Page Four THE SUMMER DAILY Saturday, May 12, 97' PageFourTHE UMME DALY Sturdy, My ,197 TIME Summer Daily S smeisr Jdstier of S111 EMI(\ AN I)AILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, May 12, 1973 News Phone 764-0552 CarlnKing: 1, " i Discrimination 'AROLYN KING of Ypsilanti emerged Thursday night as perhaps the youngest crusader for women's rights. Twelve year old Carolyn decided that she was going to play in the Ypsilanti chapter of the "girls not eligible" Little League, and with the help of the Ypsilanti munici- pal government, did just that. Her successful defiance of official sexist policy now promises to pave the way for the entrance of more females into traditionally male- dominated sports. The Ypsilanti Little League was hesitant about vio- lating national "no-girls" rules, but Ypsilanti's mayor and council threatened to take away their field if King did not play. So Thursday night she walked twice and struck out once as her team went down to defeat 15-0. Not a spectacular performance, but surely no worse than her teammates. The national Little League now threatens to revoke the Ypsi chapter if Carolyn remains in uniform. Robert Stirrat, the L.L.'s national public relations officer, de- fends this stand by citing research that girls are physio- logically unfit to compete with boys. JT IS PERHAPS true that at present, the reflexes of most young girls are much slower than that of their male peers. Yet how can girls be expected to develop reflexes when they are encouraged to stay home and play with dolls while most boys are trained to be rough and tough Furthermore, it should be noted that there are many boys who are physically unfit for Little League baseball. It is unfair and discriminatory to disqualify any entire group of neonle from a certain activity based on tradi- tional beliefs about that group. The Little League has every right to disqualify those who prove unfit to play. But one's sex is insufficient proof. It might also be added that many of the boys on King's team as well as the opposing team Thursday night expressed opposition to having a girl play baseball with them. Indeed, it is because of these existing attitudes which the young boys hold in their formative years, that they must be exposed now to the attitude of equality for females. THE NATIONAL Little League can now either penalize the Ypsilanti chapter for its rule "violation," or can change their rules to permit qualified girls to play. We hope that they choose the latter alternative. Martha Mitchell stays true: A srange seise of honor By PETE HAMILL 'PHE DARK BLUE Lincoln Con- tinental with the New York plates numbered 779YSO was like some polished memory of the old days, as it carried Martha Mit- chell through the jammed and cla- morous traffic of West End Av. a week ago Thursday. She had been in cars like this before, rolling up to the West- chester Countrv Club to play bridge, or heading for the recep- Lions and the balls and the Inang- orations; all in the days when Billy Graham ran the prayer breakfasts, and her husband's agents were smashing the Bolsheviki on the streets of Washington, ad all the beady-eyed little California men still commanded respect. A 1-ong time ago. BUT NOW, on this muggy after- noon, Martha Mitchell was arriv- ing at the office of a lawyer, to try to keep her husband from going to jail. There were no druarolls, and no marital choirs; only a maul- ing crowd of reporters and camera- men, and housewives with baby carriages, and doormen, and honk- ing horns, all playing their small part in the seedy finale to al ong and squalid show. "Hey, Martha," someone shout- ed, "This way, turn this wayl" And: "Do you think your husband was part of the coverup?" A n d : "Will your husband be indicted?" And: "Are you gonna talk about the dirty things you mentioned last year?" And poor Martha Mitchell replied with a ghastly vacant grin, the face of a person who has stunned herself to avoid examining the contents of the 'abyss. She took off the dark glasses, and there was a scribiIe of terror in the eyes; the red hair seemed overrinsed and exhausted., Microphone cords were tangled in her legs, as she tried to nove up the steps of 232 West End Av. to make a deposition to Henry Roth- blatt, who is James McCord's law- yer. "Oh, my," she said. "Oh, my " She started up the steps, and there was a surge, as almost 200 reporters pressed forward, and she looked about to fall, a small dumpy woman in a powder-blue dross, cltching a worn family Bible. "I'm glad I don't have claustrophosia, ' she said, laughing a dry laugh, and then was pushed up again, into the Martha Mitchell hallway. It says a lot about the character of John Mitchell that he let his wife go through t h e t scene alone. Carlo Gambino wsoitld have had more class. AND SO Martha Mitchell went inside to an office, to tell what she knew, while declining "to discuss what she had learned in her hus- band-wife relationship." And in Washington and Los Angeles and probably a lot of other places, peo- ple were talking. Nixon's people. were calling reporters, pointing at each other, ratting on friends, as the biggest political scandal in the country's history continucd to