~~tir SirIiw at Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited arad 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 Doily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN GRAY Trhhemcredibili of North Vietnamese aggression ALTHOUGH both antagonists in the Vietnam war purport peaceful goals, the administration's demands for North Vietnamese reciprocation remain one step ahead of the North's de-escalation pace. After three months of stalemate in Paris, Secretary of State Dean Rusk said last week that the administration wants "a realistic response" from the North in reply to our bombing restrictions. He ex- plained away the recent lull in ground fighting simply as a chance for North regrouping. President Johnson announced March 31 bombing restrictions to an area com- prising only ten per cent of North Viet- nam. TH E NEXT 'WEEK, the North Vietnam- ese announced their willingness to enter in negotiations with the U.S. As the days passed, the Johnson ad- ministration eventually clarified exact- Student sports: skepticism E SPECTRE of a skeleton intramur- al program returned to haunt the University over the weekend, at a time when both the University and its auton- omous Athletic Department are osten- sibly struggling to combat the 40-year- old villain of neglect. Students protesting the paving of a portion of Wines Field stopped the proj- ect Saturday morning, forcing an emer- gency meeting with President Robben Fleming. Students criticized reducing the playing area on Wines Field without prior meetings with student sports leaders. The paving resumed Monday with the grudging consent of the students, but dnly after the administration had prom- ised in writing that further support of club sports and intramurals would be forthcoming in the immediate future. Understandably, there is still skepti- cism. KJN G most efforts for improved stu- dent sport facilities has been a strue- tural defect in which student athletics "falls between chairs." No one wants and no one has responsibility. Last winter's Regental shuffling of the athletic department was supposed to di- vorce student athletics from Intercolle- giate athletics by forming a Student Sport Advisory Board. The Regents left the task of finances to this board. And they appointed Athletic Director Don Canham as chairman. Canham presumably is supposed to car- ry out the board's most viable sugges- tions. But he has only one source of money and resources: the Athletic De- partment which has stubbornly refused to, take student athletics under omni- jurisdiction. Even if the Athletic Depart- ment was conscientiously sympathetic to the student suggestions, it could hardly afford the many improvements which are necessary. The Regents thus have again effective- ly dead-ended the responsibility for stu- dent athletics. BUT THERE is a solution: The Athletic Department, which owns the main campus playing fields and the Intramural Building, would deed those fields to the University (with the excep- tion of Ferry Field on which the football team practices.) Minor sport teams would practice in the Events Building. The Regents would abolish the advisory board and the present intramural setup. In its place would be a Student Sports Board, organized along the lines of the University Activities Center. Money and facilities would be supplied by the University. Manpower would be supplied by the students. This would eliminate unilateral action by the administration and put responsi- bility directly where it should be. -DAVID WEIR Sports Editor -HOWARD KOHN ly what the restricted part of North Viet- nam amounted to. It is the North Vietnam panhandle - which comprises a small percentage of the land but is the home of four million of the nation's 16 million people. In this extremely confined area, the U.S. has intensified the level of the bomb- ing to the saturation point. In testimony before the House Appro- priations Committee released in June, Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford ex- plained the government's strategy: "We are increasing the number of missions over that area (the panhandle) very sub- stantially. "As I remember the figures, they were something like 3,000 (sorties) in Febru- ary, about 5,000 in March, 7,000 in April, and now they are running at around 10,000 sorties a month," Clifford said. DURING THESE months there were re- ports widely circulated in Washing- ton that one of General Westmoreland's last commands was a directive to win the Vietnam War through an all-out ef- fort within three months. That was in spring. But in recent weeks fighting in the South has gradually tapered off. No rock- ets have fallen on Saigon for the past six weeks. The number of American sol- diers killed in Vietnam has drastically dropped since the spring when totals av- eraged 400. U.S. combat deaths are down from the war's all-time peak of 562 ,in the week ended May 11 to the 1968 low of 157 killed in the week ended July 20, or a drop of 72 per cent since the talks began May 13. WHILE ALL signs seem to indicate the North Vietnamese and the National Liberation Front are willing to negotiate a settlement, the U.S. and the South Viet- namese government have