I heard the news today oh boy ... By ZACH SHILLER THE UNITED STATES and an- other nation "joined today in an expression of continued deter- mination" to maintain strong for- ces here "capable of deterring ag- gression." Sounds like something out of Vietnam, 1966 or so? Well, it's July 12, 1971 in Seoul, South Korea, and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird is the U. S. delega- tion leader. IN ANOTHER corner of the world, 2500 South Africans are ar- rested under the pass laws there each day. A writer for the New York Times reports, "The pass laws are designed to keep the blacks without rights anywhere, and on sufferance everywhere. The black person is not considered a person, but a labor unit. His wife, children, old father and mother are not members of his family but are described as "superfluous appen- dages." A 'labor unit' may stay to work. A, grandfather too old to work is sent out of the area." You never cease to wonder how the U.S., the most technologically advanced country in the world, with immense economic and po- litical power, is helpless to do any- thing about this situation, It is ig- nored and therefore tacitly accept- ed. BACK HOME at the Capitol, Sen. James Buckley of New York was disclaiming that the nation has been on an "antimilitary binge," forcing sharp cutbacks in large areas of defense spending essential to its security. "As a result," the Conservative- Republican declared, "we are not only falling critically behind in the necessary business of military re- search and development, but we have allowed our existing forces to deteriorate to a point where - - "Because I'M the EM the EMPLOYEE - TH the ability of the President of the United States to assure the de- fense of vital national interests is in jeopardy." Unless "our compulsive anti- militarism is not soon brought to heel," the Senator said, the na- tion will find its foreign policy ob- jectives "irrelevant because we will be without the means of im- plementing thenm." THE CONTRADICTIONS latent in statements such as thishave never been adeutely spelled out. One the one hand, senators such as Buckley point with horror to our impending doom at the hands of expanding Soviet military might; on the other, they say that socialist countries can never develop to the extent the United States has be- cause socialism inevitably treads the path to failure. This dichotomy leaves you fear- ing an imminent Soviet nuclear strike and at the same time con- soling yourself that the 'reds" can never catch up. The inanity of such a position should be obvious to even the casual newspaper reader, AND WHILE this support of dic- tatorships and outright repression g4;A . Ufr4it oa anDti 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, Tuesday, July 27, 1971 News Phone: 764-0552 NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY JACOBS i --r4 , 1.4 E . - - t M£ , - - , Agnew says U.S. black leaders could learn much from African leaders. continues abroad, surveillance and harrassment of 'subversive groups" reach new heights in this country. Papers taken from the files of the FBI in Media, Pa.,Rsaythat 20,000 Boy Scouts in Rochester, New York, have become the eyes and ears of 'the Bureau. Candidates for public office, speakers at Earth Day rallies last year, and members of such groups as Students for a Democratic So- ciety have all been subject to in- vestigation or at least observa- tion by the FBI. PLOYER and YOU'RE AT'S why!" And now it appears that people living in the area around Media are being harrassed by govern- ment agents. Plaintiffs in a suit brought against the FBI have asked a Federal Court to enjoin as unconstitutional "continuous and malicious harrassment" by agents since the theft of F.B.I. files at nearby Media in March. THE COMPLAINANTS say in the suit that FBI tactics included physical violence, bribery, threats, illegal searches and seizures, illegal wiretapping, electronic surveil- lance and denial of the right to counsel during the raids and in- terrogations, and intimidation not only of themselves but also of friends and relatives and em- ployers. So, hit by bit, various govern- ment surveillance techniques are uncovered. We are obviously far from knowing the full story; there are hints of a file of about 20,000 people who would be considered "dangerous citizens" should there be an attack on the U.S., and the number of individual dossiers in the possession of the government is unknown. MEANWHILE, there may be' a poker game going on in the Capi- tol. High administration officials seem to think so, according to a recent statement of the deputy secretary of defense. Theroyal flush, however, ap- pears to be on the cheeks of one of our highest officials in the De- fense Department, David Packard. His latest argument to the Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee on arms control is that the United States must proceed with deploy- ment of offensive and defensive missiles as "bargaining chips" in the strategic arms talks with the Soviet Union. This argument, perhaps the oldest trick in the Cold War book, seems to have lost none of its ability to smite down the foes of spiraling nuclear acquisition. While the administration travels down the same hard line of its predecessors on issue after issue, Nixon is lauded as the president to re-establish normalcy in our relations with the Peoples' Repub- lic of China. Normalcy has already been established in every other field of foreign policy: the "nor- malcy" of Truman - Eisenhower - Kennedy-Johnson. It will only be when this status quo is challenged and finally changed that the U.S. government can claim success in the foreign policy field. THE ADMINISTRATION'S sud- den veer towards rapprochement with the ,People's Republic of China has momentarily obscured the rest of Nixon's policies from view. But when a vice president of the United States comes up with a statement admiring the dic- tators of Africa and recommend- ing them to this country's black