Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan s$Z'?v.ALAN LENHOFF of Cam bodia: Spending unseen millions 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY JACOBS APPARENTLY, President Nixon is willing to risk being labelled a hypocrite in order to preserve the secrecy of American activities in Cambodia.. Last week, Nixon refused to supply the House Government In- formation Subcommittee with doc- uments relating to American for- eign aid, programs in Cambodia. These reports had been routinely sent to the committee 'by the last four administrations. Ironically, only two weeks ago, Nixon issued an executive order which he said would help the bur- eaucratic mountain of classified documents. The result, the Presi- dent claimed, would be that citi- zens would know more about their government. The President's action, however, hardly seem consistent with that goal. In refusing the committee's re- quest, Nixon invoked his "execu- tive privilege" - ostensibly for the immediate purpose of allow- ing U.S. foreign aid payments to Cambodia to continue. The committee had requested the information under a 1961 law that stipulates that foreign a i d payments for a specific program will be suspended unless the exe- cutive branch either provides Congress with requested informa- Lion within 35 days, or the Presi- dent has expressly forbidden the release of the documents. T H E COMMITTEE had asked for the annual country field re- port which is assembled by U.S. Embassy officials, and contains in- formation about the activities of the Agency for International De- velopment (AID) and the United States Information Agency (USIA). It seems that recent events in Cambodia have been responsible for the President's decision to withhold the information at this time. Only three days before Nixon announced that he would not re- lease the documents, Cambodian Premier Lon Nol announced that he has taken over as president. prime minister, and commander- in-chief of the Cambodian armed forces. Earlier, Nol had dissolved the Constituent Assembly, just as it was putting the final wording in- to a constitution that provided for a government headed by a presi- dent who would nave been direct- ly responsible to a National As- sembly. While Nol's seizure of power might look like an act of dictator- ial strength, most observers have viewed it as a desperate attempt to maintain his power in the coun- try. EVER SINCE a stroke left him partially paralyzed last year, Nol's popularity has been steadily dropping. He is particularly under fire from student leaders w h o blame him for a lack of reforms and the recent military setbacks suffered by the Cambodian army. Nol's supporters now fear that the Communists will use the pal- ace coup as propaganda fuel against him in their efforts to se- cure the support of the peasantry. And if these efforts are accompan- ied by expanded military action, it could mean the end of the Nol regime. Already, U.S. military of- ficials report, Vietnamese Com- munists control about one-half of the country. Nol originally assumed power in 1970 in a U.S.-assisted coup that ousted Prince Norodom Sihanouk, after it became apparent that after it became apparent t h a t Sihanouk would not end Cambod- ia's long-standing neutrality in the Indochina war. It is uncertain, however, to what extent the Unit- ed States is willing to aid its has- tily installed ally. It is known that the U.S. Air Force is providing massive air support for the Cambodian troops but the exact magnitude of the support is unknown -- military officials two weeks ago discon- tinued previously routine disclq- sure of the number of American planes deployed in Indochina bombing missions. An even greater mystery is. role of AID in Cambodia. While the state department agency denies that its funds are used for mili- tary purposes, it has been docu- mented that AID has provided sophisticated "counter-subversive police units" to a number of Latin American countries - in addition to the roads, schools and food that the agency is supposed to fund. AND NIXON'S refusal to release the AID documents can only give more credence to fears that the United States is playing a similar role in Cambodia. Meanwhile, Prince Sihanouk, the deposed Cambodian head of state, sits in Peking where he has lived in exile, waiting for the" day he can return to Cambodia. "I have only two choices," he re- cently said to an American jour- nalist. "I can be a puppet of the* U.S.A. or have a Communist.Cam bodia - Communist but independ- ent. There are independent com- munist states.. . -"We have no complicated de- mands. We want peace, good food and love. How can we do that without freedom? After making peace, we want to make love." EL Lon Nol Sex and degeneration at the big 'U' - If you think Mrs. Beard is sick. Women's names: A right By CHARLES STEIN IT STARTED out as a rather sim- ple experiment. A group of seventeen men and twelve women in Xanadu Co-op were going to spend a two week trial period liv- ing with 'roommates of the oppos- ite sex. The idea had been kicking around for a while, perhaps in- spired by a copy of Robert Rim- mer's The Harrad Experiment, which also had been kicking around . . . But more likely, it was just a natural outgrowth of the curiousity of a group of people who had been living in the same house for a year, and had decided to take that platonic relationship one step farther. In the spirit of