Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 4Mine' the Ad. Bidg. TODAY HAS been declared a day of solidarity with the Vietnamese people. Demonstrators will greet the Regents at their monthly meeting, then march to the diag for a traditional rally. In the two weeks since President Nixon announced his plan to mine the harbors of North Vietnam, protests have racked cities and college campuses across the nation. But, throughout this time, Ann Arbor has been strangely quiet. Now a group has once again decided to demonstrate against the war and-equally important for us-against the University's complicity with that war. UNIVERSITY FUNDS sponsor war research and are in- vested in corporations which fuel the war, and the University's corporal silence on the war lends tacit accept- ance to it. It was here, at our University, that electronic sensing devices which track down Viet Cong guerillas were devel- oped. The University, by investing in the large firms which supply war materials - including Dow and Gulf Oil - in effect supports the role these corporations play in the war. If the University would change its stance - as Yale has - from voting with corporate management on all matters, then it could exercise at least a symbolic con- structive influence against the war. INSTEAD, THE University struggles to maintain a con- trived neutrality in an age when neutrality does not exist. One must either support or oppose the war, and there is no longer any question on where our University stands. Join the protests and mine the Administration Bldg. with balloons to show your support of the anti-war forces. Then, if you can, go to Washington to bring your protest to the Pentagon. Tell them once more to "stop the mining, aid the war!" -ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Co-Editor YAF sends fortht By NANCY ROSENBAUM and ARTHUR LERNER "(ONSERVATIVES CAN defeat the radicals in student elec- tions," declare the aoganizers of the Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) Student Election Fund. "Responsible students" need help to combat the "left financed entrenched campus radicals and their revolutionary goals" -and funds are being sought across the nation to help turn the tide. Already, according to national YAF Executive Director Wayne Thornborn, the Student Election Fund has assisted students in California, Connecticut, New Mex- ico, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, and Tennessee. YAF has "sought out hundreds of students and encouraged them to run," promising campaign as- sistance. MONETARY ASSISTANCE has been limited to avoid violation of campus election rules, Albert For- rest, organization development di- rector, comments. Instead, YAF has supplied can- didates with "experienced" lead- ers to "help with organizational work," and "in house" printing at "rock bottom prices." In addition, YAF sends free to conservative candidates such bonuses as "Politics, Campus Style." "How to Win an Election," and "The New Student Politics"- the "'How To' book with the very best tools a student government can follow to gain the support of the responsible student majority." Citing campus victories in New Mexico and Louisiana, YAF re- ports that conservatives "succ""d- ed because they told the truth, they built good campaign organ- izations and they were aided by YAF. YAP literature deplores the "much touted liberal student goupss" adicals' "anti-war campus lobbies," adiows such groups as the Public Iterest Research Group in Michigan PIRGIM). "Conservative students mustt present an attractive alternative." Forrest points out. BECAUSE THERE is no paid regional director in the Midwest, Forrest explains, the campaign has not been pushed much in this state. The Student Election Fund has not received "as much money as we had hoped," Thornborn says. but "we're gearing up for the fall." Michigans YAP Publicity Ifor- mation Director Kathryn Augustin says the state group is more active in forming the Libertarian Party and "fighting PIRGIM." But her husband, State YAP Chairman Peter McAlpine says "We're going to get as many of our students as possible to run." "We're starting to try and raise money for it," he adds. "We'll try as hard as we can." Mark Ruessman, vice chairnman of the state YAF, and a Univer- sity YAP member, asserts the drive "is news to hins" and that the campus group's last project was the "Ping Pong demonstra- tion"-- against the visiting play- ers from the People's Republic