I w ir30t$ran DaIIM Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Non-aligned nations assert autonomy y 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1973 The issue of resignation By CHARLES WILBUR ON SEPT. 6, representatives of 76 govern- ments met in Algiers for the fourth summhit conference of non-aligned nations and called for a fundamental change in economic relations between the underde- veloped world and the developed nations. Participation in the conference has in- creased greatly since the first summit was held in Belgrade, Yugoslavia in 1961, with 25 nations attending. This year participants in the triennial gathering included the re- cently formed nation of Bangladesh, the Royal Government of National Unity of Cambodia, and the Provisional Revolu- tionary Government of Vietnam. While there was by no means a uni- formity of opinion among the diverse mem- bers of the conference, there was little questioning of the need for the poor nations of the Third World to unite to fight their common enemy - imperialism. Resolutions produced in Algiers cited two key areas requiring united action by the non-aligned nations, the right of nations to control their own natural resources and the need for the improvement of trade relations between undeveloped and devel- oped nations that have consistently favor- ed the latter. THE QUESTION of national control of natural resources has taken on new sig- nificance as the fuel crisis worsens in this country and abroad. Libya's nationaliza- tion of foreign oil interests and the de- mand of the oil-producing countries for an increase in the price of crude oil are re- cent examples of third world nations aban- doning a passive posture in dealing with the developed nations. Conference resolutions on this matter stated unequivocal support for member na- tions who acted to take their economic des- tinies into their own hands. In addition the conference decided that any compensations to be paid for nationalization of foreign in- vestments was a matter to be determined solely by the expropriating nation. In an effort to improve the t e r m s of trade with developed nations, the confer- ence called upon participating nations to form producer associations in order to "eliminate unhealthy competition, to pre- vent harmful activities by multinational companies and to reinforce their (the na- tions) negotiating power." Through such associations the underdeveloped nations would be able to co-ordinate the production and sale of their major exports. THE CONFERENCE produced several political rescolutions in addition those on the economic manifestations of imperial- ism. The general thrust of these political statements challenged assumption t h a t LAST SPRING the President, in a.na- tionally televised speech on Water- gate, asserted that any Cabinet officers or White House staffers who were in- dicted would be expected to resign pend- ing the outcome of the trial. However, in his press conference yes- terday, Nixon asserted that the Vice President is not obligated to resign if he is indicted by the grand jury. Although, Vice President Agnew may not be legally required to resign if in- dicted, we believe that if indicted, Ag- new's next action should be resignation. President Nixon argued yesterday that the difference between the Vice Presi- dent and cabinet officials and White House staffers is that the Vice President is "elected by all the people" and thus holds his office "in his own right." f* Editorial Staff CHRISTOPH{ER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief DIANE LEVICK.......................... Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER .................... Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY ........ Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER .............. Editorial Director ERIC SHOCH . ............. Editorial Director TONY SCHWARTZ.................. Sunday Editor CHARLES STEIN .............. ....... City Editor TED STEIN ............. ........Executive Editor ROLFE TESSEM................... Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Pakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Dan Biddle, Penny Blank, Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Dave Burhenn, Bonnie Carnes, Charles Cole- man, Mike Duweck, Ted Evanoff, Deborah Good, william Heenan, Cindy Hill, Pack Krost, jean Love, Josephine Marcotty, Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seidenstein, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Sue Stephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca Warner DAILY WEATHER BUREAU: William Marino and Dennis Dismacheck (forecasters), Sports Staff DAN BORUS Sports Editor FRANK LONGO Managing Sports Editor BOB McGINN ..............Executive Sports Editor CHUCK BLOOM ................Associate Sports Editor JOEL RS ... ...........Associate Sports Editor RICH STUCK ...........Contributing Sports Editor BOB HEUER ............Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Jeff Chown, Brian Deming, Jim Ecker, Marc Feldman, George Hastings, Marcia Merker, Roger Rossiter, Theresa Swedo STAFF: Barry Argenbright, Bill Crane, Richard Fla- herty, Cary Fotias, Andy Glazer, Leba Hertz, John Kahler, Mike Lisull, Jeffrey Milgrom, Tom Pyden, Leslie Riester, Jeff Schuller, Bill Stieg, Fred Upton NIXON DID NOT elaborate on the meaning of "in his own right," but it would seem that he means that because the Vice President was elected rather than appointed, the President cannot force the Vice President to resign. Per- haps, but it is doubtful that the Vice President would refuse to honor a public Presidential request for resignation. The first decision, of course, belongs to the Vice President. It is apparent to us that if he is indicted, Agnew has a moral obligation to resign, the American stand- ard of presumed innocence notwithstand- ing. The spectacle of a Vice President fighting court action over his personal activities while still in office would only obscure more important issues facing the nation, ranging from the Watergate in- vestigation to the economy and other domestic problems which should concern the American media and public. IN THE EVENT that Agnew is indicted and he refuses to resign, President Nixon should then take the initiative and publicly ask for the Vice President's resig- nation. Aside from any moral responsibilities, one would think that the President would be worried enough about the credibility of his administration without having a " Vice President under indictment in office with him. Moreover, the President and many ad- ministration officials have constantly harped that the United States must al- ways deal with foreign nations from a position of strength. In- the face of such statements it would be ironic if the Nixon Administration then retained the services of a Vice President under criminal in- dictment. IN HIS ATTACKS on the plethora of news leaks in general and Assistant Atty. Gen. Petersen in particular, the Vice President is, we think, showing his true colors. He apparently feels that his personal reputation and his personal presence in the office of Vice President are more important than the office itself and the credibility it needs. President Nixon saw fit to disagree with Agnew on some aspects of the situ- ation yesterday, saying that the charges raised against the Vice President were indeed serious and supporting Petersen's handling of the case. If Vice President is indicted and refuses to resign, thus placing himself person- ally above both his office and the Ameri- can public he is to serve, then the Presi- dent should ask that Agnew step down. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Biddle, Josephine Marcotty, Christopher Parks, Ted Stein the United States achievement of detente with the Soviet Union and the People's Re- public of China meant "a generation of peace." . Rather, the conference proclaimed, the continuation of imperialist domination of underdeveloped nations could only lead to serious conflict, and that "imperialism, colonialism and neo-colonialism are t h e common enemies of the peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America." One point of friction that developed at the generally harmonious gathering w a s over the meaning of non-alignment and the relation of the non-aligned countries to the socialist-nations, specifically the U.S.S.R. SOME DELEGATES, notably Cambodia's Prince Sihanouk and Libyan leader C o 1 . Muammar Qaddaffi, were sharply critical of Soviet foreign policy, referring to the existence of "two imperialisms," that of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. This line of reasoning was attacked strongly by Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro who cited Soviet aid to his country, the Vietnamese, and liberation movements across the globe to belittle. the "two irn- perialisms" theory.. Castro called upon the conference to recognize that "any attempt to pit the non-aligned nations against the socialist camp benefits only imperialists interests" and that "inventing a false enemy can have only one real aim, to evade the r e a 1 enemy." The conclusions reached by the confer- ence seem to validate Castro's point for the program of action agreed upon by the rnon- aligned nations was aimed not at Soviet in- fluence in the third world, but at the in- grained patterns of economic domination perpetuated by the developed nations of the West. CLEARLY THE ALGIERS gathering re- presents a step forward for the non-aligned nations both in determining the real prob- lems facing the underdeveloped world today and 'in developing a united course of ac- tion in dealing with those problems. What is just as certain though is that any serious attempt by the non-aligned na- tions to eradicate the conditions of under- development will be resisted by the Unit- ed States. Whether in the form of overt military intervention or through the subtle manipulations of foreign aid trade relations used so successfully against the now de- posed Allende government of Chile, the United States continues to be the major obstacle to those nations seeking national self determination and economic independ- ence. Charles Wilbur is a Daily staff writer. -4 The Nit4 DIRECTOR'S NOTES of, the Rampaging Squirrels By MARNIE HEYN I WANT TO make it clear that I was not hallucinating. True, I was thoroughly bent out of shape by all the over-and under-the-coun- ter cold remedies that nascent Jewish mothers had been foisting on me all day. I never knew there were so many forms of penicillin. And I love animals. Especially squirrels. As a child, my only hob- by was playing Clara Barton to any maimed or dying animal I found. When I lived with ,my par- ents, we always had at least two nests of squirrels living in the at- tic. But this was clearly a squirrel of a different choler. To begin at the beginning ... It was a dark and foggy foot- ball Saturday for, an Ann Arbor politico. I spent the afternoon de- signing a leaflet and swilling, smoking, popping, snorting, and shooting up cough cures. Achiev- ing a well-twisted frame of mind, I rode my bike with five reams of