Page Fou r THE SUMMER DAILY--MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 9, 1973 Page Feur THE SUMMER DAILY-MICHIGAN DAILY Sumue al and TfHE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, May 9, 1973 News Phone 764-0552 AmeVdia ViCtory 4 S A SEGMENT of the new media, we feel great pride when others in our profession are honored for their achievements in news coverage. We t1us applaud The Washington Post for receiving the 1973 Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the Watergate affair. Yet the importance of this award goes beyond mere pride, or even Watergate, for it .igmiies a major victory for the i ews media in its battle with the Nixon Administration. In moths past., the Nixon Admini tration his been actively attemptin oia prevent soy ifavorable news from being issued from governmnt agencies, as well as trying to discredit any onlavorable news concernling President Nixoii ind his crew. Vice-President Agnew, speaking for the President. tias frequently and firmly spoken out against ti1e news media, charging that it was run by , small elite who were trying to alter public upillnitn, Kent Stare and Watergate: An ironic parallel By JAMES WECHSLER ON MAY 4 three years ago Na- tional Guardsmen opened tire on the campus of Kent State Uni- versity, killing four students and wounding nine others, one of whom may never walk again. The blood- bath climaxed a series of student protests across the nation o v e r President N i x o n ' s chilling an- nouncement of the U.S. "incurson" into Cambodia. This anniversary is tinged with nusual ipoignsncy and irony. Mr. Nixon had pnrtraved the CamfOd- ian action as desigsetl 'to pro'ect ir Iesnhoi are in Vietnam and. in guarantee the success i>f i~e thirs inssd Vietnamtition ero grn.' Na, tith the Vie,' itm a thirsts:i ostensitite cOtrnied, ie rmii of US. hnmhs user tins iso is u hess icr and emure iii- i, tissut ci cc before. 'l nt- ttle tie 'is"m-and-nt r 'r" \Sini ratisi that recatted with ida Ioofeess to the Kent trgedty, tes lilt resisting pdens for a pruuid esness exposed oin wide front iid its spokesmen pleadingf i r d r~ nl flr~p fo t rnzxp: State issue alive; clearly he feels that is the only way he can me- morialize his daughter's terribie death. A pending suit launched against the Justice Dept. during the tenure of John Mitchell ac- ,uses that agency of "wilful c(s- a hint of Presidential resolve to seek punishment for those who had shot down the students." Subsequent inquiries and disclos- ures dramatized the contempt for both justice and truth that has gov- erned the Administration's response merv in toeraiinc.err rtan ' VONE E ltl CENTL Y.we have sE'tn journalist-ith jailed ors is its rank wh o were binge or threatened with imprisonment for refusing to re- f:iJhfiul to "' cause." vesd confidential tews sources. Such intimidation, en- couraged by the President, has caused many of these OVER A TELEPHONE f r m P itsburgh recently, Arthur Kraise, sources ti o'dry up''. This has included, reports column- whose attractive, gentle daughter, ist. Jack Anderson, many of those from the White House Allison, was one of those slain, said S'HE WATERGATE affair first surfaced into the public icith mingled grief and bitterness: eye last June whenspersoins were arrested attempting 'After I read Henry Kisinger's to burglarize acd bug the Democratic National Head-glea for compassion for the people involved in Watergate, I wrote hm quarters. The Washington Post then began to investigate asking him to tell me how this the involvement of the Committee to Re-Elect the Presi- Administration defines compassion. dent (CREEP) in the Watergate affair, despite adminis- I reminded him that this govern- tration criticism and President Nixon's statement of ment killed my daughter and ouher June 22 last year that the White House had "no involve- kids, and has never even been will- ment whatever in this particular matter." ing to convene a grand jury to in- 48 IT NOW stands, the credibility of The Post, as well vestigate the crime. I asked him to as that of the news media in general, remains high, tell me how I can have comas- while that of the Nixon Administration has sunk to an sion --except for the people i all-time low, being killed in this war. The Watergate affair, still unfolding, promises to ."I haven't had an answer." greatly affect our country, both positively and negative- On the day before the fusillade ly. It is reassuring though that one of its positive effects in which she was entrapped, Alli- will be the strengthening of freedom of the press in this son Krause had placed a flower in country this is what The Washington Post's Pulitzer a National Guardsman's rifle and Prize symbolizes. murmured: "Flowers are better President Nixon, in finally conceding the importance than bullets." That night she tele- of an open press last week, humbly told a group of press phoned her parents to express ds- personnel: "Just keep giving me hell when I'm wrong." may over spreading campus lash- We will, Mr. Nixon, and thank you for your blessing. es, If HAPPSNE -t> WHILE T WAS OUT 11 WAS P RPETRATEP 19 MN WN ITH WIN NING THE PEACE A 91'TORY OF THAT ..., UT THAT'S _ s RTF :of THING- -lIAT I PUACEP 11 NO )(CU t Hi$! 