9WfrilItizjan Baity 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 ol reprints SATURDAY, MAY 13, 1972 News Phone: 764-0552 - tm - Unearthed Gravel papers JN THE END it was only a small victory for freedom of the press and the right to know, but it was also real embarrassment for our Republican senator, Robert Griffin. For weeks, Alaska's Sen. Mike Gravel has been trying to insert portions of secret Nixon administration Vietnam policy papers into the Congressional Record, the daily publication of congressional proceedings. ButGriffin led asuccessful Senate fight to block publication of the classified secret documents.. In a unique vote April 25, the Senate agreed with Griffin, and Gravel was stymied. Griffin, the Republican whip, is concerned about vio- lations of government secrecy classifications. (He was undoubtedly miffed earlier this week when hundreds of U.S. Army classified maps from Germany turned up as wrapping paper in a London firm.) The information in the reports, however, was no big secret. The Washington Post and other papers had al- ready printed pages and pages of the documents, partly consisting of presidential advisor Henry Kissinger's sug- gestions on how the Vietnam wdr should be wound down. THE SECRET STUFF finally made it into the Record this week. Rep. Ronald Dellums (D-Calif.) got in 29 pages of it, under a routine procedure in which House members simply ask for unanimous consent to insert material, without identifying what it is. Even though hardly anybody reads the Congressional Record, there was some hoopla in the press this week and attention was focused on government furtiveness and the unfortunate fears of Senator Griffin. -ARTHUR LERNER NIGHT EDITOR: JAN BENEDETTI EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR: ROSE SUE BERSTEIN ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITOR: MERYL GORDON PHOTO TECHNICIAN: JIM WALLACE ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Contempt in Chicago? Hoffman slaps the naughty, teasing kids THE REMANDING to District apparently insulted Hoffman sem- THE PROBLEM is simply that Court of the Chicago conspir- ply with their political and cultur- cultural and political differences- acy contempt . sentences marks al attitudes. That is unfortunate. which should not enter into a trial another battle won in what seems A judge who is to try delicate rae- conducted by an impartial judge like a children's crusade for poli- es should be able to overcome -do affect the outcomes of poli- tical freedom. such petty considerations as whe- tical trials here. In the past two years, we have ther the defendants indulge in Emphasizing these differences in witnessed a number of political what he considers childish pranks. court only intensifies the w a r trials where the defendants - af- These defendants simply acted between the children and the ter wasting much time and energy as they normally do, at the trial's grown-ups. Hopefully, the Chicago and sometimes even their lives- outset, but provocation from the defendants will be really frees at have been acquitted or had mis- bench and frustration led to the last and this wave of cultural re- trials declared. outbursts Hoffman called c o n- pression will cease. r z r t Bobby Seale was declared the victim of a mistrial last summer; the Soledad Brothers were recent- ly acquitted, but not before one of them was slain in prison; t he Harrisburg defendants were ac- quitted of conspiracy, as were the Chicago defendants. In a few of these cases, the de- fendants were found guilty on some of the charges, but no con- spiracy charge has been success- fully prosecuted yet. And no wonder. MOST OF THE associations the government uses as evidence to link the defendants with their plots are reminiscent more of high school study hall violations than of gangster thriller novels. Naughty Phil Berrigan smuggled a letter out of prison, the govern- ment announces. For that he is sentenced to prison. A younger naughty Phil Berrigan would pro- bably have been sentenced to stay after school, but the gov- ernment is a tougher disciplinarian than good old Mr. Chips. The Chicago 10 children - even the defense attorneys didn't know how to behave like grown persons -so provoked daddy Judge Julius Hoffman that when the flimsyevi- dence put together by the state proved insufficient to convict the group, he issued convictions him- self. Hoffman slapped the rebellious kiddies with hefty summary con- tempt citations, because they had issulted him sod the dignity of his position. Unfortunately, Hoffma failed to realize that neither his title nor his behavior inspire re- spect, except from his ideological comrades the conservative grandaddies of yesteryear. DETERMINING when being in- sulted in court