rl Air4igau Batty 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 :a4 Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will 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. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD WINTIER 1 ' ./ ... C s { q s .( r a Wt {+yl !11Y r} ~ ' "S. t," The Student Vote: Catalyst for Change? , ,? r', , . S i E L } t 1' +. 2 i C d HEUNPRECEDENTED Democratic vic- tory in the City Council election in the traditionally Republican Second Ward served stunning notice that students are at last coming of age as a political force in city government. The historic reversal was engineered by a strong student turn-out for Demo- crat Len Quenon in the first and second precincts where the bulk of student housing is located. Quenon's one-vote victory dealt a sharp blow to incumbent Jim Riecker and all other second ward citizens who have so long tried to stifle, rather than stimu- late, progressive reforms in Ann Arbor. NFORTUNATELY all that Monday's election promises is a City Council which will begin where the tired and worn council left off. For each political party lost a seat and gained one. As a result, the Republican majority on council will continue to prevail seven-to-four on most issues. However, the Democratic minority. will probably merge to form coalitions with liberal Re- publicans on matters of fiscal reform and social programs. But what must be underlined is that the election has not overturned council tradition and transformed it into a dy- namic advocate of social reform. If the new council wishes to make history in Ann Arbor where its pre- decessor has failed, city administrators must launch a special, concerted effort to mold and enact legislation in the cru- cial areas where the city is lagging. FIRST, COUNCIL must enact stringent building codes and reform the De- partment of Safety Engineering. The city's apartment dwellers have too long been at the mercy of Ann Arbor's wealthy landlords. Even if present build- ing codes were being enforced to their full extent, it would be, in many cases, still profitable for landlords to break the law. The city must also develop a broad mass transit system. The present mud- died operation leaves students and the poor of Ann Arbor virtually immobile. If necessary, city subsidy must be used for an effective transportation system. A city income tax must be instituted to replace property taxes as the city's ma- jor source of revenue. The present sys- tem places unfair burden on apartment dwellers who pay the taxes in the form of higher rent. Furthermore council must press for- ward with sincere and powerful pro- grams to combat the racial prejudice which threatens to rock Ann Arbor's placid summer with violence. The so- called "All-American City" can no longer pretend to mollify black and white hatreds with nothing but token human relations commissions. BUT CITY COUNCIL alone cannot re- make Ann Arbor. In a town where students play such a major social and economic role, government must recog- nize them as a legitimate and powerful voice in local affairs. The large-scale student participation in Monday's council election hopefully will act as a catalyst to put Ann Arbor on the road to meaningful municipal change. -DANIEL ZWERDLING MĀ°CAR . "t~} t r 1 r- "'AW) CoMuE ON, (aEN E --E MY (A~~oosE." Lamne Duc:Sila Hawk Johnson Decision: Calling the Bluff By JIM NEUBACHER SO LYNDON JOHNSON won't run again. Now you've had two days of hashing it over with everyone in Pol. Sci. 414, and in your dorm, and you realize that it doesn't mean the war's over, and that if you're in med school, you better stay there, even if you really want to be an artist. But you know what Lyndon Johnson really did Sunday night? He called the bluff of every man in the house. And he did it at a time when the stakes were high, and the pot was full. Sen. Eugene McCarthy, who faced Johnson directly yesterday in the Wisconsin primary, was the big loser in the deal. The announce- ment of non-candidacy by Johnson, coming two days before the elec- tion, took a lot of the steam out of the McCarthy campaign, and spot- lighted Sen. Robert Kennedy as the frontrunner for the Democratic nomination. A WIN in yesterday's election will mean much less to McCarthy forces now. He ran against a lame duck. His other major opponent was not on the ballot, and even gave him his support: At the same time, Johnson, by halting the bombing of North Vietnam, and actively seeking negotiations with Hanoi, through the Geneva machinery, through Britain, and through the Soviet Union, has taken the step that McCarthy claimed was necessary. McCarthy must now hang on the outcome. If the bombing pause brings no results, or even an outright refus- al to negotiate reasonably from Hanoi, the basis of the McCarthy campaign will be destroyed. Already, yesterday, a Hanoi newspaper gave indications that the bomb halt will not lead to any sort of mean- ingful talks, unless additional steps are taken. And if negotiations are successful, and