. .JACK ANDERSON== 14 Alfmhan aij Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 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 all reprints. TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1972 NIGHT EDITOR: TONY SCHWARTZ i . wry i No money for PESC LAST WEEK, when the executive com- mittee of the literary college distrib- uted the money in its $52,000 "innova- tive fund", the financially-troubled Pro- gram for Educational and Social Change (PESC) received nothing. Most of the "innovative funds" were used to purchase educational innovations such as overhead projectors and maps. That the literary college would deny "innovative funds" to the truly innova- tive PESC program, and instead favor the purchase of overhead projectors is ironical and absurd. But not very surprising. Overhead pro- jectors classify as quiet, predictable in- vestments. People - especially those who Editorial Staff ALAN LENHOF? Editor SARA FITZGERALD ............... Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS .............. Editorial Director CARLA RAPOPORT ............... Executive Editor ROERT $CHtEINER ........... ... News Editor Ross SUE BERSTEIN.......... Feature Editor PAT BAUER .............. Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY ............. Editorial Page Editor MARA DIJN .................. Editorial Page Editor ARTHUR LERNER............. Editorial Page Editor PAUL TRAVIS ............... ...... Arts Editor GLORIA JANE SMITH.......Associate Arts Editor JONATHAN MILLER.......;.. Special Features Editor TERRY McCARTHY..........Photography Editor ROBERT CONROW...............:Books Editor study needed change in both the Univer- sity and the larger society - are neither quiet nor predictable. ' Overhead projectors are tools with a limited number of uses. But people - like those involved in PESC - resist limits on their search for educational innovation. Most importantly, overhead projectors cannot irritate University officials, as PESC can. PESC WAS attacked at the beginning of the term by administration and liter- ary college officials because of its policy of offering classes free to members of the community and using non-University personnel to teach several courses. The complicated politics of a Univer- sity asking for money from a tight-fisted state legislature demand that overhead projectors take precedence over people interested in radical change. Neither conservative legislators in Lan- sing nor conservative faculty in Ann Ar- bor would smile on funding groups like PESC. PESC will probably continue, however, financed out of the pockets of its. mem- bers. But the refusal of financial support to a struggling, worthwhile group must be condemned as a blow against the search for educational enlightenment. -JAN BENNEDETTI The WASHINGTON - Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Nobel Prize-win- ning Soviet author, has accused Soviet authorities of harassing him. He claims the Kremlin has systematically slandered, investi- gated and hounded him. The story has outraged the intellectuals around the world. No doubt most Americans believe Solzhenitsyn's experience could never happen here. We might point, out that t h e White House has directed a sim- ilar campaign of slander and in- vestigation against us for the past several weeks. In an attempt to discredit us, White House speech writers have furnished speeches to congressional leaders blasting us. Robert Mardian, the Justice De- partment's internal security chief, has been running an intensive in- vestigation of us. Government gumshoes have staked out my house from a nearby vantage point and keep it under surveillance through binoculars. They tail me wherever I go, driving about two blocks behind. We have traced the license numbers to FBI cars. The FBI has also prepared a thick dossier on us, full af :aw, un- confirmed allegations which has been turned over to the Justice Department and the White House for ammunition against as. This campaign is beginning to resemble the Soviet harassment of Alexander Solzhenitsyn for the same crime of criticizing the gov- ernment. Roger's Role President Nixon is taxing extra pains to give Secretary of State Bill Rogers a role in planning the Moscow summit meeting in May. The President was criticized for bypassing the State Department :n his preparations for his Peking trip. He has made a point, there- fore, of asking Rogers to prepare the briefing papers for the Moscow trip and to coordinate the prepara- tions inside the National Security Council. Rogers has assigned the respon- sibility to Martin Hillenbrand, the Assistant Secretary in charge of European affairs. Both Rogers and Hillenbrand have met privately with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin