-i, flye irliigan Bailij 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 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in oil reprints. FRIDAY, JUNE 14,1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN GRAY __ ._ Nuclear treaty: Going nowhere slowly THE OPTIMISM created by the adop- tion of a nuclear non-proliferation, treaty by the UN General Assembly is an example of a foolishly sanguine reaction to an ineffective move toward a distant goal of disarmament. When the Geneva conference convened four and a half years ago, President Johnson instructed the American nego- tiators to seek an agreement so "that future generations will mark 1964 as the year the world turned for all time away from the horrors of war." This promise has not been met. The treaty, which limits the spread of nuclear weapons to non-nuclear nations, is notable more for what it ignores than for what it includes. For President John- son to call it "the most important inter- national agreement in the field of dis- armament" is to blatantly misrepresent the true potency of the treaty. UNDER THE terms of the agreement, present nuclear powers would not be affected by any limitations. The continu- ing produ tion of nuclear weapons by the United Sates and the Soviet Union will no doubt continue undisrupted. Yes, it is encouraging to note that West Germany, Israel and the United Downinanship, SOON AFTER the assassination of Sen. Kennedy, the President and the Con- gress moved quickly to provide Secret Service protection for all active presi- dential candidates. Pictures came over the Associated Press telephoto machine soon after, showing each of the candidates with their newly- assigned bodyguards. George Wallace's protectors were conspicuously white. Come on, President Johnson, how could you have missed that trick? Arab Republic, nations on the verge of becoming nuclear powers, agreed to the terms of the treaty. These nations have traded the possibility of increased power for what seems to be a sincere interest in disarmament. But after four years of negotiations, the best the Soviet Union and the United States could produce is a treaty that af- fects neither of them., ALTHOUGH the failure of the Soviet Union and the United States to ef- fectively limit their destructive capa- bilities is a real tragedy, it is a greater tragedy -for President Johnson to pretend an effective treaty exists. In saying that the treaty "goes far to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons", President Johnson is blindly clinging to a desired ideal rather than seeing the document for what it is worth. Rather than blasting the treaty for not forcing worthwhile steps, the Presi- dent is twisting the treaty to make it fit the political glorification of the nations that signed it. FOR, the General Assembly's failure to produce an effective treaty is particu- larly disappointing when compared to what could have resulted. Every time a disarmament conference convenes, the possibilities inherent in that meeting are limitless. Every time that meeting results in a worthless document, however, the possibility for true disarmament is set back by false pride resulting from hollow agreement. This is the shame of the President's pronouncements. When leaders place a successful pre- sentation above an objective view, they are perpetuating a cruel game of ap- pearances. A distorted view is substituted for an accurate view just as a worthless measure is substituted for an effective one. --LESLIE WAYNE Thanks, Bill OPENING the mail the other day we were delighted to find a letter from William F. Buckley, Jr., urging our sup- port for a new venture of his, a biweekly magazine called Combat, dedicated to exposing the vile machinations of the far left. We can only hope that our readers will respond to this new quasi-literary ven- ture with the support and enthusiasm that an undertaking of this magnitude, deserves. -W. S. --- --" Letters to the Editor Representative To the Editor: Could someone please tell me what has become of government of, for, and by the people? I have listened with incredulity as countless news broadcasts re- port the "fact" that Hubert Hum- phrey has virtually won the Dem- ocratic nomination for President. Where does this victory have its basis-in the mind of some zealous party official, in the subjective questions of an "objective" poll? Certainly not in the past events. Hubert Humphrey, running, not inappropriately, under the name of the Johnson administration, placed a poor third to both Sen- ators Kennedy and McCarthy in all but one state primary. He has not accepted offers to debate on the issues at hand. Granted he has indicated that his views are in some manner different from those of the present Administration, but has left the determination of those differences up to the people's ima- gination. In short, he has made little, if any, effort to apprise the people of his views. Claiming self-righteously that he will stay above "political squab- bles," Mr. Humphrey in fact plays the political game to the hilt, courting delegates and patting the backs of party leaders. The only justification which is offered for his behavior is that he is limited in what he can say because he still holds the post of Vice-President. When, pray tell, will the transformation take place? When will the toad become the handsome prince? Inaugura- tion Day is rather too late. And what of the convention delegates? Where do they derive their power to represent not the wishes of the people in their states, but their personal political in- terests? How does a man pledged to the late Senator Kennedy magically appear on the side of Humphrey the day after Robert Kennedy has been buried? Are the people's rights and opinions also to be buried? Senator