help to win peace, he might be able to take pride in knowing that he helped to bring it about indirectly, but still his campaign will be baseless, and his source of conflict with the administration will be gone. It is hard to campaign against an opponent, against an administration, that does what you recommend, and does not fight back. JOHNSON has called the bluff of the academic community also. Here, in our extremely rarefied atmosphere, which is certainly much different than the atmosphere surrounding the rest of American so- ciety, most feel certain that Johnson's move for peace is too little, and too late, and thus, continue to press for immediate and total withdrawal. But why, then, if, a bombing halt is too little, too late, did Sen. McCarthy and Sen. Kennedy win over the campuses of the nation, when neither has come out with a proposal stronger than the action Johnson has now implemented? The Senators did not declare themselves in support of immediate withdrawal, or in favor of a firm rejection of the policies which have put us in the position we are in. Neither Senator has proposed concrete ideas as ofyet for avoiding this sort of involvement in the years to come. Only yesterday, Robert Kennedy congratulated Johnson on taking the "first step for peace." Yet he remains the darling of many who call Johnson's move too little, too late. Johnson has also called the bluff of many of those who espoused the credo of "anyone but LBJ". Many of these people, now-having no one to sink their venom into, are faced with the hard task of picking their favorite, and working constructively for him. This sort of positive action is hard for many who rely on negativ- ism for the stimulus and source of their political thinking; who would rather criticize everybody than support anybody. And some people, seeing the impending Kennedy-Nixon choice in the fall, are repulsed. Maybe they are not so turned off as by a Johnson-Nixon choice, but they are still not pleased with their options. BY WITHDRAWING from the race, Johnson has made everyone stop and think about the alternatives left, and about Lyndon Baines Johnson. He can no longer be accused of political motives for every action he takes, and every inaction he is part of. Yet some would even go so far as to call his stunning statement of non-candidacy an attempt to salvage a place in history while he still may. Now Johnson is free to a great extent. The pressure is off. He may call for a bomb halt without having to be bound to past words that will haunt him at election time, and without worrying about accusations of selling out to the doves. He may also follow what he perceives to be good military strategy and send more troops to Vietnam without being accused of trying to appease the hawks. It is not a question of votes any more. FINALLY, HE HAS called the bluff of those who have wailed so loud and long about the "death" of the democratic system, and its failure to work in this modern day. Lyndon Johnson's withdrawal is sure testimony to the effect the process of popular will can have on events. Of course Johnson was a politically and personally strong man. He was able to stand up in spite of the pressure from all sides for a long time. But the over- whelming frustration of the American people, and their desire for concrete, express action brought men like McCarthy to the forefront, thus forcing Lyndon Johnson to relinquish the power given him back when times were different. Most of all, It should be hoped that Johnson's move stimulates some thought in the circles of middle class, liberal Americans who supported Johnson in 1964, but are rejecting him now. It is time for Americans to realize what they are rejecting; not a man, but a policy and a credo and way of thought common to Johnson and millions like him. They elected not only a man, in 1964, but also a. Great Society, andi a world policeman. But only the man is bowing out now. NOW, IN 1968, with this resignation of the man, too many will sit back feeling that the credo is gone with him, and will be shocked to find it again in the White House on January 21, 1969 in a new form. And now they will use the resignation of Lyndon Johnson as an outmoded form of national defense mechanism for the national ego. Americans will be easily convinced to blame the "bad" years of the Johnson Presidency on the man, letting themselves be brainwashed into thinking the formula was right, but they just got the rotten apple in 1964. Will Americans let themselves think that? You bet they will , 1* Vietnam: A Time-Worn Plea SWINGING temporarily from Western Europe and Northern China, the focus of international power politics has ap, parently now centered on Southeast Asia. Secretary of State DeanAcheson recent- ly crystallized this rapidly developing problem with the curt warning to Chi- nese Communists that any attempt at aggression against Southeast Asia "would violate the interests of the United States." But just where do these American "in- terests" lie and are they worth the