Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "ere Opinions Are Free, Truth Wilt Prseil 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed im The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21, 1967r Cit on Right Track With Proposed Housing Ordinance I' 4 4 R , . ; '""|"""* 1967 The cgiLc an Tibne synia i ~ ~ ~ M JT SEEMS THAT the powers-that-be in Ann Arbor city government have come to the realization that students comprise nearly 30 per cent of the population of Ann Arbor. At least, it looks that way if one considers the proposed city housing ordinance presently before City Coun- cil. For students especially this ordinance will be a tremendous step forward from the half-century-old state housing law Ann Arbor presently operates under. The City Health Office, formulator of the code, has figured out that students living in rooming houses have to do other things besides just sleeping in the one room allotted to them, and have made the minimum space requirements for "rooms used for sleeping purposes" accordingly larger in these dwellings. In rental units, a large percentage of which are occupied here by upperclass- men, graduate students, instructors and their families, the new code designates the responsibility for most code viola- tions specifically to the landlord. This includes standards of lighting, ventilation and heating, as well as repair and main- tenance of stairways, walls, ceilings and plumbing facilities. In addition, no land- lord can lease an apartment or other liv- ing unit unless it is "clean and sanitary." Any student, or any renter for that mat- WHEN DUNCAN HINES drew his culin- ary map of the nation, he must have marked Ann Arbor in big red letters as a depressed area. For if this city is one of the brainiest in the country, it also contains, with few exceptions; the most pitiful assortment of eating establish- ments one could ever hope to encounter in his fondest nightmares. During the regular school year, this fact is not so ,disturbing, but in the humid hot summer days when home- cooking becomes torture, residents take to restaurant-hopping in larger numbers and suffer proportionally. Not only is there the ever-present pit- fall of exorbitant prices. For the real rub comes in the quality of the food .Which is available-within walking dis- tance, much less within monetary range- to the thousands of students here. ITHOUT IDENTIFYING by name the host of mediocre-to-bad eating places, it is nonetheless possible to define broad standard areas: * Pizza Parlors - Ann Arbor is the home of the soggy, impotent pizza, with little or no tomato sauce, an excess of oily, drippy tasteless cheese, and a crust that chews like latex rubber. All the "col- lege" atmosphere in the world does not compensate for this deficiency, although one can argue that it is always better to get dyspepsia in the presence of friends.; Hippies' Hangout: Love on Haight ter, who has had to de-fumigate rugs and scrape inch-thick grime from walls and floors before daring to live in a newly rented apartment should regard this pro- vision as a blessing long denied. THE NEW ORDINANCE is not perfect, however. There are still several items which should be included but aren't. For one thing, nothing is said in the code about wooden fire escapes, those inexpen- sive monuments to anti-logic rather prev- alent in multiple dwellings. More import- ant, no protection is given in the code to tenants filing complaint of code viola- tions. These tenants, certainly the only ones who would notify anyone of a vio- lation (no landlord would complain about himself) become liable for eviction as "undesirable residents." These omissions, among others, have been pointed out to Council. It remains to be seen what will be done with them. But the new ordinance is not, as the Ann Arbor Board of Realtors charged at a recent Council meeting, the fruits of a "hurried, crash approach.". The office has been working for many months on the ordinance, using as guidelines the most widely accepted standard housing codes. What it does represent is a con- certed effort to provide an adequate and healthful environment for people. -JILL CRABTREE epsia * Hamburger Havens-These are in- trinsically the most dangerous, because an unwary patron may find himself spending most of his weekly allowance on lunch. Unbelievably expensive to begin with, these places offer little beyond free mints and toothpicks at the cash- ier's desk. The usual enticement is good soup which lures the innocent into the establishment for the final kill-on bar- becue and hamburgers. If one is lucky he gets away with a $1.25 tab and gnaw- ing hunger pains. i Family-Style Restaurants - Those weary of the usual lunch fare may de- cide to splurge a little and move up the status stratum to restaurants where the waitress brings the entree after, not con- currently with, the appetizer. The mini- mum bill is about $3 and that usually takes care of say, chicken chow mein, or a roast beef sandwich, or a fried chicken dinner. s Drugstores-In perhaps the most en- couraging aspect of Ann Arbor's food scene, members in this category serve food which is equally bad as any other area, although not noticeably worse. fOR THE STUDENT Ann Arbor food is a passing spectre to be reconciled with. But the long-time residents merit our sympathies and must be congratulated for their iron wills and stomachs. -STEPHEN FIRSHEIN "Now here's our plan-. Letters to the Editor Unguentine Open letter to Prof. Kaplan: An old philosopher once said one usually gets more enraged when he sits on a hot coal than when his neighbor does so. Your letter on freedom of speech would have been a breath of fresh air