Aiwe £id in DaU4 Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan HRP responds to 'S un 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of stuff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1972 Biting md dog' MCGovern GEORGE McGOVERN'S apparent diffi- culties in the popularity polls here in the United States seem pale compared to his reception by South Vietnam - or, more correctly, by the South Vietnamese government. Take heed of the following analogous description of his policies broadcast recently over South Vietna- mese radio: "It is just because of these stupid pronouncements (by McGovern) that we are now faced with an onerous task, like catching a mad dog and putting him in a cage for mad dogs, or killing him by bashing his brains in, even though by doing so, we could be stained by the ani- mal's saliva or dirt." Not very neighborly things to say at all. It is clear that Nguyen Van Thieu does not think much at all of the sena- tor. But it is probably encouraging that McGovern has given him little reason to like him. McGovern's commendable refusal to support Thieu's dictatorship has won him the most hostile reception in the South Vietnamese government-control- led press of any American in recent memory. Referred to as the "Mad Dog on the American Political Scene," he has been called "mentally ill" and "an enemy of the South Vietnamese people." The Thieu government is so sure that McGovern will lose they see no reason not to attack him in the most vicious way possible. rVHIEU IS USING McGovern's underdog status as a chance not only to blast the antiwar movement. in the United States, but to reestablish his position with the Nixon administration. Nixon is seen aS a "known" quantity - he is known to support the Thieu regime, to be willing to continue American involve- ment in Vietnam and to have seemingly no compunctions about raining bombs on the North. Thieu 'knows that if Mc- Govern assumes power he loses his, and is consequently using every opportunity to extinguish any pro-McGovern sym- pathy in his own country. And where does the Nixon administra- tion fit in? The American Embassy in Saigon recently lodged a formal pro- test wth the South Vietnamese govern- ment concerning the broadcasts. The ad- ministration shares in Thieu's confidence about Nixon's reelection, and now wants to appear magnanimous in decrying the blasts on McGovern. IT SEEMS, however, that Thieu's voci- ferous outbursts are a bit misdirect- ed. Perhaps they should be directed at the American people in general, who by now are hopefully getting fed up with the grandstand ploys of a threatened dicta- tor. -EUGENE ROBINSON The following article was issued by the Washtenaw County Human Rights Party in response to articles appearing in the current issue of the Ann Arbor Sun de- tailing an apparent rift between the Rain- bow Peoples Party and HRP. THE RAINBOW PEOPLE'S PARTY h a s played a dual and sometimes confusing role in the HRP. There was never a formal "alliance" between the two parties. Instead, many RPP members participated in HRP as a caucus, while at the same time oper- ating as an independent group. It was from this latter perspective that the ar- ticles in the Sun were written. The HRP always accepts political differences within the party. However, since the RPP has es- sentially stepped outside the HRP, we feel it is important to state the differences between the basic RPP political philosophy and that which is stated In the current HRP platform. This in no way is meant to exclude or de-legitimize the views held by RPP within HRP discussions. Underlying the Rainbow People's Party criticism of the Human Rights Party are basic political differences. RPP's primary constituency is "freaks on the street, stu- dents in the public schools and universities, the rainbow merchants around town, rock. and roll bands, community service workers, [and] brothers and sisters who work for the honk one way or another in order to insure their survival." RPP believes in a youth and cultural revolution, one which is happening here and now and which in- volves smoking marijuana. HRP disagrees with this philosophy on several points. First, we feel that it is an age-chauvinist position, writing off the old- ers and elderly as useless to fundamental social change. While we recognize the poli- tical effect the legal prohibition of mari- juana has had on many people's understand- ing of the system, we do not see the act of smoking marijuana as particularly signi- ficant in itself. Though calling for its legis- lation, HRP has never advocated the use of marijuana. HRP sees social change arising primarily from political and economic forces. We see our constituency in terms of tis social class. Labor, organized and unorganized, and oppressed groups - women, racial mi- norities, gays and students - are the people in society whose interests and power give them the capability to achieve social change. We are a long way off from a democratic socialist society. It will take years of grass roots organizing through open democratic organizations such as HRP to bring it forth. Differences such as these can only be resolved by full and open discussion. We welcome that discussion. ONE OF THE MAIN POINTS in t h e Sun's article was HRP's failure to 'nom- inate a candidate for sheriff. What was nev- er made clear in the Sun was that the HRP convention on August 