Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author This must be noted in al reprints SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1972 News Phone: 764 0552 Nixon and the press THERE IS no love lost between Richard Nixon and the press. This in itself is no surprise; the relationship between the occupant of the White House and the work- ing press has historically been stormy. But this admin- istration spends more.time and resources than any other in recent memory has to intimidate and harass the media. The President's favorite tactic in this campaign is to issue threatening statements released by adminis- tration officials, who may range from obscure aides to the Vice President. The latest example is the administration's response to the stories filed from Hanoi by New York Times cor- respondent Anthony Lewis. Lewis' dispatches from the North Vietnamese capital are among the most explicit and revealing reports of the Indochina War. He has, for example, set forth evidence, that the victims of U.S. air attacks have not always been "mili- tary targets," and that the North Vietnamese are sur- mounting the problems caused by the recent U.S. block- ade of their harbors. In an apparent attempt to get even with Lewis, the administration last week lashed out against him-pre- sumably because the Times hasn't followed the Washing- ton edition of the war story. An obscure White House aide termed Lewis' reports "a conduit of enemy propa- ganda." AND, by a strange coin- cidence, a few days later the government did w . not see fit to invite a Times reporter to one of its reg- ular briefing sessions. No snub was intended, h a w e v e r, administra- tion officials say. It was explained that one report- er from a New York news- paper - the Daily News- had already been invited, and that the administra- tion did not think another one was necessary. Such petty harassment would seem beneath the dignity even of the Nixon administration. WHAT IT REALLY proves, however, is that there has been no remarkable transformation from the old "You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore," Nixon to the so-called new Nixon. Nixon has continually revealed-as in this case-that he has not lost his taste for the "low blow" sort of in- fighting which has characterized his political career since the days of red baiting Helen Douglas and Alger Hiss. The only difference is that now he hires hacks to execute tasks which the "dignity" of his office will not permit him to do himself. A recent rash of commentaries by conservative writers complains that the majority of the "liberal press" hates and distrusts the President. If this is indeed true, the reasons must be painfully clear. The American press is used to friendly antagon- ism from the White House. It cannot, however, inure itself to bullying and harassment. THE PRESIDENT may well believe that the press has been unfair to him. But he certainly should not ex- pect a dramatic change in relations while he persists in tactics like those employed against the Times. -CHRIS PARKS NIGHT EDI-OR: JAN BENEDETTI EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: ROSE SUE BERSTEIN ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: DIANE LEVICK PHOTO TECHNICIAN: DAVID MARGOLICK ROSE SUE BERSTEIN -- Who's the biggest father of them all? -- Spiro! The length of skirts and the arrangement of hair and t h e slang of the streets change, but basic morality cannot funda- mentally change if civilization as we know it is to survive. Vice President Spiro Agnew, May 25 AH, YES.' Seasons may come and fashions may go, but Spiro Agnew rambles on forever. The Vice President's latest voci- ferous voice-raisings came 1ast Thursday when he spoke in New York, accepting the Father of the Year award of the National Fath- ers Day Committee. Agnew let loose a tongue lash- ing at critics of the Indochina war, at modern morals and parental permisiveness. Sugar daddy Spiro, with father- ly concern, compared those who ignored the screams of Kitty Genovese - who was stabbed to death in New York in 1964 while 28 New Yorkers watched - to those who "insist we abandon South Vietnam." POOR SPIRO. He can rave and rant that North Vietnan is "an international bandit that preys on its neighbors, that savagely bul- lies its ways across borders estab- lished by treaty, that has already swallowed up pieces of Laos and Cambodia and seems intent on conquering all three," but he doesn't see fit to criticize his ad- ministration's blatant disregard for the territorial rights of N o r t h Vietnam'stharbors, or the callous invasions of Laos and Cambodia. Agnew further lambasted t h e "new morality." He said it t snot morality at all but "just a cheap, easy rationale for doing whatever you damn well please." Perhaps that's why it was all right for the U.S. to bomb Hanoi, to mine the northern harbors and to assist in the destruction of An Loc. That was certainly cheap, and easy, and whatever they damn well pleased. Touche, Spiro! But the funny thing about Spiro's speaking is that he fails to look beneath his nose - at the home front. Among those war protest- ers he chastizes so soundly is his 15 year old daughter. The Vice President also thought it sad that parents quoted in a New York Times article on the' sexual behavior of teenagers said they found it difficult to regulate their own children's morals when there were no public moral stand-- ards. Not too long ago, however, col- umnist Jack Anderson reported that Agnew's own unmarried son was living-"in sin," presumably- with a female friend. Tsk, tsk!!: TALK AS HE may of permis- sive parents, Daddy Agnew seems to suffer from the very same prob- lems as all other fathers these s days. Why then did this commit- tee - made up of clothing manu- facturers and men's wear retail- ers - choose him as father of the year? Perhaps it was that fatherly concern he exhibited when he spoke of Kitty Genovese, Or maybe the paternal pride he has in South Vietnam's govern- ment. Was it the stern sobriety he un- doubtedly eihibits in dealing withr his own children? Could it be a reward for his eloquent effusiveness? His grandi- loquent grumblings? FORGIVE HIM, fathers, for he knows not what he does. Letters to The Daily To The Daily: COLUMBIA University's Presi- dent, William McGill, in his May 5 Commencement Address at the University, has continued his at- tack on the Department of Health, Education and Welfare's efforts to eliminate sex discrimination by hsolding major American universi- ties accountable for their hiring and admisions practices. McGill has waved the red flag of aca- demic freedom and has called for all concerned academiciansto ral- ly 'round to preserve their privi- leged position. It all sounds unhappily like a re- casting of the segregationsts' cry, 'Freedom of Choice." Both bast- ardize cherished concepts of American democracy in an ef- fort to retain the status quo, which is favorable to the old guard. Segregationists and McGill's ad- herents are attempting to distort society's need to extend-the rights and privileges enjoyed by the few to those who have not been so fortunate. Both are attacking oth- er groups in an efort to camou- flage the fact that their attitudes and practices have created unjust situations which must not continue unchallenged. In caling academic freedom "a form of special privilege," McGill has turned his back on the Ameri- can belief that academic pursuits are undertaken in an effort to broaden man/womankind's know- ledge of him/herself and his/her universe. not to insure the main- tenance of an oligarchy. McGill further contends that "academic freedom must continually diminish under the presure of external agencies unless we are willing to make the most powerful efforts to sustain it." He speaks as though tIe universities in their 'privileg- s'd positions" are immsune from scruting under law, and are not answerable to the subjective cri- teria of relevance cooa effective- ness. McGill implies that by definition, any effort to bring about change within the university that has not originated with and -is not imple- mented by top professional staff and top administrative personnel, is unacceptable. Undoubtedly, with this attitude, McGill feels as though his "academic freedom" is being threatened, as groups which the universities serve seek admin- .istrative accountability and recog- nition in the decision making pro- cess. HEW and the affected groups within the University have no in- tention of curbing academic free- dom, unless "academic freedom" is defined as a license to main- tain an elitist club which denies membership to minority groups and women. To date, "academic freedom" is ironically restrictive. Yet, to survive as a viable institu- tion, American universities m u s t broaden their horizons to recognize the validity of pursuits and con- cerns which are not within the traditional academic mainstreara, but are certainly capable of en- riching the universities' scholastic environment. Margaret Houy May 25 Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to M a r y Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily huilding. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the eightto edit all letters sub- mitted. Pieta