had it appeared in the press months ago when the rabble in- terrupted the speeches of Secre- tary McNamara and Senator Hart, or when they interrupted Presi- dent Hatcher and President-elect Fleming on similar occasions, or when they conducted a sit-in at the Washtenaw County Draft Board, or when they engaged in the numerous sit-insyin the of- fices of the University's adminis- trative officers, etc. Since you were silent on those occasions and in fact since it is suspected that you tacitly gave your approval to most of them, you can't blame your friends for asking, "Where was this cham- pion of freedom of speech when the cause was not so dear to his heart?" As !far as most of us are con- cerned, Abe, you will have to use your own unguentine. -John J. Carey Professor of Electrical Engineering Multiversity Attempting to persuade The Daily to take a positive, construc- tive stand on any subject is silly, I know. Even so, Walter Shapiro's editorial (June 8) ridiculing Clark Kerr calls for at least one reply. He refers to the "abysmal mean- ingless of hard academic work." He is convincing many people that academic work has no place in his plans-that his main objective as a student is to pomplain. Kerr tried honestly and patiently to deal with the Berkeley parasites on a give-and-take basis (mostly give). The parasites' insistence on a one-way street finally tied the can to Kerr. The Daily seems to have all the answers. Thus it would be inter- esting to have printed in the paper a plan for running a university. Pretend for a while to be the administration. Then put down on paper what you consider a truly satisfactory and workable plan for running the school. JUST FOR OPENERS, consider a few administrative details. The budget, for one. Where do you get funds, and how do you allocate them to everyone's satisfaction? Academic ranking, for another. Without grading, how do you se- lect the likely and deserving can- didates for admission tog raduate schools? Consider campus organi- zations. What possible rightful place has anon-student in a stu- dent organization? Please admit the possibility that a person seek- ing such unnatural status is like- ly to have an axe to grind, be he a Savio or a Bircher. Consider university press conferences. How do you prevent a group like Voice -or any other group-from mov- ing in and taking over a meet- ing of working communications media people? If in all your wisdom you are unable, or unwilling, to develop workable answers to some of these questions, we can only assume that your only function is to gripe. The questions are simple and di- rect. No evasions, please., , -Whit Hillyer, '32 Americanism Some of you people don't make any sense. You are willing to call the U.S. the aggressor, when it is the Communists who are the ones that are taking and have taken over countries by force. They have Cuba, Laos and now they are trying for Vietnam. Mr. Nguy- en Thanh Trang (Daily, June 16) has been in this country too long if you ask me. I know everyone likes to pin the badge of the "bad guy" and "dirty bird" onto the U.S., but you would think at least a countryman from the country where our boys are dying while fighting someone else's war would at least admit that we did not force our way over there. We cannot help it if Vietnam is too backward and helpless to fight its own wars and settle its own dif- ferences. In case most of you have for- gotten, we offered Vietnam as- sistance when this whole thing started. Now if Saigon didn't want our assistance, we would not have gone ahead and said "Well, buddy, you've got it anyway," but the fact is that they said that they wanted it! Now we are over there and the U.S. not the Commu- nists are called the "aggressors." With the number of schools, houses and other material things that we have given Vietnam, all the people over there do not hate us! One person cannot speak fOr the whole country especially since that person has spent several years away from that country. Sure a group of people feel that way about us over there, but you won't hear the people of the vil- lages who are getting medical at- tention, supplies and education from our men and new schools complain about us over there. THE U.S. DOESN'T and will never live off war and it takes a person with any kind of brain to know that. I wonder if you have any proof of that statement. Probably not, it's the "thing" now days to hate the U.S. Every coun- try has to spend some money on keeping up their defense. Look at Red China, they just exploded an H-bomb and the fall outis falling on Japan. China is the world's number one enemy - not the U.S. If the U.S. would stop help- ing every little country that comes whimpering to our door asking for help, we could spend all that money that we are now spending on thefiwar, to better our home difficulties. Mr. Trang, go back to your country and find out what the score really is. It's an "All- American" trend to hide behind books and stammer, "I am a stu- dent, I am draft free," so what's your excuse for your not serving your country? I cannot write any more letters to The Daily, my doctor has told me that I am getting an ulcer and to stay away from things that upset me. But I will read the editorials once in a while to keep reminding myself that I am an American and I am proud. --(Mrs.) Sherry Cook The Elephant .And the Blind By SHIRLEY NICKOVICH Hello there, elephant world. My groping mind Is trying to prepare me for the ride. Although the reference frame that I've defined Is called a "tomb" by people who reside Within a coffin hewn in Angell Hall. For every person's vision is designed With limitation factors he can't see, And you are truly blind