leaders, it is obvious where t h e government stands. The vice president has run the dictatorship circuit from o n e corner of the globe to the other. Mobutu, Selassie, Franco an d Hassan are the biggest recipients of American praise, in keeping with the rest of our foreign pol- icy. ON THE HOME front, the July 19 New York Times reports that life in the inner city is continuing to tecay at such a rate that it is becoming a magician's trick to f in d supermarkets, drugstores, taxis, parks, restaurants "or even a good corned beef sandwich." In the same issue, the Times reports that over a million inhabi- tants of the South are unable to read or write. These two facts barely scratch the surface of the stagnation and decay which afflict the American people. And buried under the rub- ble of the ghettoes which litter the landscapelies what remains of the American dream. The Editorial Page of The MichiganDaily is open to any- one who wishes to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. Cellar controversy: Underlying issues By SIMON BADDELY Daily Guest Writer HERE ARE ALWAYS explanations for why censorship occur- red if you have the chance to ask for them, and few were more reasonably and gently argued than those put forward at Saturday's public meeting of the University Cellar's Executive Committee. I was expecting to hear a rather stentorian lecture from Prof. Bulkley (surely I though a misprint for Buckley of whom he was probably a cousin) on why he was against being able to buy any more kill-it-yourself literature. I was waiting to hear a denunciation of The Sensuous Woman as a rotten little book that I shouldn't even be able to leaf through on the bookstands. To such suggestions I could have responded with the cool fury of the liberal who knows here at least he can be an absolutist. As it turned out, there were not the real issues that came up at the meeting. Sure, they were mentioned. Several of us in the audience of about 20 were waiting to guard the First Amendment as eagerly as any active member of the NRA to guard the right to bear bazookas. Some of the committee in- clined to ask why it needed a newspaper story to bring us out. This was the first time, it seems, more than two people have been present at a scheduled public meeting of the committee. The real issues seemed to be some way ahead of the public, and members of the committee spent a good part of the meeting admitting responsibility for that. PROF. BULKLEY in particular commended The Daily for its editorial on the subject. It emerged that "yes," there had been censorship, and steps would be taken to see that censorship did not occur again. The issues, however, stem from the way the censorship occurred in the first place. They bear examination as an example of the pitfalls that await experimental institu- tions Of course, it all comes down to ecology. The bookstore only has so much space. Result: selection involves more and more rejection. The great debate: When does selection become censor- ship? We are all used to the informal censorship imposed by high initial cost and low re-sale value, but this is something new. A direct refusal to display certain books. The operative term is display. Anyone can order anything; the question is how the choice is made about what books will be displayed to custom- ers. The way this choice was made is now admitted by the committee to have amounted to censorship. The bookstore man- ager ordered The Sensuous Woman. When it arrived the em- ployes, acting in consensus, stated that they did not want to be responsible for selling it, and asked him to take it off the shelves. THE MANAGER ADMITS that if he hadn't taken The Sensuous Woman off the shelves things would have been dif- ficult with his fellow employes for a while. He happens to be talking about a value placed on the quality of relationship among employes, which organizations throughout the nation are spending millions of dollars each year to create. They are re- cognizing that given fulfillment or indifference as the main determinant of a job's value to employes, the success of an organization or even its survival may depend on the quality of its social relationships What may be forgotten now that due process is served is that there are not many bookstores where the employes are sufficiently involved to care about what books they are respon- sible for selling or indeed to consider that it has anything to do with them. The people have now entered the scene for a couple of hours and quite predictably have told them, "You may not exercise a discretion which you have chosen to make a part of your work ..." " . . . sure the store manager has to select books, but so long as he does it in his bureaucratic role as a book selection operative, then he isn't acting as a censor..." This is quite convincing and acceptable if the manager is seen as an entrepreneur who will be guided in his decisions by the market. But the whole idea of the Cellar is that it can better serve the needs of the public than organizations that must make a profit. The exercise of censorship by profit making or- ganizations is a contradiction in terms of a free market. IF YOU CHOOSE to ignore the market, to move away from a policy of serving the mean, then you cannot use the odd contingencies of the market as an excuse for selection. The re- maining criteria for selection for display can all be called cen- sorship. What we have here is a failure of semantics; nor do I see answers in a dialectical exercise about the ubiquity of censorship, If there is no market, the distinction between censorship and selection lies in the quality of the relationship between the enter- prise and the constituency it claims to serve. The store carries an image of its universe of customers, and mismatches between that image and its reality can occur. If due process occurs, such mismatches are resolved and a new image of the public is created in the selectors' minds - as happened during the past week. *k