31p Etrlpgatt Batly Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MicH. Truth Wll Prevail 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. FRIDAY, MARCH 8,1968 NIGHT EDITOR: WALLACE IMMENI Johnson's New Ploy: McCarthy vs. the McCarthyites 4J4 J l" - - ~ \ -- (a a --- Y7' - Y _ Nothing Like an Exciting Game of Solitaire..- Love A in the Sprtingtime... POLITICS OVER the years has accumu- lated what is perhaps the largest collection of cliches in America. To re- peat one of the more egregious of these, Lyndon Jolinson is a shrewd politician. While at first benignly ignoring the quixotic rumblings of Eugene McCarthy, now that the Minnesota Senator's cam- paign has perhaps caught fire - another epic cliche - Johnson is beginning to display his renowned political sagacity. The President's henchmen in New Hampshire have begun amusing them- selves by calling McCarthy "an appeaser" and a "spokesman for the forces of sur- render." This maneuver was topped yesterday by ads in all the major New Hampshire papers which ominously warned: "The Communists in Vietnam are watching the New Hampshire primary. Support our fighting men in Vietnam. Write-in Pres- ident Johnson on your ballot Tuesday." This brand of subtlety is unlikely to win him. any new friends in academia, but Johnson remembers the success with which the Republicans used this kind of rhetoric to excite the political adrenalin during the early fifties. And while turning the New Hampshire primary into a confrontation between Mc- Carthy and the McCarthyites could just backfire on the President, this approach certainly has not shortened the political fife of Richard Nixon. JOHNSON PULLED an even better po- litical trick this week by confounding everyone and not entering a stand-in candidate in the Massachusetts primary. While all but conceding that state's 72 convention votes to McCarthy, Johnson has demonstrated the prime fallacy of the McCarthy crusade to bring the war to the American people. And that is the small percentage of Convention votes which are chosen in party primaries. Despite the publicity focusing on states like New Hampshire, the bulk of Convention delegates are party loyalists chosen in state and local party caucuses - hardly the most demo- cratic of millieus. As recent American political history will attest, major political decisions tend, to be made in party conventions rather than in the November elections. The 1964 Goldwater nomination shows that con- ventions tend to have a will of their own. OPTIMISTS MAY VIEW these twin prongs of White House strategy as. an asknowledgement of the growing sup- port which McCarthy's low-key campaign has been attracting. But for the rest of us, the President's decision to ignore the primaries is just a blunt statement that the politicians and not the people will control the Demo- cratic Convention in August. -WALTER SHAPIRO Rural Intramurals CATCHING UP with yesterday is growing in popularity. The University has de- cided to build four intramural playing fields on North Campus. Although the students' needs for rec- reation have only been severely below par for 10 or 15 years, the University felt it could not postpone the decision any longer. Not any longer than necessary, at least. The University's planning office first recommended the playing sites in 1966. But the University hesitated because the Residential College had also been promis- ed the land. Now that the Residential Col- lege concept has been reduced to a sha- dow, the University has relit the recrea- tional firebrand. Because the University is a harrassed institution with countless demands on its hands, it deserves praise when it manages to even do one thing at one time. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, t20 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. The Daily Is a member of the Associated Press. Collegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year., Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrie: ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Fred Mayer, assistant University plan- ner, acknowledges, like everyone'else, the deficiencies in the intramural program. PROBABLY, for one reason or another, the University can be excused for not noticing the immediacy of the intramural drain. After all, the Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics has been taking good care of the students out of its sur- plus funds. The Board hasn't had many surplus funds, of course, but it did buy Wines Field in 1956-its last outlay for outdoor recreation.' It also has a stately intramural build- ing on Hoover Street. As a matter of fact, it has had the building for 40 years. This week's decision to finally carry through on the North Campus plans will relieve some of the pressure for outdoor playing space. It could even exceed some of the students' fondest dreams. Let us, for one reason or another, kneel and give thanks. BUT IF you're kneeling inside the intra- mural building on Hoover Street, be very careful when you get up. It's slippery when wet. -HOWARD KOHN Executive Sports Editor By DAVID DUBOFF ALMOST AN entire week of classes have passed since the end of that four day weekend which boasts the pompous title of Spring Recess, and all week long I have been discovering that I miss more and more that other Ann Arbor which emerges when the campus empties out. All of the rumblings that I had heard to the effect that "there's nothing to do" seemed irrelevant in light of the fact that there was so much you didn't have to do and so much more time to do things you could never quite fit in during the school year. Laying aside the obvious ad- vantage of not having to go to classes (hardly a persuasive argu- ment for staying in town), here are some of the other worthwhile features that I noted about the other Ann Arbor: Finding previously non-existent books - which had apparently materialized overnight r- on the shelves of the UGLI; Being able to walk through the fishbowl without distraction from hawkers, leaf letters and tables strewn with diverting literature ; Being able to study in the Union MUG without constant interruptions f r o m gregarious friends; not having to struggle to hear myself think over the noise of a hundred chattering students and the constant clinking of dishes and spoons; Being able to walk across the Diag at noon without practically getting mauled by a horde of stu- dents, all going the other way; BEING ABLE to have a conver- sation with a friend without hav- ing to break it off