TRE Summer Daily SIimmlenr Edi/11 7of TIlL MII( lIlG(AN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Thursday, May 31, 1973 News Phone 764-0552 Nixon won't talk IN REFUSING to testify on Watergate, President Nixon is showing the ultimate contempt for Congress, the judicial system, and the citizens of the United States. Ronald Ziegler, Nixon's Press Secretary, announced yesterday that the President will not permit himself to testify before any Congressional or judicial Watergate panels. Furthermore, this ban will apply not only to sworn testimony, but to informal statements and writ- ten responses to written questions as well. "We feel it would be constitutionally inappropriate," explained Ziegler. "It would do violence to the separa- tion of powers. The Constitution grants no immunity to a president. He may be summoned to court. B UT THE issue really isn't one of "separation of pow- ers" as much as it is getting the truth out into the open. How much did Nixon know? What was his part, if any, in the cover-up? It would seem that Nixon, as eager as he is to clear his good name for the history books, would be anxious to appear before an investigative committee, and clear up the matter perhaps once and for all. And yet, Nixon refuses, prefering instead to release at his leisure carefully prepared and worded statements about his role in Watergate. Unfortunately, most of his statements so far have lead more to questions than to answers. sHE PRESIDENT, as leader of this nation, owes it to the people of this nation to tell them the truth of his personal involvement in Watergate. Unfortunately, Nixon won't accept this. Instead, he will sit comfortably in his White House office behind a cloak of "national security," and remain secure in his knowledge that he has the support of the POWs and Julie Eisenhower. Americans for Democratic Action: Assuming new relevance By JAMES WECHSLER IN ORDINARY circumstances, the adoption of a resolution by a national convention of Amer- icans for Democratic Action calling for the resignation of Richard Nix- on, explicitly accompanied by re- jection of proposals for the simul- n IE tt le J taneous retirement of Spiro Ag- wanouhv efctos re fer C) p os g S J s oe S new, would have been the target of jest and incredulity. There would have been facetious refer- cl THE COMPREHENSIVE Health Planning Council of ences to the new "ADA-for-Ag- Southeastern Michigan (CHPC) will meet next new' legions. Wednesday to consider final approval for St. Joseph Mr. Nixon's political condition thatc Mercy Hospital's proposed move to Superior Township. no such reaction has been evident. t We urge the council to veto this proposal. While the ADA sessions held in e It is quite apparent that St. Joseph has not consid- Washington a weekend ago revoked y ered the needs of the general community in its decision no big headlines, neither did theye to move. This is despite the fact that such a condition No press and TV reports I have b was set forth by the CHPC, in conjunction with the seen suggested there was any- s Greater Detroit Area Hospital Council, which has al- thing extraordinary about the mor- b ready approved the move, ose reconciliation of this bloc d It was requested by the two groups that the compo- on Agnew succession. t w sition of St. Joseph's Community Advisory Board be so LISTENING TO the debate that d composed as "to reflect a cross-section of the people in preceded the vote, one hardly de- s the service area." tected any surge of ardor for Ag- However, we do not think that St. Joseph's advisory new. The view that decisively pre- th board, consisting for the most part of bank presidents, vailed was that - on the record D university presidents, physicians, and other such people already amassed - the case for c tulry represdents , acro-scion, on thi commun . p Mr. Nixon's withdrawal was irresis- e truly represents a cross-section of this community. tible. Indeed, the most serious di- c SHOULD THE move of St. Joseph be approved, the aver- vision occurred between those who r age Ann Arbor citizen may face a reduction in avail- heatedly urged the initiation of im- t able ambulatory care services such as emergency room peachment proceedings and those out-patient who were in effect calling for an d treatment and diagnostic and therapeutic uexpression of no-confidence in the services. Furthermore, moving costs may very well raise Chief Executive by both the coun- medical costs at St. Joseph's. try and Congress, on the ground l We oppose the move for these reasons, and hope that that he cannot retrieve the moral A CHPC will do likewise. damage his leadership has suffer- la ed. b But the delegates were persuad- e ed that no comparable indictment b could be drawn against a Vie President who, so far as anything EDNESDAY, Canada announced that it will pull its now revealed, was luckily isolated WEfrom a key role in the internal troops from the International Commission of Con- operations, of Campaign '72. trol and Supervision in Vietnam within 