20 voted that the party should run a candidate for sher- iff if an acceptable one could be found. In this decision, the so-called homogeneous hard core of HRP was split. Two people who had considered running for sheriff withdrew from the race for financial and personal reasons before the August 24 caucus. This left the party with two people contending for the sheriff's nomination, neither of whom had even been to an HRP meet- ing. After interviewing the prospectice can- didates on August 24, the party voted almost unanimously that it had no acceptable can- didate and would therefore run no one. RPP threw their votes in - as a bloc - with the majority. The second main point of the Sun articles relates to the nature of the Human Rights Party. We are pleased to see that the RPP has stated its commitment to the HRP plat- form, program, and elected officials. If this is the case, then it makes little sense to withdraw support from an electoral effort which pushes for that same platform and program. Because arguments, debate, and nom- inating procedures were heated does not make HRP a "campus-radical debate so- ciety." It is important to have a thorough debate on nominees and issues, especially since state law forbids the HRP to nom- inate by primary and requires the "cau- cus" procedure. The law also requires a late-August caucus, when everyone is out of town! We do not propose to defend or attack any alleged "faction" in HRP, but it is im- portant to note for the record that no "fac- tion" prevailed during convention voting and that there were many occasions when the supposed "factions" did not vote as a bloc - e.g., the sheriff's race. In fact, all of the losing candidates and both of the people who considered but rejected run- ning for sheriff are or will be working hard for HRP. They are doing sodbecause they see the importance of building an open, democratic, radical Human Rights Party. LIKE ALL ORGANIZATIONS, HRP must be aware of and consciously fight elitist ten- dencies. No one can ever accuse us of try- ing to brush this problem under the rug after our caucus. It is to our credit, not our discredit, that the openness of our party underwent a thorough debate. And the fact is, despite a charge that HRP "regulars" run the whole show, that our present steer- ing committee has a majority of people on it who were not active more than a month in the party before the April election. Sim- ilarly, our candidate slate combines people with various degrees of experience in the party. The HRP runs its meetings by parliamen- tary procedure because we feel it is the best way in which the majority can rule and the minority have its rights. This sys-. Finally, there is some criticism of the party's perception of its constituency. Con- trary to what John Sinclair has said, Steve Burghardt, our state representative nomi- nee, did not say our party's constituency is "liberal Democrats." What he, and many tem can be oppressive for people who are rtecles not familiar with it, but the alternative is a kind of "shouting democracy" which is oppressive to those who have difficulty speaking out. It is not necessarily a "parlia- mentary trick" when someone loses a vote because of the will of the majority at a well-attended convention. In fact, when RPP felt it had been unfairly muzzled in its attempt to explain its position on the sheriff's race on August 19, the HRP con- vention overwhelmingly voted to suspend its own rules and allow for a lengthy RPP presentation on that issue. others who are concerned about keeping HRP open, said was that we must recog- nize that many people who have voted and might vote for HRP are in fact "liberal Democrats." That does not mean that we try to sound like liberal Democrats with a different name, but rather that we seek to persuade them in a reasonable way that the Democrat Party cannot meet their needs or provide for their concerns. Liberal Democrats are not the only peo- ple this party must win over. M a n y people in this country have only an un- directed bitterness and cynicism towards all manner of politics, gained through exper- ience with an inhumane system. Certain- ly large numbers of the student-youth com- munity are part of the force for change. But youth is by no means the only part. In order to bring about fundamental social change, we must seek to bring together all those victimized by the American social system and unite them to change that sys- tem. This requires a broadly based con- stituency and a party that is open, not ex- clusionary. That is the HRP position. TJiat is our candidates' position. It is time now to get down to the work of building the Human Rights Party, con- fronting the Democrats and Republicans, and changing the system they perpetuate. Let us have differences about how to do it, argue those differences in a fair, demo- cratic, comradely way, a d m i t where we differ, hail our agreements, and get on with the urgent tasks we face. I'l I The axing of Al Ackerman AL ACKERMAN is gone. The TV 4 sports commentator was canned on Friday after commenting on the expulsion for life of two American track stars from the Olympics. Discussing the banning of dash men Vince Matthews and Wayne. Collett for not standing at attention during the playing of the national anthem follow- ing their one-two finish in the 400- meter final Tuesday, Ackerman said, ... I can't feel the same sense of moral outrage as some of our viewers, with the m'urder of 11 Olympians still fresh in my mind." Ackerman was. fired apparently be- cause he "editorialized" too much in his daily presentation of sports news. He at times has been notably critical of the Detroit Lions' and Red Wings' manage- ment. 