. Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan superscription Moratorium: The Rites of Fall by flyn Weiner N 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. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT SCHREINER Registering all the voters CITY CLERK Harold Saunders said last week he hopes to register "40-50" per cent of eligible student voters by the end of the month. Whilie to some this may seem a laud- able goal, those who feel maximum feasi- ble participation is essential in a democ- racy can take little comfort from the clerk's projection. Nor can they help but be alarmed by his implicit assumption that by reaching this goal, he will have gotten the problem of student registra-= tion over with. In the city as a whole, Saunders has turned in a lackluster performance man- aging. to register about half of those ellgible to vote. This failure to create widespread par- ticipation in the city's electoral process can be traced to the clerk's unwillingness to implement a number of suggestions proposed by various groups. For example, Saunders has continued to resist the idea of year-round registra- tion, despite its use in many other com- munities across the nation. Instead,' there are at present, only a limited number of times during the year when persons may register to vote. The number and duration of these Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEATTIE Ed ,DAVE CHUDWIN Executive Editor Managing Editor STEVE KOPPMAN.............Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFF .... Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY .... Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER..... ....Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT.......Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE .........................Arts Editor JIM IRWIN..................Associate Arts Editor JANET FREY .................. Personnel Director ROBERT CONROW ...... ....Books Editor JIM JUDKIS .................... Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Lindsay Chaney, Mark Dillen, Sara Ftzgerald, 'Tammy Jacobs, Alan Lenhoff, Jonathan Miller, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Robert Schreiner, W.-. Schrock, Geri Sprung. COPY EDITORS: Art Lerner, Debra Thal. DAY EDITORS: Pat Bauer, Linda Dreeben, Jim Irwin, Hannah Morrison, Chris Parks, Gene Robin- son, Zachary Schiller. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Ric Bohy, Kenneth Conn. John Mitchell, Beth Oberfelder, Kristin Ringstrom, Kenneth Schulze, Tony Schwartz, Jay Sheyevitz, Gloria Jane Smith, Sue Stark, Ted Stein, Paul Travis, Marcia Zoslaw. Business Staff JAMES STOREY, Business Manager RICHARD RADCLIFFE.Advertising Manager SUZANNE BOSCHAN....... Sales Manager JOHN SOMMERS ............. Finance Manager ANDY GOLDING iiAssociate Advertising Manager ASSOCIATE MANAGERS: Alan Klein, Donna Sills, Judy Cassel. ASSISTANT MANAGERS: Paul Wenzloff, Steve Evseef, Ashish Sarkar, Dave Lawson. registration periods are set by the clerk, forcing those interested in registering to do so at his convenience rather than their own. Further, he continues to reject door- to-door registration, a concept which has gained the support of both the Dem- ocratic Party and several student groups. Instead he has held steadfastly to the principle that registration must be car- ried out at times and places controlled by his office. THROUGH THE deputizing of registrars as well, Saunders exercises exces- sive restraint on the registration pro- cess. Those wishing to become registrars must apply in person at the clerk's of- fice and are further required to attend special registrar's classes. For the upcoming drive there are only three class sections open, all of them meeting at City Hall. Although the potential inconvenience of these classes is apparent, their very necessity is also open to question. The process involved in registerinig voters is not complex, and a brief list of written instructions should suffice to prepare anyone to be a registrar. Examples of ;more liberal voter regis- tration programs than the one currently used in Ann Arbor are not difficult to find. In Los Angeles county, a system of reg- istration by mail has been developed which eliminates most of the restrictions found in the Ann Arbor system. Under this system, registration is a continuing year-round process rather than being restricted to specific regis- tration drives established, by the clerk. Further, rather than manning regis- tration sites determined by the clerk, registrars receive the necessary forms in the mail, 'and are free to register voters wherever they wish. The introduction of such a system in Ann Arbor is the only logical step assum- ing that the priority of the clerk is to register as many voters as possible. And if the clerk does not view maxi- mum registration as his major goal, he should be replaced by someone who does. 