T4V irnnan Daily Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 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. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: HESTER PULLING Vietnam's farcical election THE ORIGINAL ESCALATION of the war in Vietnam was legitimated as a war to make that country "safe f o r democracy." Even through the rapid suc- cession of Vietnamese military coups in the early .sixties, this pretext of saving helpless peasants from the "authoritar- ian menace of communism" has been maintained. But in the past several weeks, what- ever remained of this myth of fighting for democracy has been shattered com- pletely. In the October South Vietnamese presidential elections, the only name on the ballot will be that of Nguyen' Van Thieu. Of course, the Administration in Wash- ington does not see this development as reason to pull out or even partially stop the flow of aid going to the Thieu re- gime. President Nixon said this week that in only 30 of the aid-receiving countries "have leaders who are there as a result of a contested election by any standard that we would consider fair. "In fact,", said Nixon, "we would have to cut off aid to two-thirds of the nations of the world, in Africa, in Latin Amer- ica, in Asia, to whom we are presently giving aid, if we apply the standards that some suggest we apply to South Viet- nam." Thus, since we are already giving aid to over 60 authoritarian or even fascist countries, why should South Vietnam be held to an arbitrary standard of demo- cracy? THIS PECULIAR LOGIC is the out- growth of a philosophy which is more intensely anti-communist than pro- democratic. Nixon "would prefer, as far as South Vietnam is concerned, that its democratic process would grow faster." But he is most concerned that the South Vietnamese government be viciously anti- communist, whatever component of democracy is used to install it. This system of priorities is reflected in our foreign policy as a whole, where we would sooner see a fascist dictatorship than a peoples' democracy, if that demo- cracy should show the faintest inclina- tion towards disaffirming an anti-com- munist stance. In South Vietnam, because of the spot- light of publicity, American officials have worked hard to maintain at least an out- ward show of democracy. When Gen. Duong Van (Big) Minh was considering withdrawing from the Presi- dential race, Ambassador Ellsworth Bun- ker reportedly offered him "financial as- sistance." Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor Authoritative Vietnamese sources said Bunker portrayed the offer as a way to achieve "equality" between the resources for the campaign of Thieu and Minh. However, the sources said, Bunker's proposition angered Minh and was a principal reason he withdrew from the race August 20. N OSOONER HAD Minh withdrawn, than the South Vietnamese Supreme Court reversed an earlier decision and allowed Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky to reenter the race. Almost all observers have attributed this direct turnabout to American pressure. On August 5, the court had disqualified Ky because his endorsements from pro- vincial councilors had duplicated Thieu's to a large extent. However, when it ap- peared that Thieu would have no oppon- ent in the October' election, the court reversed itself. Ky withdrew from the race, charging as Minh had that the election was rig- ged. Several days later, substantive evi- dence appeared that confirmed t h e s e charges. APPARENTLY, THIEU sent a letter to each of South Vietnam's 44 province chiefs saying they would be responsible for getting out the pro-Government vote in the elections. It then detailed various ways to harass opposition candidates and build government, support. The authenticity of the letter has not been challenged by anyone in the Thieu regime. While the election will now be uncon- tested, Thieu has attempted to give it some semblance of democracy by saying he will resign from office if he doesn't receive at least 50 per cent of the vote. A voter can only express his non-con- fidence by mutilating the ballot or throwing it away and putting an empty envelope in the ballot box instead. Thieu has said that, "If I see the re- sults of the voting confirm the confi- dence of the people in me, I will con- tinue with another four-year term. But if the results show clearly that the peo- ple do not have confidence in me, I will not accept another four-year term and step down." BUT DESPITE its farcial character, the election will go on. Ky has vowed to stage a coup if it does. The U.S. news media has tried to show a deep division between Ky and Thieu, while the effect of both on their country has been de- vastating. Some time ago, Ky boasted his hero was Adolf Hitler. Every day, we hear more of the atrocities practiced by Thieu's army and government. The split between the two is not a split founded on political ideology, but merely on personal rivalry. A race between them, though seeming- ly democratic, would offer the Vietnam- ese people a choice of one tyrant or ano- ther. Now, they have been denied