Page 4-Thursday, November 1, 1979-The Michigan Daily Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom WAISHINGTON WINDOW Carter's conservation e fforts Vol. LXXXX, No. 49 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Carter can not get on TV P OOR JIMMY CARTER. Being the most powerful person in this coun- try does not mean that he can get anything he wants. Besides his ritual wars with Congress, the president has now taken on what some view as the fourth branch of government-the television networks. And again, he ap- pears to be in trouble ofu suffering defeat. For the sake of this country, let's hope so. Carters campaign committee filed a complaint Monday with the Federal Communications Commission, charging the three major networks with wrongfully refusing to sell him air time for a political speech. The president wants to address the nation on IDec. 4, when he announces his for- mal candidacy for re-election. But the television stations said no. In denying the president's request, network officials have argued that selling Carter time would force them to honor similar requests from other presidential candidates. Such a move would trigger a chain reaction in which every candidate from Ronald Reagan to Larry Pressler would be seen in the living rooms of American homes all across the land. And that is exactly what the country does not need at this time. Already this upc'oming 1980 race has received more than appropriate attention. As early as last spring, stories appeared in newspapers and nightly news telecasts showed the candidates making the rounds from cornfields in Iowa to town banquest in New Hampshire. It Nuc ear Pc qp .can neve T HE PRESIDENT'S commission on Three Mile Island has at last returned the conclusion that opponents of nuclear power have been saying all along-that nuclear power plants can never be made 100 per cent safe. That finding is as dangerous as it is disturbing, since the constructiqn of nuclear power plants has, continued unabated, even after the Three Mile Island accident underscored the fallability of these supposedsly fail- 'safe systems. As long as human error is a factor, like the commission con- cluded, nuclear power safety can never be assured. Perhaps this finding will provide new impetus to the move to declare a moratorium on the construction of new plants, and a freeze on the issuing of new nuclear plant licensing. A majority of the commission members themselves agreed for the need for such a moratorium, but bickering over the specifics precluded the inclusion of that recommendation with their other revelations on nuclear hazards. was-and still is-simply a case of presidentialmania. While the media has given too much attention to politics-a flaw in the industry that goes back to its incep- tion-neglected have been the serious issues of the day. Sure, inflation and energy have made their way on the creeen, but one seldom hears about women and minorities striving for equality. There just isn't enough time in a 30-minute newscast. You can't forget commercials. It is this kind of media coverage of minor moves by each candidate which has -made the situation worse. Since candidates know the media will give them great publicity, they start their campaign almost two years before the election. Their philosophy was taken from the success story of Jimmy Car- ter. It is this attention which exaggerated the importance of this month's Florida Democratic Caucus. It is this zealousness which made Ted Kennedy's every sneeze a national event. The Carter camp thinks it has found reason to complain to the FCC. Un- der the provisions of the Federal Communications Act, the networks are required to provide important political candidates access to the airways. While this may be true, the act has not carried weight until the campaign really gets underway, and after networks have begun to sell time to any candidates. It is still more than a year before the election. It is way too early. Jimmy Carter will have to wait. By HELEN THOMAS UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON - President Carter believes that energy conservation is catching on. The president believes he started from scratch to educate the American people to turn off their lights,1 lower their thermostats and drive at 55 mph. He concedes he was not without frustration. But he never doubted the need to conserve energy would soon be recognized as a necessity in a nation that has always had bountiful resources. "I think there's a growing awareness very rapidly coming on ... the American people that we do indeed have an energy problem, and that every American needs to do something about it," Carter said in a recent interview. "The thing that impresses me most strongly is that the conservation of energy ... need not be an unpleasant thing," .he added. "It need not be a sacrifice. It need not be something that disrupts America. It can be an exciting, positive, pleasant thing." CARTER SAYS IT is not necessary to drive automobiles that weigh 5,000 pounds, with one person in a car, going 75 miles an hour. He also suggests lowering thermostats in the winter and wearing a sweater. These are not sacrifices, he maintains. They are prescriptions for increasing the "quality of life," making it safer and "more enjoyable with a sense that we've done something not only for ourselves and our family, but also for our nation, and it will be a