Kennedy said time and again that it was Humphrey he opposed in attitudes and policies, that it was with Senator McCar- thy that he had the most in com- mon politically. And yet, accord- -ing to a recent New York Times poll of delegates, more than four out of every five Kennedy dele- gates say that they will support Humphrey. Is this representative government? Perhaps, but it is most certainly not representative of the people. -Steven Blatt Law and... To the Editor: Ann Arbor used to be a safe place to walk around in, but apparently times have changed and so has the quality of some of the more unusual people wan- dering around campus in the ear- ly morning hours. At around five A.M. on Saturday a student walk- ing across the diag was jumped by three individuals and beaten brutally. About fifteen minutes after he was able to inform the Ann Arbor police of this mishap, these same individuals assaulted the authors of this letter on State Street across from the Union, beat them, and robbed them of about ten dollars. During the nearly half-hour in which this rather conspicuous and boisterous activ- ity took place, not one member of the Ann Arbor police force or even the omnipresent Sanford Security was present. There seems to be no excuse for the police's delay in sending at least one scout car to investigate. It seems even more unlikely that Sanford Security was so busy pro- tecting the University from kids with cans of green spray paint that they didn't have enough time to walk around and find out what was happening to the people on campus. Ann Arbor used to be a haven for big-city students who never before had the opportunity to walk off their insomnia with impunity; if this is no longer pos- sible, at least some effort should be made to keep State and South U. from becoming another 12th and Clairmont. -Chuck Krause, '71 -Al Safian -Bob Rubenstein, ~'69 Nincompoop To the Editor: The blathering arrogance of our so-called "student" newspaper plummeted below its previous nadirs yesterday when Little Sher- ri Funn, self-styled "Beatle Ex- pert" took it upon herself to de- liver the definitive commentary on Sergent Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Early in the (I hesitate to say it) review, Miss Funn gets bogged down in sentimental and trivial ephemera. Were that not bad enough in itself, to add insult to injury, as it were, Miss Funn hap- pens to be, in my humble estima- tion, flat wrong. She babbles on with lines like "Sgt. Pepper walked the terribly thin line between good and pre- tension" and "Bob Dylan, as usual, was the leader of this new ,honesty' phase in rock with John Wesley Harding." And everyone knows Zappa never says "The pre- sent dayacomposer refuses to die;" it is inscribed on the album jacket. If you don't accept this, you are, a blind, stupid nincompoop. --Lonnie Lickett, Grad U RBAN L E H NER The path of most Resistance "MY NAME is Arnie Bauchner," the leaflet began. "Today I am re- fusing induction at Fort Wayne." Arnie Bauchner was standing in front of the Ann Arbor armory at 5:30 yesterday morning when the inductees who would travel to Fort Wayne by chartered bus and the Ann Arbor Resistance members who would go by car arrived. He was handing out to the inductees green mimeographed sheets which explained what he was doing and why he was doing it. Between writing, re-writing, typing and mimegraphtng the leaflet, checking last minute details with lawyers, and rehearsing in his mind what he would do and say, he had only gotten six hours sleep in the last two days. The morning was cold, very cold, and gray. The people in front of the armory chattered and huddled together over thermoses of coffee. Talk was more an exercise in maintaining blood circulation than a meeting of minds. Only Bauchner seemed oblivious to the cold as he gave instructions to the Resistance members in a quiet, com- posed voice. COMPOSURE IS a virtue which seems to come naturally to Arnie Bauchner. He is in his early twenties, dark and mustachioed. He went to Rutgers and is new a graduate student in the University's sociology department. He has organized the poor in a Philadelphia neighborhood. Last Dec. 4, he returned his draft card to the Selective Service System Deciding to turn in his card was not something Arnie Bauchner took lightly, and perhaps his cool, almost pensive composure is rooted in the deep conviction which he has been nurturing over the .past months, both before and after Dec. 4. For him, as for may in his position, resistance is more .than an isolated act of defiance; it is a life-style, a dedication to change society through personal commitment. Yesterday morning, he seemed genuinely, fatalistically unafraid, uncowed in a way which those, of us who have continually kept our decisions one day away, who have refused to wrestle with ou con- sciences, could never be. On the bus, he feared a little for his safety men in his position, riding buses'to induction centers to refuse induc- tion, have been badly beaten by fellow-inductees. But never did h fear the almost certain prison term which now awaits him. WITH THE ANN ARBOR resisters, the Detroit resisters, and those from the Detroit adult support group, the demonstrators must have numbered 30 or 40. The sky in Detroit was no less bleak than it had been in Ann Arbor. Only the smells in the air were different. Fort Wayne sits back off of Jefferson Avenue, an industrial row occupied mostly by steel mills and taverns, and the smoke from the chimneys has left the street engulfed in smog. Across the street is a small Catholic Church, the building of ec- lectic architectural design - a box-shaped structure with Byzantine battlements. Four or five MP's guard the old fort's driveway,, a few feet back from the sidewalk and the red-brick