i4~ Sii$&ztnDaily Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 20 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. Detroit junkie: Giving up on heroin IDAY, APRIL 9, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: LYNN WEINER Threat to highway safety HE MICHIGAN State Senate's lack of concern about highway safety and nd its strong bias toward industry were videnced in its approval recently of a ill to allow trailers 14 feet wide to use tate roads. Existing law limits the width of trailers D eight feet. Since 1963, a permit system as allowed manufacturers and haulers D extend the maximum width to 12 feet 1. certain classes of traffic. The threat to highway safety is that he proposed 14-foot width will be two D four feet wider than the lanes on exist- ig state trunk and interstate highways. railers would have to occupy part of a econd lane or the shoulder of the road. [otorists already upset by long, slow- ioving trucks might be forced off the Dad to pass one of the new monsters. Even in good weather with dry roads, his could be dangerous. But when visibil- y is hampered and the surface is slip- ery, leaving the road to pass a wide railer greatly, increases the chances of ccident. At the speeds used on inter- tate highways, such an accident could asily be fatal, Humanity )RESIDENT NIXON boosted humanity several notches over the course of his week. Wednesday he announced an increase 1 United States troop withdrawals from ietnam, a saving in American and Indo- hinese lives. And on Sunday it was eported that the President opposes abor- on on the grounds that it inter- eres with the right of life to which hu- ian beings are entitled. More specifically, the President said he >uld not reconcile abortion with "my ersonal belief in the sanctity of human fe - including the life of the yet un- orn. For surely the unborn have rights lso recognized in law, recognized even in rincinles expounded by the United Na- ons." This will certainly come as news to the umans living in Indochina, for whom merican airpower has killed countless nborn babies. And, as Nixon boasts that he enemy has suffered more casualties han the South Vietnamese during the aos campign, certainly the President's ewly-adapted police of pacifism is to )y the least, interesting. -R. P. Editorial Staff' ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor IF THIS PROPOSAL becomes law, Mich- igan may find it has brought more problems than highway safety. Wiscon- sin, which authorized 14-foot widths in 1969, has already reported some 18-foot wide building modules and says they are chewing up road shoulders at the pave- ment edge. State highway department officials fear requests for widths of 16 and 18 feet will quickly follow approval of the 14 foot limit. The cost of upgrading Michigan's 9,200- mile primary road network to handle wid- er vehicles might reach $2 billion, ac- cording to highway department manag- ing director Henrick Stafseth. It the Senate were really serious about keeping the cost of state government at a min- imum, it would not have committed it- self to such 'a large future exoense. Supporters of the wider limit say it is necessary to help the state's mobile home and modular housing business. Last year Michigan manufacturers produced 20,000 mobile homes, putting Michigan fifth in the nation and second in the Mid- west. Some legislators fear the industry will leave the state without approval of the 14-foot limit. IJOWEVER. THE industry could con- form to the 12 foot limit without ex- tra construction costs. In testimony be- fore a committee, one manufacturer ad- mitted that each unit could be built in three sections instead of two. The only additional cost would be transporting another section. State Senator Robert Van der L a a n (R-Grand Rapids), a spokesman for Gov- ernor William Milliken, suggested that any attempt to improve highway safety should start "by making it tougher on drunk drivers." This is an attempt to ignore the problem. While drunk drivers are a major cause of accidents, there is no justification for adding a new hazard to those that already exist. It is hard to imagine how a drunk driver could safely pass a trailer 14 feet wide on a road with lanes of 12 feet. The State Senate's willingness to give this industry a higher priority than the public's needs was shown by the lopsided vote on the bill. Only eight members op- posed it while 23 supported the 14-foot width. Ann Arbor's Gilbert Bursley was out of town to attend a national trans- portation conference at Texas A&M. POWERFUL BUSINESS interests back- ing the bill have already moved it through the Senate quickly with minimal opoosition. Unless :there is a public out- cry soon, it may pass the H o u s e and become law in a few months. This would be disastrous for Michigan's drivers and taxpayers. No matter how many restric- tions are placed on the movement of 14- foot trailers on highways, they will always pose a safety hazard to other vehicles trying to use the same road. Large amounts of state revenue, which might be used for education or welfare, will be diverted to repairing road shoulders if the new trailer width is approved. These costs alone are likely to exceed any tax revenue gained from the mobile home in- dustry. If the 14-foot limit is necessary to keep this industry in Michigan, then the state should let it move elsewhere. -PAT MAHONEY Assistant Editorial Page Editor By RIC BOHY RONALD IS A junkie. He is also a marked man. Late last sum- mer he robbed a dope house to get money for methadone. He also made a deal to work as an inform- ant for Detroit's Metro Squad - a police narcotics organization. He is now in Detroit General Hospi- tal