t h a t "democracy" as well. And while whole newspapers are cen- sored and opposition candidates beaten up, Secretary of State William R o g e r s drones on in the background, "the demo- cratic process will continue in S o u t h Vietnam." -ZACHARY SCHILLER The By WALTER SHAPI Editor's Note: Walter piro is a former Washingt litical writer who is nowa uate student in Europea tory. He was associate e director of the Daily in 1969. DESPITE the intensit which the media and narcissism have probed t tudes and aspirations of t lectivity simply known as one of the major riddles is the unfathomable plans could potentially be 25 young voters. Few are unaware th2 "youth vote" loomslarge political scenarios titilatin in the Presidential car George McGovern and Joh say-candidates who havE fusions about being nor by a convention of elderly heelers. But it was startling to li same sort of claims while to a key adviser to Henr son. It is one thing to tole. political fantasies of suce cated doves as McGove3 Lindsay, but "Scoop" Jack sentimental favorite of bi and the aerospace industr3 an unlikely figure to galvi' campuses of America. The speaKer, Ben Wat was no political novice. authored along with] Scammon The Real Majo moderate's answer to Kev lips - which in a chap titled "Demography is I posited that the typical a "forty-seven-year-old wife from the outskirts of Ohio, whose husband is chinist. A BRIEF LOOK at the graphic profile of the 11.5 Americans enfranchised N enigma RO state referenda rejecting a lowered Sha- voting age and pass the 26th ton po- Amendment anyway. a grad- Even liberal Democrats who saw in his- the lowered voting age as some ditorial sort of electoral subsidy (although 1968- not as big as they might have hoped) generally had little con- by with cern about restrictive residency ;y with requirements which in most states our own forced college students to vote at he atti- their'parents' homes-or not at all. hat col- "youth", For in their own way liberals of 1972 are as petrifiedofstudents vot- of what ing en masse in their campus com- million munities. The fate of former Rep. .Jeffrey Cohelan (D-Calif.), is too Lat the recent for it to be otherwise. Co- in th helan, a staunch, if not outspoken, g those left liberal whose voting record mps of over seven terms in the House was inp ofnd virtually spotless by ADA stand- en Lid- ards, was defeated in the 1970 .ino ie- Democratic primary by Ron Del- ed lums, a militant black city coun- y ward- cilman. Cohelan's district? Berkeley and hear the environs. talking Dispersed to their parents' pre- y Jack- cincts for voting purposes young rate the voters could help elect the mature ;h dedi- liberal of their choice. Concen- !n and tra ted in college communities, son, the thesedsame voters might do some- ig labor thing dangerous-like run candi- y, seems dates of their own in primaries nize the and general elections. tenberg, THE SPECTRE OF. frivolous He co- students taking over sleepy col- Richard lege towns and driving the good rity- a tax - paying burghers into bank- in Phil- ruptcy was raised several times ter en- during Congressional debate on Destiny" the 26th amendment. voter is Conservative Robert Michel (R- house- Ill.), set the tone of the March Dayton, 23 House debate when he wailed, a ma- "For goodness sakes, we could have these transients actually con- trolling the elections, voting city demo- councils and mayors in and out million of office." For those previously not by the familiar with Michel's contribu- of the youth vote basis for continued discrimina- tory registitraon procedures seems flimsy at best. Seeing the hand- writing on the ballot, a group of House Republicans decided to sponsor a new constitutional amendment (the 27th) which in effect bars students enfranchised by the 26th amendment from vot- ing in college towns. It is hardly coincidental that among the Republicens sponsoring the amendment are three con- servatives politically threatened by the 35,000 Ohio State Univer- sity students, 30,000 University of Cincinnati students and 17,000 University of Ohio students, re- spectively. While most of the focus of the fight over student registration has 26th Amendment, which lowered the voting age to 18 (an additional 13.5 million Americans will reach age 21 between 1968 and 1972) in- dicates that there is some basis for Wattenberg 's optimism. Demo- graphics indicate that while "youth vote" has a leftward tilt, it may be less acute than McGovern and Lindsay stalwarts expect. For those of us to whom "college student" and "youth" have long ago become interchangeable syno- nyms, it is sobering to realize that only 20 per cent (2.3 million) of the 11.5 million Americans be- tween the age of 18 and 21 are college students living apart from their parents. Needless to say that among the new voters who will have already turned 21 by 1972, the proportion of college stu- dents is even smaller. In contrast to this campus con- tingent, is a group best describ- ed as "blue collar youth"-to whom George Wallace is more likely a hero than Caesar Chavez. Of the 11.5 million potential