patriotic thing."4 The president has tried to be an educator on the subject since the first days of his ad- ministration, calling the energy crisis a "moral equivalent of war." Despite the president's rosy outlook on the joys of retrenching, there appears to be no massive rallying to the cause. THE SHORTAGES AFE spotty and there is no real sense of solidarity in tackling the problem. The enormous profits earned by the giant oil companies in the third quarter of this year helped spread the notion that sacrifices are far from being shared equally. In fact, there is a feeling the companied are making it big now on one of the world's finite resources. Sometimes Carter's solutions seem sim- plistic. *Buy a wood burning stove, he says, perhaps not realizing the price of firewood, or its availability. Riding a bike to work becomes an im- possible task when people live many miles from their jobs. Car pools also take some' doing in out-of-the-way places. In some: places, mass public transportation is non-a existent. Moreover, there are very few examples of major sacrifice in the way of life at the White House or on Capitol Hill that can be con- sidered pace-setters for the nation. IN THE END, the sacrifices that will be: made will come from pure necessity. The burden ofinflation and its leveling effect on the average family is example enough when the hohemaker goes grocery shopping; Buyer resistance is born of reality In wartime, a president can rally the nation to sacrifice on a massive scale: In a depression, such sacrifice is forced on the people. But in today's world, it seems to be more a case of holding back the dawn. Changing a nation's lifestyle is an immense task. Carter has always said that he has made it a creed to take on the tough problems skip- ped over by some of his predecessors. As the president sees it, the Americani people must be re-educated on, the limits of this bountiful land. He has started the process that will go well into the next decade-and will be a legacy for his successors to perpetuate. Spacy Jane Pr oPg A t By Tom Stevens 140! eu pAe JuSr A Ev ow-oP BEACH- TCp r~ ____ r I i s " i i j " ! . , i _. 'u - Ali M1._. _ J. J- _ I r _ S U. S. arms in S. E. wer plants ,r be safe The President now has his mandate to order such a sweeping moratorium on A-plant construction and licensing. He also has the mandate th close those existing plants which all hold the potential for erupting into Three Mile Island incidents from New Hampshire to California. And the president now has a mandate to order the massive redirecting of funds and committment that is necessary to bring alternative energy sources like solar power out of the experimental stage and into prac- tical, everyday, safe usage. Nuclear power is still in its infancy. But with still unsolved problems of waste disposal, leakage, and the very real potential for disaster that can never be controlled. Nuclear power is an infant that is being rushed into a premature birth in this country, without the caution and concern due when the stakes are as high as human existence. Let us now take the com- mission's conclusions as a warning, and put the baby to bed for awhile until it matures. Time is running out. To The Daily: The Carter administration's lavish support of the military dic- tatorship in Thailand and to the Pol Pot forces still fighting in Kampuchea must be exposed to the American public. "Washington's arms sales to Bangkok add up to $400 million so far this year, about four times the average of recent years," Newsweek reported October 8. "The Pentagon is jumping Thailand to the head of the line for deliveries of M-48 Patton tanks, anti-tank missiles, mor- tars and M-16 rifles. Within a few weeks, the Thais will receive their first F-5 fighter jets equip- ped with Sidewinder air-to-air missiles." Reporting from Bangkok in the September 26 issue of Le Monde, Patrice de Beer says that "the Thai press and government con- tinue to announce, with great fan- fare, the arrival of new American military hardware and ar- maments. Giant cargo planes loaded with artillery and a ship- ment of tanks are expected momentarily . . . (the tanks arrived this week). ''New American 'advisers' have also begun to show up here to train Thai troops in the use of the new weapons, some of which, such as the TOW antitank missile, are extremely sophisticated." The pretext for this military buildup is a supposed threat of a Vietnamese invasion of Thailand. But there has not been a single incident of Vietnamese forces in. Kampuchea crossing the Thai border, despite the open inter- vention of the Thai army on the* side of the Khmer Rouge forces in the war in Kampuchea. In fact, in an October 4 dispatch filed from the headquarters of a company of Thai marines in Ban Laem, Thailand, New York Times correspondent Henry Kamm described how he inter- viewed "the leader of a group of about 15 male and 10 female Pol Pot soldiers.who had come to the marine post to pick up rice, fish sauce, peppers and blankets that they carried backto their base Across the border." However, Washington's miserable game in Indochina is beginning to arouse indignation around the world. "The seating of the Pol Pot regime at the U.N., with the assistance of the West, including the U.S. and Britain, underlines the whole immoral nature of great power maneuvering over Cambodia," the Manchester Guardian Weekly declared on its front