to discuss the trip. Preliminary papers have already been submitted by the State De- partment experts. One secret analysis warns that the Soviet Union, despite its lip A quick By LEE M. KORNFIELD White House is out to get me Lawmakers as Lawbreakers Few people realize htow fre- quently lawmakers are also law- breakers. They have become so puffed up with their own import- ance that they regard themselves above the little laws that are in- tended, presumably, for lesser cit- izens to obey. Take, for example, the case of Congressman John Melcher, (D- Mont.) He makes his Washington home in the Maryland suburbs. Some time ago, Melcher decided to erect a basketball backboard for his kids and their neighbor- hood friends. Melcher put it up on a curb so that the kids had to play in the streets to use it. Neighbors .com- plained, to no avail. A short time ago, Melchor moved a few' blocks down the street and erected ano- ther basketball net.in thehs:a m e manner. County officials have in- structed Melcher to move it. The congressman has stubbornly re- fused. It remains in place to this day. Or take Congressman PeterKy- ros, the Maine Democrat. Last December, while speeding down a Washington street, he struck a parked car. It plunged into ano- ther car ahead of it. Kyros then drove around the block and hit yet a third automobile. He than left the scene of the triple accident. Unhappily for Kyros, the crashes were witnessed. Police visited the congressman, in his office, but no hit-and-run charges were filed. Kyros finally went to drivers' school, but only after we had exposed what he'd 'done. Such disdain for authority.is by no means confined to Capitol Hill. Peter Flanigan, the fixer-without- portfolio in the White House, has frequently tried to influence offic- ials in his home town of Harrison, N.Y. Once he tried to block A college housing development near his home. And about a year ago, he-wrote to town officials on White House stationery to try to get two streetlighs removed. T h e y were, he said, shinging too bright- ly into his bedroom window. @United Features Syndicate, Inc. ft This figure may bea Lockheed may have vincing the German acceptable. realistic, but trouble con- public it is Anderson claims he is being harassed by this man * 4 service, is quietly building up its armaments while talking disarm- ament and seeks to exploit relax- ed tensions to improve its stra- tegic posture around the world. Spanish Narcs Narcotics officials are quietly studying Spain's success in curb- ing the narcotics traffic by strict enforcement. Spanish customs officials are the world's best in nailing narcotics smugglers. Those who are caught get stiff sentences that discourage other smugglers from entering Spain. The Spanish enforcement h a s also caught a number of Ameri- can teenagers who won't be ^om- ing home from Spain for a long while. Typical is the case of 18- year-old Claudia Barner from South Pasadena, Calif. She was arrested for bringing seven pounds of hashish illegally into Spain. She will be 23 years old before she will be released from Span- ish prison to return home to South Pasadena. More Lockheed Troubles Lockheed planes have been plagued with problems here in the United States. Now Lockheed's fabled 104 Starfighter jets appar- ently are having trouble staying in the air in West Germany. The West German government signed its first contract with Lock- heed back in 1958. More than 900 Starfighters have now been deliv- ered to . Germany. A distressing number, however, have myster- iously crashed. The actual number of accidents is classified by the German gov- ernment. But my information is that a startling number - from 150 to 250 - have crashed. The son of a former German defense minister was one of the victims. The planes have come down at such a rate, in fact, that Melvin Belli, the famous San Francisco attorney, has filed suit in behalf of widows and orphans of German pilots who have died in SEarfighter accidents. Belli tells me something is wrong with these planes. They were mod- ified by the Germans under Lock- heed supervisin. So many h a v e crashed, he says, that the pilots flying them are scared. Lockheed denies the charges. First of all, said a spokesman, the German starfighter is the same plane that is being used safely by other NATO countries. Secondly, Lockheed told me, the accident rate - even by United States standards - is a realistic num- ber. About 17 major accidents occur, I have learned, for every 100,000 hours the Starfighters are flown. w t, !r n4 ,$.