Page 4-Sunday, January 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighiv-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 93 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan More guns, less credibility The Friday Night Massacre D URING THIS WEEK of President Carter's State of the Union mes- sage many critics have castigated the Administration for its lack of substan- ce. Certainly in its first year Carter has left unfulfilled promises made to the American people in the heat of his cam- paign for the Presidency. But now it appears that in at least one specific area, the budgetary ap- propriations for defense, Carter is not only not fulfilling a campaign promise, he is plotting a course of action in direct conflict with statements he made during the campaign. The budget that Carter will send to Congress on Monday will include an in- crease in military spending overall and an increase in arms sales. This despite the fact that Carter the campaigner pledged to end the United States' role as arms salesman to the world. In fiscal year 1979 this country will supply the global community with more foreign aid in the way of outright grants to be used for military spending, supply them with more weapons outright, and train more foreign soldiers on American soil than in fiscal year 1978. The Administration's reasoning for its failure to reverse the ballooning trend in defense appropriations is weak at best. , First we are told that many of the arms deals were "on paper" before the people -from Georgia started living in the White House. IF.A REDUCTION in arms sales to foreign powers was truly an inten- tion of the new Administration, then the benefactors of our military technology would have been informed that, no mat- ter what their order of arms was a year ago, there would be smaller servings for everyone the next time around. Another bit of illogic presented by the Administration for our consumption involves provisions for increased arms sales to Middle East nations. By this, Carter doesn't reflect his own highly- publicized confidence in an eventual Arab-Israeli settlement. Boosting the arms shipments to the area while at the same time calling for a permanent peace is contradictory. The newest outlays of huge military grants to nations worldwide indicate a trend toward increasing arms sales, not toward reducing them. If Carter had intended to blow the defense budget up even more than his predecessor, why didn't he just tell us so? No doubt the answer is related to the fact that Carter had to convince us to elect him to the position he occupies now. EDITORIAL STAFF ANN MARIE LIPINSKI JIM TOBIN Editors-in-Chief LOIS JOSIMOVICH...................Managing Editor GEORGE LOBSENZ ..................Managing Editor STU McCONNELL....................... Managing Editor JENNIFER MILLER....................Managing Editor PATRICIA MONTEMURRI ............... Magaging Editor KEN PARSIGIAN........................ Managing Editor BOB ROSENBAUM ...................... Managing Editor MARGARET YAOanagMaaging Editor SUSAN ADES JAY LEVIN Sunday Magazine Editors ELAINE FLECTCHER TOM O'CONNELL Associate Magazine Editors STAFF WRITERS: Susan Barry, Richard Berke, Brian Blan- chard, Michael Beckman, Lori Carruthers, Ken Chotiner, Eileen Daley, Lisa Fisher, Denise Fox, Steve Gold, David Goodman, Elisa Isaacson, Michael Jones, Lani Jordan, Janet Klein, Garth Kriewall, Gregg Krupa, Paula Lashinsky, Marty Levine, Dobilas Matunonis, Carolyn Morgan, Dan Oberdorfer, Mark Parrent, Karen Paul, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Martha Retallick, Keith Richburg, Diane Robinson, Julie Rovner, Dennis Sabo, Annmarie Schiavi, Paul Shapiro, R. J. Smith, Elizabeth Slowik, Mike Taylor, Pauline Toole; Sue Warner, Jim Warren, Linda Willcox, Shelley Wolson, Tim Yagle, Mike Yellin, Barbara Zahs, Jim Zazakis Mark Anarews, Mike Gilford, Richard Foltman Weather Forecasters SPORTS STAFF KATHY HENNEGHAN ..................Sports Editor TOM CAMERON......... ..Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIS . .Managing Sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN .......... Associate Sports Editor JOHN NIEMEYER.....,............. Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Paul Campbell, Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt, Jeff Frank, Gary Kicinski, Rick Maddock, Brian Mar- tin, Bob MiHer, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Cub Schwartz, Errol Shifman and Jamie Turner. By ROD KOSANN The word came over the news wires Friday evening. Acting for President Carter, Attorney Gen- eral Griffin Bell had lowered the political axe on David Marston, U.S. Attorney in Philadelphia. At that point Mr. Marston has be- come the first political casualty of 1978, and the same people who brought you the Bert Lance af- fair, and the Jody Powell smear of Charles Percy, are now pre- senting to the public the "Friday Night Massacre." As U.S. Attorney in the city of brotherly love, David Marston vigorously pursued wrongdoers in high places. Appointed eigh- teen months ago by President Ford, he has since brought down three prominent Pennsylvania politicos - two of them Demo- crats and one a Republican. Since