around in their four-man cell, maybe fifteen feet by fifteen. There is no exercise space these days in the Shiawassee County Jail, so Brian and Ken don't leave their cell, except once a week when they are allowed to walk down the hall and see two visitors each for thirty minutes. One wall of the cell has a steel door with a slot where food is pushed through. The op- posite wall is all open bars on a corridor where the deputies patrol. Flourescent lights come on at 7 a.m. and go off at 11 p.m. There is never any sunlight or fresh air. If they weren't still in jail this month, Ken would be a second semester junior here and Brian would be taking graduate courses. They would be walking around campus with the rest of us. Instead, they are imprisoned because of what happened in early December last year in another small Michigan town, Walled Lake. It focused on the cruise missile engines being made there. A cruise missile could be aimed from Den- ver, travel 1800 miles, and stand a good chan- ce of directly hitting the Graduate Library with a nuclear warhead. Such missiles are only twenty feet long, two feet in diameter, and could be hidden in a basement. The range, accuracy, and radar invisibility of the cruise missile is made possible by two special components: its superior guidance systems, and its very quiet and efficient engine. Cruise missile engines are manufac- tured about fifty miles northeast of Ann Ar- bor, in Walled Lake, at the Williams Inter- national Company. Since August of 1983, there have been ninety-three arrests at Williams Inter- national. Ken and Brian were in a group of 13 people who attempted to block the Williams driveway as the seven a.m. shift drove to the gates. In an attempt to keep the protestors from "blocking ingress and egress," Williams has obtained an injunction from the Oakland County Circuit Court. In addition to counts of trespass, violators of the injunction can also be charged with contempt of court. Most of those arrested before Brian and Ken's group served 25 to 30 days in jail. Some have also been charged with "conspiracy to tresspass," a felony which carries a penalty of up to one year in jail. Thus far, no jury has Ellis works at Canterbury House. Part two of the interview will appear tomorrow. been willing to convict the protesters of con- spiracy. When it became clear that people were willing to spend a month in jail to protest the production of cruise missile engines, Williams and the court took a new tack: civil contempt. Individuals who were in civil con- tempt could be held in jail indefinitely, until such time as they followed the order of the court. On December 7,1984, Judge Francis Xavier O'Brien of the Oakland County Circuit Court ordered Ken Jannot, Brian Larkin and the 11 others to jail unless they promised not to lock the Williams gate again. They were also given the option of doing forced community service eight hours a day seven days a week. None of the 13 would make the promise which the judge demanded. 12 went to jail, and one chose community service which he is still doing. Of the 12, seven have since been freed pending their appeal of legality of using civil contempt charges to punish them not for something they did, but for something they might do in the future. Brian, Ken and three others have chosen not to appeal (for reasons they explain in the second part of this interview which will ap- pear in tomorrow's Daily) and continue to serve their indefinite sentences. One of those three others is Dorothy Whit- marsh, 37, a nurse who is now in the Oakland County Jail. She is permitted to travel to her job at University Hospital here in Ann Arbor but must return to her cell in the jail each night. With Ken and Brian at Shiawassee are Dean Abott, 18, who helps to run a Detroit shelter for the homeless, and Carfon Foltz, 77, a retired Methodist minister who has been in jail before for similar acts of civil disobedien- ce. Ken Jannot is 20, grew up like many Univer- sity students in the Detroit suburbs, and went to University of Detroit high school. Brian Larkin was raised in eastern Pennsylvania and did undergraduate work at Georgetown before coming here to graduate school. Brian turned 25 in jail earlier this month. Because I work for a campus ministry, I am allowed in the jail outside of regular visiting hours and have seen Ken and Brian regularly these past fifty-seven days. Lately they look exhausted but their spirits hold. I wish you could see their faces, as I do thorough the bars, but I am glad at least you can hear what they said when I asked them these questions last week. Johnathan Ellis: When you were sitting in classes last term, could you have imagined yourself in jail this long? Brian Larkin: I expected to be in for no more than 40 days or so. The longest anyone has been in before on this charge has been 36 days, and then they were released at the request of Williams. So judging from that, I didn't expect Williams would be this tough on us. E: Has your experience in jail been dif- ferent than you imagined? Ken Jannot: I didn't really imagine much of anything. I really didn't know enough about the intricacies of jail to have a clear picture. E: How has your jail experience changed you as the weeks have gone on? J: There have definitely been different stages during these seven weeks or more. I think we're all kind of tired of this place. I go back and forth between by great resolve to stay in here and my great desire to get out. When I get at my most insane in here, I start writing a lot-poetry, in my journal and all sorts of letters. L: I have done more and more thinking about ways to live non-violently in my life, but I've come to realize that I can't make any of those decisions here in jail. Basically, I jus have to experience this situation as best a possible, experience the helplessness and powerless ness of not knowing when we will be released. E: Why did you choose being arrested as a means of protesting the nuclear arms race? L: It's distinct from the work I had been doing. For SANE, where I am the canvass director in Ann Arbor, we