off the record Elle t t iaxe 43 t Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan ll, Probig a murder near Capitol Hill 420 Maynard St:, Ann Arbor, Mi. 481 04 News Phone: 764-0552 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1973 Citing national interest' .. . HE "NATIONAL INTEREST" has be- come a ubiquitous term. Every time the President is asked to justify his refusal to release tapes of his Watergate conversations, the term seems to find its way into his response. It happened again Wednesday, when Nixon obliquely rationalized breaking the law so long as it is done in the "national interest." He has justified his approval of a 1970 intelligence plan which included bur- glaries and opening of mail in the same terms. rHE SECRET BOMBING of Cambodia in 1969 and 1970 had to remain se- cret, he says-it was in the national in- terest. John Ehrlichman, the President's for- mer top domestic advisor, found the bur- glary of a psychiatrist's office perfectly justifiable-it was done in the interests of national security. National security and the national in- terest are terms which are inviolate. They cannot be attacked; to'do so would be to turn them into partisan issues. Whenever the national interest is in- voked as the justification for a policy,, we are told that criticism of it must end and we must unite behind whatever the policy may be. As Henry Kissinger said last month, "the foreign policy of the United States is not a partisan matter. It concerns the whole nation." THE PRESIDENT, it seems, would like to extend that concept to his Adminis- tration as a whole Defense spending, Nixon said at his latest press conference, should not be cut. "We can have the finest domestic pro- grams in the world but it isn't going to make any difference if we don't have our freedom and if we're not around to enjoy them," he said. This is not merely another appeal to that familiar phrase, national security. It is a renewed call to the anti-com- t +UMI! Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief ROBERT BARKIN..................Feature Editor DIANE LEVICK ....,..........Associate Arts Editor DAVID MARGOLICK ...........Chief Photographer MARTIN PORTER . . ....... . .........Magazine Editor KATHY RICKE ..............Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH .. .....Editorial Director GLORIA SMITH ..... ...................Arts Editor CHARLES STEIN ......................... City Editor TED STEIN .. ........ ........ Executive Editor TODAY'S STAFF News: Bill Heenan, Eugene Robinson, Charles Stein, Rolfe Tessem, Rebecca Warner Editorial Page: Zachary Schiller, Eric Schoch, David Yalowitz Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: David Margolick . munism and the overblown fear of a Soviet attack we have suffered from since World War If. National interest and national security are terms which deserve careful scrutiny. When national leaders implicitly or ex- plicitly justify a policy on the basis that it furthers the national interest, we should investigate to see just what the national interest is. SUCH AN IMPLICIT justification came at the President's Wednesday press conference, when Nixon said he will veto a bill which would raise the minimum wage to $2.20 an hour. It would increase both unemployment and inflation, he said, and would thereby run contrary to the national interest. Before we accept such an argument- or any supposedly based on what is good for the nation as a whole-we should look closely at the facts. In this case, we might very well agree with Sen. Harrison Williams (D-N.J.) when he says that a Nixon veto is likely to "perpetuate a legally sanctioned class of working poor.,, AND RATHER THAN blithely accepting the argument that an increased mini- mum wage would bring higher prices, and thus run counter to the national interest, we might do well to look at historical precedents. The "national interest" can be a dan- gerous term. It only becomes dangerous, however, when it replaces logic and serves as a reason in itself. ... for burglary THE INDICTMENT of former Presiden- tial domestic adviser John D. Ehr- lichman and three other former White House aides should bring little surprise in view of Ehrlichman's testimony be- fore the Senate Watergate hearings. Ehrlichman admitted in July that he had knowledge of a planed "covert" op- eration to obtain files from a psychia- trist who had treated Daniel Ellsberg. The former adviser denied knowing of the burglary itself, carried out by a White House "plumbers" team in September, 1971. Ehrlichman's defense of the break-in as a national security operation permis- sible under the powers possessed by the Presidency has implications far beyond the burglary itself. LIKE THE ISSUE of President Nixon surrendering his taped Watergate conversations, the burglary case goes to the roots of Presidential power. There is only one answer to the ques- tion of whether White House employees should be allowed to break into citizens' homes and offices for "national security" purposes: They should not be permitted to do so. By TED STEIN WASHINGTON - WHY did it happen here? That thought comes to you when you stand in front of a house where a murder has been committed a few hours before. Why is a police seal pasted across this particular lock. If you're close enough to read the warning to keep away, you're probably close enough to have heard the victim's screams (if there were any). Murder is commonplace in the city. You read about it all the time, but you never really feel it. As the laterafternoon sun fades behind the grey-brick townhouse where Diane Zilinski, 24, was murdered, it can be felt. The white paint on the house's window frames is peeling. The patch of grass nearby is long and weedy. The people returning to their homes close by are strangely silent. There is no-reason