enfold. And Martha Mitchell, loyal in an appealingly empty way, re- mained the best of them. She had so little reason to re- main loyal. They had made fun of her, they had knocked her down and drugged her. Anti here she was, staying true. She might he the only person who ever deferre'! to Richard Nixon who actually understands the word "honor." Have we ever had such a crew in power before?, All those slick ad- vertising men, those loveless champions of righteousness: t h e Deans, Magruders, Ehrlichmaes, Haldemans, Kalmbachs, and t h e rest. It would require a very suec- ial kind of jail to house such a bunch. It was John Mitchell and his boys who put the Berrigans in chains - literal chains - and act- ed as if they had sole possession of the True Faith. Life will be different in the can. YET EVEN NOW, with the news- papers looking like the Newgate Calendar, there js the feeling that we baveonly seen the tip of the iceberg. These are people, after all, who break into psychiatrist's offices; that's like bugging a con- fessional booth. Ehrlichman stood in silence, and Ron Ziegler retailed Nixon's lies, while some poor lag oaut in California was doing time for burglarizing Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office. An innocent man. A real man in a real jail, when the actual crime was com- mitted by the President's men. There is the feeling that Nixon cannot last, that he will have to resign or be impeached, or this Re- public will cease to function. Nixon is a graduate of the University of Murray Chotiner; he knew and practiced every slimy trick in the political bag on his way to power, and to ask us to believe that he did not take part in the Watergate cov- erup is to ask one act of faith too many. Pe YeHamil Cis a wf erfor ite Nesv York. Post. Copsycighti 1973 by the New York Post Corpora- tion. "rWHAT' IF NE 451C44 olt POLI17Iat. A'Yl~wuiM F- I Letters to Child care center To The Daily: AS PART OF the Tribal Coun- cil's development of cooperative programs the Children's Commun- ity Center was initinted to pro- vide free child care at theBlues & Jazz Festival and then at the People's Ballroom in 1972 prior to the burning of the Community Center. The Children's Community Cent- er can now afford to expand serv- ices beyond the presently small program. With the $15,000 received from Federal Revenue Sharing funds we are presently seeking to rent/lease/buy a building (church, house w/yard, land & portable classroom) which will enable us to obtain a license from the Dept. of Social Services. We will work on a program for approximately 20 children, 2 to 5 years, primarily for poor people. Anybody with information or as- sistance regarding a building, or people with young children wanting more information and an applica- tion form please write: C.C.C., c/o 1520 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104. -The Children's Community Center May 11 Boycott obligation To The Daily: THE REVERSAL of the historic "Honeywell Resolution" Monday night is both foolish and tragic. While U.S. bombers are blasting Indo-China without even the flim- siest legal excuse; while Honey- wel, Inc. is still producing weap- ons which are used illegally; while there is every reason to assume that Honeywell's cruel and indis- criminate weapons are mutilating Cambodian and Laotian civilians; while 200,000 civilian political pri- soners are still being held illegally and being tortured and starved in the cages of South Vietnam's pri- sons; the new City Council, domin- ated by "law and order' advocates, worries about propriety and pro- cedures. No court, not even the Interna- The Daily tional Court of Justice, has the pow- er to impose effective sanctions against countries, companies or in- dividuals who violate international law. But citizens of the United States have a clear moral obligation, es- tablished in the war crimes trials in Germany and Japan after World War It, to do what we can to in- stre compliance with international law. THIS IS A serious obligation. It implies that all of us are reson- sible for the modern weapons of horror which have been used by the U.S. government in Indo-China and that it is our responsibility to stop the production and use of such weapons if they are illegal. The Republican members of the City Council, by voting to reverse the "Honeywell Resolution", have shirked their responsibilities as cit- izens of Ann Arbor, of the United States and of the world. They have voted to continue the mutilation of the men, the women, the children and the land of Indo- China. They are cowering behind "propriety and procedures" to avoid facing the world's most im- portant moral and legal challenge. We hope that men and women of greater courage are leading Ann Arbor if the civilian population of this city is ever subject to the ter- ror of illegal mass bombing, if fleshettes and molten shrapnel and jagged hunks of plastic from il- legal, immoral bombs ever tear the flesh of Ann Arbor's children. We'll need more than excusos then, and we need more than ex- cuses now. -Interfaith Council for Peace May 7 Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc tors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. AN