been unwilling and even reluctant to recognize the North's deescalation overtures and con- tinue to insist on actions which have al- ready been completed in good faith. There is a reason for these delaying tactics. When South Vietnam's Thieu visited the President in Honolulu last month Mr. Thieu explained he needed at least three years to organize an effective political organization to compete with the NLF in a coalition government (as reported in the New Republic). Of the three political front organiza- tions organized by the South Vietnamese government after last September's elec- tions, only the one supported by Mr.I Thieu has survived. While the United States is playing into the hands of Mr. Thieu, the bombing of the North continues. Both the North and the NLF have taken the reciprocal ac- tions for which Dean Rusk waits so pa- tiently. THE INITIATIVE both in Vietnam and in Paris now rests in our hands, and it is time for us to prove our intentions by showing the Vietnamese and the world that we are sincerely interested in nego- tiating peace now. -STUART GANNES Johnson's TWO OF the nation's major steel pro- ducers who had increased their prices last week after granting substantial wage increases to employes backed down Mon- day when faced with a Defense De- partment boycott. Two others followed suit yesterday. - It is fortunate that the steel price in- crease - which would surely have had an inflationary effect on the nation's al- ready bloated economy - was avoided. But no cheers for the Johnson admin- istration. The President's action was taken in a desperate moment for the U.S. economy. And this desperation, it must be noted, has been caused almost exclusively by the $25 billion a year of destruction this country is unleashing upon the people of Vietnam. The steel price increases, even if tem- porarily avoided, are only symptomatic of 'Deat (Continued from Page 1) For basically, in this year of harmony, most Republicans are in fact concerned with who the nom- inee will be. Reagan woos dele- gates at their caucuses and they are impressed. Nixon grants audi- ences to the delegates and they some away impressed, Nelson Rockefeller dispatches his banker brother Dacid to the Texan dele- gation and this representative of the Eastern Establishment gains som egood will even if no vote shifts. While Reagan has failed to make dramatic inroads in the past twenty-four hours since he became and avowed candidate, one cannot help being impressed with the effectiveness that this former denizen of the late show uses in getting his low-key, earnest, cit- izen-in-politics image across. Unlike Goildwater, his former mentor, Reagan does not project the same aura of extremism, al- though, at least half or the youth- ful Reagan supporters here seem to have crawled out of the YAF woodwork after being relatively subdued for three years. Reagan has defintely increased his sta- ture so far at the convention, for he has held his unwieldy Califor- nia delegation together to the ex- tent that a Negro state senator Going into the far turn, it's .. . By FRITZ LYON OF COURSE it's an open con- vention. Anything can hap- pen. Wide open.I 1st ballot: Anticipating no con- test, the Nixonites panic when their shoe-in falls three votes short. 2nd: Nixon loses 12 more to Rockefeller (Winthrop). The race is on. 3rd: Nixoners stampede to Rea- gan, whose backers, sensing a landslide, cross over to Dick. Rock holds firm, causing a deadlock, and the convention adjourns until Thursday. 4th: Rockefeller withdraws and declares for Percy. Reagan is stopped, and delegates drift back to Nixon. 5th: Nixon is only seven votes shy, but Percy withdraws in favor of Lindsey, Romney nominates astronaut Glenn, and Reagan de- clares for John Wayne. 10th: Nixon gives up, directing his delegates to plug Westmore- land. The convention breaks for dinner. In the smoke-filled room, bleary-eyed managers g r o p e through the fog for a compromise candiate. S o mn e b o d y suggests thumbing through the Miami Beach telephone directory. 14th: Moderate Chet Huntley gains on recording star Everett Dirksen. Stassen holds his own. 18th: MacNamara withdraws unilaterally, and delegates trickle lack to R. Milhous Nixon. Specu- lation runs high, but J. Edgar hoover is only 27 votes behind Speculation. 20th: Nixon concedes for the third time. The survivors fall asleep. Party chairmen wander through the lavatories looking for new faces. Then, on the 23rd the Trend starts to develop; by the 25'th, a quorum is awake; on the 27th, re- porters bolt for the telephones; and finally, on the 28th ballot, McCarthy is unanimous. Nixon on the first? Not a chance. sconded the appeal for him to be- come an announced candidate, he has captivated the hearts if not the votes of all the delegations he has visited, and he has success- fully projected that hard-core Republican image of responsible cost-cutting in government. Reagan has come a long way since the initial cries of well-de- served horror at the entrance of the former host of Death Valley Days in to the political arena. If Nixon loses again this fall, odds are that it will be a responsible and energetic Ronald Reagan and not New York's Mayor