wall. Five or six city policemen and an F.B.I. agent with a camera stood around yesterday on the thin strip of grass between the wall and the sidewalk where the demonstrators slowly walked their signs around in two circles, one on each side of the driveway. Along the drive, between the side- walk and the MP's, is a bright green metal trash can; on its side, in clumsily- stenciled white letters, are the words "Anti-war, Anti-draft literature and trash here." The demonstrators on the sidewalk erected a makeshift cardboard basket of their own and scrawled on it "Government propaganda here." The picketers were In a polite, almost jocular mood. THE RESISTANCE people come to Fort Wayne often, for the center is processing about 100 inductions a day. On days when they know someone Is planning to refuse induction (three or four a week do, and the number is increasing) they turn out more heavily. The military has no authority to arrest those who refuse induction. That is a matter for the FBI, and indictments are sometimes delayed for months. But the military can hold a man inside for hours, even days, before letting him go. They are less likely to do that if they know people are waiting for the man just outside. Inside, Bauchner was quickly isolated from the other men. This was his only regret. He .had hoped to pass out leaflets to all the men, to talk to many of them, especially those there only for pre-induction physicals. He could have done it, too, had he been less obvious at the outset. But then he would have had to endure long'hours of examina- tions, and he was weary from lack of sleep. He was taken into a room by himself, and the doors were shut. The young lieutenant who interviewed him admitted they didn't want "others to see this." Later, in the-car returning to Ann Arbor, Bauchner remembered the young officer's defensiveness, his curiosity, his uneasy pauses when in the course of their pleasant hour-long debate he couldn't answer certain arguments or seemed to be mulling over a point. "THE FIRST THING he said to me was, 'do you have anything against 'me personally?'" Bauchner assured the lieutenant he didn't (a graduate of the University of South Dakota with one year of law school at the University of Wyoming, the lieutenant hopes to go into finance). Twice during the hour the officer asked Bauchner to rise, then said, "Take one step forward and repeat this oath and you will be in the army . . . you don't want to step forward? .. you refuse to be inducted?" "He kept insisting that he could be in the Army and still be an individual," Bauchner said. "It was ironic because every once in a while he would ask me a question and I would look at him sort of incredulously and he would say, 'I have to ask this question, I'm just following orders'." They talked about the demonstration outside, and about Columbia. "He appreciated the picketing, said 'that kind of demonstration wins friends, Columbia loses them.' I told him I thought there were some occasions, when rational processes break down, where that kind of dem- onstration is necessary, but I don't think I convinced him. "I ASKED HIM what he thought a minority should do when the majority chooses to commit genocide. If a minority of the German people had told Hitler they didn't intend to play along, would we have criticized them for violating somebody's civil liberties? He was silent for fifteen or twenty seconds, then he changed the subject." ; Bauchner refused to. sign any papers, the lieutenant said that was sufficient indication of refusal, and he was released. There are laws regulating what the military can and cannot do to yet uninducted civilians, but unless a man knows his rights and is willing to insist on them even in the face of argument by those who now control his life, he might as well not have them. The possession of anti-government leaflets is an example. The military police will insist that those passing through the gate for induction or pre-induc- tion phyicals surrender their leaflets. Although they don't have to, most obey. The average man is scared, easily pushed around, and the military counts on it. If every man insisted on his full legal rights, the process of induction would be rendered chaotic. THEN BAUCHNER was with, the picketers, telling them about the lieutenant, smiling quietly but with little bravado. A stocky black man, not more than 18 or 19 years old, stopped at the wall, then turned to the demonstrators. He didn't want to go; he was obviously confused and impressionable. They talked with him, and the MP's began to get a little nervous, edging over occasionally to ask them to "move off the grass." They told him what to do, gave him literature and phone numbers, but there were too many people talking at once and he didn't really understand. They forgot to take his name. As he U 4' j --D. 0. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48104. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press, the College Press Service, and Liberation News Service. Summer subscription rate: $2.50 per term by car- rier ($3.00 by mail); $4.50 for entirersummer ($5.00 by mail). Sum ner Editorial Staff DANIEL OKRENT......................Co-Editor URBAN LEHNER .,...................Co-Editor LUCY KENNEDY.......Summer Supplement Editor PHIL BROWN................A.'.Sports Editor FRED LaBOUR......... ...... Ass't. Sports Editor The funeral and America: Parallel progress By ROBERT JOHNSTON Editor, 1965-1966 College Press Service SIX a.m. Saturday morning-A dark orange sun just above the horizon is struggling with the re- lentless smog of Northern New Jersey. It glimmers and flashes on the shiny tracks of the Penn Cen- tral. We rumble through Princeton Junction, Metuchen, New Bruns- wick, Elizabeth, Rahway. This is the overnight train from Washington to New York. It is crowded Wvith hundreds of blacks, --young families returning from visits with parents and grandpar- ents in the South, or grandmoth- ers on their way to visit their children and grandchildren in the ghettoes of New York, Newark, and Philadelphia. Scattered through the train are maybe two dozen white faces. Most of these will be returning over these same tracks in eight hours aboard the funeral train of Bobby Kennedy. 