Page 4-Friday, October 20, 1978-The Michigan Daily tie 3ich gan 3 aiI Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedomn Vol. LIX, No. 37 News Phone: 764-0552 ldited and managed by students at the University of Michigan City Council wastes time Nixon arsenic for G.O.P. T HE ANN ARBOR City Council has never been known for alacrity. The weekly Monday night meetings appear to be mere exercises in triviality; Councilmembers spend seemingly endless hours discussing preposals which are either inadequate or have no legal basis and therefore no hope of passage, or those members who are seeking higher offices use the time to "show off" for the media. The major problem is Councilmembers don't do their homework. The Council could better spend its time debating the intrinsic merits of proposals rather than correcting gramatical errors. For example: Members of both parties waste valuable time discussing a comma here and a "whereas" there, while more important matters go unattended because by the end of the evening everybody is frustrated over the trivial matters. When Albert Wheeler was mayor, meetings frequently lasted until the wee hours of the morning. The same trivia and petty bickering went on, and meetings had the same sircus- type quality. Now Mayor Louis Belcher effectively restricts meetings to 11 p.m. deadlines, but the fat has not been trimmed. It's merely a circus that starts and ends on time. Last Monday night's meeting furnished two examples of irresponsible delays. Fourth Ward. Councilman David Fisher tries to restrict enrollment of children at Community Day Care Center through an amendment to the site plan, which Council approved. The plan was to expand the Center's ground floor because a state fire inspector has ruled out use of the building's second floor. Mr. Fisher's amendment was said to be totally unenforceable; since building inspectors cannot be expected to spend their time counting bodies. The intent of the amendment was to satisfy irate neighbors who complain of excess noise and traffic. But the amendment was not an enforceable measure, and it did not really address the problem. All of these faults with the proposal could have been checked in advance, and corrected prior to the meeting, instead of wasting close to half of one hour at the meeting itself. Councilman Earl Greene (D-Second Ward) asked the city attorney to request an opinion on whether two Ann Arbor Bank employees, who are city councilmembers, could vote on issuing a bond to the bonding authority. The bond would eventually be sold to build a parking structure behind the bank's Liberty St. branch. Greene's request seemed to be a spur of the moment gesture, which he had not researched. Consideration of this bond has gone on for weeks, so it seems strange that a possible conflict of interest suddenly comes to mind. Instead the inquiry seemed to be a ploy to gain media attention. Greene is running for U.S. Congress and has been noticably more vocal since announcing his candidacy. Unlike the University Regents who barely figure out the issues involved in time for their meetings, City Council members are frequently in contact with city hall officials and with their constituents. They have ample opportunity to clarify details of ordinances and resolutions in advacne of their Monday night free-for-alls. They can work out minor language matters in advance. They can ask the city attorney's office for the legal feasibility or ramifications of any legislation before meetings. If members sof Council do their honiework, ' policy questions can~ be dealt with at their meetings, instead of wasting a lot of time and energy on trivialities. By C.J. Moore WASHINGTON-"Stupid." "Unviable." "A disservice to the party." "Hopelessly dishonest." "I don't want him in my district." Richard Nixon is on our television screens again. Crowds cheer him; commentators speculate about him; foreign statesmen speak of him with respect. But with next month's congressional elections fast approaching, Republican Party leaders and regulars-the former president's staunchest supporters from the days of the 1952 Nixon fund crisis to his resignation over Watergate in 1974-make no bones aboutvit. They still consider Nixon a political skeleton best kept in a tightly-locked closet. Speaking about the former president on and off the record, Republicans on Capitol Hill agree nearly ten-to-one that Richard Nixon should not venture out during the current campaign on behalf of GOP candidates. "I've got a tough enough battle for re-election," one Republican senator said, "even without the Nixon albatross around my neck." ALTHOUGH THERE has been much softening of Republican animosity toward Nixort over the past few years, most party members express continuing disfavor with the ex-president and lay blame for the lopsided Democratic majorities in both houses squarely on Nixon's Casa Pacifica doorstep. Southern Republicans remain especially embittered against the party leader they believe destroyed the GOP's entire "Southern strategy." The Republican Party, they note, had been making steady gains in the New Southfor 20 years-until Nixon's disgrace undid decades of patient political work. "He's done tremendous damage to the party," said Rep. William Dickinson of Alabama. "Everything we worked so hard for was torn apart by his inability to accept the blame for his acts. He brought the entire party down." Would Dickinson invite Nixon to his district? "I suppose if someone asked me to invite him I would, but I. would not take the initiative." Like many Republican leaders around the country, the Alabama congressman said he can see no future role for Nixon in any public service. Another Southerner, Rep. James Martin of North Carolina, said, "I think he will achieve a somewhat higher profile through his own effortsmwith the press, but I don't