04e i ia DaUf Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Arab terrorists: ngon 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 enust be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1972 Year of the poll THE PRESENT Presidential campaign has again focused attention on the reliability of political polls. While the Detroit News, for instance, contended in its recent poll that Presi- dent Nixon "shows a sharp gain it Michigan from a (News) poll of one year ago," Carl Wagner, the chairman of Mc- Govern's Michigan campaign wielded yet another poll to claim that Nixon lost rather than gained ground. In the News poll taken statewide be- tween Aug. 28 and Sept. 1 Nixon led Mc- Govern X54 to 38 per cent. Wagner, how- ever, cited the results of a New York Times Magazine poll taken between July 24 and Aug. 11 in several states. The survey showed Nixon getting 57 per cent of the vote then, compared with a mere 25 per cent for McGovern. Therefore Today's staff: News: Tammy Jacobs, Judy Ruskin, Debra Thai, Paul Travis Editorial: Lindsay Chaney Photo Technician: Terry McCarthy while McGovern still appears the loser, the trend shows him gaining significant- ly. McGovern disputed as "unbelievable" a recent Gallup poll which shows 61 per cent of the youth voters favoring Nixon compared to 38 per cent for McGovern. This poll sampled about one-sixth the size of the usual sample taken, the Gal- lup organization conceded. WITH McGOVERN'S chances portrayed. as so dismal, in large part on the basis of these public opinion polls it is well to be -skeptical about the accuracy of such surveys. Previously the polls wrong- ly damned Harry Truman's Presidential chances in 1948. This year they rele- gated McGovern as far too unlikely to change an 'inevitable' Muskie nomina- tion. The polls so poorly mirrored public opinion that McGovern's strong New Hampshire primary showing shocked the reading public. In view of their past performances polls must not beataken as a decisive rendering of popular opinion. MARCIA ZOSLAW By TED STEIN rTHE PALTRY attempt on the part of the Organization of Arab Students in Sunday's Daily to justify the mur- der of 11 Israeli Olympians is a per- verse lesson in logic. For how can one justify as politi- cally expedient the cowardice that is terrorism - whether it takes the form of bombing an Israeli marketplace, killing civilians at Tel Aviv airport, or in this case, the murder of athletes' at the Olympics. The underlying cause celebre of the terrorists, of course, is the destruction of the state of Israel and as Nasser put it, "driving the Israelis into t h e sea." This solution, however, has grad- ually come to be rejected by the guer- rillas' host Arab countries in favor of the more realistic notion of coexist- ence. As both sides have moved closer to a position of negotiation, the guerrillas have found themselves caught in a vice - between the Arab countries, who are clamping down on their activities, and Israeli fire power. Arab countries are also wary of the reprisals that invaribly accompany the guerrilla terrorism, as the article points out. EVEN IF moral sanctions against murder fall on deaf ears among the terrorists, arguments advanced for the political expedience of terrorism de- vour themselves. The article states, for instance, that illogic emerge as what the article calls "a desperate tactic". The fact that the guerrillas are beseiged by both Arabs and Israelis has driven them to indis criminate murder. The fact that the terror is "desper- ate" may explain but cannot in any way justify, or excuse it. Indeed, the terrorists should be "sus- picious of the world community." For it was that community's pang of con- science after the genocide of World War II which was responsible for the creation of the state of Israel. ALL OF THIS does not mean that the Israelis are totally blameless. The fact that recent raids against guerrilla bases in Syria and Lebanon have taken the lives of scores of civilians cannot be condoned. It is, however, an under- standable "overreaction in the de- vastating terror-reprisal syndrome. Hopefully, the latest flurry of t b e Mideast war will not sweep away for long possibilities for peace. The ter- rorists havethe power to be the "spoil- er" in the Mideast - for as they be- come harder pressed their acts will become more desperate and outrageous. This will stimulate more reprisals, which unfortunately usually cannot be directed at the guerrillas alone. In