John Lind- say who eventually puts the tat- teredrGOP elephant back to- gether. *, * * The high point of Reagan's ap- peal to the generally receptive Texas delegation at their caucus at the Hotel Barcelona yesterday afternoon was his declaration, "I believe that the people of this state have a right to set certain rules governing the state's univer- sities. And if students won't abide by these rules, then the state has the right to ask them to get their education elsewhere." The ap- plause was long and vigorous. The core of youthful followers around each of the three candi- dates serve as a small but decep- tive reminder that all youth has not forsaken the Republican Party. The Rockefeller boosters are by far the most numerous and at- Reagan and Nixon partisans sneer at them and mutter deprecatingly, "What do you expect, they're paid." However, those who shout in- cessantly and inanely, "Rocky's people say hello," claim that they all paid their own ways to Miami. As in everything else in this campaign, the Nixon kiddy corps are the best managed. Every day they are herded out of the run- down Miami hotels which they call home to the tune of $4.50 a night, and are herded by super- visors through a quick rehearsal of the day's planned demonstra- tions. The supervisorsscome armed with attendance lists. But no one is sure whether missing two dem- onstrations is sufficient cause for them to drive you out of your cheap hotels for good. Whatever, it's all a little reminiscent of old- time steel workers being evicted from a company town upon losing their job or trying to organize a union. The Nixon volunteers tend to be the sons and daughters ofpar- ty functionaries and thus their allegiance to the two-time Repu- lican loser is almost congenital. Only the Reagan backers really reflect the excitement of the cam- paign and a hopeful and optimis- tic attitude about the convention. For when cornered, too many Rockefeller boosters will sadly ad- mit that they don't see how their candidate can make it either. * * * Things that don't make the his- tory books department: Although most of the 1300-odd delegates who listened to Washington Gov- ernor Dan Evans' see-saw, left- right, all-thingsto-all-,men key- note speech Monday night, had already reached a state of shell- shock from the giddy succession of the day's boring scheduled events, a group of matronly Flor- ida delegates applauded Evans en- thusiastically at every pause. Evans seemed so grateful that he lost all eye-contact with the rest } , i; ' . { l i f r _ ,' i I F r W'T14S OFFICE SEEKS 'THS MAN.° R. REaAAt f I rile / i ! ,, ... \ 5 t J' S " + ' "..,.. 1r /- d .. Valhey Days.' I in ' .. , , " \ " .a \\y r V . _:^,: r Miami w d: 1 96. R 11e Re ,,,r 0 1 TibI'ft 90Rt , , _ c . %' 1 -a .,, 4i ' r 4S iwl . r c 4 S tY- 0 4. .. YOu ordered these . . ." of the hall and gave most of his speech for the benefit of the polite but ingenuous ladies from 'he Sunshine State. Monday afternoon, a fleshy- looking, well-tanned and uneasily familiar face was loitering in the lobby of the plush Hotel Foun- tainbleau. He would stand near a group of people, await their rec- ognition, and when that recogni- tion failed to come, he would go over to them, extend his hand and say, "Hi, I'm Claude Kirk." And the thrill of speaking to a real-live governor was enough to create a semblance of conversa- tion until after about three min- utes both sides ran out of plati- tudes. And then Claude Kirk, conven- tion host, self-proclaimed and largely ignored candidate for Vice-President, would slightly grimace, repaint his smile, and walk over to another group of sight-seers. Two attractive girls were dog- -gedly manning the Rockefeller booth in the Barcelona Hotel yes- terday as the lobby surged with a noisy reception for Governor Rea- gan. But the image of their cheer- ful smiles was destroyed by the sign in front of their table, "Rocky needs Texas." And about another 350 votes on the first ballot. * * George Romney held a press conference after' the Michigan caucus yesterday afternoonan d attempted to explain the intellec- tual basis for his planned plat- form amendments. But strange- ly, after about five attempts by Romney at a clarification, about the only consensus of what the Romney platform amendment was about, was "economic issues." .J'H OWARD KOHN p RONALD REAGAN'S candidacy gives America one last chance to reclaim the American Dream. Republican conservatives, ignored and ridiculed in November of 1964, have not given up hope that America does really care about their needs. Ronald Reagan, who has captured the conservative e'sprit with his flashback haircut, is ready to -work through the politi- cal system. Despite much malignment, the conservatives are waging a comeback through perfectly peaceful means. But even conservative patience will eventually peter out if there is no response. IF AMERICA continues intent on its course of appeasing rebel demands at the expense of hard-working, law-abiding conservatives, there will be no alternative. There will have to be a revolution. Guns, which conservatives have kept just in case, will be used only if the wave of pragmatic liberalism continues to sterilize the police and the military. Only then will action be taken to resurrect a paramutuel econ- omy and a social gospel of man and the military. The revolution will be peaceful. Conservatives fortunately will not condone messy guerrilla tactics, but will engineer a calculated military takeover and computerized execu- tions. THEY WILL, of course, elect a principled man like Reagan to legitimize certain principled re- forms. Overall, conservatives will h be reasonable but just, fair but *4 firm, humorless but stupid. j They will simply take those re- wards for which they have worked patiently and slaved carefree all these years. They will only re- cover their rights as America's first citizens.