r U1r41, klu Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan Didn't we contribute 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in oil reprints. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: NADINE COHODAS On the seventh day SUNDAY MORNING IS the day for resting, rejoicing, reflecting, restoring, reliv- ing, redreaming, reminiscing and radiantly radicalizing-the day after Satur- day. As Howard Kohn and Walter Shapiro wrote almost five months ago, "Today dawned as callous and imperturbable 'as yesterday." So out of a need to escape the editorial pomposity of the rest of the week which often made little of much and vice versa, "sunday morning" was born. On "sunday morning" karate is as important as Korea's parallels and im- pounded cars as relevant as price-fixing at General Motors. DENY WHAT "sunday morning" has been saying would be to deny what we feel and think every day. Despite the mornings when there was too little to say about nothing, "sunday morning" has. been an experience as well as an experiment. Yet first-person per- spectives on our daily lives have become jaded after five months of "sunday morn- ings". And the living value of any experience or experiment is that it change and evolve and grow within itself. Now Howard has another idea: first-person perspectives on your lives and the lives of others about you, a feature page entitled "The Sunday Daily." So next week "The Sunday Daily" will rise out of the ink of "sunday morning." And if you don't notice the change, "What the hell?" -THE EDITORIAL DIRECTORS at the ofie, By DAVID FAUMAN manager wo HE WAS AN amazingly ugly old man. Dirty and man and he dripping saliva from between his split lips, The man re he approached each new face .that entered the band-aid on supermarket. He appro "I hurt myself," he would say in an anguished "I don't voice. People would look at him with an embar- off. Please v rassed stare. Then the wrecked, stunted old man lost in a co would stumble away. not embarra He finally approached me. I sat on the window fronted emb sill waiting for a ride home. I was horrified, em- barrassed, afraid, and perhaps a little ashamed AS THE as he stumbled in his pigeon-toed manner across man, eachg the floor toward me. I felt cornered and ashamed figure. None that I should fear and wish to escape from such like cries. Az a pitiful specimen. ried away a "Wvhat will I do?" he asked me. He drooled and Some fre shoved his face into mine. rnan approa even noticed "JUST LEAVE it alone and it will heal all by she did not itself," I mumbled. the warmth He continued to pick at the sore with a piece The man of cardboard scavenged from the floor of the customers'N super-market. "Leave it alone, go away," I wanted through the to scream at him. "Take your misery out of my appeared. H life." scrubbed mii He approached the manager of the store. The he had neve 'as obviously no stranger to the old herded him child-like into his office. appeared several minutes later with a his hand. oached me. like the band-aid. I want to take it will you tell me what to do?" He was nfusing maze of adult faces. He was assed. But he made each one he con- arrassed for him. LINE of customers passed the old glanced sideways at his dirty twisted stopped or heeded his painful child- rd if he approached them they scur- s if he were a leper. aks came into the store and the old ched them. Only the girl in the group L; she looked with immense pity. Yet speak or stop: she could not extend of human recognition. nager kept the old man out of the way. Finally while I was looking window for my ride, the old man dis- le is gone now and the carefully rnds that entered the store left as if er entered their lives. 41 dear?; sundaty olb morning * My brain lay on the cold, cold ground By NADINE COHODAS ILOST MY brain last Friday. It must have fallen out some- where between the Micligan Union and The Daily. For as I was walking past what used to be the Administration but is now the LSA Bldg., I noticed a sudden lightheaded feeling come over me. "Hmm," I thought, "my head certainly does feel light." But thinking nothing of it, I kept on my merry way to The Daily. As I went up the stairs, how- ever, something was amiss, for there was my left ear smack on top of my right. "My, oh my," I exclaimed. "I do believe. my brain has fallen out." Quickly I hurried b a c k toward the' Union in search of my lost cerebral parts. I ran up to the Union Lost and Found and breathlessly inquired if anyone had turned in a cere- bellum, cerebrum or any of the four lobes once inside my skull. NO LUCK. But on my way back to The Daily I spied a mass of convoluted material just 12 and one half feet southwest of the cube on Jefferson Plaza. "Yahaa," I rejoiced. "It's my brain." Anxiously I ran over to the mass of convolutions and was damned to find out it was only a group of spaghetti. "Fooey," I was consigned to mutter. And here it is Sunday morn- ing and what am I to do with- out my brain? Not only, do I have a midterm and two pap- ers coming up, but my glasses keep falling off and my hair has no place to go. Sush a dilemma. I like karate best; you will too $ By NEAL BRUSS SOME OF OUR BETTER scholars have the mind-body problem. That means that they know themselves only as minds and have never made any extended experiental contact with their bodies. One sees them in library and classroom, their stomachs hanging over their belts, small knots of chronic tension dancing on their necks. This is unfortunate for them for several reasons: --Because they do not understand the possible uses of their bodies they deny themselves large areas of experience, which they'd probably enjoy analyzing, critiquing ;nd using in their disser-. tations. -They come to conceive of the physical, sex and violence, as magical. They are