any case, the cause of peace in the Mideast - which both the Israelis and the Arab countries have gradually come to see as the only viable solution - is not served by feeble attempts to explain away the terrorism at Munich. Ted Stein is a night editor on The Daily bigOyear "Today, the Olympics! Tomorrow, the Wordoi" the "deliberately planned and executed murders" contribute to "the solution of the Palestine problem, using the sole technique left open to them.". If the terrorist indeed means to de- stroy Israel then perhaps this is the only possible modus operandi - to per- iodically kill off a handful of Israelis. But as a feasible method for depopu- lating Israel this seems rather fruitless. Another argument which the article espouses is not even valid on face of it. It states that the Munich incident attempted to free "a portion (200) of the more tha 2000 political prisoners held in Israeli jails." According to the 'NY. Times Sunday, 535 Palestinian guerrillas have been imprisoned. When the veneer of reason is strip- ped from the arguments, the murders -1976... a Skipping ahead to, ThAgUeA 4 - ... -M *Vt A SIG- t - --.Y, By BILL ALTERMAN S INCE THE 1972 election has been this country's sole topic of discussion since mid-1971, and since I have a low threshhold of boredom, it is safe to say that the activities and outcome of the next eight weeks hold little interest for me. Being only 21 years of age I fully expect to be around when a President is elected in 2112 and I am more interested in who is elected then, than in who is elect- ed this November. Actually, the winner of t h is November's election seems a fore- gone ,conclusion and no amount of harping on the 'youth vote" is going to change it. A sizable por- tion of America thinks George Mc- Govern is a dangerous radical and unfortunately a good chunk of that portion istnormally Democratic. Since Nixon appears headed to a second term victory, and since he is such a blah personality, it would be much more interesting to spec- ulate on elections future. 1976 is a much better candidate for "decisive election of the half- century" honors. It appears likely that the '76 election will be a bat- tle between a liberal on one hand and a conservative on the other. The trends of 1972, particularly as evidenced at the conventions point to a collision unlike any since Roosevelt and Hoover in 1932. FOR THE DEMOCRATS, this year was the year the decision was finally left to the people, or at least those willing to vote in the primaries. For better or for worse the Democrats have let the genie of participatory democracy out of the bottle and the far left appears to have proved most adept at cap- turing it. Though not impossible, it will be exceedingly hard for the oldliners to regain anything ap- proaching their former stature in the party. Conceivably, George Wallace could be the man to beat in the 1976 primaries, but only if busing or some emotional question accru- ing from integration is a potent is- sue in 1976. Oterwise 1976 could very well narrow down to a choice between George McGovern or Ted Kennedy. For McGovern it may well de- pend on how bad he does this November. Anything approaching the Goldwater debacle of 1964 would foreclosedanyeattempt in four years. However, a closer battle, maybe 55 percent to 45 percent, c o u 1 d leave McGovern a viable candidate in '76. Ted Kennedy's position is much more delicate. Should Mc- Govern choose to run in four years, much of Kennedy's natural consti- tuency, the young and intellectual elite, would be lost to the South Dakota Senator. Not even Ken- nedy knows whether or not he would engage in such a squabble. Young Ted in 1972 made no motion whatsoever toward the nomination. Only 41, Kennedy knows his time will come, and with Chappaquadick only three years distant, 1972 was not his year. SHOULD McGovern not run in '76, Kennedy would still not have the nomination automatically. The South will never go for him and Chappaquaddick will never d i e But if the senior Senator f r o m Massachusetts can keen his face clean for four ears his chnces for the nOmwoinario wOld 'peor excellent Urlike McGovern K\ Of nedy co';ld get the smnort of Big Labor and the pirty bosses ,d the other disench'tel groidns destin- ed to veer to Nxon this yCar. Which m cns that 1976 might conceivably be the year the Demo- crats hold a quiet convention while the Republicans take the oppor- tunity to sgiabble For, if the stee- ed boredom of three weeks a