page Sep-. tember 30. The editors of the. British weekly pointed out that "much of the debate over the aid "framework" springs out of the desire of the interested parties to use it as a means of building up the legitimacy or the military strength of the side they favor. "This wrangling must surely 4sia stop. The West should not have" supported Pol Pot at the U.N. It should not now compound this mistake by trying to structure aid to Cambodia in such a way as to' give minimhum legitimacy to Heng Samrin and maximum help to Pol Pot. Nor should it pursue the unrealistic aim of using an army of aid officials in Cambodia as a means of 'internationalising' that country and opening it up to (Prince Norodom) Sihanouk." Byusing mass starvation as a weapon against the spread of a social revolution in Indochina, the imperialist governments are committing a crime that is just as great as their original destruc- tion of Kampuchea. The inter- national labor movement must expose this murderous policy and demand immediate and uncon- ditional aid for Kampuchea, and an end to U.S. arms shipments to Thailand. -Bob Warren Young Socialist Alliance RO0TC course credits UI To The Daily: LSA credit for R.O.T.C. courses has been an issue of fervent de- bate since credit was first revoked in 1970. As recently as April 1979, the College Curriculum Committee reviewed the credit withholding policy at the request of the Military Officer Education Program Committee, a point L. Wayne Brasure failed to note in a recent editorial. They voted by a 2 to 1 margin against recommending R.O.T.C. courses accredidation. The R.O.T.C. question is a dif- ficult one because emotional feelings towards the military have entered into the debate and have prevented discussion based on the program's true academic merits. Yet, we feel that R.O.T.C. is sufficiently lacking academically to continue denying it credit. BRASURE WRONGLY grants academic soundness to R.O.T.C. courses. R.O.T.C. instructors whose qualifications only require Bachelor's degrees are far below the academic norm established by the University. None of the in- structors have Ph.D's and only 42 nr emnt hav Master's degrees models of professional military officers for students. They retain their military title and wear of- ficial uniforms. This role and that of an LSA instructor, an academian and one dedicated to the University, are incompatible. University faculty in a 1969 report to the Regents recommen- ded "that the several schools and colleges allow credit for courses taught by instructors holding regular academic appointmen- ts." Not only do R.O.T.C. instruc- tors have no such appointments, none are so qualified and thus, University and College standards are not met in R.O.T.C. courses. The course content itself precludes the granting of course credit. Regular University cour- ses have been increasingly sub- stituted by R.O.T.C. courses. Brasure admits that much of the upper classmen R.O.T.C. curriculum is similar to established LSA courses. The question then is: why should LSA give R.O.T.C. courses credit when they offer similar courses or why does not R.O.T.C. accept LSA courses- in fulfillment of their requirements? Certainly, a nnlitincal ceneclass could be analytical and qualitative research and presented con- clusions should derive from reasoned and logical thinking. The Curriculum Committee maintains an unofficial policy against any course used as a soap box for the propogation of political ideology or dogma. The purpose of R.O.T.C. is to indoc- trinate students into military logic and lifestyle. As an exam- ple, Air Force R.O.T.C. offers Aerospace Studies 411: National Security Forces in Contemporary Society. A goal of this course ac- cording to the syllabus is to "un- derstand the nature of the inter- national political system andthe constraints which that system places on the formulation and implementation of U.S. defense policy." The topic's discussion is planned for two lectures, while the Political Science Department feels that such a topic is worthy of several courses. Because of the time constraint, the course material can not be presented in an objective manner. $rasure himself noted that R.O.T.C. "is geared to produce officers . . ." As Professor King stated: "the function of LSA is to professional school and "on the job training" as R.O.T.C provides contradicts its liberal arts orientation. We feel that R.O.T.C. courses do not deserve credit. Nor, do we feel that R.O.T.C. and R.O.T.C. students should feel they need credit. Engineering. school, for4 example, only allows its students four credits for R.O:T.C. courses- as distinguished from the twelve credits asked from LSA. Yet, engineering students constitute the largest contingent in R.O.T.C. Brasure does bring up a good point in noting the injustice of paying the University and not receiving credit. Still, 64 per cent of R.O.T.C. students divide $590,000 of scholarship money, which is not based on financial need. To provide credit to those students who are in fact paid for being in R.O.T.C. is a ldicrious proposition. R.O.T.C. courses arc still recorded on the transcript, and thus, the academic overload is recognizable. The Department of Defense offers sufficient incen- tive for students to join R.O.T.C., as exhibited by the rise in student enrollment. The granting of court se eredit mnuld be extraneous I I - - , . 5,0' , .mW~l(e EW' IM-Nv