the SUfldGiy daily Number 18 Night Editor: Martin A. Hirschman December 7, 1969 y u . " ' 1 ; - mnoratoriurm five years ago*. Ifl'I ~ ih\Q L !2OW 11KC- voA "am, tFO LUOLJUN ORVER , . /YV 1V - *~% ~UT L~'~XY~T YaL) CAN~JT WI RPAWd - mU can Y . I ORC Q DA sa TRcOP I' LAY Th 50 Q? 5 i f n r 0r- 60T W 00W~ ' rooPs. N0)oaoSy-Ot-N J OF ON) MYLt WtSL r IM Fo&L.LO&IK fl16 FR$Iti7E~JT C~pES- JOT PUjUINJ OUT 2SG9 7RJOP5 S(S UUTUJW( AB(AHS 5 UUT IFRCVYWO1.-P6R HNML TO UNLTAL LY &iTURAW," W &X)LP WAR?, A)M h Li'oO / A cynical review of the fall semester past 'ND OF SEMESTER. Time to take all the things we should have learned three months ago and cram them into our heads in some semblance of order, time to throw out the dusty old newspapers upstairs and make room for the pre-exam memorization. But lest we forget, in our eagerness to bring in the new, that there is another life beyond the bluebook, we present here a somewhat jaded capsule history of the world here and else- where, as it went this semester. With the help of a few line drawings by Conrad and Feiffer, we move down Memory Lane, suspicious but not quite convinced that the joke of the car- toons is really on us. Another month, another travesty. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell attempted to permit a slowdown in the 15 year process of school desegregation. Fortunately, he was checked by a Su- preme Court unwilling to ignore its own precedents. But Hur- ricane Laurie wreaked a vengeance of her own, ploughing into the Gulf Coast and leveling small towns in the process. Back in Washington, the administration courted Latin American friendship by backing up New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's infamous goodwill trip with "Operation Inter- cept," designed to coerce the Mexican government into en- forcing its own law against the free flow of international commerce. To everyone's relief, the expensive operation was abandoned after traffic jams developed from Tijuana to the border. The prices of funny cigarettes have gone back to normal. Meanwhile, other prices continue to climb. But the Nixon Administration has won its surtax and its anti-inflationary measures seem to be taking effect (despite the perverse union action in the G.E. strike). That means many fathers will be out of work after Christmas, if they aren't already. Back in Ann Arbor, the "quiet campus" erupted over economic issues. After several guerrilla skirmishes between anti-ROTC protesters and the Ann Arbor police videotape squad, radical students concentrated their efforts where the masses were-behind the establishment of a University book- store. The long smoldering controversy over the store culmi- nated in a sit-in at the LSA Bldg. When the smoke cleared 109 people had been arrested, the Regents had finally agreed to set up the bookstore and Robben Fleming had scored two points by outflanking Sheriff Doug Harvey. At UCLA, the regents proved even less flexible. Voices from the past, they attempted to block the appointment of Angela Davis, an avowed Communist, to the faculty. They invoked an ancient bylaw, but the courts upheld the Con- stitution. At the same time, a Chicago court was staging the show trial of eight individuals accused of conspiring to get them- selves attacked by police during last year's Democratic Con- vention. The prosecution spent the entire semester putting forth their case, while Judge Julius Hoffman made it clear who was in charge by arresting defense attorneys, gagging defendant Bobby Seale, and, finally, sending Seale to prison for four years on a 16-point citation for contempt. As the much-heralded Oct. 15 Moratorium Day approach- ed, the Nixon administration responded predictably with pleas for national unity, calling for a "moratorium on protest" against the Vietnam war. Sen. William Fulbright obliged (out of new-found senatorial courtesy) by cancelling Foreign Re- lations Committee hearings on the war, but no one else was much deterred, and the Oct. 15 demonstrations proved a model of peaceful protest that even the Attorney General could not fault. The Nixon non-policy on Vietnam enunciated Nov. 3, is more intriguing. In a long-awaited speech, Daddy Dick informed the "silent majority" that he would take care of Vietnam, so they needn't bother their heads about it. He did tell them what they could worry about, though - those freaks who would march on the Capitol in 10 days. The vice president stole the limelight. Harrassing the ar- rogant and liberal establishment media barons, he won support for the Administration's upcoming campaign to revoke the Bill of Rigts through a national referendum. Agnew should go to Japan. There, violent and massive protests by students reached a high point in Tokyo last month when thousands strove to prevent Prime Minister Sato from leaving the country to negotiate with the U.S. over the return of Okinawa. Sato did manage to leave and reached an agree- - - ' r - * -X wr- _ ~How come it takes a hurricane to integrate the housing here in Mississippi ." -Daily--Andy Sacks r,;: t . s r s T 1 i; k Iwo r; ,y f r .r r r 'I INN i 1 it 1 L