Page 4-Saturday, May 17,1980-The Michigan Daily Democrats: Do vote May 20 IS YEAR'S Democratic primary will be a vestige of its former self. The state Democratic committee chose its delegates in statewide caucuses last month. Only two names-Jerry Brown who is no longer cam- paigning, and Lyndon La Rouche-will be on the primary ballot. But Democrats should not do as Michigan Democratic chairwoman Olivia Maynard urges and stay home next Tuesday. Even though major candidates President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy will not be on the ballot, Democratic voters have an important task to perform on May 20. According to a recent Detroit Free Press article, if candidate Lyndon La Rouche should win just 20 per cent of the vote in this "election," his campaign will be eligible for federal funding up to several hundred thousand dollars. La Rouche calls himself a conservative Democrat. A more apt description would be a right- wing extremist backed not by Democrats but by the U.S. Labor Party. La Rouche blames most of the world's ills on the Council for Foreign Relations and the Trilateral commission. He is attempting to reach voters through the guise of conservatism, calling for an end to drug proliferation, strong sup- port for nuclear energy, lower taxes, and a world- wide gold based monetary system. He has already been given nearly a half million dollars in federal-campaign funds. His money was cut off after he failed to win 10per cent of the vote in several previous primaries, but it could be restored, retroactive to April, if he succeeds in winning just 20 per cent of the vote in Michigan's so called primary. Michigan Democrats can prevent this waste of taxpayer's money by showing up at the polls Tuesday and writing in a candidate for the Democratic party nomination. This gesture could lend a hint of responsibility in an otherwise wor- thless election. Kennedy is the Democratic candidate most wor- thy of a write-in vote. His 18 years in the Senate and his liberal, socially conscious outlook show him to be a candidate far better prepared to head the presidency than his inept opponent. The Daily endorsed Kennedy for the April 26 Democratic caucuses and now we urge voters to write his name in on the ballot May 20. It will not help Kennedy's faltering campaign, but it will save taxpayer's money by preventing federal support of La Rouche's senseless campaign. Endorsements represent a con- sensus of the Daily's Editorial Board. I AP Photo SECRETARY OF STATE Muskie's meeting with Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko is an en- couraging sign. Carter rhetoric blocks U.5. -Soviet settlement While it is still far too early to judge rookie Secretary of State By John Goyer Edmund Muskie, his first statements in Brussels this week There are several possible show a willingness to repeat ver- motivations behind the Soviet batim Carter's rhetoric and a statement. The Soviets may want lack of independent thinking. to pull out of Afghanistan because Muskie's appointment, we they are worried about getting were told only a week ago, bogged down militarily-as reassured those leaders at home several recent analyses suggest and abroad who feared that they are. Or they may be plan- National Security Advisor ning a much more sinister move, Zbigniew Brzezinski would gain lulling the U.S. into negotiating in influence following the depar- on Afghanistan while Soviet ture of Cyrus Vance from the troops amass on its borders for State Department. These leaders the march into Mideast oilfields. hoped that Muskie would con- Much more likely, they may sim- tinue the moderate course of ply want reassurances that the Cyrus Vance, who seems to have U.S. and Europe will not constantly kept in mind the destabilize a Soviet puppet maxim that, 'war is the break- regime in Afghanistan. None of down of diplomacy.' these possible aims can be SO FAR MUSKIE has failed to ignored and they must be ad- follow this course in his public dressed in negotiation. statements. BUT BY MAKING the In Brussels on Thursday, statements and by instructing Muskie dismissed a proposal Muskie to say the same, Carter is from the Soviet bloc that Soviet allowing the Russians to benefit troops would pull out of from Afghanistan in a way they Afghanistan if the U.S. stopped probably did not count on when covert support of Afghan they invaded. rebels-support that our gover- Carter gives the impression nment says does not exist. (Do we that Afghanistan is an issue that believe our government?) would be worth rolling up our Muskie labeled the withdrawal sleeves and stepping outside for. plan "cosmetic and not a The Europeans don't see the meaningful proposal," according situation as quite that to a story written by Times repor- serious-and they have a lot ter Bernard Gwertzman in Brussels. Muskie's statement smells. It LETTERS TO THE DA sounds, in fact, like something * Carter would say. According toH itchcoc the story, Muskie spoke with Car- ter on the phone three times Wednesday evening. STATEMENTS SUCH as U e O Muskie's labeling the Afghan E E T S U H a u ieMu k e s l b l n t h A f hnwi t h d r a w a l p la n " c o s m e t ic a n d not a meaningful proposal," can To the Daily: only serve to widen the East-West It is an outrage that you rift. allowed Owen Gleiberman's It would be charitable to label puerile, unknowledgeable and what Carter has proposed to end thoroughly obnoxious article on the brewing tensions in Alfred Hitchcock (Daily, May 13) Afghanistan and Iran "cosmetic be printed. One would think that and not meaningful." To with all the film-going students in American ears, Carter's the area your paper would be proposals for economic sanctions able to find someone with an un- against Iran and the Soviet Union derstanding of film to write a are comforting rhetoric in an final piece on the great Hitch- election year. cock. Gleiberman is a fool, a more to lose than the U.S. ' Soviet proposals such as the one calling for hands off by the U.S. and Europe in return for withdraw 1 from Afghanistan seem designed now to drive a wedge between Europe and the U.S. Gwertzman reported from Brussels that Lord Carrington, British Foreign Minister, a agreed with Muskie that the statement was a rhetorical reac- tion to international disapproval of the Afghan invasion. But Carrington added that the fact that the Russians "are prepared- to talk about a nonaligned Afghanistan is not discouraging." Maybe the Soviets want a way out of Afghanistan. Perhaps it would not be a bad thing to pursue negotiations with the U.S.S.R. over the future of Afghanistan in the interest of decreasing the possibility of another world war, which no one will win. Muskie's decision to meet with Gromyko in Vienna is en- couraging. Meanwhile, however, it seems as if Carter's campaign rhetoric is getting in the way of a true settlement with the Soviets. John Goyer is a former Daily staff writer. ALY: k article bnOx1oUS cheap Pauline Kael clone, an of- fensive and disrespectful begin- ner. Almost everyone I've spoken to about his article is livid with rage that the Arts editor let that piece of garbage be printed. And what's more-if Martin Scorsese or Brian DePalma could read his article they would be even har- sher in their criticism. -Fred Parnes May 16 I I