Page 4-Tuesday, March 13, 1979-The Michigan Daily . 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eigh ty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 128 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The press in danger again E IGHT YEARS ago, the govern- ment stopped the New York Times from printing a confidential history of the Vietnam War that had been leaked to the newspaper. Last week, Judge Robert Warren issued a 10-day restraining order to temporarily prohibit The Progressive magazine from publishing a story on what freelance writer Howard 'Morland says describes how a :hydrogen bomb works. Morland didn't find out the infor- ,nation for his story by sifting through secret documents or meeting with a secret source. Rather, he simply lured government nuclear facilities to come up with his story. Though this most recent case of government-press confrontation koesn't have the intrigue that accom- Oanies press leaks and secret documents, it's not dissimilar from the Pentagon Papers case. Both cases in- yolve an attempt by the federal gover- nment to suppress the media because 'of the dangers that could be presented to national security. On the one side, Warren is being warned that publication of the article would help smaller countries develop an H-bomb capability rapidly, ruining any prospects for nonproliferation. The other side to the case is whether freedom of the press should be stifled. The Supreme Court follows a general standard that prior restraint of an ar- ticle is warranted only if publication would result in grave and irreparable harm to the country's national security. The press is not omniscient. Editors of The Progressive surely can't predict what effect publication of the H-bomb story could have. But, even with expert testimony, Judge Warren certainly can't forsee the impact the story would have. Thus, prior restraint of Morland's article is a dangerous denial of free press. If speculation by witnesses con- vinces Warren to prohibit publication of the article, a sad precedent would be set, allowing the government to inter- vene on a free press in cases in which the consequences of publciation are unclear. In wartime, the High Court has restrained publication of the sailing schedule of troop ships. Such action is justifiable, for consequences of such publication would unquestionably be detrimental to the country. Publishing a story on the H-bomb could be dangerous, but there is no ac- curate means of determining if it would be. No one ever said a free press doesn't cause damage. But democracy isn't without its risks either. I had an interesting bar- hopping experience on Chicago's north side over spring break, en- tering a swinging-singles type drinking establishment called "Butch McGuire's" with another under-aged friend. The bouncer checked our I.D. cards, nothed that we were both under 21, and sent us to the next gentleman for hand stamps. The second boun- cer stamped my hand with ink that wiped off with a napkin, and he didn't bother to stamp my cohort. Thernext night, we went back to the same bar, and the same bouncers didn't even ask us for I.D. THERE ARE very few similarities between Chicagoand Ann Arbor, except that in both cities, adults under 21 can always find a bar to drink in. In fact, the laxity of Ann Arbor bouncers and waitresses make the leniency of their windy city counterparts look like hard-nosed Gestapo tac- tics. This city has a $5 drinking fine, and anybody of any age can usually drink anywhere-albeith illegally - so one of the most potentially explosive issues in the April election has now fizzled out. There will be no massive in- flux of disenfranchised students going to the polls in the city elec- tions, and even if they did, the Republicansvand the Democrats have taken identical poisitions on 21-year-old drinking. So despite the newly-registered student voters all affected by the drinking age hike, the com- plexion of the Ann Arbor elec- torate won't change much in April. As far as bar-hopping here is concerned, things are prac- tically the way they were before Prop D passed. TAKE DOOLEY'S for instance, that rowdy, beer-drinker's establishment bar on Maynard. There, they are aware of the water solubility of hand stamps, so they opted for the reverse - they only stamp the hands of Kk®Ith ri iv people old enough to drink. The switch os, however, that nine times out of ten, the waitress or bartender never asks to see the hand stamp before seving drinks. Also, one of-age drinker can usually get a pitcher for an entire table. The pattern is similar in most city bars. But the bar owners' nonchalant attitude towards the 21-year-old drinking age is only to be expected, considering both parties in city hall stumbling over each other early on to show city voters that they were more