paper, four ashtrays, and a half-gallon of milk on my back. Puffing, sweating, and trailing, I arrived home to find 45 people sit- ting on the living room floor. (NO, not little green men . .) IN MY DELIRIUM, I had for- gotten that my roommates were giving a party. In fact, the party was the reason I bought milk and ashtrays. The keg arrived right behind me, and the gathering's whoopla pitch rose several notches. I have vague memories of drinking beer and eating vegetable curry, sitting on the fire escape and soaking up esthetic impressions from the de facto collage along the fence, bouncing off walls, guests, frijoles, and mariachi music. My clearest memory is of the moment I heard a high-pitched in- termittent squeal, like a gestapo, siren, in the back yard. It was the cry of someone being raped or mercilessly tickled. With half- formed visions of adventure and rescue dancing in my head, I tore out the back door and fell over the keg, a kitchen chair, two peo- ple with paper plates, and broke through the banister. BY THE TIME I regained my equilibrium (librium? methedrine? cocaine? dristan?), an unforget- table scene was unfolding. A four- inch-long bushy-tailed mite chased our cat under a VW, dashed under and over folk's feet, and with no hesitation at all ran right up Jan- ice's .leg.. Chattering all the while, it leap- ed headlong at the side of an abandoned pickup truck that rests in peace on our back forty. Our protagonist was rebuffed but not deterred. Next it tried to scale our neighbors' aluminum siding. The kid just wouldn't learn. This was a squirrel? I had my doubts. In any case, it was certain we needed help. Strange as it now seems, I dashed back inside and dialed the number for Ann Ar- bor's finest, Our Boys in B I u e. Okay, when you get done laughing, what would you have done if a quaisi-rabid rodent crashed your patty? I was having second thoughts even as I listened to the ring ?t the other end. When I- explained to the switchboard lady that a squirrel was behaving badly at our party, she sort of, well, choked, and put 'me on hold. After she plugged back in, she rather breath- lessly told me that what I needed was the Humane Society. How could I argue with that? I CALLED the number she gave me, and got an answering service. An answeringrservice? Whatever happened to rain and sleet and dark-of-night people? Or was that Chase Manhatten? When I had told my tale of woe, wires were crossed somehow, and the Voice of Mission Control in- .formed me that there hsdn't been a case of rabies in Wshten aw County, Terra, in 27 years. I wasn't reassured. I remembered all the booboos on Star Trek. At some point I was reconnected with the answering service and made arrangements to have the person on call rush right over. With the Stones shaking the fillings in my teeth, I went outdoors to keep a vigilant eye on the specimen. Night had fallen. In the gather- ing gloom, I could just make out the object of my surveillance skit- 4 I Businmss Staff BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager RAY CATALINO...............Operations Manager SHERRY CASTLE . ............. Advertising Manager SANDY FIENBERG ................. Finance Manager DAVE BURLESON ................... Sales Manager DEPT. MGRS.: Steve LeMire, Jane Dunning, Paula Schwach ASSOC. MGRS.: Joan Ades, Chantal Bancilhon, Linda Ross, Mark Sancrainte, S u a n n e Tiberio, Kevin Trimmer ASST. MGRS.: Marlene Katz, Bill Nealon STAFF: Sue DeSmet, Laurie Gross, Debbie Novess, Carol Petok, Mimi Bar-on SALESPEOPLE:.W end ItPohs, Tor .Kettinger, Eric Phillips, P et er Anders, R o be rt Fischer, Paula Schwach, Jack Mazzara, John Anderson Photography Staff DAVID MAROOLICK Chief Photographer KEN FINK ... .................Staff Photographer THOMAS GOTTLIEB..............Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN ...................Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI.............Staff Photographer TERRY McCARTHY ..............Staff Photographer tering up a noble oak - but wait, there are two fuzzy beasts on tha tree - and another one oo that tree over there -yand a fourth one crossing the yard, all screamnmg and staggering? They were muti- plying. The plague was on. I got out my flask of Romila" and took a poke of it. The atmos- pherewas getting tense. A DOOR OPENED behind me, shedding some light on t'e mat- ter. I was joined by someone who apparently was my neighbor. He carried an enormous battery-pow- red searchlight, a lead-filled cane, and a pipe with a ste mabout a foot and a half long. I. had found my Watson. We shared a companionabia si- lence, gazing up into the inky in- nards of the trees, ears tuned to suspicious rustling. 0 t 1 e r folks joined us quietly. The soft sound of purposeful inhalation was a des- cent to the whistling of the wind. The peace was broken by a dis- embodied voice: "A wu' ation iike this is enough to make you real- ize the value of keeping a gun." Reeling from a massive overdose of codeine and the image of people blindly and wantonly filling t h e air over our house with singing lead, I stumbled down the drive- way to wait for the Humane So- ciety on the front porch. It seem- ed as good a place as any. That moment was probably the only point in my life when I want- ed to see Marcus Welby bounce out of his car complete with little black bag. I was slated for disap- pointment. The man who showed up was shorter than me, and ex- tremely nervous about the pros- Editorial Page: Ted Hartzell, Heyn, Eric Schoch Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: Ken Fink Marnie ' 'h" I Cm F " ~ I r~jji 4 To The Daily: STIMULATED by several ideas that have turned up in your paper's recent analyses and editorials on the tuition question, I propose these several trivial thoughts to add some perspective to our prob- lems. Although the officers and admin- istrators of this university appear to perform with a certain degree of uncertainty, I shudder to think what would happen were the uni- versity run by students. For the three, going on four, years I have been here the-student government has been a consistent mockery. It is the only government I know of that can go broke in the self-per- petuating act of holding its own elections. It has shown itself to be immune to being voted out of exist- ence. Nobody cares enough to bother. After all, it's only a triv- ial dollar or two down the drain, and perhaps that's not too much for a little comic relief. The University grinds on though the power of its own inertia, much as the inertia of the federal gov- ernment carries it past the Water- gate obscenity; in the end the brr- eaucracy is necessary for our are geared to an eighth grade edu- cation) and the administrators are somehow vastly superior. Mcluhan has said that the media will tend to medieval-ize society. Perhaps it will be sooner than we think. Rather than stopping at Presi- dent Fleming's University "c o m- prised of many constituencies," perhaps it would be better to re- member that in the end, the consti- tuencies are only people, and not all that unequal, in the end. -Andy Detwiler Sept. 30 .S. To The Daily: IN READING through the Oc- tober, 1973 edition of Ms. magi- zine I was very surprised and pleased to see an ad placed by Donald E. Stokes, Dean of the UM Graduate School in the Ms. Classi- fied section. The ad invites can- didates to apply of the position of Director, The University of Mich- igan Press. The open posting of vacant posi- tions is an important technique in pesahjcihina thaat 11 TTniver-v degrading To The Daily: WHILE I HAVE to generally agree with theThursday, Sept. 20 editorial in that police priorities are often misguided, I must take exception to your comments on bicyclists and the law. Bicycles are vehicles, and as such the drivervmust obey t h e same laws of the road that the driver of a car must obey. By im- plying that riding a bicycle t h e wrong way on a one way street is a trivial offense, you are degrading the status of the bike rider to something less than that of the motorist. As a user of the roads, I expect the status of a bike to be the same as that of any other vehicle on the road. -Carol Chaney Ann Arbor Bicycle League Sept. 21 yogurt To The Daily: LET'S GET one thing straight from the beginning: your editors, Parks and Robinson, know very little about college football. Letters: If the students ran well-executed football. Bo and his staff should be congratulated for producing a football style re- miniscent of the always exciting "Lombardi" Green Bay teams. Your attributing of Bo's heart at- tack to "anxiety resulting from an obsession with winning 'T h e Big One' " is an unfounded, per- sonal assault which should be re- tracted by your paper. Just be- cause the Michigan coaches have worked hard to build a first-class, top ranked offense and defense - it does not automatically make them or the players a bunch of "brutes." Even your reference to exces- sive "50 to 60 point margins" is also quite inaccurate. Michigan did not win a single game last year by 50 points or more (some much lower: vs. Mich. St. (10-0), vs. Purdue (9-6), vs. Ohio State (11-14), and vs. Navy this year (14-0) although many Michigan scores were lopsided as expected from a goody team. If Michigan football games are not "exciting" enough for y o u r editors, to have a "satisfying, hu- man experience," -may I respect- fully suggest that perhaps t h e y the Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN pect of catching and h a n d l i n g weird squirrels. IT MUST BE said, however, that he did rise to the situation. He hauled a ladder and some cages out of his panel truck and follow- ed me around the house. What hap- pened then was such a stew of tree climbing, yelling, beer in paper cups, and crisscrossing beams of light that I don't remember it very well. But the ferocious critters were finally caged and driven off for observation. I went to sleep with a profound sense of safety, and dreamed that Alfred Hitchcock was living in a sleeping bag in our attic. Mainie Heyn is a Daily staff writer. Ms. Fonda and Mr. Hayden to dramatize the plight of political prisoners held in S.'*Vietnam brings to mind the case a few years back when this same Ms. Fonda was in on the cover-up of similar mis- treatment of certain U.S. prisoners in N. Vietnam. The obvious ques- tion is, "Why the double stand- ard?" The only significant differ- ence in the two cases is the poli- tical affiliation of the oppressors. Thus Ms. Fonda appears less and less a kind humanitarian concern- ed with the sufferings of political prisoners around the world, a n d more and more as just another in- sincere political manipulator, a professional activist capitalizing on these sufferings for the ad- vancement of her political cause and her popularity. Come on now - enough with the crocodile tears. If she condemns (and rightly so) the mistreatment of'prisoners by Saigon, she should also expose and condemn t h e similar actions by Hanoi, Havana, and Peking, etc. If we are told to withdraw support from the form- er, she should also denounce the latter, and withdraw support in I :I T.-'V i 11 171'or