for death here on this block of well-kept townhouses in Washing- ton's fashionable and historic Capitol Hill district. Only that a psychopath hid in a darkened apartment and waited. THE UNFORSEEN act of a madman has changed the lives of people who knew Diane Zilinski. And as a summer reporter for the Washington Star-News, it is my job to talk to some of them. There is an awesome unreality in such a task. In a few hours a person's life takes shape and the city will have a biography of sorts. It is the only one that will ever be writ- ten. Chasing murders is where reporters are tested. You find yourself doing impossible things that cannot be done if you think about them. You're expected at six in the morning, for instance, to climb the steps of a tenement in search of parents and neighbors of a 13 year-old girl raped and Back fro By JAMES WECHSLER dissemb AND WHAT is new since last we cord. met? Returning from an Aug- ust holiday one would like to re- THE P port the discovery of some new, sion, of cheerful perspective on the national bodiane condition. You will find no such freely a reassurance here. If these weeks ticed on of flight and meditation have pro- speech t duced anything, it is the sense that Wars - our predicament is graver than lected f many are willing to acknowledge orations and that things are far more likely with fla to deteriorate rather than improve But th in the forseeable future. tionalys What emerged more clearly than occasion ever during an interval of libera- justify t tion from daily deadlines and in- ted duri stant commentary is the portrait August2 of a leaderless, floundering coun- Mr. N try. The crisis in our political in- country stitutions is rendered more omi- whether nous by spreading economic an- warned archy and the bankruptcy of policy- that co makers in that realm. Adminis The increasingly remote rela- tion. Th tionship between the country and who bel its two top men was epitomized in has tes a caption under separate photos of who do) President Nixon and Vice President knows t Agnew on page one of last Sun- tape of day's Times. It cryptically report- between ed that "the White House refused to could he permit photos" of their meeting. question The P THUS AMERICANS were left could h to wonder whether Mr. Nixon had about Jo decided that photographic proxi- es to fed mity to his Vice President would ing thel further tarnish his own withered ers on t image or whether Mr. Agnew pre- that Byr ferred to seem to be going it alone. Ehrlichn No doubt both camps will soon seriously leak their private versions of the have bee affair. Meanwhile, we are reduced been an to the speculation usually associat- Byrne w ed with shadowy power struggles his FBI in the Soviet and Chinese hierar- chies, or in our native underworld. EVEN The only useful information re- veterant leased about the conference was premise that they had not discussed the pos- ly on tr sibility of an early Agnew resigna- bate see tion. In the present atmosphere that still foo statement inevitably strengthened enoughc the suspicion that this was the persuade central topic of discussion and per- related i haps contention. iness ofi For the moment, at least, Agnew But th can still legitimately invoke the designati presumption of innocence in the Secretar tawdry matters to which his name contextc has been linked. Mr. Nixon's case desperat is quite a different matter. For It did n< regardless of the evidence con- have se tained in the tapes he has so versy ab steadfastly suppresssed, he is al- in some ready plainly guilty of massive from Ca brutally murdered the night before. What was she like? What were her hobbies? Was she a good student? Somehow the questions are asked, and from contorted, tearful faces, answered. This is not one of the times you have to, tell people why you're talking to them. The news has traveled swiftly, and they are prepared. On other occasions you are the first to tell them. Tell them their lives have been shattered. Sometimes they break down, and won't say anything. Usually they speak, if only in a barely audible whisper. "I looked in and saw her wallet and credit cards out on the kitchen counter, so I knew something was wrong," he relates. Then, with a landlord who has a key, he enters the apartment and finds her lying against the stairs leading to the second floor, "covered with towels very neatly ar- ranged so that only her feet were show- ing." MAKE NO MISTAKE about this one. It's grisly. The kind of murder that makes homicide detectives on the metropolitan po- :. .}::.Y..,'".: .;r, .}: ;.v i":."<:v:::.. :.v::. :: :: ": :" "What was she like? What were her hobbies? Was she a good student? Somehow the questions are asked, and from con- torted, tearful faces, answered." But always, there is a long pause that tears at you. THE NEIGHBORS of Diane Zilinski aren't very helpful on this day. They describe her as a "cheery, but quiet" person, "a very gracious lady." Most of them don't know her at all, and are only shocked that a murder has happened on their block. "Why this is the first time in a long while that there's even been a crime on the street," says a tanned women in a print dress. Much of the gut information for the story comes from Diane's employer, Berkeley Bennett. He found the body and tells what the police won't. His voice is unemotional unlike most of the others. He says he reached his administrative assistant's house about 11 a.m. after she failed to show up for work, and went around to the back, where the door was cvhained, but slightly ajar. lice force impossible to deal with. They like to say,'"It's been quiet all around," and today they can't. Murder powerfully. drives home the reality that the police are helpless when it comes to protecting a large city from the ravages of maniacs. When asked whether the victim was sex- ually molested, they give an unheard of "no comment". It means that the body was badly mutilated. Two days later a Marine stationed at the barracks across the street from the crime is charged with first degree murder. The accused, Lance Cpl. Charles Harman, 21, served as a barracks guard for five months. On the morning the body was found, he played golf with a fellow Marine guard. "From what I know it seems im- possible," Harmon's friend told me. "He couldn't, have played golf as well as he did." Harman played his round close to par. Too much of working with tragedy only numbs you. Al Lewis has been the Wash- ington Post's police reporter for more than thirty years. He comes into the press room at the police headquarters with his thermos and brown-bagged' lunch, looking more the part of janitor than reporter. 