<; It is a tribute to moral "in- testinude" that they have waited this long. If Ronald Reagan has the cour- tesy to thank God for America, I think America should have the decency to thank God for Ronald Reagan. I pray that the delegates make the right decision today. N 0 4; Biafra: From tribalism to starvation 4o EITOR'S NOTE: The following speech, given by Sen. Wayne Morse (1-Ore) last Friday, isreprinted from The Congressional Record. R PRESIDENT, the war in Biafra is not only a great human tragedy but it calls for humane and moral action on the part of not only the United States but all free nations. The present situation in Nigeria is a direct consequence of two serious mistakes made by Great Britain. The first mistake dates back to the colonization era when Great Britain had colonized a vast re- gion of the western African con- tinent called Nigeria where three major tribes lived: the Muslim Ahoussas in the north and the animist Ibos and Yoroubos in the south-the Ibos living in the east and the Yoroubos in the west. IN THE NORTH, Great Britain was satisfied with the setting up of an indirect administration and left alone the feudal organization stemming from Islam. This organ- ization was made out of Sultan- ates and Emirates, and a great majority of the people which no- body cared to educate was left prey to the exploitation of this feudal system. On the other hand, in the south, the Ibo and Yoroubo tribes 0 ent unfortunate state of things. The numerous coups d'etats performed by the more advanced southern elements in order to take over the country were the only means at the disposal of these ele- ments for all democratic processes to reach this end were inaccess- ible. THIS SITUATION then led to the several tragic consequences, the assassination of Sir Aboubakar Tafew and Ahmadou Bello, two prominent chiefs of the northern region. The coups d'etats brought forth also murderers' reprisals against the innocent population and particularly against the Ibos who suffered 30,000 dead through- out Nigeria and mostly those Ibos settled iri the north of Nigeria. These Ibos were forced to take refuge in the eastern region from where they originated. Furthering this massive exodus toward the east, the Ibos refused to take part in the many con- ferences with the leaders of the other regions which were held at Lagos or elsewhere in Nigeria out of fear of being massacred or of receiving insufficient protection. This fear caused the conference ,of the Nigerian leaders to be held outside of their country in the Ghanean town of Abouri where an agreement was reached and accepted by all. Unfortunately, the Government of Great Britain, which enjoys a great influence in Nigeria, was unable to force the Federal Gov- ernment of Nigeria to accept and respect them. The second mistake was the di- rect cause of the bloody hostilities which have taken place in Nigeria for the past 14 months. This barbarious and inhuman war in which there is no possibili- ty to respect the most elementary laws of war caused the death of hundreds of thousands of people per day. These dead are not only the victims of direct hostIlity but they can also be attributed/ to hunger and disease which afflicts i indistinctively men, women, and children. The civilian population is sub- mitted daily to bombings thanks to sophisticated armamentopenly supplied in great quantity by two great powers, Great Britain and the Soviet TUnion.and by plnens or human life. These villages ob- viously have no shelters. IN 14 MONTHS of war, the number of casualties has substan- tially surpassed the number of casualties in the Vietnam war. Furthermore, it is indeed very strange to witness that for once, in a civil war against a small population, the West, represented by Great Britain, and the Com- munists, represented by Russia, are both on the same side and, stubbornly eradicate a small na- tion. TO PERMIT the continuation of this war and offer Egypt and Algeria this occasion, constitutes a grave error for the Occidentals because when they begin to realize their error, it will be too late. Sometimes, we only see the racial problems and sordid in- terests of different countries but we must not forget the suf- ferings of all men ,as human suffering deserves t o b e abridged. The warring factions should join together to cease the hostili- ties and return to the conference table. Once again the Security Council of the United Nations should measure up to its obligationsto intervene {whenever and wherever