voters enfranchised by lowering the vot- ing age, the 4.1- million youths in the labor force certainly fall in this category. But all these new voters will be far less likely to vote than the average citizen, if past electoral behavior is any guide. Traditionally high mobility and fragile community ties have kept voter turnout among those in their twenties disproportionately low. For example, a December 1969 Gallup Poll on voter registration revealed that only 50 percent of those, polled between the ages of 21 and 29 were registered to vote, as contrasted with almost 75 per- cent of the adult population at large. The cynical may use this sta- tistic to say that the reason that Congress so willingly granted 18 year olds the right to vote was. only because they were confident that it would not be used. IN ANY CASE, the likelihood of low participation and little bloc voting was undoubtedly a factor in convincing conservative and moderates to ignore numerous tions to the lucid debate on this issue, "transients" is a euphemism for students - that is, people who make a definite commitment to attend college in one place for four years in a country where al- most 19 per cent of the general population moves annually. During the debate, Abner Mikva (D-Ill.), who represents the Hyde Park area surrounding the Univer- sity of Chicago, gave assurances to the House that nothing in the Amendment -jeopardized s t a t e laws limiting student registration. Earlier Tom Railsback (R-Ill.), generally one of the least Nean- derthal of Illinois Republicans, had actually called the 26th Amendment an example of "what you people can do by working within the system." This time he intoned that in his view "before a person or student (editors note: there's a difference?) should be permitted to vote in a community where he is attending college, he would have to express to the sat- isfaction of the registrar that this was going to be his permanent residence". GIVEN THESE assurances that the 26th Amendment would be like an "R" movie with students under 21 admitted to the polling booth only when accompanied by parents or guardian, one can easily imagine the political shock waves generated by the Michigan Supreme Court's recent decision affirming that for voting purposes students are bona fide people. The Michigan Supreme Court decision was pretty unambiguous. Justice John B. Swainson noted that the United States Supreme Court had ruled in 1965 that under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment "the preven- tion of transients from voting could not justify" a Texas law limiting registration by service- men. Applying this and other re- cent voting rights cases to Mich- igan the court held that "in the future, students must be treated the same as all other registrants." Although so far students can register to vote only in Michigan and a few other states, the legal -Daily--Tom Gottlieb been on the future of local gov- ernment in college towns, these three Ohio Congressional districts are not that atypical. Nationally thanks largely to the modern multiversity - there may be a dozen Congressional dis- tricts in which students could po- tentially become the most pow- erful voting bloc. And in perhaps an additional 25 Congressional districts students could become a vocal minority, Bringing the issue closer to home, Michigan's 2nd District- home of both the University and the 25,000 students at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti -has one of the largest concen- trations of students in the coun- try. Although he won by 37,000 votes in 1970,bland, three-term Repub- licen incumbent Marvin Esch must have been troubled by the Michigan Supreme Court decision. For the 1970 census shows that 27 percent of the 2nd district's voting age population is under the age of 25. And following redistricting, callow youth may comprise 30 per cent of the potential electorate. National attention, however, has been foscused on how the "youth vote" will influence Presidential politics. This may be somewhat unjustified, since low turnout and a lack of a cohesive voting pat- tern among youth as a whole may seriously blunt the anticipated ef- fect of the 26th Amendment. In that case, the real importance of the 18 year old vote may lie in the impact of bloc voting in student communities on local and con- gressional races. WHEN CONGRESS PASSED the 26th Amendment only one member foresaw the possibility- let alone the desirability-of any change in, the composition of the House. Looking around at the cor- pulent, middle-aged male faces of her peers, Bella Abzug (D-N.Y.) reminded her colleagues that "the House of Repesrentatives, more than any other branch of Govern- ment, is intended to be the di- rect voice of the people. And in a nation which is getting young- er all the time, there are no young people in Congress." But somehow there is little shock value to the simple state- ment that "there are no young people in Congress." No one seems to find something awry when the youngest member of Congress is a 30-year-old conservative Demo- crat from Georgia named Dawson Mathis. We