'I'HERE IS NO lack of interest on the part of students in working to get the greatest possible number of students registered. But the continuing unwilling- ness of the clerk to take the necessary steps prevents this goal from becoming reality. -CHRIS PARKS- 'HE SUN RISES every day, winter precedes spring, and the anti-war movement kicks around each year when the leaves begin to fall. The peace movement has been seared in our consciousness for the past several years as an absolute, a given of University life. If it is not yet written in the cata- logues or the calendars as a regularly scheduled activity, we still assume its con- tiudexistence, as we assume the eter- nity of the war. We have ritualized the protests as we have turnedrfootball games into cultural events. The slogans, the buttons, the chants, the marches - we have our ex- pectations of momentary political effecacy and we fulfill them once or twice a year. Rituals are codes of ceremony observed with regularity as a form of worship. Web- ster cites components of sacrifice, proces- sion, plays, mysteries, and ordeals as rit- ualistic attributes. AND, INDEED, the peace movement fol- lows the definition. Sacrifice? The draft card burners, draft resisters, fasters, and vigils aid to cleanse the guilt and blood from penitent Amer- icans. Procession? If nothing else, the protests are marked by the mass of support of marches and rallies - huge affairs which are continually attracting a broader range of Americans into their ranks. What be- and their votes. And the great ordeal of the movement - suffering now through pangs of frustration, apathy, cynicism - all feelings which no doubt please the gov- ernment. AND WHAT IF the movement has turn- ed into a ritual? It still communicates a meaning - as does the ritual of the war. But now, we are dulled to the outragetof the deaths just as we are chilled to the burning fervor of the protests of 1968- and 1969-and 1970. Why are so many of us so blase about the war? It is not the war which has been wound down like a clock, but it is the anti-war protest which has stopped ticking. Student apathy has grown so that it is now the establishment - the teachers and professors and administration - who dare excited about the moratorium - and the students yawn and shrug and remember the latest football game and the most recent peace rally with the same thought. EVEN IF WE recognize the anti-war movement as one of our current rituals, we must not forget the message the ritual communicates. There is a war grinding on right now, and we must not stop batter- ing away at its source. If ritual serves this r purpose, then let us dance the pattern and chant the songs - and maintain and intensify the message of peace. 4 y ,, gan with the core anti-war activists now includes organized groups of labor. feder- al workers, veterans, students, and poli- tical groups in the monster cathartic event. Plays? The movement has evolved a unique form of art - guerrilla theatre. Groups ranging from the Vietnam Veter- ans Against the War to feminist organiza- tions have enacted "street theatre" on the steps of the Senate and in the roads of the nation to protest the war. Mysteries? The greatest mystery of all is why the war continues and we do not maintain our anger and resistance. Ordeals? The ordeals of the Vietnamese, of the American GI's, of the prisoners of war, and of the American people, sup- porting the destruction with their money -41 videre est 'credere MBT-70: A quantum jump in technology? by pat mahoney3- THE DEPARTMENT of Defense (DOD) deserves an award for persistence. No matter how many. y e a r s behind schedule its programs run or by how much they exceed ori- ginal costjestimates, the DOD in- variably tries to conceal unex- pected problems. If new tech- nology threatens to make a wea- pons obsolete, the DOD discovers an unexpected use for its latest toy. A classic example of these char- acteristics is the MBT-70 t a n k program. It is hard to imagine any program in the federal gov- ernment having a more spectacular rise in costs. After a review in 1969, Assistant Secretary of De- fense David Packard ordered the cost per tank reduced to $600,000. This figure, however, is deceptive. It is only the "hardware" cost in fiscal year 1970. Support equip- ment ,research, development test and evaluation (RDT&E) costs plus advance production engineer- ing (APE) are expected to raise the per unit cost to $800,000. In- flation between 1970 and 1975. when the tank is expected to go into production, is estimated by the DOD at an annual rate of two per cent. When a more realistic rate of five per cent is used, though, the cost per tank exceeds $1.1 million. NEW WEAPONS, though, could make the MBT-70 as useful as a crossbow on the battlefield of the late 1970s. Only a few thousand dollars are needed to build a wea- pon capable of destroying t h i s million dollar monster. Already the United States' TOW missile. a tube-launched, optically track- ed anti-tank missile system, is capable of defeating the heaviest known enemy armor is being de- ployed in Europe. The TOW missile, Dragon mis- sile and other weapons. costing only a few thousand dollars, are capable of destroying the m o s t sophisticated tank now deployed or on the drawing board. Even worse, by the time the MBT-70 is fully developed, a new generation of anti-tank weapons will be operating. Most MBT-'i0 advocates concede, according to Sen. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mis- souri) that "little can be done to greatly improve the MBT-70's sur- vivability against existing anti- tank weapons, much less the foi- low-on generation." ORIGINALLY THE MBT-70 program was a joint effort of the United States, and West Germany to develop a battle tank by 1970 to meet NATO needs. T he Germans backed out last year, but the MBT-70 remains a NATO tank designed for use in Europe. Yet the United States is being forced to foot the bill alone. No other NATO country plans to contribute to development costs or ;purchase the finished product when it is available. Already the MBT-70 program has been delayed six years and further postponements are like- ly. Components for which t h e Germans were responsible must be redesigned. New analyses, draw- ings, hardware and prototype tests must be carried out for the ad- vanced engineering, which Gen- eral Motors is helping to develop. To the Army, though, all these problems are obstacles that can be overcome with enough money and time. As Secretary of t h e Army Stanley Resor says, the MBT-70 "is the tank we are de- pending on for the 1970s. We must make it work. We don't have any alternatives." ALTERNATIVES, HOWEVER do exist. The Army has failed to study them. Other tanks, which are already in production a n d cost far les than the MBT-70, are almost equally effective. Even the Army admits that, for reliab- ility or fire-power and the pro- bability of successfully complet- ing an engagement, the MBT-70 and a cheaper alternative both receive over 90 per cent ratings, The Army has also refused to po- vide better armor and a smaller profile which would greatly im- prove the cheaper alternatives in relation to the MBT-70 which it calls a "quantum jump" in tech- nology. Instead of seeking substitutes for the MBT-70, the Army has tried to find excuses for contin- uing its development. This year the Army's stated tank require- ment has increased significantly Eagleton says, although the exact increase is classified. Acknowledg- ing that modern weapons have in- creased the vulnerability of tanks the Army has found a new use for them. "The tank is not em- ployed singly against tanks," ac- cording to a March 1971 = eport. "rather, tanks are used in var- ious combinations with mechaniz- ed infantry, artillery and tactical air." CONGRESS HAS consistently bought these misleading argu- ments. And it may soon find it has no alternative buts to continue the MBT-70. Cheaper tanks, such as the M-60A1E2, will be phased out in 1974, two years before the MBT-70 goes into production. "As long as the Army can count on continuedecongressional acquies- cence," Sen. Eagleton has pointed out, "there will be no serious search for more cost-effective al- ternatives to the MBT-70. And as the MBT-70 comes closer to pro- duction, the less alternatives are available." Cutting defense procurement funds by significant amounts, though, is almost impossible be- cause the approval of so many groups is required. This year the House A r m e d Services Committee cut the entire $59.1 million request for produc- tion while leaving the $27.5 mil- lion for RDT&E untouched. The Senate Armed Services Commit- tee cut $4.7 million from the RDT&E but added $40 million for production. Sen. Eagleton's amendment- to cut funding to the level approved by the House committee was de- feated 51 to 42. THE EAGLETON amendment was one of more than a dozen proposals offered during 15 days of debate on the military procure- ment bill. Yet when the Senate passed the bill by i. vote of 82 to 4 last week, only one amendment, cutting a mere two million, had been approved. Opponents of the Pentagon were outwitted by the Senate Armed Services committee, which blunt- ed their attacks by taking $1.1 billion from the admiistration's requests and restricting the ABM to two sites already autho ried. When the bill reached the floor, the clever management of Sen. John Stennis (D-Mississippi pre- vented significant tampering with new weapons for the admirals and generals. Liberal senators. seeking some way to cut the $21 billion appro- priation might have received some; solace from one of Sen. Stennis' comments on the MBT-70. "Next year, perhaps," the chairman of the Armed Services Committee said, "will be the time when the real issue will come, or it may be the year after that . . i *i Madd ox: Just a Southern country guy i * Letters to The Daily By TONY SCHWARTZ LESTER MADDOX is the kind of guy you'd have at a hopping dinner party where everyone had agreed not to discuss politics. Old Lester isn't a politician, rather an ebullient, loads-of-fun southern coun- try guy with a sackful of opinions and