think he will ever be vialbe in the political arena again." Martin said he believes Nixon no longer presents a threat to the party but neither does he consider the former president an asset. LIKE MANY OTHER successful candidates, Dickinson andEMartin rode out the Republican election disaster of 1974 by divorcing themselves from the Nixon image that brought defeat to party loyalists who supported "the former president until the bitter end. Since then, more and more Republican candidates, as one Washington source put it, have learned to treat Nixon like "political arsenic." By the 1976 elections, it was not unusual for GOP candidates-first-timers and incumbents alike-to exclude not just Nixon, but any reference to the Republican Party from their billboards, posters and campaign literature. "Play down the party" became the main strategy for surviving the aftermath of the Nixon years. Another maxim was "stay away from 'fat cat' imagery." Thus the campaign posters of Rep. William Cohen of Maine-one of the few Republicans on the Judiciary Committee to survive the voters' wrath in,1974-showed him in jeans and workshirt, not ain a GOP three-piece suit. In 1976, Rep. Arlan Stangeland of Minnesota rode to victory perched on a tractor. Another reason he defeated a heavily-favored Democratic opponent was that he did not run on the ticket of the old Nixon Party. He called himself, even on the ballot, an Independent- Republican. Though the examples were numerous, the strategy was the same. Republicans had to seem to be hardly Republican at all. Thus the party divorced itself from the Nixon years, tipped its hat to Gerald Ford, struck up the reform movement band and embraced the concept of a "do-something Congress." It became vital for many Republicans to as for independent pursuit of Republican ideals. It was a move that soon yielded political dividends. In four special elections for seats considered Democratic strongholds, Republicans won three. Like Strangeland in Minnesota, Reps. John Cunningham of Washington and Robert Livingston of Louisiana ran on platforms noticeably devoid of Republican symbolism and Nixon-style rhetoric. THIEN ENTERED) the 1978 election scene-full of flourishing, if still modest, hopes for Republican candidates-a revived, recuperated Richard Nixon complete with new grandchild and another on the way. It is more than enough to make a staunch "New Republican" blanch. Do any of the Republicans up-for election this year want the newest new Nixon on his side? From New York to Ohio, from Florida to North Dakota, the overwhelming response to Nixon's re-emergence has been even- tempered dismay, adefinite "not in my district and not in my party." Like many Republicans, Rep. Ralph Regula, an Ohio moderate whose district is ringed'by Democrats, still praises the Nixon foreign policy record but cannot forgive the ex-president's failure to act decisively at the beginning of the Watergate scandal. "He could have been the most effective president this eountry has ever seen," Regula said. "He could been a hero, but he was stupid. He gave the staff the impression they could do as they pleased and he never stopped it. He should have fired them all ,right from the start." What would he do if Nixon supported his re- election campaign? "If he were to come to my district, I would find any excuse to be somewhere else. I wouldn't want to be associated with him-not out of any animosity but because I don't think he could be good for the party anymore." That belief cuts across ideological lines. Rep. William Walsh of New York, a conservative, said, "I would just stay in. Washington if Nixon visited my district. I just think he did too much damage to the party." BUT A FEW Republicans disagree. "I think he's paid his dues," said Minnesota's Strangeland. "What higher price could a man pay than to be removed from office and virtually exiled for four years?" Strangeland suggested that the party might offer Nixon an advisory role, but that offer would be "ve, hush, hush." Other party members believe Nixon shou be made an elder statesman. Maryland Re Marjorie Holt advocates such a position b does not want him involved in party politic She describes Nixon as a man who "character is flawed by an inherent strain dishonesty that would raise too many doub as to his ability to serve the public. Illinois Rep. Paul Findley, who conferr( with Nixon before a recent China trip, said would welcome the former president in official role as an advisor on Sino-Sovi affairs. Findley said he had no reservatior about greeting Nixon in his home district, bi he saidhis constituents still are "preti negative" about the ex-president. Rep. Cohen of Maine, who is seeking Senate seat this year, probably identifies t main GOP worry when he notes that whet one loathes or forgives the former preside Richard Nixon cannot help but remind vote of the past. and, distracL attention fro~ Republican plans for the future. Rather th either repudiating or rehabilitating NixoT Cohen believes Republicans shoul concentrate on younger leaders such as Rep: Philip Crane of Illinois and Jack Kemp New York. Perhaps Rep. John Anderson, anothe Illinois legislator to survive Watergate, ha the most representative Republican respons to Nixon's re-emergence. "The Republican Party is generally forgiving group," said Anderson, who heai the House Republican Conference and ha, been mentioned as a GOP presidentia contender in 1980, "and certainly its attitud has relaxed over the years. But the majorit would say to Mr. Nixon, who has lived in sel imposed exile for four years, 'As you emerg from Casa Pacifica, do as you please as private citizen, but stay away from an, statements that could in any way imply tha you are speaking for the party.' Of course, he said, "there will be recognition for th office he held-the job that he did-but't accept