so take it for granted that politics is the domain of the mature and the established, that the absence of even token rep- resentation for youth seems only just. At this juncture the politically cynical may ask with consider- able justice, "Why bother? What difference would one -- or even a dozen-campus-oriented Con- gressmen make?" Their skepticism is thoroughly ground in experience. Few in Congress have attempted in recent years to demonstrate what an in- dividual - or even a dedicated minority - can achieve. And since a Congressional majority ready to profoundly alter the American status quo is sufficiently evanes- cent, even two dozen new Con- gressmen are likely to make scant difference. THE OBVIOUS limitations of the Congressional stress on coa- lition and compromise is illus- trated by a case study of the timidity of the Senate doves in the August Washington Monthly. The author John Rothchild indicts the Churchs, Hatfields, McGov- erns and Hartkes for being far more opposed to disrupting the or- derly processes of Congress than to continuing. the Vietnam War. . An aide to J.W. Fulbright could have been speaking for any num- ber of dove Senators when he admitted, "I don't think it's reach- ed the point where he'd stop the whole Congressional machinery to cut off funds for the war." COMMENTS LIKE this seem to invite bitter rejoinders. 'But in a sense bitterness is unfair. Ful- bright and his Northern col- leagues, reflecting their New Deal heritage, are there to pass legisla- tion, not to obstruct. In a pathetic, yet somehow touching way, lib- erals actually believe in the ef- ficacy of such concepts as ra- tional debate, compromise and the overriding necessity to be "effec- tive legislators." Profoundly influenced by the patriotic tinsel of World War II, they actually believe in the ma- jesty of the Presidency and when they refuse to challenge the President on foreign policy, it oft- en reflects not only political cal- culation, but a lingering rever- ence for the office, as well. This orientation of Congres- sional liberals is by no means limited to the war in Vietnam. Last year only one Senator voted final passage of Nixon's patently unconstitutional preventive de- tention bill. Why? Because as the result of a typical Congressional compromise it was inextricably linked with a piece of "good leg-' islation"-a judical reform bill. ANOTHER ARTICLE IN the the same issue of Washington Monthly illustrates what tactics Congressional rules provide for -Daily-Tom Gottlieb dedicated minorities - if they choose to take advantage of them. The article by Jacques Leslie is a profile of Rep. H. R.' Gross (R-Iowa), a man little known out- side of Waterloo, Iowa, and the United States House of Represen- tatives. A 72-year-old rambunc- tious reactionary who has built an entire Congressional career around voting ""no, Gross is the living antithesis of Sam Rayburn's oft quoted maxim that in Congress "to get along, you must go along." For Gross, a~n uncomplicated man for whom a balanced budget is wedged somewhere between cleanliness and godliness, is a liv- ing example of the power which one lone man can have over the operations of the House-a body which gives short shrift to the right of the individual member compared to the more leisurely and loosely - structured Senate. A fierce opponent of all Gov- ernment spending not sanctioned either by God or the Defense De- partment, Grass makes his pres-' JIM BEATTIE Executive Editdr DAVE CHUDWIN Managing Editor Rep. Dellums ence felt on the House floor with acidic questions during debate and requests for quorum call after quorum call. When particularly irked, Gross has been known to tie up the entire House for hours by refusing to grant repeated re- quests for unanimous consent to dispense with some unnecessary portion of official House proce- dure. OBVIOUSLY H. R. Gross' style of obstruction is not the only model a campus - oriented Con- gressman could follow. He or she could serve as a kind of national ombudsman for students and youth - much in the same way that Bella Abzug is an advocate for women and Ron Dellums for blacks. Another alternative would be to use Ralph Nader as a model and establish a Congressional of- fice whose major function is to probe areas of Government glos- sed over by the conservative Con- gressional committee structure. These are just some of the first possibilities which have emergec. from the Pandora's box of student voting in Ann Arbor and else- where. The Michigan Suprem( Court has raised the lid, but th, box's future . contents right nox depend on massive student regis tration. It N. STEVE KOPPMAN ..Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFF . Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY ....Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER Associate Managing Editor LORRY LEMPERT Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE ........ Arts Edito' JIM IRWIN .... . ..........Associate Arts- Editor JANET PREY.............. ...Personnel Director ROBER' CONROW Books Editor JIM JL ?:IS.. .......... .Photography Editor t - z.' Al Gh -fr' I