opposed to the new drinking age than the other guys. As a result of the ordinance passed in December, just days before the new drinking law went into effect, Ann Arbor now has a $5 fine for violators of the 21-year- old age. That ordinance was in- troduced, oddly enough, by Republican Mayor Louis Belcher, who beat the Democrats to an issue suited for their largely student partisans. IT WAS BELCHER, remem- ber, who said way back in 1971 that he was opposed to the $5 pot fine, and that the police should enforce the law "whether it meant raiding the communes on- ce a week." But then again, the born-again Belcher has reason for his con- version - had council not passed the $5 drinking fine, PIRGIM would have continued their petition drive to get a referendum on the ballot in April. And the last thing a Republican Mayor needs in .an influx of newly-registered student voters turning out in April for a "student issue" like the drinking fine. In the fall, thousands of new voters registered in Ann Arbor, thanks to proposition D on the November statewide ballot. And those new voters could well have thrown the local elections into turmoil for the GOP, had they all decided to exercise their right to vote in April, as well as Novem- ber. BUT PROBABLY more impor- tant than politics in the Republicans' ardent embrace of the $5 fine is the simple fact that drinking in this city is business. Selling liquor and beer in Ann Arbor is a business enterprise. And by siding with the students in imposing the lenient fine, allies of the $5 fine are actually siding with the biggest money-making enterprise in Ann Arbor next to sports. So the Democrats are left fuming not only by the fact that the students now have no $5 ballot proposal to pull students out in April, butthey don't have the satisfaction of having been the party to introduce the council- passed $5 fine. At the December meeting, Earl Green was the only council member to express that ciy limits chburg frustration, in the form of a narrative history of the politics of the drinking fine. Except in the glare of the television lights - TV News Four Detroit was filming the debate - Greene's defense of the Democrat's came across more as a pouting "We thought of it first." SO RIGHT NOW, the only issue that could have aroused at least partial student interest in a city election is, for the most part, over and done with. The city has a $5 fine, and, in hindsight,, most students' couldn't care which party it was that first thought of the idea. And, for all practical, purposes, any student who wants to drink in Ann Arbor can. There isn't even a meaty rent control measure or fair housing ordinance to -draw at leastF minimal student interest. Small wonder students this year look like they'll be more apathetic about the city elections than ever before. Students, as a general rule, find it hard to get excited about potholes (most don't own cars), open meetings, and budget deficits. It's too early to predict whether the presence of PhD candidate and American Studies teacher James "Jamie" Kenworthy will be a draw for more student par- ticipation.aBut Kenworthy is now sporting a freshly-cut frock of hair, matching blazers and ties, and shunning his familiar nickname "Jamie" in campaign literature for the more formal "James." Students may not even feel that one of their own is run- ning for mayor, which could have been Kenworthy's strongest drawing, card for the all-, important student votes. But Ann Arbor politics show a history ofsunpredictability that render most predictions at this stage useless. This election year, it could well come down to the very last vote - but let's not go through that one again. Daily City Editor Keith Richburg's column appears every other Tuesday. Letter-s China must leave # p 9 Carter should appoint a special prosecutor Vietnam 0NE OF CANDIATE Jimmy Carter's main selling points in his 1976 campaign was his pledge to restore trust, openness and honesty to American government. He reminded voters of the deception of the Watergate incident, and offered, in- stead, "a government as good as the American people." Since then a lot of the President's 1976 campaign promises have proven to be empty rhetoric with the passage of time. But now, the very integrity of Jimmy Carter himself is at stake, and the candidate, as President, seems no better on that score than either of his predecessors. The Justiee Department is investigating loan irregularities at the Carter warehouse in Plains, and Jimmy Carter's Justice Department has shown it can stonewall with the best of them. The case involves a loan to the Carter family peanut warehouse from the National Bank of Georgia. Peanuts were the collateral for the $3 million in commodity loans, but the peanuts may have been moved out of the control of the bank while