Summer Daily 'Summer IEdtiooof THEIIMICHIGAN IDAI Y Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Friday, May 18, 1973 News Phone~ 764-0552 Watergate: The crime of silence YESTERDAY THE indefatigable Sam Ervin strode into the Senate Caucus Room, bathed in klieg lights, and ushered the biggest political spy show of the century, Watergate, into America's living room. Flashbulbs popped; aides moved like adrenalin through the crowded room, clutching briefcases and memos in hot hands, suggesting to million of Americans who had never before been able to touch the sinews of federal power that here, at last before the eyes, was the urgent and horrible truth. Sam Ervin, the unswerving protector of individual rights, the statesman's statesman, fully sensed the mo- ment. He pronounced with awesome deliberateness, "The nation and history itself are watching us," and the na- tion and history watched his eyebrows hint at a nervous smile, as if even the stolid senator from North Carolina could not help but shake at the immensity of the occa- sion ELSEWHERE IN the nation yesterday morning, Ameri- cans woke up to find daily television viewing sudden- ly bereft of soap operas. Instead all three networks trans- mitted the strange sight of those long-concealed sinews, bared at last and twitching grotesquely beneath the klieg lights as Ervin and the others began probing with razor- edged knives. We, the Ameriman nubic, seemed ready to vomit at the sight. The m'ior networks reported receiving thous- ands of phone calls demanding a return to soap opera from the lte- diresttable real onera of Watergate.- But for several weeks we will be forced to watch the probing continue: we may stumble momentarily in our dily routines as the probes cut deep and the beast in Washington cries but Already a figure of the law so high and resneeted as the Attorney General has been indicted for criminal acts against the nation. And many or most of us shall continue to wish the soap operas were back, because Watergate is more than a consiracy of power-seeking bureaucrats to dupe the public and seize the government. The guilt shall not be borne solely by that grisly political version of "The Un- touchables", the Committee to Re-Elect the President. WATERGATE WAS the rest of us as well. Since time immemorial we have provided a mandate of silence for Mr. Nixon and every other chief executive, assum- ing that the President, like H. Howard Hunt and G. Gor- don Liddy, acted "with the best intentions." Now Ervin's committee cuts through that false cover, and we shrink from the TV set as it indicts each of us for that mandate of silence, coldly outlines our choices the future, and forces us to live with Watergate. The worid press views Watergate SOME NEWSPAPERS around the world are saying the Water- gate scandal may weaken the President's ability, to conduct foreign affairs. "There are signs that President Nixon's home front crisis over Watergate and other matters is now begining to have an effect on the international scene," the London Daily Telegraph said. The British newspaper added that although Soviet officials have kept silent over Watergate it is apparent that Communist party leader Leonid . Brezhnev "is ready to try to screw every last drop of advantage" out of the scandal during his visit to Washington next month. In Hungary the newspaper Magyarorsag said Nixon may find it difficult to "actually govern at home" because of the bugging scandal and "will more and more fail to represent the interests of the American capital . "The power of a rightist conservative president has become stabilized with all its corruption and reactionary measures . . . in such a historic 'period when the interests of the American capital demand sober and rational consideration of important world issues," the paper continued. IN ASIA, THE Jakarta daily, Indonesian Raya, said the bugging incident "has made us doubt the rationality of the American leaders on international matters." "The confidence in Nixon's integrity was greatly shaken. Al- though it cannot be proved that he was personally involved, it is impossible for Nixon to say he has no knowledge of it," Indonesian Raya contended. Youth baseball being threatened by Little League organizing By ,ORDON ATCHESON T VERYBODY HAD to use the same bat. Some one brought a ball wrapped in black electrician's tape. Most of us played with hand- me-down mits. We made a piece of cardboard serve as first base, a small rock second, and an unneed- ed sweatshirt third. Despite the inferior equipment, we loved sandlot baseball. But sandlot baseball is being kill- ed off by a twisted, perverted imi- tation called Little League. Little League thrives on organi- zation. There are permanent