- < ; ' ~ i . s ; a l '.2 +#, : ii; S 3 f 'b j 1 f 'n easy way to make $4 million After n LAST WEEK The Daily published the ad- tion and dresses of the Regents. I would like to friends a take this opportunity to air my ideas to perplexin the regental body as a whole. would ul Recently, a great many words have been leading to written concerning the financial troubles IT IS' plaguing the University of Michigan, a have writ college that operates from funds, allotted But bef by the state legislature, which ultimately tion. I w come from the pockets of the populace. permissio The president of this university, Robben which too W. Fleming, has openly stated in the Uni- fornia at versity Record that the monies directed to sible. Sev the University for the coming year are ducted re grossly inadequate and that the continua- sexual te tion of such a financial policy will definite- and after ly lead to the downfall of this great insti- search an tution of learning and rseearch, which so human e: effectively serves this country and its peo- was reach ple, not to mention the State of Michigan. that if t One week ago I had a get-together with lavatories some of my friends in my room, and many tices on topics were discussed over glasses of Span- per cent. - n- ada, Pink Chablis, and Catawba, such as Once t the overcrowded library conditions, abor- the Unive tion reform, and finally the above men- dered th tioned topic, which commanded the major- numbered ity of our time. facilities Vietnamese hurt, many fruitful hours of delibera- intense thought, my coterie of rnd I arrived at a panacea to this g problem - a solution which iltimately have multiple effects o the demise of this dire dilemma. TO present, this solution that I tten you. More arriving directly at this solu- ill digress somewhat, with your n, and discuss an important event )k place at the University of Cali- Berkeley in as few words as pos- eral years ago a study was con- egarding ways to suppress homo- ndencies of student populations, many months of painstaking re- nd literally thousands of hours of nergy and technology, a solution hed. What this study revealed was he doors of each cubicle in the were removed, homosexual prac- campus would decrease by 59.38 hese findings were made public, rsity of Michigan immediately or- e removal of such doors, which d 5,875 (including the Willow Run and the M Club offices), and, too Phase 3 Letters: To The Daily: it has d I AM WRITING this in response ple but, to "Why we must cheer for the have do enemy" by Charles Stein (Daily, - April 8). While it is commendable that Mr. Stein realizes what the defeat will mean in terms of the program of Vietnamization it is to Thel incredible to me that somebody IT C who then pats himself on his back ITaCMa for opposing "the war for the last that Ma five or six years" can see it in edy?"s strictly American terms. the bass I myself spent two years and quaintas two months in Viet Nam as an To dsc advisor to one of the "goddam indeed a South Vietnamese" (Mr. Stein's ings) w words) divisions fighting for their havingt lives north of Saigon. 'the su While I, too, would cheer the 'Plautus Viet Cong, this does not mean that rogance I must not also cry for the ARVN ing'to r soldier in the field who is getting ng his ass shot off for a government he really doesn't care for. The total lack of compassion for the Vietnamese (and I can make no distinction between the people To The of the south and north) people DIAN ,vhiit y lirv Sanin hi-. or-, South done to the American peo- what the American people ne to the Vietnamese. _7lniari i innUm n ' once removed, these 21/2' by 5' doors were placed in a specially constructed building on North Campus. Having presented this needed informa- tion, I will immediately propose my solu- tion to the University's financial crisis with the hope that you will have retained much of the preceding information. FEW THINGS in our present world are sacred enough to be considered private. One of these should be the pause 'to relieve oneself of a heavy burden brought on by our bodily functions. When engaging in such an activity, I de- sire the utmost solitude for the occasion, for my productivity increases with increas- ing privacy, and frankly I feel that my own unique technique should not be ex- hibited to strangers. MP proposal, which my friends have hu- morously labelled a "modest proposal", is to have a public auction of these cubicle doors, which I have valued at twenty dol- lars apiece, so that those people who en- deavor to excrete in private may, by car- rying these doors on their person, do so. In order to be eligible for the privilege of buying such a door, one must sign a paper stating that he is not a' homosexual, and have an accompanying letter from one's parent or guardian stating similar facts about thir child. Such an auction would net the Univer- sity 117,500 dollars in cash plus a build- ing that would comfortably have room for 1,352 