4te £id Ian 3n14 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. 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 all reprints. Wednesday, June 23, 1971 News Phone: 764-0552 NIGHT EDITOR: LARRY LEMPERT Strange victory A RATHER curious victory was won Monday by oppon- ents of classified and military research when Senate Assembly voted to postpone consideration of the contro- versial research issue until September. Both students and faculty had been critical of the idea of resolving this issue in the summer months when most students are away from Ann Arbor. This latest action presents the possibility of holding open forums before Assembly to let them know exactly the size and the rationale of the anti-research movement on campus. But Senate Assembly, in a sense, stumbled into this welcome move. At no time did the Assembly indicate a willingness to hear student viewpoints or a desire to resolve the issue before a larger audience. The true motivating factor behind Assembly's decis- ion was a slow working committee that had been sched- uled to present a report on classified research Monday, but which has indicated it cannot complete its study until late August. Which all goes to show that sometimes bureaucratic bumbling can disrupt the ruling class too. -ALAN LENHOFF A higher court CIVIL RIGHTS leaders will universally condemn the Supreme Court's 5-4 recent decision that p u b 1i c facilities may be closed, preventing their integration. But critics who would like to brand Nixon's c o u r t reactionary and racist must concede that the given task of the court is to interpret the Constitution as it stands. In that Constitution, there is no provision to force cities to operate swimming pools or any o t h e r facilities, and there is no reason for the Supreme Court to order them to do so. The court, which has generally ruled for desegrega- tion in similar suits, was careful to determine that the city was not covertly operating whites-only pools. "We want no one to get any hope that there has been a re- treat" from past decisions, Justice Black said. " 4LL THAT is good is not commanded by the Constitu-' tion, and all that is bad is not forbidden by it," Chief Justice Burger explained, apparently with regret over the decision. It is the Constitution, not the court, that is at fault. This nation has not yet become enlightened enough to recognize such rights as recreation, much less the basic human right to guaranteed income, food and shelter. This is still-a nation of racists, of an uneasy white majority that is willing to make concessions in the name of peace, but not to accept the equal humanity of black people. The Supreme Court is a creature of the present system and its laws. There is no hope for true equality un- less the people change - if they ever do. -M.A. Vietnam: Censoring the present By JAMES WECHSLER H EAVY fighting was reported in southern Laos ... Defense Minister Sissouk Na Champassak claimed 700 enemy were killed and three tanks and four aircraft guns destroyed in recent days. News- men have been barred from the region without explanation. U.S. and Laottan officials have been reluctant to permit press cover- age of the war there. Associated Press, June 17 Thus, even as a decision ap- proaches in the crucial test of the right of The Times - and all of us - to print the secret an- nals of the past, we are remind- ed of the curtains obstructing our view of the present. GOP Senate leader Scott and other administration spokesmen observed with some piety in recent days that the documented decep- tions of the Johnson era now tn- folded are matters of sad history that point up the refreshing can- dor prevailing in the Nixon re- gime. But yesterday's report on the blackout over southern Laos is only the latest in a long series of censorship sagas of the N ix a n period. Whyare correspondents barred from first-hand coverage on this front? What possible con- siderations of 'security" dictate the exclusion of reporters? It is impossible to suppress the suspicion that the administra- tion once again fears that c I o s e- up coverage may be inconsistent with its portrait of a war being "wound down" with neat p r e - cision. EARLIER this week Jerry Green of The Daily News, who has long had access to informed Pentagon sources, reported : "The heaviest threat to Pres- ident Nixon's program for with- drawal of forces from Vietnam lies in Cambodia. The situation in Cambodia is extremely sticky and can be reported as a matter of grave concern' to the White House. If Cambodia collapses and the North Vietnamese reestablish their sanctuaries . . . then the whole Nixon plan, the President's. secret timetable, would be dis- rupted . .., What "contingency plans" are being dratfed now to meet .the threatened crisis? Are there still some surprises ahead for the American public? Again there is little basis for evaluation because the Cambodia story is largely fil- tered through press headquarters in Saigon. BEYOND the continuing effort to minimize or obscure unfavor- able battlefield news and the re- lease of fraudulent "body-counts" Is the fog enveloping the politics of South Vietnam. Time and again U.S. officials have affirmed their "neutrality" in this fall's elections there. Yet no one believes that Ambassador *1 -9 "What's so 'top secret,' Dad? .. . I've been telling you that for years!" r Ellsworth Bunker has lost interest in the fate of his protege, Presi- dent Thieu. Is there any serious reason to believe that we are promoting conditions congenial to a free election - or are we simply urging Thieu to avoid the public-relations debacle of an un- contested campaign?. Gen. Duong Van Minh was re- ported recently to have delivered a speech to political figures as- sembled at his Saigon villa- in which he accused the Thieu re- gime of being "afraid of peace." The address revived reports that he is contemplating a challenge to Thieu based on the creation of a "government of concillation." But there is still doubt whether Minh will be able to get on the sallot, and Truong Dinh Dzu, run- ner-up as the peace candidate in the 1967 vote, remains imprison- ed. It is surely inconceivable that the U.S. could not secure Dzu's release if there were any validity in our professed concern about free choice. WHAT ALL this suggests is that, amid the many lamentations revived by the record of p a s t miscalculation and disingenuous- ness, the air surrounding our Vietnam policy is still murky - and the war goes on. Political im- peratives appear to demand that President Nixon continue and perhaps even accelerate with- drawal-of ground troops. At the same time, however, there ap- pears to be no hint of any flex- ibility in our attitude toward a coalition settlement. The prisoner-of-war issue is being exploited as a cover for the acknowledged plan to maintain a "residual force"; when the Ad- ministration is challenged to set a withdrawal date conditioned on return of the PWs, it has alter- nately cried that there was no basis for the belief that the ad- versary would accept such terms and then admitted that such an agreement would be unsatisfact- ory anyway because the Saigon regime is unready to go it alone. Will it ever be? OUT OF the furor stirred by the Justice Dept.'s offensive against The Times at least one salutary result may emerge. The Nixon Ad- ministration, its own credibility already badly damaged by events, may find it harder than ever to pursue a devious course in its proclaimed "exit" from the war. More questions will be asked about both the. censorship of military operations and the cover-up of our political intrigues in Saigon. Yet in larger terms the n e w storm is another cruel manifesta- tion of the incalculable damage this wretched adventure has wrought. Now, in June 1971, more than six years after the escalation began, our government is at war with the press over the right to tell the truth about a national tragedy. Have we really begun to measure the cost of this disaster on every level of our existence? O New York Post The Editorial Page of The Michigan Daily is open to any- one who wishes to submit articles. 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