the task of a U.S. attorney is os- tensibly that of finding dirty han- ds where there should be clean ones, it seemed that Mr. Marston was doing a splendid job. Unfor- tunately, splended jobs don't count for much where politics is concerned, and for that reason Marston has been handed his walking papers. THIS WHOLE AFFAIR first came to the surface last week at President Carter's news confer- ence. When first questioned about Mr. Marston, the President de- nied having heard the name until it started to appear in the press. However, upon further question- ing Mr. Carter recalled a phone conversation he had with Repre- sentative Joshua Eilberg, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, in which Mr. Eilberg requested that the removal of Mr. Marston be "expedited." Mr. Carter in turn relayed the message to U.S. At- torney General Griffin Bell, and inquired "why it was taking so long" to find a replacement for the Philadelphia attorney. What President Carter and Mr. Bell may, or may not, have known at the time was that Eil- berg was under investigation by Mr. Marston's office. The alleged wrongdoing involved kickbacks that Representative Eilberg's law firm might have received from a Philadelphia hospital which had won a $65 million fed- eral grant. The President and At- torney General first denied any knowledge of such an investiga- tion, but late this week the Jus- tice department confirmed that the probe was indeed in progress. THE REASON CITED by the Carter administration for, Mr. Marston's replacement 'is that the administration is seeking U.S. attorneys with a substantial amount of trial background. Mr. Marston has been recognized as a capable administrator, but Mr. Carter claims that "he had never had -any prosecuting experien- ce." Nontheless, Mr. Marston's lack of skill has not prevented him from compiling a record that can only be termed outstanding; and as one reporter covering the Justice Department noted, the U.S. attorneys appointed by Car- ter for Las Vegas and Los Angeles have "little or no such experience." Why then the sacking of Mr. Marston? Pure and simple, the reason is politics, and whether or not the term political (and pos- sibly criminal) coverup might apply to the whole'affair will de- pend on the public's learning ex- actly what Carter and Bell knew of the Eilberg investigation. At- torney General Bell flatly admit- ted to political machinations when he said, "the in party right now, happens to be the Demo- crats. They can get in to com- plain probably faster than any other party right now. That's the system we have. So,.there are a lot of complaints about Mr. Mar- ston. They say we ought to have a Democrat as U.S. attorney in Philadelphia." Undoubtedly, some will say that Mr. Bell is right and "well, that's politics." However, it is this type of politi- cal patronage, which gives little regard to merit or achievement, that Mr. Carter has been deriding ever since he entered the public spotlight. WHILE CAMPAIGNING for the Presidency, Mr. Carter prom- ised that the U.S. Attorneys would be selected "strictly on the basis of merit without any con- sideration of political aspects or influence." It was these sort of pledges that got Mr. Carter elec- ted, as he rode into office on a reputation of honesty, integrity and clean-political dealings. The removal of David Marston goes against the grain of this image, and leaves Mr. Carter's own foot- prints on his Presidential tongue. Making things even thornier for Mr: Carter is- a statement by Gene Zack, Representative Eil- berg's. administrative assistant. Mr. Zack said that the Philadel- phia Congressmen, all Demo- crats, believe Mr. Carter "owes them something" for their aid in .the Presidential campaign, and that "we have often reminded the White House of that help." To make good on that debt Mr. Mar- ston has been made the sacrific- ial lamb, but one can only wonder if justice is the full price being ex- tracted. Had President Carter retained Mr. Marston, all charges of "po- litical favoritism" and "cover- up" might have been avoided. He ; didn't. Consequently, he will be forced both to hear those charges and to answer them. After his Friday meeting with Mr. Bell, Marston quoted the Attorney General as saying that he was not "inclined to reconsider" the de- cision. Whether or not the Ameri- can people are "inclined to re- consider" the question of Mr. Carter's integrity will prove a wholly different matter. " Rod Kosann is a frequent contributor to the Daily's Editorial page. Editorials which appear without a by-line represent a con- ' ' 's editorial board. All other editorials census opinion of the Datly 9 as well as cartoons, are the opinions of the individuals who. sub- X. them. i .LOOKING BACK, THE WEEK IN REVIEW writing good' T F JOHNNY can't write by 1986, it 1 won't be the fault of this University. LSA faculty members approved last week a college-wide English compo- sition requirement that will soon re- place the present one-term composition class that for years has been the maxi- mum writing requirement for Univer- sity students. The class, which writers slept through and non-writers dreaded, will soon be only part of a larger