risk of precipitating another world cataclysm? Apparently Acheson was speaking pri- marily of French-controlled republic of Vietnam (French Indochina), located in the southeast corner of the Asiatic main- land.. Both the United States and Britain are reported considering sending aid - both financial and military-to the little country which stands between the Chi- nese Communists and the rich mineral deposits of Malaya and Indonesia. But Vietnam, itself, is already split in- ternally. In the northern sector a strong Red force led by Communist Ho Chi Minh is battling with the forces of the pro-French Bao Dal government for con- trol of the republic. Hubert EARLY RETURNS from Wisconsin in- dicate that Vice-President Hubert Humphrey -- if he's lucky - will receive about 200 write-in votes in the Democra- tic primary. As the Vice-President seriously pon- ders his presidential candidacy in the weeks ahead, we hope he will conjecture on the meaning of this veritable outpour- ing of support for him in a state where he got over 40 per cent of the primary votes eight years ago. The vote must be regarded as an indi- cateion of the massive ability President Johnson has to pass his own remaining popularity to the man who is his chief cheerleader for Vietnam. We are sure that the Vice-President asks himself now and again "What ever happened to Hubert?" As he delves for an answer, we can only hope that he will look back on some of his more syrupy ut- terances about . that war in Southeast . jAsia. --W.s. ON THE SURFACE, then, it would seem that Mr. Acheson's American "in- terests" do include financial support for the Bao Dai government, which might serve as another block in the path' of the rising tide of Communism. Many observ- ers have reported, however, that the Bao Dai government is opposed even by the anti-Communist citizens of Vietnam- on the grounds that it is nothing more than a French puppet dominated by the French army stationed in the country designed only to perpetuate France's Asiatic colonial interests. In an effort to rally the support of its critics and to throw off the bonds of French domination, the Bao Dai govern- ment two weeks ago appealed to the United States directly - without French supervision. Paris officials, however, have insisted that all aid must be handled by themselves, claiming that the Bao Dai government is incapable of administer- ing an aid program. If the United States should give aid directly to the Bao Dai government it could quite possibly instill a feeling of loyalty to the Western world in the minds of the anti-Communist Vietnam peoples and could substantially extend the Tru- man program of aid to underdeveloped countries of the world, IF, HOWEVER, the aid is given to Paris officials to administer as they chose, it will only perpetuate a decadent and collasping French colonial empire. Cer- tainly the American "interests" of which Mr. Acheson speaks do not include the perpetuation of such a colonial system designed to subjugate dependent coun- tries in the interests of a greedy mother country. -JIM BROWN, The Daily, Tuesday, March 28, 1950 Resistance DESPITE THE excitement of the past few days, the brutal war in Vietnam continues. Today is a Day of Resistance when young men in demonstrations across the country will turn in their draft cards. Since the first Day of Resistance last October more than 2,000 young men have taken this dramatic step. By HOWARD KOHN THE HAWK is Dead . . . or is he? Straight-eyed Lyndon Johnson's 90 per cent bombing halt of North Vietnam has been widely inter- preted as a signal for the end of the draft threat. It has been hailed as the first step toward negotiated peace. More than anyone, Johnson wants peace. That is certain. Johnson is keenly aware that aca- demia will brand a black-Z on him in the history books if he does not stop the conflict during his administration. He has convinced himself that he will go down in history as the man who brought peace to South- east Asia. He can not and will not simply walk away from a tra- gic and immoral war without try- ing to prove himself and his poli- cies. The bombing halt, w h i c h actually meant only reconcentra- ted and intensified air strikes on the supply lines and on the south- ern panhandle of the North around the demilitarized zone, can hardly be called a "meaning- ful" concession. At least, it is un- likely that Hanoi will think it is. IF JOHNSON is serious about a, negotiated peace, he will have to make pride-swallowing contradic- tions and concessions of his Viet- nam policy right and left before Hanoi can be lured to the con- ference table. But the Texan's own history and character belie that hope. It seems much more likely that Johnson will follow his battle- tested line. The Texan is a politician, a smart politician. In a matter of weeks Senators McCarthy and Kennedy will be tearing at each other with the barbs of highly superficial issues, while Vice President Humphrey waits cagily stage right. PUBLIC DISSENT will have been placated. McCarthy