1 OFFI C -.. - TRAT'S MobN Tarentum, Pas, Valley Daily News - ". the 'LAW-AND-ORDER' Administration . . . reacted with cold aloofness to the Kent tragedy, steadily resisting pleas for a grand jury inquiry... KRAUSE HAS WAGED a tenac- anis, lonely battle to keep the Kent regard of the Constitution" by its failure to conduct a grand jury .n- guiry; a government replj trief is due to be filed in the D.C .Dis- trict Court within a week. tn a few days Dean Kobler, the student who lost the use of t.sh legs as a result of the son.)t ings, will present Attornev General designee Elliot Richardson 'v i t h petitions bearing s0,00t names irs- ing a grand jury probe. (The peti- tions were brushed off during Mit- :hel's regime.) IN TIlE PRESENT set , at- ergate, symbol of a far-flna i on- spiracy of political sabotage and espionage, appears likely to doin- inate any chronicle of the Nixon era. But the archives of the Kent State story are crowded with clues to the moral and credibility gap now being unveiled. . Two days after the killings ,I wrote: . . . One clung to a faint hope that the shock [of the deatsl would elicit some sign of grace and compassion in high Washington places. Instead there emerged the lifeless expression of Presidential 'sadness', accompanied by the self- serving judgment that 'when dis- sent turns to violence it invites tragedy.' Nowhere was there even Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- Ilications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed ZNE words. The Editorial Direc- tors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. to the slaughter ofi inocents. A newspaper investigation show- ed that a detailed FBI report, de- scribing "fabricated" testimony by Guardsmen, had been suppressed "and placed under lock-und-key for 75 years." Coverup did not begin with Watergate. Five months after the sshostins a special report by the Presidents' Commission on Campus Unr-st, headed by former Gov. Scranton, declared: "The rally swas peaceful, and there was no aplparent impending violence. Only when the Guard at- tempted to disperse the rally lid some students react violently . . . 'the indiscriminate firing of rifles into a crowd of students snd the deaths that followed were unneces- sury,,unwarranted and inexcus- able." like the reports of other Presi- dential commissions in the Nixon era, this one was treated by the Administration as if it had. never been submitted. NOW, THREE years after 'he day of horror, David Eisenhower, in the tones of a young fogy, writes triumphantly of the calm prevail- ing on the campuses. Meanwhile, Arthur and Doris Krause drove sadly last week to a candlelight vigil at Kent State. Today, for them and the families of Jeffrey Glenn Miller, William K. Schroed- er and Sandra Lee Scheuer, t h e three others who perished, there is the agony of remembrance and a shared despair about a govern- ment whose leaders have never seemed to care. James Wechsler is the editorial director of The New York Post. Copyright 1973 by the New York Post Corporation. I ACCEPED THE WORP OF THE5E MEN.. 13UT TH4AT'S NlO Fxcu5EF! x.L64rr.T THAT THE VEN4OCRAT6 HAVE Pc ' EFTHF. Su~r-TH-fAT 5. NO l I Letters to The Daily I '0P %xL65 AMr:RCAAND Gap \\ B1LESFACH' W4ERV LONE OF 4 you. To The Daily: IT WAS WITH great delight that I read the article in The Daily (April 18) about the men from Delta Tau Delta doing a service TrHAT s to the unsuspecting motorists who may fall into the speed trap at \ N the bottom of the hill on Geddes ~XCI. - Road. Our wonderful boys in blue regularly is just off Geddes iat Hill with the portable radar system. I have always wanted to do just what DTD id, but lacked the courage. Geddes Road is governed by a 25 mph speed restriction until the city limit sign. I hope that the efforts Of Mr. Seegel et al have THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL kept a lot of people from getting the radar shaft. I also hope that Daily readers will take note of this speed trap and pass the word. The radar speed traps serve no other purpose than to fill the city cof- fers, along with the parking ticket racket. It is too bed that with all of the rip-off going on in 'Ann Arbor, both, on Campus and off, that Ann Arbor's 'finest" have nothing bet- ted to do than pull these snake-in- the-grass stunts, which amount to little more than legalized extortion. I again offer my praises for the DTD. I hope they keep up the gossd work. -Jack Wilson LSA '73 April 18