science, room- mate selection was done by lot- tery but, with the stipulation that each person could list the names of three people, he or she could not possibly live with. To some, the idea. was a bit too progressive, but most people in the house and those in the Uni- versity who knew of it, accepted it as just an interesting variation on an old theme. But as the people of Xanadu would soon learn, what is con- sidered commonplace in Ann Ar- bor is down-right revolutionary in the world-at-large. For no sooner 'did the experiment get under- way, than the local press got hold of the story. The Free Press stringer was the first person to realize ithat t h e story had great potential interest to the reading public and the pap- er's editors were quick to agree. One Free 'Press staffer, upon hearing about the experiment, en- visioned the headline "Wholesale Fucking at the Big U." DESPITE THIS early sensation- alism, the paper's front-page ac- count was low-key and accurately reflected the non-sexual nature of the experiment. But what r e d - blooded American reader was go- ing to believe for .one second that there wasn't more than a lit- tle smut involved in a group of college students sharing co-ed rooms? Newspaper editors wno read the story in the Free Press probably conjured up visions of huge drunk- en orgies, complete with 1 o it d music, broken wine bottles, and hundreds of young naked bodies strewn about the floor in the most titillating of positions. The hope of discovering such an erotic scene must have inspired RECENT Supreme Court ruling which gives states the authority to compel married women to take their hus- bands''names has brought to attention once more how close American women still are, legally and psychologically, to being the property of their husbands and fathers., Women across the country cannot fail to find the Court's behavior ominous. The problem of women's name rights is one that many find incomprehensible and even ridiculous. The name issue is a symbolic one, but the importance of its symbolism cannot be overstressed. NAME IS personality. Men, who are ac- customed to equating themselves with their names, whose ties with the past and future are secured by the patriarchal naming system, who can be sure of go- ing through their entire lives under the name they grew up with, will naturally find it hard at first to understand the psychological implications of women's name change with marriage. Women today, individually and collec- tively, are involved in trying to define themselves in new ways that are posi- tive and personally meaningful. For the nation's highest court to make the ruling it did cannot help but dis- courage women who are rightfully seek- ing to change their status in a male- oriented society. i Letters to, The, Daily The colors worse court has shown its all-male, static at a time when such a position is than aeplorable. -REBECCA WARNER GROUP: Antics, not action TflEIR CAMPAIGN poster for today's SGC election says "GROUP -- A Lot Less Politics And A Lot More Action." However, a look at GROUP's behavior at the past two SGC meetings seems to con- tradict their slogan. GROUP's antics highlighted two weeks of SGC debate over appointments to the Credential and Rules Committee (C&R). This seven-member committee is respon- sible for the validity of the current elec- tions. Although it agreed on a chairman for the committee, SGC voted down a proposed slate of C&R candidates that many members felt was "stuffed with GROUP moderates." At this point in the meeting, the five- member GROUP contingent walked out. Since GROUP's members can make or break a quorum, the meeting abruptly ended. ALAN LENHOFF Editor SARA FITZGERALD.................Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS ................. Editorial Director CARLA RAPOPORT ............. Executive Editor ROBERT SCHREINER.................News Editor ROSE SUE BERSTEIN ................ Feature Editor PAT BAUER.......... Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY ...........,. Editorial" Page Editor MARK DILLEN ................ Editorial Page Editor ARTHUR LERNER .............. Editorial Page Editor PAUL TRAVIS .................. ........ Arts Editor GLORIA JANE SMITH .......... Associate Arts Editor JONATHAN MILLER.......... Special Features Editor Terry McCarthy .................Photography Editor Robert Conrow........................Books Editor Editorial Staff NIGHT EDITORS: Linda Dreeben, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson. COPY EDITORS: Jan Benedetti, John Mitchell, Zach- ary Schiller, Tony Schwartz, Ted Stein. DAY EDITORS: Robert Barkin, Howard Brick, Dave Burhenn, Mary Kramer, Judy Ruskin, Charles Stein, At the next meeting, held last Thurs- day night, GROUP denied that any of. their members knew the contents of the slate, proposed by C&R chairman Tom Bentley, until it was proposed to the en- tire SGC assemblage. WHETHER or not their denial is true, the fact remains that GROUP be- havior was completely uncalled for. Both the left and right-wing factions in SGC have suffered defeats, when their pro- posals were opposed by the five-member GROUP faction. Yet, as SGC member Brad Taylor of the Student Caucus said, "We never walked out and broke quorum - it was more honest to resign." It seems that GROUP, which, in the past, has enjoyed many SGC victories, has yet to learn how to accept defeat. And if GROUP is to throw its