'Seemingly, Ackerman's r e f r e s h i n g comment on the Olympic expulsion was deemed too controversial and was the last straw for the WWJ-TV management. The station however, had no comment for the press and the tapes of the show and Ackerman's script are nowhere to be found. CKERMAN BROUGHT to the screen a human, perceptive look at the sports Today's staff: - News: Robert Barkin, Pat Bauer, Meryl Gordon, David Stoll, Marcia Zoslaw Editorial: Robert Schreiner Photo Technician: Rolfe Tessem world, avoiding standard recitations of scores and schedules. When Ackerman approached a contro- versial issue, he did it openly and said what he thought - rather than camou- flage hostility and bias in snorts and snickers while reporting news of a par- ticular bent. In this respect, Ackerman stood shoulders above the vast majority of TV commentators of both the sports and news variety. It is this that is most unfortunate about Ackerman's firing. Watching Al might not have been quite the same as experiencing Sonny Elliot, but it was not a lot of hyped up baloney either. -ARTHUR LERNER Chucle up for safety THE NATIONAL Motor Vehicle Safety Advisors Council has given GM President Edward Cole its first award for "outstanding contribution to automo- tive safety." Cole, known as the father of the Corvair, heads a company that has recalled over 17.7 million automobiles, or 54 per cent of its total production, for safety defects since 1966. -THE WASHINGTON MONTHLY September 1972j 4'ACKANDERO China thaw causes ch I*. WASHINGTON - W a r m i n g renew their pledges of support of ments are reaching North Chinese-American relations, which North Vietnam. nam. weathered the bombing and min- NI'. ing of North Vietnam's supply One strongly worded message -NIXON'S '76 STRATeu lines, are chilling again of support reportedly was signed While House aides tell us The interception of Chinese ship- by Chairman Mao Tse-tung him President Nixon will not an ments, according to a CIA report, self. Such a rare message from Spiro Agnew as his success has soured U.S. relations withg Mao has the force of being en- 1976 if the President is re-e mainland China. graved on the great wall of China. this fall. The President, say The report reveals that Chinese The CIA report, furthermore, sources, wants a wide open freighters are successfully unload- affirms our earlier report t h a t publican convention in 1976. ing an astonishing amount of sup- heavy U.S. bombing has failed to With this in mind, the plies at hidden anchorages up and halt the flow of supplies across dent intends to give nationa down the North Vietnam coast. the network of rail lines, roads and posure to several presidential The supplies are unloaded on trails that lead into North Viet- pects, including New York's small barges and boats, which nam. Nelson Rockefeller, ex-Tre smuggle the war booty to shore. The CIA report claims more t Secretary John Connally, c The ingenious Chinese, we have h oh epwa mr thich living czar Donald Rumsfeld learned, even use huge waterproof half of the war material, which United Nations ambassador G plastic bags to float supplies a- used to be shipped to North Viet- Bush. shore. nam before the bombing, is get- The President is not like ting through. Even the Air Force,emrc lira IlnosS To disrupt Hanoi's supply line, which has a vested interest in embrace liberal Illinois Se the U.S. Seventh Fleet has inter- Chuck Percy. But even if a I cepted some Chinese shipping. But monstrating its bombing raids are bandwagon begins to pick up such action, according to the CIA, effective, acknowledges that more steam, the President is expect has only prompted the Chinese to than a quarter of the former ship- remain above an election fig - i> J r f' 1~ . ~~ 1 l iet- that noint ,or in ected our Re- Presi- A ex- pros- Gov. asury ost of- d and eorge iv to nator P-ercv some ted to glht. Agnew playing WILL HE GET THE ANNOINTMENT? P1K GIll set I Letters to The Rainbow politics To The Daily: THE CURRENT Ann Arbor Sun, the Rainbow Party newspaper, in- cludes this inviting headline: "WELCOME HOME STUDENTS! ANN ARBOR IS YOUR COMMUN- ITY." Traditionally the Rainbow people have treated students as middle-class transients, not real people like themselves. Reading beyond (and behind) the h e a d- lines, an explanation appears. The RPP, which already controls a newspaper, other media channels, a rock band, two houses, a counter- cultural martyr (John Sinclair), a radical image and useful official connections, is breaking into poli- tics. Its expressed purpose is to take over the Human Rights Party, or wreck it! and for that they need support from the students they have always shown contempt for. Superficially, the Rainbow busi- nessmen criticize HRP for two rea- sons: (1) For allowing "ultra-left- ist intellectuals" to influence nomi- nations, and (2) For nominating at least one candidate who believes in appealing to liberal votes. T h e Sun does not explain how the Hu- man Rights Party can be too far left and too far right at the same time. They do say, though, that the "strong rainbow contingent" at the last