to call me blind, For I, at least, admit the world to be Defined somewhere between a snake and wall. By SUE HUTCHINSON Collegiate Press Service SAN FRANCISCO-We boarded the bus on Market St., and felt just like any other two people boarding a bus. But when we got off 15 minutes later on Haight St. pronounced "hate") something was different. Haight St. was busy that noon. The cars and busses passed in the street, shoppers walked past sotres and women passed with children in their arms. The usual tall Victorian houses were quiet. But Haight is the hippies' dis- trict, therefore different. Some call it a zoo, others commune, and the hippies callit a love society. There cars do not whiz - they creep and camera poke through their open window. There shoppers may beg for their money. Children may ride papoose boards. All this left us feeling foreign in our typical college clothes. We knew we looked like tourists when a cold-looking young man with curly brown hair bristling from under a yellow cap approached us and asked for change. ON ONE CORNER we stopped to talk to a group of cameramen from the British Broadcasting Co. They had been in the Haight area for a month making a documen- tary in color to show to British audiences. This particular morn- ing they were set up on the corner by the Drugstore Cafe-the main gathering place for the hippies. As we walked with the crew, a man wearing a leather vest, but no shirt, walked up and looked over my shoulder. His hair was thin and straight and falling in his eyes. A large medallion lay just above his protruding stomach. We asked him where he was from. "I'm down from heaven. I'm God" was the reply. "How long will you be here?" "I'll be here as long as I can continue being me. Being God is the grooviest part of being." It was a cold, gray day and occasional raindrops made splotches on the sidewalk. But the man said he didn't mind the cold. Then he returned to the group of 10 or 12 hippies sitting on the sidewalk by the cafe. One was playing a guitar and a harmonica at the same time. He wore a blanket and his hair reminded me of Phyllis Diller. A green cape kept out the cold. NEAR HIM A dark-haired girl, wearing an Indian headband, clapped her hands. Another squat- ter raised a half gallon of milk to his mouth. His neighbor hugged a dog. Soon someone came from the group and began to line up coins. They said they wanted to buy Haight St. and asked for more coins. Where was the line going? "All the way to Market St." Later we learned it was probably going to buy the next community meal. This is the life of Haight St. during the day. What motivates it depends on the people you talk to. They don't all share every philosophy, but love is an impor- tant word in their vocabulary. One man dressed all in cordu- roy with three tiny bells dangling from his belt, talked about his life. He had been a printer in North Carolina, he said, and then he had worked for the government in Washington, D.C. That was the immoral part of his life, he said. Now that he is a dope pusher, he considers himself a moral man and is concerned about his civil liberties. Asked about his civil re- sponsibilities, he said, "I fulfill them, I pay taxes. I vote. I don't lie, steal, or even play complicated social games." He has a philosophy of govern- ment too. A former Communist, he now believes democracy to be the best system, but says, "People have to be able to trust one an- other and love one another before any system will work." NEARBY STOOD Gary, a curly haired man from Detroit who wore a button that said, "All I want is love." But he hates Lyndon Johnson. He says America is dead and "out of its mind," He pointed to hippies who came up and introduced themselves and said, "You see, they love. They don't hate." He disagrees with the printer's politics, believing that Commun- ism is a good system. "Commun- ists are the most beautiful people in the world," he said. But he thinks people should have private property to protect themselves from big government. The hippie life is not all com- fort and ease. They have several problems - three of which are health, tourists and police. The former printer coughed all during our conversation, and when another came up and introduced himself they compared illnesses like two women on the phone. "Best way to get over bron- TOUR BUSSES have started going through the district now and Haight St. is often full of cars with tourists taking pictures. The hippies say they try to love them, but they dislike them. "They want us to entertain them. We want to love them. We resent them because they make a circus out of us. If they would take us seriously we would get along."' "Man wants to fight. We don't want to fight. But if we have to, it will be terrible. We are power- ful. We will use magic weapons the Man doesn't know about," said the former printer who now says he communicates with his wife in North Carolina by telepathic waves. Further resentment of the tour- ist is shown in signs in windows. Like one which read, "Hey gang, let's all communicate with the tourists with the Universal Sign Language. When you see the Gray Line bus coming: 1) raise arm, 2) clench fist, 3) extend finger, 4) grin." We could not determine the justification of the conplaint of police harassment. One police ar' sat in the district. A motorcycle officer rode up to the drug stores and talked for a while. And the police patrol in two's at night. But even they are not sure how much of the crime is attributabe directly to the hippies. "We can't tell. They attract the strong-arm element by their presence. But we can't tell how much of the actual crime-petty shoplifting and stuff-is done by