students; consequently, such a ven- ture would be worth in the neighborhood of $4.43 million. This figure does not include revenue from the sale of accessories, such as door bags, similar to the presently popular book bags, only larger, in which one could carry the door around with great ease. AT THIS INSTANCE I will pause a sec- ond and allow the ,reader to reflect upon my proposal. A question may have arisen in your mind regarding the source of my statistical information; however, here I can easily put your mind at ease by mention- ing that my source is none other than Rocco Corleone, a world reknown numbers man. At this time I will also mention briefly other proposed solutions to this frightful financial predicament; however, intuitive- ly realizing that you are in accordance with my proposition, Ifind that spending too much time on these is unnecessary. The aforementioned solutions, here I use the Mr the bombing of North Vietnam - as well as his decision not to run for re-election. lon peal out the melody Shall Overcome." It wa forgettable moment. -Stuart H. Ganne Cambridge, Mas April 5 Arennis 1ec0ma April 10 Daily: AN come as no arty Porter ("Ror April 6) wouldf a "bombasticx is of his apparen nce with them. smiss Roman com all Greek and Rou ith a flip phrase the minimal know bMect necessary ' correctly, betra and an ignoran eaders of your pa Ellen V. Bruce, April 6 Carillo Daily: 'E LEVICK'S sho n, 3 Following Johnson's speech the Diag was filled by joyous students celebrating the President's 'abdi- Porter cation' far into the night. But on April 4 the Daily's head- surprise lines, already black with import- ance, were swept aside by the nan Coin- blacker, incredible news of the find t h e assassination of Dr. Martin Luth- bore" on er King Jr. in a Memphis hotel, nt non-ac- The elation of the past few days nedy (and evaporated. Now the headlines man writ- marching across the Daily's front , without page told of riots in Washington wledge of D.C. and of National Guardsmen to spell being deployed on the streets of ys an ar- Chicago and Detroit. ce insult- In the midst of this national horror show, the University sched- Grad uled a Memorial Service for Dr. King. Classes were cancelled for the day to attempt some assess- ment of what was happening. Ev- onneur eryone was bleak and even the weather changed in unconscious rt article sympathy with the moment, for a .. . a freak snowstorm hit Ann Arbor on To The Daily:. REFLECTING my de editorial honestry rather for any particular politi I must object to the n implications in the ar my God, the hippies ar (Daily, April 5). Although the article w knowledge, otherwise the Democrats werer assing the voters. Contrarywise, all thr attempted to aid the workers in processingt turnout. For a paper run by youth, the Daily has a to go toward the honest this democracy lacks a people demand. y of "We carcerating them. Stop. s an un- The stench of STRESS can not smell better to our nostrils oy the s '71 prosecution of three of its goons. s. The whole STRESS unit, must not be revamped but totally dis- organized and the brains of its conceiver should be scattered on the graves of the Blacks murder- ed and executed by mad, racist, sire for log cops who compose the assas- than love sination squad. Stop. cal party, What we say is that human life misleading is more valuable than the few tidle "Oh dollars at stake in a robbery at- 'e voting" tempt. At least the funeral and cost of burial vastly exceed the few dollars taken in any street as, t my robbery. The revolutionary -posi- accurate, tion is: STOP STRESS AT ALL NOT har- COST. Campus building, I conducted a poll and the results conclusively reaffirm my prop- osition, with an overwhelming 69 per cent in favor of e public auction. Common responses were, "If I have to pay forty cents an hour to park my car on an Ann Arbor street, I surely will pay twenty dollars to park my body on a Uni- versity toilet," and "Sure, I'll just ask father for a hike in allowance." Many questioned why the University does not simply reinstall the cubicle doors so everyone-can enjoy the privacy t) which they are entitled; however, I logically pointed out that this is not the way of the University. THEREFORE, gentlemen, my arduous task of compiling and presenting the data having been completed, I will now relin- quish my proposition to you in order that you may carry out the above suggestions, so that this university can be preserved in all its just glory. A1 modest proposal PIL ee parties slow poll the large concerned long way reporting nd young -Bob Higgins April 7 Rock & Roll To The Daily: I would like to take this oppor- tunity to suggest that what this campus needs is a Beach Boys' Concert. Only the most inert indi-