because one of us has to go to class; Finding a parking place on the first floor of the Thayer Street structure; Jaywalking without fear of be- ing run over by a crazed bicycle rider; Seeing a movie at the Campus at 9 o'clock without having to wait in line for 20 minutes; Finding an empty local phone booth on the first floor of the Union; not having to wait to use the student directory; Finding an empty john with a door on it; Not having to say "Hi . ...how are you . . . fine" to a thousand acquaintances on State Street, and then having to spend the next hour trying to remember who all of them were ; Being at home for four whole days without receiving any calls from enterprising psych grads needing subjects for tedious exper- iments; NOT HAVING to spend an hour every morning pouring over The Daily personals column, after searching since sunrise for that ingenious spot among the bushes where the paperboy hid my paper today-assuming this is on'e of the rare days when he delivered it at all. Of course without this morning search I miss the thrill of stumbling over the pile of two- week-old Huron Valley Ad-Visors piled on my porch; Not having to make the agoniz- ing choice of deciding whether to go to Cinema Guild or Cinema Two, since neither is open; Being able to find a New York Times at any store in town after 10 in the morning; Ordering a pizza on a Friday night and not having to wait an hour-and-a-half for devilery; Getting a table in the Brown Jug in less than 30 minutes; "wait-, ing less than 20 before having my order taken; 'Waking up Saturday without a hangover, because there wasn't a single party anywhere in town Fri- day night; Everyone knows that the pur- poses of education are best served when students can live and learn in an environment in which a proper balance between work, rec- reation and rest is achieved Recognizing for the first time how much more pleasant it is around campus without the crowd- ing; the noise, and the rush asso- ciated with school, I would pro- pose to whoever handles schedul- ing of such things that Spring Break be extended to encompass the entire year. WALTER LIPPMANN The Case For Rockefeller NEW YORK-The United States can count itself fortunate that in these unhappy times there is an election near at hand. For this opens up the chance to begin to get a grip on the events which are at present out of human and political control. There is no other way to begin unless the voters choose a new President with new advisers and a new party alignment. The conflicts within the nation about the war, the cities, the economy and the racism cannot be healed unless the nation of a whole can look forward to a new beginning. The nation cannot thrash around for another five years in its entanglements. The dominant fact of our time is not that opinion is divided and that there is strong opposition to the Administration. That is normal enough in a free country. The dominant fact is the crumbling of that binding confidence in the nation's purpose and its future, which in normal times may be taken for granted. There is a disintegration of the hope, which is the inner genius of the American spirit, that men can solve their problems and that evils can be overcome. Lyndon Johnson has undermined this hope, and he has driven a whole generation of Americans into open or implicit revolt against their government and their own society; he has instilled in the rest of the people a sense of hopelessness and bewilderment. With the ins having gotten us into trouble, the only thing to do is to turn to the outs. Unless Mr. Johnson retires and along with him his chief advisers, only a Republican President can save the country from its plight. Sen. Eugene McCarthy cannot replace Lyndon Johnson in the White House. What that gallant man is doing is to rally the saving remnant of the Democrats in order to save the soul of the Democratic Party. He is saving its future. But for the dangerous present the hope of the country is that it can find a Republican to replace President Johnson. THE REPUBLICAN PARTY does not have a wide choice of avail- able and qualified candidates. There are in fact only two such men; former Vice President Richard Nixon and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. Gov. George Romney has withdrawn; Gov. Reagon does not have the experience needed to be President of the United States in this critical age. Nixon has had a long and rich experience in the administration of local and regional politics. Yet, that is where the action is. That is where the great problems arise. In terms of election politics, Nixon has an even greater liability. It is the same liability which Lyndon Johnson has-the credibility gap, which is the polite way of saying that masses of people do not much believe or trust him. In a contest with Mr. Johnson, the country would be asked to choose between two men who, as Mr. Dooley once said of two other political candidates, are as far apart as the two poles (since they argue about so many things) and yet as much alike as the two poles (since they are both icy and barren). MEASURED ONLY in these electoral terms, the case for Rocke- feller is virtually unanswerable. He is the one Republican who has the best chance of winning the election. For while Nixon is the preferred choice of the regular Republicans, they are a minority party and can win an election only when a great mass of Democrats and independent voters defect to them. No other Republican can match Rockefeller's attraction for this strategic mass of voters. Rockefeller would not have this ace of trumps if the reasons for making him President were not intrinsically solid and sound. I submit that in the year 1968 the reasons are compelling. For what the country will be choosing is not a war President who could win the war. It will be choosing a President for the reconstruction in which the War will be wound up and the wounds healed and the damage repaired, the damage which is not only material but moral and spiritual. In one way or another the Vietnamese war will either expand and explode into a global catastrophe, or a way will be managed to close it down. I regard Nelson Rockefeller as the most qualified man available for this supreme task of reconstruction. I believe that Lyndon Johnson has disqualified himself. FOR MYSELF, I have never been concerned about Rockefeller's refusal to talk about Vietnam or align himself as a Hawk or a Dove. That is a politician's tactic. I have never talked about Vietnam with the governor