pro- gram that will include an upperclass writing requirement for all LSA stu- dents as well as an assessment of writ- ing skills for all incoming students star- ting with the class of 1982. For those who already know how to turn a phrase with commas and colons in tact, the new program offers a re- spite from composition training: if the assessment shows a student can write, he or she can skip comp class alto- gether. If, however, the assessment shows the student can't, there's a 1-4 credit tutorial in store for him/her, fol- lowed by the traditional freshman com- position class. The upperclass requirement still hasn't been specified by the faculty bo4rd who voted the new provisions in, brit possibilities include the creation of waiting courses within all LSA depart- ments or the integration of writing skills into existing course material. The decision of the LSA faculty - de- As one LSA sophomore put it after the Monday decision: "People should be able to write." ticked off THE UNIVERSITY'S eight Regents are usually a calm, respectable crew. They sit back and yawn as Rob- ben Fleming and his vice-presidents lay Health, Education, and Welfare. HEW's Office of Civil Rights had threatened to have federal funds pulled from the University's coffers if admini- strators didn't make assurances that they would turn around their affirma- tive action record. A couple of Regents, most notably Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) and Sarah University's crummy affirmative ac- tion record, but on the federal gov- ernment for trying to enforce its ow guidelines. The Office of Civil Right report said the University still pays men more than women in most staff positions, doesn't keep track of its af- firmative action programs well, and has demonstrated a lack of support for Affirmative Action Director Gwen Baker. The Regents have sat quietly through month after month of meet- ings, never worrying about all that; but when a challenge to their authority comes up, watch out. Well, what the hell. Power's husband isrunning for the U.S. Senate, and Baker probably will be soon. Nothing like a Regent on the run. " the cutting edge t WAS CLEAR last week that the era of tight money for the Univer- sity is only deepening. Vice-'resident for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro announced on Monday that admini- strators will have to pare $2 million out of various University programs be- cause of a large and unexpected deficit. The main reason is a curious one: students are apparently electing fewer credit hours than normal, and thus pay- ing less tuition. Enrollment is down only slightly; it is the actual number of classes being taken that has caused the rl,. ~ controversies may be cleared up soon. A Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) judge has been ordered to hear arguments and decide whether the Graduate Employes' Or- ganization (GEO) is really a union or just a bunch of uppity graduate stu- dents. Until now, nobody has really known for sure. Even since the union's birth in 1974, University officials have muttered that GEO is not a legal union, that most of the work they do is an integral part of their status as students, and that they therefore have only a questionable right to organize. When he was faced with the same issue in August, Judge Shlomo Sperka said the issue had been resolved in 1973, when the Michigan Supreme Court ruled that University Hospital interns and residents were both students AND employes, and thus entitled to organize as a union. But last Thursday MERC ordered Shlomo to reconsider, and the University is now rubbing its hands in anticipation. The order by MERC "is just what we asked for," said Univer- sity labor lawyer Bill Lemmer. If Shlomo decides GEO lacks the right to exist, it's a little piece of paradise for the administration - goodbye union, goodbye troublesome negotiations, goodbye yearly pay raises, goodbye barrassingly low. In fact, the only sur- prise in'the report was that minority enrollment, including black student enrollment, had dropped even further from the elusive fen per cent mark. ' According to the report issued from the vice-president's office, black-". enrollment at the University.- plunged from the 7.2 per cent mark of 1976 to the 1972. low of 6.6 per cent. Likewise, minority enrollment on a whole fell'.: y from 10.2 per cent in 1976 to 9.5 per cent last fall. This report, with its annual disap- pointment, annually brings to mind the Black Action Movement (BAM) strike". of 1970, and its sister, BAM II of 1975; as well as the promise that grew out of t; those protests : the University, to offset °, the decline in minority enrollment, would provide by 1973 enough financial aid funding to allow a black enrollment level of ten per cent. The money was provided, but ad- ditional problems-including a strike by Detroit school teachers the year of-- ter the University's promise which shut down city public schools in the fall, th- warting University recrutiment effor- ts-offset much of the effect of the fun-.r. ds. Many have charged that the Univer- sity has not tried hard enough to attract , ------- __.__ . . _ ._. ._. ., r.. _ .. ,,_ ,---- - -- -_ ---