him in a party or political sense is n acceptable to Republicans. Private, ye~ Public, certainly not." Moore is a Washington-based observf of Republican party politics. This artic was written for the PacificNews Service. The neutron bomb mistake B Y ORDERING production of some components of the neutron bomb, President Carter has all but disclosed that the United States intends to go ahead with this unneeded weapon, despite its' potential for making nuclear war more likely. The neutron bomb - known by the Pentagon euphemism as an "enhanced radiation warhead" - is the weapon that has made war less destructive to property. Originally designed as a NATO response to the massive Soviet tank buildup in Europe' the bomb produces twice the deadly radiation of a conventional bomb with only a tenth of the explosive power - or to put it crudely but realistically, it kills people without ruining surrounding buildings. Any weapon which ,makes mass destruction convenient and nice makes the threshold of nuclear war plummet into the realm of not only possible but probable. Relations between, the United States and the USSR are already strained as a result 'of the dissident trials, and Soviet imperialism in Africa. After all, it makes war a much more palatable option. States always lose in war; the question is whether a state will gain more than, enough to compensate for the loss. With the likelihood that factories and power plants would be spared in an exchange of neutron bombs, any state would only need the smisguided belief that its military strength is stronger than the opposition to move first. The neutron bomb should not be built period. Now, by producing some of the components and stockpiling others, weapons quicker than President Carter can change his stance on an issue. President Carter has shown a definite lack of leadership in keeping up with his campaign promise to cut defense waste. With the exception of the veto of the unneeded aircraft carrier, he has yet to give the defense department a definitive and unequivocable "No!" Even in cancelling the B-1 bomber, the President left the door open for possible future development. Since the administration has already shown that it is proceeding with the neutron bomb development, discussion of the weapon's immorality is at this stage ex-post-facto. But the President should be warned not to use the threat of nuclear devastation as a means of "talking tough" to the Soviets in next weeks' SALT negotiations. Let's hope for the sake of the world that President Carter will reverse the hawkish trend his administration is setting. ibe 1 icj an Uai EDITORIAL STAFF Editors-inchief Letters to the Daily DAVIDGOODMAN GREGG KRUPA Managing Editors EILEEN DALEY KEN PARSIG IAN - D)AN OBERI )ORFER Editorial Director RENE BECKER Magazine Editors LIZ SLOWIK SUE WARNER STAFF WRITERS: Michael Arkush, Carol Azzizian, Richard Berke, Leonard Bernstein, Brian Blanchard, Ron Benshoter, Mitch Cantor. lonna De rodt, Eleonora diLiscia, Marianee Egri, Dan Ezekiel. Josh Garrson, Ron Giffor'd, Sue Hollman, Elisa Isaacson, Carol Koletsky, Paula Laxhinsky, Marty Levine, Adrienne Lyons, Chester Moleski, Mark Parrent, Judy Rakow- sky, Ma rthai Retalliek ,Keith Richbur. Kevin Roseorou. Daily stance rapped To the Daily: I am tired of the Daily's anti- Proposal D endorsement. Thursday's front-page article "Age Hike won't reduce drinking" was an outrageous invitation to adolescents to disregard gislation, as well as an underha ded.distortion of the situation. While such legislation probably won't deter all those under 21 from drinking, it willbea strong dissuasion for many, students and non-students alike. During this age period, people explore ways of coping with stress and develop recreation preferences. By it's lack of options, the Ann Arbor atmosphere steers undergrads to drinking; getting blasted is the 'thing to do.' Council member Susan Greenfield's endorsement of the anti-Proposal D campaign. bespeaks an attempt to gain popularity among her young constituency. Her remark about impending curfews shows her to be an inflammatory politician. In this article the Daily tried just too hard to make a big story out of an issue with more serious implications than an adjustment in campus life. -Janet Smarr Lebanon facts To the Daily: clarified The American news media has continuously distorted the facts about Lebanon. Dr. Tanter's letter to the Michigan Daily (Oct. militias have alienated a large portion of the Lebanese Christian community as 'a result of the brutal acts of violence which they, the militias, committed. To mention just a few examples: the militia's cold bloodedly massacred 35 Christians in the village of Ehden; about one month ago, the culminated their racist harassment campaign against the Armenian community by killing several of those who refused to pay "protection money" to the militias. The fact is that many reporters discovered that many Christians blame these militias as much as they do the Syrians, for the calamities which they have suffered (Oct. 15, Ann Arbor News). °These militias were trained on the same racist nriinllvc ac Ct ho fl *n;-C ,lan PLO and keep the syrian force preocupied by sending all kind of weapons to the fascist militias Thus, Israel is using Lebanes civilians as cannon foder for, it goodwill geopolitical designs' ii the Middle East. " Every conscientious perso would deplore the indiscriminat' shelling of civilian areas by th Syrian forces. But one shoul keep in mind that the fascis militias themselves als extensively bombarded civilial targets,'moreover, these militias due to their contempt of humai life, have located their artillery installations in civilian areas (t minimize their losses), thus, the; are- partly responsible for 'th high number of civilian deaths Filially, Lebanon is bound t remain yin turmoil as lone a