a bubbling need to tell them to every- one. He's a guy you'd meet at a Rotary club dinner replete with sugar-cured ham and steaming homemade rolls. He's the M.C. whose endless string of one-liners would make a big hit with the home-town folk. He's the M.C. whose political tour- de-fource was the same line with which Lester spices every, speech and inter- view - "Let me just say that I'm a little Democrat, a little Republican, a little independent and all the way American." At the University, how- ever, no one was much interested in listening to Maddox spout politics from a podium. Even the 300 people who ,did show up, not enough to pay his plane fare, no less a whopping $2500 speaking fee, came to laugh and to boo. Maddox was more serious. "I'm sup- posed to speak what I believe about this country and the principles that I hold dear, If I'm sincere in what I believe thei I ought to be able to go and talk to people who agree with me as well as people who don't." Lester came to do business. Bedecked in a subtle cosmogoria of green and gold sports clothes, grey argyle socks reaction. Despite his general charm, it is apparent that the long-winded ana- logy-ridden answers he gives to diffi- cult questions, cause him discomfort. For instance, said Maddox to priso- ners he'd given an early stay of sen- tence, "If you go out and do a good job you'll never go back again. And if you perform well then the other men in prison can get out early too." THERE IS another Maddox, one ivith a considerably more enticing charm, one who is far more entertain- ing and well placed. It is Maddox as the M.C. It is the effervescent Lester who rode back- wards on his, bicycle outside of Hill Auditorium and who had a ball hand- ing out autographed shirts with his "phooey" trademark in suburban Aa- lanta shopping centers. Lester is at home relating folksy old experiences, gleefully telling strings of short jokes or just lounging back and shooting the bull. In fact, his Sunday speech at Hill seemed to catch the audience's interest most when he employed what must be a record five jokes in a row to il- lustrate the importance of honesty. Maddox kept a small group of re- porters in hysterics before his speech when he related the story of his now famous encounter with Jim Brown and Truman Capote on the Dick Cavett Show. "You walked off the show that night in a storm?" shot. I'm a handicap, a dropout who loves his God and loves his country. If I have a nickel I spend it a penny at a time. Old Lester would have made it black or white. I know I'm weak; we've all got faults and we're better off to admit 'em." "But the real secret to my happi- ness, that's what you asked isn't it?" Lester stops, pauses from the rush of words, looks into the air and hushes his voice. He takes a small bible from his pocket and uncovers the monogram- med handkerchief which protects it. A deep store of sincerity is summoned for his final utterance. "THE REAL SECRET is that I wake up each morning and I thank God I can walk, I can talk, I can see, I can hear, I can eat, I can listen - some folks say I don't listen but I do. And be- fore I go to sleep I thank God for giving me another day." Mobe response To The Daily: WE WERE very happy to get your letter from Anita Crone yes- terday (Daily, Oct. 11). It's good to hear from an old friend after such a long time. We knew you were feeling tired and a little low, otherwise we would have heard from you sooner. Some- times the rest of us feel a little tired and discouraged too. We nearly died from Nixon's plan for winding down the anti-war move- ment while continuing the war. But, as always, a little rest and quiet reflection help us bounce back healthier and, we hope, even stronger than before. New people and groups continue to join us here in the movement and we change our name almost with the seasons. It's a long hard struggle. And it'll go on for a long time to come. By the way, the picture which the staff included with your let- ter wasn't one of our rallies. We've sent one of ours, clipped from The Daily of Oct. 16, 1969, with Tom Hayden addressing an Anti-war Moratorium Day Rally in t h e Michigan Stadium. Hope you kept the negative. -Dave Gordon, Coordinator New Mobe Oct. 12 Spectre To the Daily: I - , 1. , w -Daily-Gary Villani Fired up by the quirk of fate which brought him to fame, Maddox decided to go into politics to purge "the hypo- crites." He won as a symbol for the struggle. Nevertheless, he was and remains every bit the God-fearing man who believes fiercely in the goodness of America, of "* And then everything went 'POFF'" that loud and clear - and guess what - not one small mention made. Spectre is a hard-working pap- er - it's written out of the lives and struggles of white women all over the country who've made a order todo what has to be done. We are trying to understand and change what it is to be a lesbian, white, class and age priv- ileged in this place - but not in familiar and sacred male leftist rhetoric - that jargon comes out