temper tantrums every time it suffers a setback, perhaps they are not the mature, re- sponsible party their literature claims they are. -SCOTT GORDON Terms papers (IOMMERCIAL TRADING in term pa- pers, though by no means a new phe- nomenon, has become more brazen and apparently more profitable. Shady mer- chants of such papers advertise in stu- dent newspapers and, in their public statements, try to give the impression that they are engaged in a legitimate Publications To The Daily: THE ISSUE in the contest for the student seat on the Board for Student Publications is the degree to which students are dissatisfied with the Daily as their newspaper and spokesman. I believe that this dissatisfaction is more than slight. Can the Board do anything about that? It is well known to those familiar with the Board that it has no power over The Daily's staff or editorial policies, which is as it should be. To suggest, as the Daily did in its endorsements for the Board race, that I am not aware of faculty-administration in- terference with The Daily, is both dishonest and ludicrous. The problem with The Daily is not inherent in the people who run it or its structure. The Daily has long been recognized amongst stu- dent and professional journalists as one of the best student papers in the country. The problem, rather, lies in its position as sole student paper on campus. The Daily suffers from its monopoly position justsas any business or other power suffers from being monopilistic. Selecting its own future staff, determining policies without regard to the opin- ions of the rest of the campus, free from control of the adninis- tration, The Daily has gone its own way, to the point that it is quite alienated from large seg- ments of the student body and the 'University. It is, by its own choice, a political organ rather than a newspaper. This is an unfortunate situation that ought tobe rectified, and the Board is the proper body to do it. I am advocating what I believe to be the only reasonable course - the establishment of a second stu- dent newspaper at the University, one independent of and distinct from the Daily that can give stu- dents and the University a dif- ferent perspective of what is hap- pening on campus. The virtue sought here is not one of "correct" policies, ones more palatable to the campus, but rather diversity per se. To allow principles of freedom of the press to foster not only independence but monopoly is clearly wrong. But It also suggested, by strong im- plication, that representing The Daily and representing students are one and the same task, or at least tasks that could he under- taken by one person. That is the epitome of arrogance. The heart of the issue here is that The Daliy does not speak for all students, and that something ought to be done - but it ought to be some- thing which takes due regard of The Daily's independence -Ron Landsman, '74L Managing Editor, 1969-70 March 20 Dem platform To The Daily: THIS LETTER is in response to the Human Rights Party com- munication (Daily, March 3). The Democrat platform was prepared by a group of 13 volun- teers, five of whom are University of Michigan students. There were three public meetings to discuss the planks before they were for- malized. Notices of thesehmeetings were carried in both the Anin Arbor News and The Michigan Daily. The platform was adopted, sec- tion by section, with many amend- ments, by majority vote of those present. Anyone who walked in the door could have voted! This adoption procedure took two meetings andabout seven hours. Both of these meetings were well advertised and attended. There are two specific issues mentioned in the HRP letter: Packard-Beakes Bypass and Bri- arwood. Thedecision made by the City Council to. go ahead on the ori- ginal alignment of Packard- Beakes was approved 7-4 with all of the six Republicans and one Democrat voting "yes." With the Council it would have been ap- Dresent Republican majority on proved even without that one Democrat vote. The Democrat platform states . . . "we oppose the decision of City Hall to de- velop the original Packard-Beakes alignment" . . . On April 3 the voters of Ann Arbor will have the opportunity to vote on a bond is- sue for $935,000.00 to provide the additional money necessary to complete this Droect. (One mil- past year's performance of our city government remember it is the Republican majority on the City Council that needs changing and ask yourself how your vote will best accomplish that task. -Mona Walz, Grad. Democrat Candidate for City Council, 4th Ward March 14 Primary plan To The Daily: THE DEMOCRATIC State Cen- tral Committee, in formulating na- tional convention delegate selec- tion procedures, has set a danger- ous precedent. Under the new presidential pri- mary plan, each precinct delegate must run committed to a presi- dential candidate, or run uncom- mitted. Until now it was thought that only those precinct delegates committed on a particular candi- date could vote to select national convention delegates committed to that particular candidate. For example, only pre.cinct dele- gates committed to Muskie in the May 16 primary can vote to select Muskie delegates to the National Convention. Of course, the number of national delegates each candi- date is allotted is determined by the percentage of the vote receiv- ed by that candidate n the May 16 primary. Last Saturday, the State Cen- tral