work through the system, lobbying in Congress and so on. That work feels like an implicit acceptance of th system which is building nuclear weapons everyday. J: I felt that only way we could bring about real change in society is for people to get in- volved directly. That means for me standing in the driveway at Williams. Even though we were only there for a few minutes, it was still direct action, blocking the entrance into a weapons plant. I wanted to say this was im- portant enough to get arrested for. And it was a demonstration of how far the defense com- panies were willing to go to stop us. I also fel like my arrest could pull more people into protesting nuclear weapons production. L: I saw the injunction against blockading Williams as a law by which the Court is protecting a corporation in its profitable preparations for nuclear war and I can't really comply with that any longer. E: Why did you choose Williams Inter- national? J: It was there. I was feeling like I neede to take some direct action to stop our head- long plunge toward nuclear war. L: It's near home. I think it's important to act locally because of the impact it has on the community - both for people who have not yet awakened to the arms race and for people already in the peace community. I began working on disarmament four years ago while on junior year abroad in Scotland. I realized then the nature of U.S. imperialism in Europe. The people of those countries do not want the Cruise and Pershing II missiles deployed. I believe the U.S. i building first strike weapons to fight and win a nuclear war. I can't be part of it. It's just in- sane and it has gotten to the point where we really need to stop the insanity. It's important that people break compliance with the arms race. E: Do you see yourself as political prisoners? J: Definitely. I felt going into this that I would be a political prisoner whether or not we got indefinite sentences-since the inju ction itself sent us to jail, for whatever time, just because we are trying to stop nuclear weapons production. I was very excited when I heard that our lawyers had sent a brief t Amnesty International headquarters asking that they take our case as political prisoners. These things take a long time and we haven't heard anything yet as far as I know. L: We are prisoners of conscience. The lawyer for Williams International said at our trial that they were not in court to punish us for what we did, but to seek our cooperatio with the court injunction. We are being hel for our beliefs, just as people are under Latin American dictatorships or even in the Soviet Union, though our conditions may be less har- sh. Illegal tour O ne of the advantages of having a President over a king is that the president is a representative of the people. He can, in theory, com- municate with the public as one of them rather than as a blue-blooded superior. Armed in part with that belief and with no small bit of chutzpa, Robert Latta, a 45-year-old meter reader from Denver, payed a private visit to the White House on January 20. Following behind the Marine band, he slipped through the doors and began a tour of the president's home. He was even- tually arrested by secret service agen- ts and charged with unlawful entry. Latta's 15-minute odyssey is under- standably illegal, and he should be found guilty of the charges, but the in- cident does raise a question : Why is the president so inaccessible to the people? Inaccessibility to the president is nothing new. Coopers and minutemen were as unable to drop in on George Washington in 1790 as substitute teachers and meter readers are about to stop by and chat with Ronald Reagan today. It also is obvious that inaccessibility is a necessary price to ensure the safety of the president. Nevertheless, it moves him a step further from the people; the people of whom he is a part. On a small scale, democracy affords all of its constituents the opportunity to meet face to face with its elected leaders. However, as a democracy en- compasses more and more people, it becomes impossible to guarantee that opportunity to everyone. Robert Latta's venture into the White House is a reminder that democracy in the United States is not perfect. He should be found guilty of illegal entry, but the nation should take a moment to consider the implications of his, or any other citizen's, inability to personally contact the president. . I Wass erman AMNDME~NT To M~k '[E D CiT J% y DI SAPEIQ. AN AQMS 9-ACE M SPACE TO EuMiNATr= NUCLEAR WEAPONS ON EAQTN.,. J PND'MOPE GUTS !N -- ovERNM~.NT ORDERTo UT w END To o1EPr~y TWAS; NOT 1~ QE-F-'aE TO V'~ REfzzTURN H I Letters Engineering humanities story slanted A , ~RE mKt taxic ,.,Ryep. as "1 __ A J W~L_.. 1 ' 21D FUN CO NEW 2~'~ To the Daily: I feel compelled to write to you, the Michigan Daily, to congratulate you on your ex- cellent article concerning the discontinuation of the College of Engineering Humanities Depar- tment. Without doubt, the aforementioned article was one of the best examples of biased and senseless journalism I have encountered in quite some time. Not only did your reporter manage to interview, almost ex- clusively, only those engineering students dissatisfied with their present humanities course, but also succeeded in making there appear to be a distinct difference The Michigan Daily encourages input from our readers. Letters should be typed, triple spaced, and sent to the Daily Opinion Page, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. smaller number of openings for freshmen. I have no opinion on whether the move to LS&A will be for the better or the worse. Personally, I enjoyed my 101 class and found the ideas discussed in class to be both relevant and interesting. However, I am confident in the typical engineering student's ability to excel in LS&A's fresh- men composition courses. -Donna K. Lloyd January 28 BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed iw/r Iotau!w6,VeW OA 014AW Oh t~r TMWR6BOPPING H16W '?P7 1L5 ? I $NAW IN17ON.. SHlOCK.. MORAL 4'6'W6/ 6vV6M6 A2Ol y/ AADfIANC2 "MYSThKY BA ML W'PAPER. ;i La J