the loan was in ef- fect-a violation of the loan requirements and banking laws. There is no clear evidence that Billy Carter, peanut warehouse manager, deliberately kept the bank unaware that the peanuts were removed as collateral. There is also no indication that the President, who owns 63 per cent of the business in a blind trust, knew of the possible illegality. But the fact remains that it may possibly be falsifying of documents, violation of banking loans, and collusion from the highest levels of the White House. The only way to solve the dilemma and to soothe the conscience of the Ameican public is to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the case. The Carter Justice Department un- der Griffin Bell's leadership has been reluctant to appoint a special prosecutor, calling such a move an ex- Justice Department is trying to quash the case by conducting an in-house in- vestigation, then the lesson of Watergate has been lost. It is likely that there were no deliberate attempts to break the law, by the President, or by Billy Carter. But if no illegalities were committed, then why is Bell so reluctant to allow an outside prosecutor? Why does the administration insist on conducting its own investigation? The American people trusted Jimmy Carter in his pledge never to tell a lie. To find that President Carter is in- volved in illegailities and cover-ups would be more than the American political system could take. The President owes it to the American people to appoint an independent special prosecutor, if only to restore that 'sagging faith in the American :political system. EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner ................................ EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard Berke, Julie Rovner..........MANAGING EDITORS Michael Arkush ...................... EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Brian Blanchard ...................... UNIVERSITY EDITOR Keith Richburg................................. CITY EDITOR Shelley Wolson .................. PERSONNEL DIRECTOR. Elizabeth Slowik....................FEATURES EDITOR Dennis Sabo.............................SPECIAL PROJECTS R.J. Smith, Eric Zorn ......................... ARTS EDITORS, Owen Gleiberman, JudyRakowsky ..... MAGAZINE EDITORS STAFF WRITERS-Sara Anspach, Ron Benschoter, Lenny Bernstein, JulieyBrown, Rick Blanchard, Mitch Cantor, Joe Ceterski, Ptefany Cooperman, Amy Diamond, Monica Eby, Marianne Egri, Julie Engebrecht, Mary Faranski, Bob Feld- man, Joyce Frieden, Greg Gallopoulos, Ron Gifford, John Goyer, Pat Hagen, Marion Halberg, Vicki Henderson, Alison Hirschel, Steve Hook, Elisa Isaacson, Tom Kettler, Paula Lashingsky, Adrienne Lyons, Chester Maleski, Jeff Miller, Tom Mirga, Mark Parrent, Beth Persky, Kevin Roseborough, Beth Rosen- berg, Amy Saltzman, Steve Shaer, Tom Sinkevics, Bill Thom- pson, Charles Thomson, Jon Vogle, Joe Vargo, Howard Witt, Jeff Wolff, Tim Yagle PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Andy FreebergH............................PHOTO EDITOR Brad Benjamin.................STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Alan Bilinskv...................STAFF POTOGRAPER C'vnrena (Chang...................STAFF PHOTOGRAPHItER Pam Marks....................... STAFF PIOTOGRAPIIER Maureet O'Malley.................STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Lisa Udelson.......................STAFF PHiOTOGRIAPHIER QCtnUTC ATAFFT~ To the Daily: Although China appears to be withdrawing, the fighting bet- -ween China and Vietnam con- tinues and the spectre of holocaust in southeast Asia remains. The invasion of Viet- nam is a dangerous anti-Soviet provocation by the US/China/Japan axis. While this criminal assault is being carried out by Chinese troops there should be no mistake who is behind it and what is its ultimate target. China is acting as the spearhead of a renewed drive by US imperialism against the Soviet Union and the working people of Indochina. China must, get out of Vietnam now ! The Peking bureaucracy wants to take a swipe at Hanoi because it believes China must reign supreme in southeast Asia and Vietnam is in the way. Marxists do not support the nationalist aims of the rival Stalinist bureaucracies in Hanoi and Peking. However, the Chinese in- vasion is clearly intertwined with imperialist opposition to the gains of the Vietnamese revolution, won at the cost of more than a million lives 'and decades of struggle. The invasion comes in the con- text of Jimmy Carter's anti- Soviet "human rights" crusade, and China's increasingly reac- tionary foreign policy, most recently under the guidance of Teng Hsiao-ping. Thus, im- mediately prior to the invasion, Teng was parading around the US with Carter, threatening that China was going to "teach Vietnam a bloody