scared silly of being mugged, and if they are ever called upon to use their bodies they either panic or freak out in muscle cramps. Thus they become uptight. THE LIFE OF the mind is not worth living if the body is dead. And if the mind is incumbered by fears of physical force, the life of the imagina- tion becomes a horror show. Tae Kwon Do, korean karate, taught most evenings and Saturday morning in the gym of ,the Jones school provides a remedy for all this. If one merely shows up twice a week, one will be provided with a regimen of creative body move- ments.. One can be fairly comfortable with the basic kicks and punches in a few weeks. One can aim at becoming a master of the martial arts of self defense. And as long as one trains, one gains Chase Manhattan banks of physical strength, self-confidence and mental serenity. TAE KWON DO, along with Romantic poetry and phenomenology, has changed my life. Nearly everybody' I know has some sort of mind-body problem, and my own was serious enough. From sitting at desks for 16 years and slumping around in general, I have developed huge dysfunctional muscle globs around my kidneys. But I have been attending sessions at the Jones School since August, and the muscles have begun to go away. Also I'm no longer 'threatened by robbers. Or cops. Sure I know how to wound in several different ways. But this knowledge has reduced the threat of violence. I imagine that getting into a fight on South University or someplace would not be much different from the stuff I do at class. So it would be no big deal. I am placid, good natured even. This wasn't the case before Karate. So this is an utterly unsolicited plug for all the brothers and sisters in the world of the imagina- tion, as physically neglected as some are to join the Ann Arbor Tae Kwon Do Association for a couple sessions a week. One of the instructors tells us to aim for the throat. Another says to aim for the Absolute. Me, I strive for the day when I will be able at least to knock out street lights with a side jump kick. 0I A glorious quest in search of whores DEAR OFFICER FLEMING1 In defense of 23f1458604dx90 By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN THE WAITING ROOM at Ann Arbor police headquarters at 8:15 a.m. seems like a dentist's office. Not only do the halls have the steril- ity of the fluid Jerome Sobel, D.D., D.D.S. always squirted into my mouth after drilling, but my old dentist and Police Chief Walter Krasny seem to have an affinity for the same maga- zines. So I sat there at 8:15 a.m. staring at a pile of Reader's Digests, McCalls,' I SAT THERE in the headquarters of the Ann Arbor police waiting to talk to Officer Fleming (no relation to Rob- ben). In my left coat pocket, I had a new, shiny pair of pliers. In my right coat pocket I had a new, shiny screwdriver. My car was parked illegally when the police towed it away because I couldn't get it started. It was broken. And when I paid my fines in e a r l y Octoher and went dnwn to the nound "Hi son. Where's the car?" My father always got to the point quickly. "I made a deal." "OK, send me the license plates." "What do you need them for?" "'So we don't have to keep paying insurance." I SAT THERE in the waiting room at the Ann Arbor police headquarters at 8:25 a.m. I felt the firm cold handle of the pliers with my left hand and the firm, lukewarm plastic of the screwdriv- thing to prove they were destroyed, to give to the insurance people." Officer Fleming had gray hair. He was a friendly man. Perhaps he was just friendly with me because I am not a hardened criminal. But come to think of it, aln'ost none of the people the Ann Arbor police deal with are hardened criminals. They are all hardened illegal parkers. I described my car to Officer Flem- ing, "Oh that one," he said. "I think it Tz~a znlr in nniarv By JOHN IGNOFFO HAT SUMMER evening was a senseless creature laughing at itself and pawing at our dreams. We groped for a drool of sex. With such a deceitful beast of pleasure as our mascot, we, a small band of inundated clowns, pranced into the neon of an urban circus, a decadent metropolis of four million dead or dying souls. We dunces danced among the unliving, laughing and joking, pushing and shout- ing, like so many mindless goldfish darting about the confines of their glass prison. We huddled together for protection as a tribe and drifted through the wastes of the crowded, noisy streets, hunting for pleasure under the dirty scraps of yesterday's and tomorrow's newsless papers, which rustled down the alleys of our mis- guided journey towards bliss. We trekked deeper and deeper into the fog. There, the darkness blazing with the lightless fires of artificial lights dissipated our mirth. We were lost in an asphalt valley of emptiness, walled-in by concrete and steel mnnnlithsc overed with Marina, lidless ees plying their clientele. Our lips smirked at those who had girls when we didn't. And when the guilded cars squealed away down the alley, the wind stripped us of our babboon fur and left us naked. And trembling, we were forced to look at a world that pecked at our nakedness, a flat, brassy picture postcard. We reached cynicism and despair and hatred of ourselves and of each other. We staggered off the sidewalk and tumbled headlong upon the soft bossom of a deep and thoughtful lake. The survivors of the shipwreck of our lives had washed upon the quiet beach of a city's edge. WE WERE exhausted by the long swim to shore and bitter with ourselves for the aimless course we had so cheerfully plotted. Our bodies writhed and twisted in the sand. We now only knew that the course of our lives demanded redirection. Hereafter, we resolved, we would navigate not by diamonds ofdtransient worth but by the gentle eyes of a deceitless God, twinkling above our *I a