Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 17, 1969 P age Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY -' .. - -'4. TIiev ivenIt out to p~rotest tlhe icarir H ednesday, hell over (1 million o f them,,. They llIlet outi for inl(Iily dlifferent reasons 118- because they wanuit tihe killing of lericans to stopj, lbecauise thiey waontIthjeilling4 of Vijet- 110r1I1(se to stop), bcauIlse they (d1on ' cat to (lie thiemiselves for (a (curse of such idubious mitr. WIII'itrer thle reasonsthey i gint the irw~r sftopped,. and thIey didlthe o(lly thing thwt1 promI~ises (liy results -- they 1110hed HI l.It was mia (rching;i tiro and (lthree years (iofo ta depse onee 01Wpresidlent be- (w(115( e e ouldn't stop) the ic-t11 and( it ntaylVbemalrclhing Wichi deposes another if 1e icon!t stop the war. W"Ito is "they" that are tryinig so hard to stop it? The ar the stuidenits and tlie acad~emiccommunity, the first ini opposition. They ae(ld 011people, lwho( have erhaps seI 5(enimor teaW(rs ticwe. And they are the 1'Ouiig. the teenaugers wcho h1('Ce 4rl(Dcf 11ip inithe shadi~e pfI the~ (ost!raicaWll geier1- f71 in 3Y 1 ,tettr5. And(1if they are 110! ('01151i71Wdbar(a war thev waY Vthe genertitiott 3. years aa'i, ia(1s, they maytt vt (a (differenlt history, for good1 or ill, than 11 as etched by the ir predlecesso rs. They also include buisi- nesslemi nowc, sortie for al- truistic reasonis, sortiefor self-interest. Tieiwar 11(15 (driveni tiee coniomy lmost1108 out of conitrol, icith the icorst in flat ion since the 1 920s, and they kniewi the i'var li'(15the TheCinlflauion has1 hit house- ivies the mlost itotceabli, the Wolosition. Along wit! thir w~ orking 11tusband(s, they are( also n1i(11rhinmg, (Ifter five vf(1s. 1f) end1 this war. r'floe rue (-> l k;Ins Of wa(1r Wie~lidda, buit they The alliance for Labor .-Actioni mayI 'oppose the war, but the larger AFL-CIO businessmen now oppose the icwar, (it least (as 1fl IllyVstill sup jport it. Aniong the old1, there are those olpposed to ivar and( thos whoicl 0feel this 5gene Crationi nis! pay tlhe price just like they (lid. And1( even among the young, there aire those echo (lready havre, or wcho still wrant to, get their sha~re of the may still be there, but it is dlecilning no1w (as it lhas (at times before. The opposition sh owed( greater strength this WveekI th an evier before. The( Pres idenit s(1gs the Inalrcliing wrill be to 1no avail, but even ais he says it hie kicks thie dlespised Selective Servrice head upstairs, hte sus5pendls the dIrafting of graduate stu- dlents, Ie annmounices someW hcider (draft cu tbac ks (and 8 sg le wrill malke a major ain- nuicemileit on the wrarNo Pl hila, the Presidlenit acts to ten der( ut the opposiiomi, hiis l oiter level arides -- the vice presidlenit, cabinetinmembers -- delno0111ce the protesters for guring aid(1and( comifort to the eniemiy. Suichi protests, they sa1y, Ill ikt it imipossible to end~ the tear quiickly. .i1hat the President (doesnt ir~ti'rst =ilis that many of those? iwho oppose the war (10 1not want hiim to end tihe war histWtiV - they iwantit enided1, aind note. They leant anl equiit- a.W)e p~eace, not ani Amtericani or South V ietnam~lese victory. T heyir (wint the war end(edl their WOY, not his. JTimie (and electioins will tell who wins ii'i wr of nerves and11(1pol it- icail clout. action in i uettiani. Thce sup port for the trar ., ' ,,..r ~amm ;. _