60 days. In so Mr. Nixon has shown no disposi- doing, Canada has become the first country to own up tion to accept ADA's counsel on T to the reality of the failure of Nixon's "peace with this or many other large matters honor". (although his detente with Peking Canada agreed to become a party of the post-war was prescribed in ADA resolutions supervision panel, believing that the Vietnam war was aWhat edmathe dea te addeci indeed over, as President Nixon has insisted so often. politically notable was the near-un- c As a result, the Canadians have lost one of its soldiers animity of the judgment that the in a helicopter crash, caused by "treaty-violators" in President's position has become t South Vietnam. And most importantly, they have found untenable, conclusthoug ae tan no peace to supervise. justment to the prospect of Ag- It was also announced yesterday that Henry Kis- singer and Le Duc Tho have agreed to a new peace plan James Wechsler is editorial di- which will really end the war this time. rector for the New York Post. And will the future bring a new, new, improved peace Copyright 1973, New York Post plan, if this one doesn't work? Corporation. new's elevation - and the probab- e strengthening of his bid for the 976 nomination. I FELT NO exuberance about iasage of the resolution; my own emptation would have been to et events evolve further. But a Fair report must acknowledge that mine was a very solitary position, and that the stand ultimately taken learly reflected a compromise with the no-impeachment group. Nor could the intensity of the entiment be ascribed to the an- ient adversary relationship be- ween Mr. Nixon and the ADA's lder statemen. There have been 'ears, when ADA conventions re- embled an alumni reunion of ve- eran liberals, intellectuals and la- orites rather than an activist as- emblage. I was struck this year by the presence of many younger elegates who had grown up in the political wars of the 60s, and, rho in many instances, had been rawn to ADA under the chairman- hip of Allard Lowenstein. It seemed equally clear w i t h .he election of able, forthright Rep. Son Fraser of Minnesota to suc- eed Lowenstein, that ADA has stablished itself as a major vehi- le for carrying on the battle for eform within the Democratic Par- y. That is the cause with which. Eraser, of course, has been most ramatically identified. IN THAT connection, one of the ess-publicized actions of this 26th DA convention was worthy of arger notice. It was the adoption. y a large majority - after spirit- d discussion - of a resolution asically challenging the current intellectual backlash on equal rights. It declared in part; "To measure the success of af- firmative action programs (to com- bat discrimination), goals and time- tables must be set. We support preferential inclusion where sys- tematic exclusion has occurred." Thus ADA reaffirmed its ties with such black leaders as t h e NAACP's Roy Wilkins and t h e Urban League's Vernon Jordan who have warned that the "anti- quota" cult has become a complac- ent cover for retrogression and re- treat in the civil rights battle. And it was Rep. Andrew Young (D- Ga.) longtime associate of Mar- tin Luther King, who delivered the convention's keynote address. POLITICAL FORTUNES and forecasts are more than ever sub- ject to the hourly bulletins from Washington. But ADA appeared to be defining itself anew as a coali- tion of resistance to the strategy of respectability proclaimed by the Coalition for a Democratic Major- ity and its fellow-travelers. Having survived the taunts of the faded "New Left", it is con- testing the politics of "moderate" accommodation and creating new bonds with the progressive insurg- ents of labor. Mine Workers presi- dent Arnold Miller was honored at its dinner; UAW vice oresident Doug Fraser and Jerry Wurf of the State, County and, Municipal Workers were among tiose on the scene. So, too, incidentally, were the two men who voted against the Gulf of Tonkin resolution -- Wayne Morse and Ernest Gruening. ADA may not be the wave of the future but it has assumed a new relevance to the present. Letters to The Daily More 'NRZ support '~o The Daily: THlE KIDS AT the Children's ommunity Center have been ask- ing what happened to WRZ com- munity radio. It is true they do ot understand completely w h at ommunity radio is, but they do miss certain aspects of the pro- ramming which directly affected hem. The Editorial Page of The Michigan Daily is open to any- one who w i s h e s to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. Here are some statements from the kids:; I'm missing Bob Rudnick. I miss getting to talk on the air. It was fun to go out to the radio station. We miss hearing stuff on the ra- dio about theaChildren's Commun- ity Center. As parents of the CCC, we col- lectively miss the good news cov- erage annoeicements. We are look- ing forward to hearing community radio back on the air. We hope we don't have a long wait. -Patricia Higgins for the Children's Community Center May 11