'His white shirt is open at the collar, and his pleated grey slacks don't fit. And his face is as rumpled as his clothes. After thirty years, it's all the same. So Al can eat a sandwich with one hand and write a story about an ax murder with the other. x SLOWLY THE STORY about the pretty, brown-haired woman falls into place-she had worked as an administrative assistant for a trade union, a legal secretary, and a stenographer for the FBI. But it is the people who worked with her in the Hexagon Club, a local drama group that raises money for charities, that knew her best. Diane had worked on the production side of shows for about five years. "She was a great, big-hearted person who never asked anything of anybody else," says a club member. The club's president, Richard Morgan says, "She- was a person who really loved life and people, I have no idea of what we're going to do without her." What he says next seems to sum up the feeling I had by the- end of the day. "The saddest thing is that you read a story in the papers about this and you never associate it with the person, you never say, "Hey, that must have been an outstanding person.' Here the person was outstanding." Ted Stein is Executive Editor of -The Daily. Y I S r Ming - on vacation:. Little ,changed the public re- MOST FLAGRANT confes- course, involves the Cam- expedition. Mr. Nixon now dmits the deception prac- his countrymen; in his to the Veterans of Foreign an audience carefully se- or one of his rare public - he boasted about it ag-waving banality. he tattered banner of "na- security" he waved on that ican hardly be invoked to he bland fraud he commit- ng his press conference on 22. ixon told the press and the that day, for example, that L. Patrick Gray had him of deeds being done uld "mortally wound" his tration was an open ques- ere are, he said, "some ieve" Gray spoke as he tified; there are others not. In fact, Richard Nixon he answer. It is on the the recorded conversation Gray and himself. How dare to suggest that the defied clear resolution? resident also said t h e r e ave been nothing sinister hn Ehrlichman's approach- eral judge Matt Bryne dur- Ellsberg trial because oth- .e White House staff knew ne was meeting with both man and himself.' Was he contending there would en no public shock if it had nounced at the time that as being interviewed about directorship? MANY of Mr. Nixon's apologists now accept the that he tramples reckless- uth. The only serious de- ms to be whether he can A enough of the people of the time - or at least them that Watergate and nfamies are not "the bus- the people." ere is no end in sight. His ion of Henry Kissinger as y of State was, in the of his press conference, a e public relations p 1 o y . ot steal the show. It may rved to stimulate contro- bout Kissinger's complicity of the dirtiest business - imbodia to wiretapping. J .I BTwVkArABOUi ~r WA? 'ATI I ' 10 "'U AP Photo "Waving the flag of national security" One comes back convinced the storm will not fade away, even though there may be lulls, and that it is time Congress began to take seriously proposals for alter- ing our system of succession through a route more acceptable than impeachment. One proposal now being drafted would call for a Constitutional amendment permit- ting Congress, by two-thirds vote, to oust an incumbent and set up a new national election within 90 days of such action; It will be explored in detail in atlater col- umn. While this formula, or some variation thereof, would offer no overnight remedy for the present numbness and frustration, it could become a major issue in the 1974 Congressional election. It c o u 1d even make those contests a national plebiscite embodying an unmistak- able message. James Wechsler is editorial page editor for the New York Post. Copyright 1973, the New York Post Corporation. per. _ _. , _,,,,,,,, y + x : _ , . _ ' n" , ' !s '. ® ... ., . r. Executive privilege at the mountaintop i By DICK WEST WASHINGTON - Ancient scrolls, some of which appear to con- tain variations of biblical narra- tives, continue to turn up in the Dead Sea area. At the moment, I understand scholars are trying to piece togeth- er a crumbling parchment + h a t "These consultations must necessarily be held in strict confidence, he continues. Otherwise, his ad- visers would riot feel free to speak frankly and without fear of their points of view being miscon- etr.r.v "9 - But Mozus, or Mozis, refuses to reveal the nature of the confer- ence, citing executive privilege. H° explains that the chosen lead- er of a group of people must seek advice and counsel from a great variety of. souirces, including Divine Guidance. These consultations m'Ist neces- breach of confidentiality and that the contents of the tablets should therefore be made public. Mozus, or Mozis, rejects the de- mand, insisting that the tablets were inscribed for historical pur:- poses'. He says different people reading the tablets might interpret them in different ways. !-