because I feel the less he said the freer he would be to commit himself to the inevitable task of liquidating the war. I am sure that he would have to liquidate the war in order to be the kind of President he can be and wishes to be. The central and critical fact is that the Vietnamese war is a monstrous diversion from the true American problem, which is not the policing of Asia but the mastery of the human adjustment to the mod- ern, urban, highly technological society in which most Americans live. For the leadership of the country in this great task Rockefeller is pre- eminently qualified. New York is the vortex of the problem. If New York can be governed well, then the problem elsewhere is soluble. Rockefeller has been able to be a successful governor not only because of his well-ordered instincts and sympathies, but because he has known where to find and how to recruit men of the necessary ability. His family interests and the wide ramifications of their good works have brought him into contact with the expertise which in our tech- nological and complex society is indispensible to good management and good government. For these reasons I hope Nelson Rockefeller will be nominated in August and elected in November. (c) 1968, The washington Post Co. If * Letters to the Editor Negro History Againi To the Editor: IT APPEARS that the "debate" over a Negro history course is beginning to lose touch with reali- ty. The issue is becoming clouded with half-truths, unsubstantiated generalizations and misstatements of fact. I would seriously question the validity of Prof. David Angus' statement that it is "extremely un- likely that anyone currently teach- ing our history department can handle the touchy problem of ex- posing the racism of those who write White American History." If he had taken a lecture course, seminar or studies course cur- rently offered by our department in Civil War and Reconstruction he would know that the racism of those who write and have written American history is exposed. Part of a historian's training in our department is learning to de- tect the bias or prejudice that colors an author's work. Admit- tedly, many history departments do not do this. The fact that ours does is another illustration of why it is ranked among the top five history departments in the coun- try (Mr. Ross's use of an outdated report notwithstanding). I would suggest that Prof. Angus is himself "out of touch" with cer- tain realities. -Robert Rockaway, Grad T T v and War Research: By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Second of a two-part series Shall the -University cease be- ing a member of the Institute for Defense Analyses? --Student Government Council Referendum No. 2 THE DIFFERENCE in attitude toward the University's clas- sified research and its corporate membership in the Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA) can be seen by merely looking at the tactics Voice-SDS m o b11i z e d against each. Voice called a sit-in last No- vember which drew 300 students to the Administration Building to protest classified research at the University. In contrast, Voice's greatest at- tack on the University's participa- tion in IDA was a satirical skit performed at President Fleming's first open house last month. This difference is a direct re- sult of how student leaders re- gard the relative importance of each issue. While $9.7 million in rtn.cmf Pd esearch is seen a cor- ture of the work done by IDA has little relevance to the 12 uni- versities which sit on its board of trustees. While theoretically IDA is con- trolled by its board of trustees, in practice that body has little in- fluence on the Institute's policy. The formal relationship of the schools to IDA merely serves as a cover for work that would un- doubtedly go on whether the cor- poration existed or not. As the faculty of Princeton University - which recently fol- lowed the lead of the University of Chicago and recommended withdrawal from the Institute - noted, the board of trustees is oft- en not even informed of what re- search projects it is approving. Since the University's sole tie to IDA is through this board of trustees, its participation is ob- viously designed to do nothing more than boost the public im- age of the institute. WHAT THEN would be the ef- fect of pulling out of IDA? "Prob- ably not a thing," says Vice Pres- ident for Research A. Geoffrey Norman. The University's partici- trust" for the defense department by five universities at the request of the department in order to give academic scientists a chance to work on the "challenges of ou time," military research. Today IDA has 600 employees and a budget of $12 million. The institute does research for a va- riety of governmental depart- ments including Weapons Systems Evaluation Group of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Though the University, which joined IDA in 1959, does not gain financially by the arrangement its faculty members who act a: consultants garner top fees. VOICE MEMBER Eric Cheste sees IDA as "using the University to legitimize" its military research work. "There's no reason the Uni- versity should sanction it," hE says. Chester adds that IDA use the cover of being an academic ally-sponsored organization to ai in recruiting personnel. In all likelihood, the referendum on IDA will get a larger "yes" vote than the question on the elimina- tion of classified research. This i because, while those who opposE IDA Rather At the last few years. These include: t "Tactical Nuclear Weapons - Their Battlefield Utility," "Chem- ical Control of Vegetation in Re- r lation to Military Needs," "Night . Vision for Counterinsurgents" and "A Rational Approach to the De- velopment of Non-Lethal Chemi- cal Warfare Agents." Domestically, IDA compiled a s study last year for the President's t Commission on Law Enforcemnent and the Administration of Justice, which recommended the adoption n.of a computerized command sys- tem based on a military model - s primarily for use during urban riots. Norman disagrees with the idea r' that the University has any re- y sponsibility for the work done by h' IDA. "In brochures we'd be shown as one of the sponsors, he says, e "but there's no validation to the s tasks." d WITH NO FINANCIAL ties to IDA and no say or interest in the projects researched, it is difficult, e if not impossible, to understand - exactly why the University insists s on continuing this relationship e with the defense department. Fight than Switch 4 -~ -