should bear i.con- tempt citation is tricky. T h e Chicago defendants, for example, Chishoimr By BOB HOOP 'HIRLEY CHISHOLM is in the presidential race to stay. An article in The Daily (May 11) made a major blunder when it erroneously claimed that Shirley Chisholm had announced she may urge her supporters to vote for George McGovern. Rep. Chisholm has emphatically stated t h a t "Shirley Chisholm is not a stalk- ing horse for any other candidate. I have no intention of leaving the presidential race. Such rumors are patently false. You will hear from Shirley Chisholm in Miami." I am deeply disturbed about the following fact: the entire article was written by a single Daily journalist, except for that one paragraph containing the misrep- resentation of Shirley Chisholm's statement. That erroneous para- graph was inserted by an editor who "just happens to be", by his own admission, a McGovern sup- porter. That editor had access to the tape of Chisholm's comments, but did not bother to listen to it. CHISHOLM'S C A M P A I G N is gaining momentum, and some McGovern supporters are "up tight" about that. Those McGov- ern folks who dream of Chisholm support had best take a careful look at their own candidate's campaign. 0 I see the Senator from South Dakota moving closer to a centrist tempt. Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, the co-founders of the Youth International Party, "Yip- pies," could hardly be expected to don suits and ties and maintain respectable silence in a trial which to them symbolized the worst in their society. Suppose the tables were turned and the Yippies were to try Hoff- man, with the government, for conspiring to suppress the Yuppie way of life. It is a safe bet that they would not then chastize Hoff- man for being orderly or quiet, or even stodgy. THAT IS A lot to hope for these days. 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 building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters sub- mitted, -Associated Pre; Tan of the year Hoffman s candidacy se rious position alongside Humphrey as the convention draws nearer. For example, though McGovern used to publicly support liberalized abortion laws, he is now hedging: "I have opinions on it, but it ought not to be an issue in the cam- paign" (Free Press, May 12). * The senator is hedging on participating in the challenge filed weeks ago against Mayor Richard Daley's convention delegates. That delegation is dominated by white males - in violation of McGov- ern's own supposed guidelines. Of course, it is highly unlikely that anyone can secure the Democratic Stmmer Staff BOB ANDREWS ... ROBERT BARKIN. JAN BENEDETTI .. ROSE SUE BERSTEIN DANIEL BORUS. ROBERT CONROW LINDA DREEBEN DENNY GAINER. ANDY GOLDING MERYL GORDON. HOARRY HIRSCH..,R TAMMY JACOBS. SHERRY KASTLE. KAREN LAAKO .. ELLIOT LEGOW ARTHUR LERNER .. DIANE LEVICK DAVID MARGOLICK SHEILA MARTIN JIM OBRIER ... NANCY ROSENBAUM ROLFE TESSEM. PAUL TRAVIS .... GARY VILLANI .... JIM WALLACE. ROBERT WARGO .- DEBORAH WHITING CAROL WIECK ...A.;.S. MARCIA ZOSLAW . .. Associate Sports Editor . Night Editor .. . . .... . Night Editor .Co-Editor Sports Night Editor ..... . ..Books Editor Night Editor Photography Editor Business Manager Assistant Night Editor .isplay Managee Night Editor Circulation Manager Classified Manager .. .Spors Edit .Co-Editor Assistant Night Editor .Photographer General Business Assistant .Sence Editor ...Assistant Night Editor .Photographer n..... . ... Night Editor .........Photographee .... Photogape ... Photographer ... Circulation Assistant General Business Assistant .. . Assistant Night Editor presidential nomination over Da- ley's opposition. 0 McGovern's organization na- tionally and in Michigan is domi- nated at the top by white- males. When asked about this "problem", one McGovern representative from the Anni Arbor office and one from the state office responded: "Well, there just aren't any qualified women". Seems strange, doesn't it that Shirley Chisholm can find com- petent women and blacks to head her campaign in Michigan, in Ann Arbor and throughout the nation; and George Wallace can find a qualified woman to direct his Michigan campaign, plus a quali- fied black to head his Indiana campaign? But, poor George Mc- Govern cannot. How can McGovern fulfill his campaign promises to put women in high levels of government when he "cannot" find women to di- rect his own organization? CONSEQUENTLY, as one Chis- holm supporter, I am not at all sure I will ever support McGov- ern - under any conditions. And with him moving closer and closer to the center, I am not sure that Shirley Chisholm will either. Bob.' foop is assistant ltate coordina/or f or piresidetuial candidate S/orley Chisholin's Michigan capta'ign. Rep. Chisholm