teams, regularly scheduled games, and carefully calculated won-lost records and batting averages. On Saturday mornings, the kids get dressed up in fancy uniforms and mother drives them to a real baseball diamond, with real bases. The pitchers throw as hard as they can. The umpires enforce every last rule of the game. Most of the players sit on the bench and watch - only the most talented people participate because winning means everything. SANDLOT GAMES seldom re- semble the impersonal, systema- tic, almost plastic Little League contests. We just chose up teams and play- ed. Nobody had to warm the bench because he might boot a grounder or strike out with a man on third. Errors were common. Whoever made one might be kidded for a while. Stil we all goofed now and then so the jokes were good na- tured. Besides we didn't play for the sake of victory. The scores of our games weren't published in the local newspaper. hut after three innings none of us remembered how many runs cros- sed the plate . . . or cared. The games weren't run by the book either. We rarely played the 'icorrect" number of innings, quit- hong only when the teams were de- cimated by the dinner hour or we decided football probably would be more fun. L.OGICALLY, of course, Little League shouldn't seem much like sandlot. Consider the heirarchy of each. Sandlot typlifies government of the kids, by the kids, and for the kids. No bureaucracy permeated the structure, since none existed. Little League destroyed sand- lot's excitement which lacked com- petitiveness and replaced it with a "winning's the only thing that counts" philosophy. The players become miniature pros. Instead of looking at a game as pure recreation, they begin to believe the contest is as important as the seventh game of the World Series. Ultimately, however, L i t t1 e League doesn't attempt to meet the needs of the young but rather adults who never entirely grew up. The coach invariably is an ex- high school star who thought he might play in the big leagues some day, but now bats clean up for his church softball team on Sun- day afternoons. Steeped in jock mentality, t h e coaches may speak more eloquent- ly than Leo Durocher, still t h e message is the same: nice guys finish last. The umpires aren't really all that bad. They hit .200 in high school. They know failure and humiliation. They emphasize with the player who drops a pop fly letting the winning run score and then gels the silent treatment from his team- mates for a week. ABSOLUTELY THE most obnox- ious adults mixed up in Little League are the crazed fans. Moth- ers, fathers, aunts, uncles - who ever - all come down to t h e games and frantically cheer their kid's team. They scream at the umpires. The only kind of person worse than the opposing pitcher is a creeping communist. That can't be the way to teach sportsmanship and courtesy. The adults should grow up. 'Re- store baseball to the sandlot. Give the game back to the kids amd iet them have some fun. Gordon Acheison isu a w'rifer for The' Dail. Letters to The Daily Artz resigns destroyed, and a new student gov- Arizre~gnS ernment of students, for students, To The Daily: initiated. I ask the students of U. of M. to I, I.AURIE ARTZ, wish to pub- join with me in this goal. And may- licly announce my resignation from be we can have a true student the Student Government Council government at last. of the University of Michigan. I ask only one thing of SGC The regime now in paser is the and that is that I be paid the most corrupt government thattI $40 dollars in back pay which is have ever seen or studied. Nearly justly owed to me, but Bill Jacobs $40,000 dollars or nearly half of the refused to pay, because he dis- total budget was thrown away on agreed with my political stands. elections which were as free and fair as those in Communist Rus- sia.''hetrest of the budget has disappeared into phony "loans" and "outside expenditures." All of the members of the SGC and most of the candidates are interested in the power and prestige of SGC and have no interest in the students at all, Because of the present corruption in SGC, the longer I remain at- tached to this group, the lower my own credibility sinks. There- fore, I am leaving SGC. But I can- not simply walk away. The pre- sent regime as it stands must be -Laurie Arta May 16 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 normflly should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc- tors reserve the right to edit att letters submitted. t t Y r f 1 S Y t. 9, 3 " ' +. V Y ':}a i Mi1u .^Y './ .r e. PP ,.-r 4~, 4 r 'rgr' t ~," \ , t\ fi " 'As I understand Secretary Rogers, they are bombing us here in Cambodia as an incentive to North Vietnam to uphold the peace ugs eciient.'