lesson." It is clear that Peking would not have taken the ominous step of in- vading Vietnam without at least tacit backing from Washington. The Kremlin on the other hand, has reacted quite conservatively by ordinary burgeois diplomatic standards, that is wanton ab- dication of, all responsibility towards Vietnam. The USSR has" confined its support to a tepid- communiqde warnihg China to stop the invasion "before it is too late," pointedly omitting any direct military threat. In part, this reticent response is a reflection of Moscow's dreams of detente with the United States: hopes of negotiating a new SALT treaty, desire not to strengthen the hand of "warmonger" Brezezinski over "dove" Vance, etc. More importantly, it is the expression of bureaucratic selfishness. For all its talk of proletarian inter- nationalism, when an ally is ac- tually under attack, the Kremlin sits on its hands stingily doling out minimum aid. Thus there is mush speculation that they are holding back in order to pressure the Vietnamese into granting base rights at Cam Ranh Bey to the Soviet Navy. It is this criminal negligence, allowing the Vietnamese to stand essentially along against the Chinese attack in collusion with U.S. im- perialism, that impels our demand, "Soviet Union: Honor Your Treaty with Vietnam!" While it is our proletanian in- ternationalist duty to defend de- generation and deformed workers states like the USSR and China against imperialist attack, it is not the ruling bureaucracies we defend but the interests of the working people and the gains of their anti-capitalist revolutions. Our fundamental appeals are directed to the Soviet, Viet- namese and Chinese masses, whose interests are not served by the illusions of deals with Car- ter/Brzezinski but rather by the program of communist unity against imperialism. Today we address the Chinese masses, drawn by their sellout leaders int. a war against their Vietnamese *class brothers: Don't Be a Cat's P'aw of U.S. Imperialism! Get Out of Vietnam Now! In calling on the USSR to honor its treaty with Vietnam we are addressing the Soviet masses, calling on them to break with Brezhnev's capitulation policy of detente with the imperialists and to remove the bureaucracy through workers political revolution. The western imperialist rulers remain dedicated to overturning the social revolutions which have driven them from more than one third of the globe. This means war of one kind or another.-Right now the Chinese Stalinists are "punishing" the Vietnamese people in the hopes of cementing an alliance with the American burgeoisie while extending their own bureaucratic sway. This vicious attack places the heroic victory of the Vietnamese working people in mortal danger! Not empty dreams of "peaceful coexistence" with imperialism, but only world wide proletarian solidarity for socialist revolution can defend that victory. China must get out of Vietnam now! Spartacus Youth League *T.A.'s To the Daily: The Daily article on foreigr T.A.'s contained a well chosen English vocabulary, was mostly spelled correctly, was gram- matically flawless and as far as my foreign eye could see had a perfect English syntax. However, it lacked objectiveness, a well- defined content and above all was an example of bad com- munication. Such faults, if displayed by a teacher regar- dless of the nature of his/her passport could easily label him/her as unintelligible and 'foreign.: If this article has a point, it is that preparing a good lecture requires, much more effort, in- vestigation and thought than producing such articles. If teaching could be carried out with the intelligible sentences alone, a tape recorder equipped with well-pronounced English to each class would more than suf- fice for high-quality University education. Did the Daily carry out an in- depth study on University education? Were the foreign T.A.'s, compared with their American fellow T. A.'s on a objective basis? What are the statistics on inadequate teaching done by foreign T.A.'s? Isn't it true that some American professors have a "language problem", too? What is, pfter all, the basis of this article? Is it to fire-up ethnocentrism? A good teacher should always be prepared for his/her students' tough questions. Such sloppy "unpreparedness" in a Univer- sity paper as the Daily strongly jeopardizes its educational value. -Ali Oziuk Teaching Assistant Dept. of Mathematics * Editorials which appear without a by-line represent a consensus opinion of the Daily's editorial board. All other editorials, as well as car- toons, are the opinions of the individuals who submit them. WNeL FA 1- 5 I c6WS~ S 06 O c70 TO -1 AW H77~ TwORO tow coon cnx tW TftI. 15 HOWO W ANk c660~ iNs is Wfr01 t ; Til sWA e (~ LZIB k i s: . MV~ FaO.O AMIAD, W, A"RT : R Q r ~L6H l tP A S IAM4L (VULS YD W '