Committee voted to allow all delegates, regardless of their de- signation, to take part in the selec- tion process. In effect this means that a minority candidate's organ- ization might not be able to pick the national convention delegates to represent that candidate. The affiliation of these national convention delegates is important in terms of both platform and cre- dential questions. The rule was clearly intended as a device to prevent Wallace dele- gates from voting on the national platform, a concern we shave. Nevertheless, we feel that the Democratic party would benefit more from a truly open conven- tion. Moreover, this rule could be used in this and future conven- tions to exclude any group from participation. We urge the Democratic State the press reaction to Uie experi- ment, for nothing else can explain the incredible attention that came to be focused on Xanadu in the coming week. For the next five days, the phone lines at the co-op wer 'lit- erally inundated with calls from newspapers, radio and TV stations who wanted to learn more about this modern day pleasure palace. Nearly every member of the house, whether a participant in the experiment or not, was inter- viewed by phone or in person by one of the eager media people. The Detroit News, The Chicago Tribune, CBS Television, and even the stately and respectable New York Times ran accounts of the Xanadu experiment.tPlayboy Mag- azine also wanted to do a story, but co-op members 'refused their offer from fear of an article en- titled "The Girls of Xanadu." Most of the major media reports were reasonably accurate, but as the story filtered down through the AP and UPI, to the smaller papers, the facts became increas- ingly distorted. ONE PAPER in Rochester, New York, referred to Xanadu as a University residence hall and in a matter of hours, the University had been dragged into the Xanadu scandal. Irate alumni ,made it known that they would not contri- but funds to such a degenerate in- stitution, and one University vice- president, estimated that the ex- periment could cost the school a million dollars in contributions. University people were not the only ones interested in the Xanadu affair, however, as the house re- ceived letters from supporters and detractors all acros the country. Robert Rimmer of the Harrad Ex- periment applauded the actions of the participants and several groups involved in similar projects asked for information about the experiment's results. But most of the response came from angered Middle Americans, who equated Xanadu with Sodom and Gomorrah.aConservative col- umnist Russell Kirk put the blame for Xanadu on a series of weak presidents at the University, and linked the experiment and' the ar- sons, as examples of the pyschos- es that plague the University. A woman from Ohio went one step further and said the experi- ment would "promote veneral dis- ease, bring deformed unwanted babies to unknown fathers, k ill some of the girls through illegal abortions and break parents' hearts." As of last reports, the people of Xanadu seem to have escaped most of these disasters, but the problem of parental reaction re- presents the most serious and cer- tainly the most depressing part of the whole affair. After the first series of articles .appeared in the local press, two girls had to with- draw from the experiment because their parents had threatened to make them leave the house. One male's father called.him a Communist, another cut off finan- cial support, and one irate parent angrily told a. female participant in the experiment to legally change her name to save the family reputation. This kind of reaction might be expected in Muskogee, Oklahoma or Biloxi, Mississippi but c e r - tainly not among the affluent and educated parents of students at a University such as this. LIVING IN Ann Arbor, one for- gets that sex is still not a' polite subject for conversation in most households, and the thought of having one's own son or doughter mentioned in an article about co- ed bedrooms, must have been more than most parents could tol- erate. The articles no doubt have pro- voked many "where did We go wrong" conversations among Xanadu parents and pore than one distraught mother must h a v e thrown in some extra Ave Maria's in her Sunday prayer to save her daughter's soul from eternal damnation. It might be nice if the Xanadu experiment which ended last week left some lasting impacts up- on the University and community in general. Perhaps the Univer- sity will change its stationery to read, Ann Arbor, Sex Center. of the Midwest, or maybe Billy Gra- ham will come out in favor of premarital sex. But looking at the situation real- istically, it is unlikely that t h e spirit of the Xanadu experiment will be remembered for more than a few weeks at most. A good foot- ball season will probably make up for the money lost by angered alumni, and the sexual attitudes of America will no doubt remain in- tact. THE PARTICIPANTS in the ex- periment may have learned some- thing about what it means to live with a member of the opposite sex, but outside of that, not much is likely to be gained from the venture. Except perhaps to provide the people of Xanadu with some good stories to tell their grandchildren, who will probably be living in dormitories with lots of caob e d rooms and wondering why anyone would react so violently to so natural a living situation. 0 £ A !ItII/'II 7-30V W/1 .19 l MA