them," McGuire said. Most, anyone will make his own observations about .the hippies. McGuire says they take advant- age of others. "They use the word love as a lure. True love doesn't exist here," he said. He used the example of hippies who walk up to a child with a donut and take a big bite of the pastry. A YOUNG MAN dressed in a pink shirt and carrying a teddy bear walked up and stood in a doorway. The son of a well-to-do Seattle businessman, the clean and slightly long-haired youth considers himself apart from the hippies. He is, too. He owns house- boats and collects rent each month. "I'm not a hippie, not a beat. Maybe a bohemian. I'vehad two and one-half years at Reed Col- lege in biochemistry. I could be a doctor. I want to travel in Europe. "Besides," he said, "you don't have to be dirty to be a hip per- son. They talk about the tourists and try to fake out the cameras. But they are doing the same things they complain about in other people." He says herhas little problem getting rent from the hippies be- cause jobs are plentiful and they either work or put up with some- one who supports them. He doesn't run with the hippies and considers himself a law-abid- ing person. But asked if he uses dope he says, "It's more common every day." But as far as meeting on the Drugstore corner he says, "I don't go in with groups. I come up here and stop to talk to people I know. But all the bohemians have left. Some of these people are beautiful, but they outdo them- selves." BUT HAIGHT is always chang- ing. McGuire says there is quite a turnover. The hippies never know how long they will stay. One doesn't know at all. Others say 18 months at least. They have set up shops and every time a man closes a shop the hippies open one. They have a curious society- sort of like a convention where rio & 4 , fit Flattering the Spirit of the Age AW .. .HE MULTIVERSITY, which will do for the society anything the so- ciety will pay for, exists to flatter the spirit of the age. One trouble with flattering the spirit of the age is that all of a sudden it may turn and bite you. Something of the sort appears to be happening in California. The popular desire, which was formerly, for reasons never made clear, to have a famous multiversity, is now the desire, for reasons equally obscure, to have a cheap one, with clean-shaven students, and relatively few of them. What are you to say to people whose immediate needs you are striving to meet, and even to an- ticipate, when they tell you they've changed their minds and do not need you any more? If it is said that we shall always want to be prosperous and powerful and that the educational system can always help us to these ends, the answer is that no casual connection has been established between education and prosperity or pow- er. Nobody knows whether America is prosperous and powerful because of -its educational system or in spite of it. Nor er are legitimate ends for a human so- ciety, and under present conditions we have no way of finding out. When all the social institutions that might sit in judg- ment on the spirit of the age, the church, the press and the university are out- shouting one another in the flattering chdrus, what chance have we of learn- ing what the spirit ought to be? The reason we are headed for the ever- lasting bonfire is that we have no critical apparatus that can be continuously brought to bear upon the aims and con- duct of our society. To confuse educa- tion with training and the transmission of information, and to conceive of the university as the instrument by which we become prosperous and powerful is to guarantee, insofar as an educational system can affect the outcome, the col- lapse of a civilization. AS LONG as there are jobs, people will have to be trained for them. In view of the rate of technical change, they may have to be trained and retrained many times during their lives, and al- most necessarily on the job. And those .:; .:;,,.~-. , BARRY GOLDWATER .,. " " .n s==w. Israel Should Keep War Gains i. .' Israel should not give up one inch of the territory she war forced to take from the Arab na- tions. I say forced to take because it seems crystal clear that the Arabs were the aggressors, that backed by the Soviet Union they forced war on Israel and that every ac- tion Israel took in turn was an act of self-defense. Israel should keep the territory to protect her borders and her people against future aggressions from the Arab nations. THE SYRIAN GUN positions along the Israeli border are an example. They have been used for Positions such as Sharm el Sheikh and Ras Nurani, guarding the entry to the Gulf of Aqaba, also should be denied to those who would use them as future doors to slam shut against Israeli shipping, as Egypt did this time in the act that first sent the re- gion hurtling toward war.. The matter of Jerusalem is more emotional than strategic, and no outside comments are likely to be heeded in regard to it. In making my other sugges- tions about keeping the territory taken in self-defense, it should be obvious that the main pur- pose is peace. It is tragically obvious by now ever with their Israeli neighbors. Israel has no such fanatical ha- tred for Arabs and could be de- pended upon to remain at peace if left alone. It is amusing to hear the So- viet Union joining in the chorus of those who want to both con- demn Israel for starting the war and to make her give up the ter- ritory taken in the fighting. The Soviet Union, if there were any justice and not mere legal- isms in the United Nations, would be soundly condemned as the pow- er whose arms and influence start- ed the war. The Soviet Union should be hooted down for talking about