nominating convention was defeated - a risk one has to take in dealing with a democratic private) is so corrupt that t x e y thought they could control h i m. As for ultra-leftism, this is a cur- ious charge to come from self- styled revolutionaries; these days even John Sinclair talks less about the liberating effects of rock and roll and more about the monopoly capitalist basis of American socie- ty. I think that puts him on the right track, but then why dues he attack the "ultra-leftists" w h o figured this out when Sinclair and friends were apolitical dropouts? The Rainbow Peoples Party must be understood as operating on two levels. One is the theoretical "counter-culture" level, the level on which we are assured that sex, drugs and cheap thrills not only liberate the individual, but demon- strate the necessity of overthrow- ing the State which denies us these sacraments. Many people, includ- ing myself, sympathize with some of this thinking even when we have' to criticize its shallowness. What- ever popular following the RPP has consists of people who sincerely believe in a freer, more humane approach to social relations. THE OTHER LEVEL - t h e Rainbow party as a business and as a political faction - has al- most nothing to do with the first. Here the tiny RPP elite is concern- ed operationally with whatever it takes to amass wealth and power. )aily Since in the short run there' a bigger pay-off in corrupting t h e system than in transforming it, the Rainbow leaders trade favors with any actual or potential power-hold- er - with a liberal Democratic mayor, with a predatory bail bondsman, or with a radical third party. The fact that this rarely yields real benefits for the people in general is just one reason f o r repudiating this approach. The remarkable thing is that the Rainbow clique has not been more often attacked for its crass hpo- crisy. In the issue of the Sun I noted, contradictions abound. On the front page, the Sun belatedly welcomes students into the com- munity; on page 10, they attack HRP for "running a candidate for County Commission in the 15th Dis- trict who has been out of town vacationing all summer while peo- ple in this community have been struggling to survive." But the Rainbow community which exclud- es students includes "the rainbow merchants around town, rock and roll bands, (and) community serv- ice workers" -- that is, the RPP leadership, their employees, and other petit-bourgeoise hip-fascist rip-off artists. I SUGGEST we should eliminate these corrupt elements from radi- cal democratic politics, because they are not radical, not democrat- 0 0 for activism By MIKE PEISNER Daily Guest Writer MICHIGAN STUDENTS now have more potential to effect change than we have ever had, since we now employ three full-time pro- fessionals whose sole job is to act in the public interest as determined by a student-elected board. We -can now direct our energy and research to gathering material for lawsuits, lobbying for new laws, public aware- ness campaigns, or however else change can be accomplished. PIRGIM - the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan - is the students' non-profit corporation set up to deal with issues like en- vironmental hazards, consumer fraud, discrimination, housing condi- tions, government-industrial closeness, etc. The PIRGIM professional staff in Lansing consists of: -Executive director Joe Tuchinsky, 35, veteran movement organ-. izer, co-author of "Guide to the Draft", founder and former head of the Midwest Committee for Draft Counseling; -Legal director Bob Hicks, 28, organizer of the Cambridge, Mass. anti-poverty law office, transportation team leader of the 1971 Nader study of land use in California, co-author of "Power and Land in Cali- fornia"; and -Research director Cary Africk, 26, systems analyst and social scientist with experience on both sides of industry. More professionals will probably be hired in January. PIRGIM can be the most powerful voice in the public interest in the state, if we students make it that. How can this be accomplished? " Research for credit - class papers, lab reports, seminars, inde- pendent study, theses, etc., in disciplines ranging from introductory economics to urban planning, chemical engineering to environmental education, etc. * Advocacy - lobbying, testifying, pressuring for change recom- mended in PIRGIM reports. * Coordination - keeping contact with student and community groups to avoid duplication and build issue-oriented coalitions, arrang- ing credit for PIRGIM class work, establishing new courses in the public interest. * Publicity - media releases, speaking, leafletting, telephoning. " Decision making - participating.in open meetings held Wednes- days at 7:30 P.M. at the PIRGIM office (1511 S.A.B.), and possibly running in campus elections for the Board of Directors. PIRGIM was formed in response to a crying need for a balance to the vested interests of certain industries and other small groups with a disproportionate amount of power used adversely. The idea is to ob- jectively expose and document issues, then use the tools the vested in- terests have employed so effectively, to overcome those same interests. 16,000+ students here, 11,000+ Wayne State students, 2,000+ Grand Valley State College students, and others have signed petitions calling r,-- " T t fX .. .. ,...L ....' - ... - . +, - + n w si 4t n e W- -W 1 PA