and Kennedy will have misfired much of their anti-administration am- munition. Assuming that Hanoi will re- ject the bombing halt as a mean- ingless political ploy, there will be no reciprocal de-escalation. Pointing out that he has now offered what "peacedom" has. been preaching and been refused (enter Humphrey), Johnson will see, no moral obligation to en- danger American lives with this foolish waste of time. And because he has a self- impdsed time limit on the war. (Jan., 1969), Johnson will take quick, precise steps. He will have an additional 200-300,000 infan- trymen mobilized, ready and set to go. Because he can not win a war of attrition in time, Johnson will be pressured to use reckless and ruthless maneuvers. If he has any serious intent- ions of helping a pro-Johnson Presidential candidate, he may have to show marked improve- ment in the military situation by August. BUT EVEN if he has irrevocably divorced himself from party politics, it is conceivable that he will trump up an excuse to in- vade the North and crush Hanoi. Johnson the Hawk is still loose and powerful. Within his administration he has isolated himself from all channels of advice except for yes- men like Abe Fortas, Orville Free- man and Clark Clifford. HE STILL sits perched, still commands the military and more than ever does not have to an- swer to public opinion. It's a bird, it's a hawk. It's a lame-duck. Swoosh. It's a ... 0> et "This Should Be A Great Year For Us Sportsmen In The Cities" :6 Letters: LBJ Critics Give No Programs To the Editor: AT PRESIDENT Fleming's In- auguration we heard it said that there are a thousand ways for a president to lose and no way to win. Be he president of a uni- versity, corporation, or president of a country it is a thankless job. IWe would like to personally commend President Johnson for a move which is certainly coura- geous and laudable. Here we seek to agree with Governor Kerner in saying that truly no man has worked harder for the goals of American Democracysand peace than President Johnson. First of all we deem it of im- portance that President Johnson was not the man who got us into the war in Vietnam. For a point of information, the war in Vietnam I !-, in exVistence druirinL7 President s... the President is the object of de- bunkers. THE OFFICE of president is a multiplex of cumbersome respon- sibilities. The President himself most not only fulfill his job but must also represent the American ideal. The present focus is on peace. We hear McCarthy, Kenne- dy, and Nixon all calling for peace movements. However, how is this peace to be attained without let- ting the North Vietnamese step all over the South Vietnamese? We have not heard any substantive answers. In conclusion we would like to see the solution to the problems of war, civil disorder, and economic prosperity rather than merely complaints as to how things are being done. . some important considerations. An increase in funds to the Uni- versitp will not save money for anyone except out-of-state stu- dents. There are only two sources of public money, unless someone finds a way to pull it out of the air: increasing taxes or taking it from other state agencies. Would the members of SGC be willing to renounce their student status in the tax structure and pay taxes on the same basis as everyone else? It hardly seems so. Five years from now these same people will probably be grumbling about the exhorbitant taxes they're paying. State funds come from taxes, and taxes ultimately come from our own pockets. If the Uni- versity budget requires a $14.5 mil- lion increase to retain the present out-of-state tuition, then obvious- becoming aware of the needs of others beside one's self. and seeing how one fits in the total picture. With this in mind, it is not a bad idea to organize a trip to Lansing. If the members of SGC will put off the decision to request more money from the State Legislature until after they get the facts, they just might find out that there isn't an unlimited supply of money in this world. --Marty Tapley, '69 Sports Writers To the Editor: BILL McFALL and Dave Weir. in March 27 and 28 Daily ar- ticles, show that they are not ex- actly on top of things in the world of sports. When a sports writer does not even have the facts ctroiL&ht in what heiwrites about. that the man is very knowledg%;- able about other happenings in sports. Concerning Ohio State's show- ing in the recent NCAA basketball tournament McFall writes: "With Ohio State figured to go two or maybe three games in the tourney, many heads turned as the Bucks kept right on winning. They kept on until North Carolina, eventual finalist and second place finisher, beat them." The facts are, however, that no one picked Ohio State to win more than one game and they did win only two East Tennessee and, yes, Kentucky) before meeting and losing to North Carolina. Had they won three games they would have been in the finals against UCLA. Weir writes: "In a few weeks, a series of elimination bouts will de-