8 A.M.-It is full daylight in New York City; and it is merci- fully much cooler than yesterday, when tens of thousands waited hours in 90 degree plus heat for a brief look at Bobby's casket in St. Patrick's. Stores are not open yet, and traffic on the streets and sidewalks is still light. At the Commodore Hotel, Bob- by's closest friends and staff are waits patiently to be admitted. They outnumber only barely the ubiquitous New York police, New York plainclothesmen, and Secret Service. Telegrams and letters of invitation are carefully scrutin- ized; ladies' handbags and men's briefcases are opened and their contents sifted in front of tele- vision cameras. Nobody makes a scene; nobody has a chance to. Inside, the honorary pallbearers stand over the coffin in turn- Nicholas Katzenbach, L a r r y O'Brien, Prince; Radziwill, Pierre Salinger, Arthur Schlesinger, Sargent Shriver, Andy Williams, and so forth. Everyone notices SCLC leader Ralph Abernathy in his affected blue denims. 10 A.M.-The immediate family enters from the back and sits just to the right of the coffin in front of the altar. They follow Presi- dent and Mrs. Johnson by just a few minutes. The Secret Service is every- where. Teddy Kennedy, in an unsched- uled speech, speaks well and with emotion of his murdered brother, "He saw war, and he tried to stop it." The President shrinks a little inside, or at least one hopes so. Cardinal Cushing's piercing, monotonous baritone is at least of a strength to inspire faith among the deviant, and to lend 11:30 A.M.-The service moves ahead quickly, ending fifteen min- utes early. It is clearly a public spectacle -a last-ditch effort to paint a facade of stability over deepening social crisis. Ethel, Jacqueline and Teddy Kennedy know the symbolic reassuring importance of their ab- solute self-control in front of 200 million Americans and heaven- knows-how-much of the rest of the world. Now begins the ten-hour public journey to the burial site in Ar- lington National Cemetery. A se- lect thousand are put on the fun- eral train; another 150 are taken to chartered planes. The train is 21 cars long-very long by passenger train standards in this day and age. With three diners and three private cars, it is no doubt the best the Penn Central has to offer, but that isn't very much. On board gloom and boredom mix into a thick pall of unease and disinterest. Abundant liquor and the more jovial of the press work hard, but unsuccessfully, at non-lethal conversation; and even this much never reaches the ears of guests and friends, who stare out the window at the passing, sad crowds, at each other, or at the seats in front of them. Television marks the slow pas- sage of the train through unend- ing crowds and through a succes- sion of stations. As it moves south, away the Capitol dome. The Lin- coln Memorial, unlit, is barely visible at the end of the string of lights that mark either side of Memorial Bridge; and the White House, also unlit since the coming of President Johnson, lies in- visible in the distance. The coffin has been loaded at last into another hearse and is being borne in a caravan of 24 limousines to the Cemetery. We see the lights of the caravan reach the Lincoln Memorial and pause for a choir's final songs. Radios among the crowd at the Cemetery connect the lights across the Potomac with th'e chorus voices. On one side of the Memo- rial the Poor People watch with the same desperate, quiet incom- prehension at the thousands of faces lining the railroad tracks. Suddenly, out of the blackness, the huge black cars pull up near the grave. Faces that have been waiting six hours turn expectant- ly. The coffin is borne quickly from the hearse to the gravesite, about 40 feet, followed by the fam- ily, the President, and close friends. They stand in a close circle around one side of the gravesite, which is just beneath John Kennedy's in a clump of trees. The services proceed eerily in a small circle of light in the pitch black Cemetery. Thousands of candle-flames mark the limits of the immediate crowd and the dimensions of the public watching sidewalk and are soon off into the night. BOBBY IS BURIED. It is 10:45 p.m. The Penn Central, the TV, and radio, the great, the powerful and the famous, and 200 million Americans go back to business-as- usual. At least they try. How long business-as-usual can be maintained is another question. When John Kennedy was mur- dered, there remained to this country's government a vast pool of political leadership, and intel- lectual and financial resources for the continuation and expansion of the New Frontier. There are no such sources of strength now. There are no billions readily available, and there is no leader- ship available to find them and use them, to accommodate the blacks' felt demands. There is no evident way out, and there is no leadership availa- ble to find it or effect it, of a huge, self-perpetuating and self- defeating war in Southeast Asia. Business-as-usual is beconing more and more ; a fool's game, played in the absence of thought and in the presence, of both tra- gedy and revolution. Reagan plays at Governor. Nixon plays at perpetual rejuve- nation. McCarthy plays at Knight- hood. Rockefeller plays also-ran. Johnson is getting off the ship. Harriman plays spin-the-bottle. The Pentagon plays, "How To