of China. THE NATIONAL and state of- ficers of the organization are well informed on the activities of at least one campus YAF member, active in University student gov- ernment. A statement from state head- quarters proudly notes that "a University of Michigan student recently testified before the House Internal Security Commission (HISC-the successor to the House Un-American Activities Commit- tee) on the subversive leadership of many new left groups." Brad Taylor, '74, a former Stu- dent Government Council mem- ber testified before HISC last year concerning the Student and Youth Conference for a People's Peace held on campus last February. Asked if Taylor was a YAF, member while on SGC, the cam- uus YAF chairman. Jeffrey Doan, he cry replies, "We have to be discreet about these things." In Washington, D.C., Executive Director Thornborn says he kne about Taylor's activity and that "this is the kind of campaign we want to get into." YAF PAMPHLETS, listing Strom Thurmond, John Wayne, Wil- liam Buckley, Jr., and Ronald Reagan as members of the group's, National Advisory Board, report that YAF "has been in the van- guard of political activism." Lo- cal chairman Doan, however, says the "national office thinks the campuses are filled with scream- ing leftists." "The University chapter is pret- ty non-political these days," he adds. "Politics are sort of liberal per se - because it forces you to Left's threat to Liberty. i Only the name has been changed NIGHT EDI-OR: JAN BENEDETTI EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: ARTHUR LERNER ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: MERYL GORDON Summer Staff BOB ANDREWS .. ROBERT BARKIN. JAN RENEPETTI.. .. ..,. ,. ROSE SUE BERSTEIN DANIEL BORUS ... ROBERT CONROW LINDA DREEBEN sNNY GAINER ANDY OOLOINO MERYL GORDON HARRY HIRSCH. TAMMY JACOBS. SHERRY KASTLE KAREN LAAKKO. ELLIOT LEGOW . ARTHUR LER NER .. DIANE LEVICK. pAvID MARGOLICK . SHEILA MARTIN JIM O'BRIEN NANCY ROSENBAUM . ROLFE TESSEM.. . PAUL TRAVIS. GARY VILLANI.. .... ..... JIM WALLACE. ROBERT WARGO. DEBORAH WHITING. CAROL WIECK .. . Associate Spots Editor Night Editor Night Editor .. ...Co-Editor . Sport's Night Editor Books Editor . Night Editor Photography Eio R.. isiiness Mnger Assistant Night Editor Display Manager ....Night Editor Circulation Manager Classified Manager Sports Editor Co-Editor Assistant Night Editor Photographer General Business Assistant Science Editor Assistant Night Editor Photographer Night Editor Photogr pher Photographer Photographer Circulation Assistant General Business Assistant Letters w The aGil RAP r pped ta1 it would seem to msec that whoever is running s h To The Daily: have evinced a strong prior DURING the March 17 Regents meeting, the student sitting behini est in the organization by1 me managed to utter something done some work for it. The during the meeting about PIRGIM candidate admitted that hei being a "leftist organization." I done any work for PIRGIM turned around to see this nattily had anyone on the RAP sI dressed fellow sporting this fun- simply cannot understsard ny looking button. I asked him these people campaigned tot what the button said and he re- plied that it was' an "Ashbrook'' GIM office, when they have button. This had to be Brad Tay- absolutely nothing to get it lor. lished, are opposed to its After the meeting, I queried him existence, and whose onlyr as to why, if he opposed PIRGIM, seems to be a desire to ri was his political party the organization into the grout Responsible Alternative Party -Fred Wolgel (RAP) running a slate for t h e PIRGIM offices. He replied face- tiously that they wanted PIRGIM Letters to The Daily s to work for establishing "right- be mailed to the Editorial to-work" laws and the abolishment rector or delivered to M of tteminimusmsvage. 'nen he Rafferty in the Studentl denied being associated with the lications businese4 office ir RAP slate, and claimed that he Michigan Daily building. wasn't oing to support it. This ters should be typed, do was ratherdbioussitliiteThi spaced and normally sh was rather dubious, as it elicited a not exceed 250 words. 5asp from his conmpanion, whom, Editorial Directors reserve it turned out, was running f o r right to edit all letters PIRGIM office on the RAP slate. mitted. In voting for candidates to PIR - ritical ould inter- 'aving RAP hadn't I; nor ite. I w b y r PIR- done esta'o- v e r y motive un the nd. hould I Di- ary Pub- the Let- uble- hould The the sub-