suffering from gunshot wounds to the head and leg. But he is still alive. Ronald's story is an old one, a story that could be applied to al- most any junkie on the Detroit streets t od ay. He needed fast money, a chance to regain the manhood that w a s stolen from him and an escape from the real- ities of living in an urban ghetto. When Ronald - who is now 26 years old - was in the Army. he ran a loan shark business. Inter- est was one dollar on each dollar' loaned. Despite the high rates. he did a lot of business and had a good deal of money. One day an- other enlisted man sold him a large quantity of marijuana for an exorbitant sum, and the mari- juana turned out to be mostly al- falfa. SO WHEN Ronald left the Ar- my, he took to the streets in an attempt to get a complete educa- tion on drugs. He was determined never to be taken again. While acquiring h i s drug education, Ronald ran across a "hot hustle." He quit his job on the assembly line at one of the Ford plants and became a gun runner for a very wealthy backer. Ronald sold guns over most of Michigan and was making fast, easy money. "I used to get $65 for a Smith and Wesson revolver, $85 if the guy was a chump;" he said. But he was taken again. His backer quit supplying the unreg- istered guns and left Ronald with a lot of angry potential customers. lice protection in c a s e he was found out. AT HOME one night with his wife. Ronald opened the door to greet Bennie, an old friend. Ben- nie h a d brought a stranger to meet Ronald. He told Ronald of a plan to rob a woman who sup- posedly had $2000 of ready cash in her home. Ronald needed more money for methadone so, he de- cided to go along. He went with the stranger in a car to a house on Hancock, near Wayne, State University. As he got out of the car, Ronald dropped his cigarettes. He bent down to pick them up, and as he raised up he heard a gunshot and felt his eye explode. Bernie hed betrayed his trust. Ronald started to run and was several yards away from his as- sailant when a second shot ripped into his left leg. He could only think of getting inside a building, so he dove through the front win- dow of a nearby house. He told the man andswoman inside that someone was shooting at him and they told him to go to the back of the house, promising him protec- tion. They armed themselves with a shotgun, but the gunman was gone. AFTER THAT, the only thing Ronald can remember is waking up in Detroit General Hospital. He underwent surgery the next day and had his right eye remov- ed. He still wants to go straight. Ronald said that he would like to return to school after he is re- leased from the hospital and study to be an anesthesiologist. And he is near kicking the heroin habit. "I can think clearer now than I have for a long time," he said. "I know now that heroin "is just a big sleep. Nothing but a big sleep. But I think that I just might be waking up." 01 0 Defeated, he decided to turn to heroin. "I j u s t wanted to see if it would get me out," he said. Ronald started to mainline her- oin that he bought on 12th Street. Almost every day was the same as the one before - he'd get up in the morning, "cop a fix," shoot up and remain high all day. He soon became addicted. BLACK JUNKIES in the ghetto are forced to pay top dollar for heroin. The pushers m u s t pay $850 to $900 an ounce for pure heroin. They then cut it with lac- tose - which is becoming very difficult to buy - or any of a va- riety of adulterants. Much of the heroin in ghetto Detroit is cut in part with "dormins," a type of sleeping pill. This causes a burn under the skin instead of the us- ual itch caused by quinine. The pushers then sell it at close to 500 per cent profit to their customers. Ronald bought his heroin from "Nitty," a black dealer known for shooting junkies that crossed him, but the type of volume dealer that can be found in almost any neigh- borhood in downtown Detroit. Nitty's front man, a man called Jerry, runs dope from large vol- ume dealers in the narcotic heir- archy. The heroin is then cut by Nitty's mistress and sold. Ronald became addicted but had only acquired an $18 a day habit after six months of shooting up. One day last summer he de- cided to kick his habit, re-enlist in the Army and support his wife and daughter. He didn't want a record of addiction, so he decid- ed to buy methadone on the street, an expensive method of acquiring the heroin substitute. So he rob- bed one of Nitty's dope houses. He also made a deal with Detroit's Metro Squad to work as an in- formant in an attempt to gain po- __ _ _ _._ _ Letters to The Daily JIM BEATTIE Executive Editor DAVE CHUDWINj 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 ROBERT CONROW .... Books Editor JIM JUDKIS........ .....Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Mark Dillen, Sara Fitzgerald, Tammy Jacobs, Jonathan Miller, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Robert Schreiner, W. E. Schrock. DAY EDITORS: Juanita . Anderson. Jim McFerson, Linda Dreeben, Alan Lenhoff, 'Hannah Morrison, Chris Parks, Gene Robinson. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Kenneth Cohn, Mike Grupe, Jim Irwin, John Mitchell, Kristin Ring- strom, Zachary Schiller, Kenneth Schulze, Tony Schwartz, Jay Sheyevitz, Gloria Jane Smith, Sue Stark, Ted Stein, Paul Travis, Chuck Wilbur, Marcia Zoslaw. Research debate To The Daily: AS A VISITING professor I have watched with great interest the debate on classified research on campus. Frankly I have been shocked at theanumber ofprofes- sors who have managed to find one argument or another in favor of the continuation of this research. It seems obvious to me that it is contrary to the very essence of a university, a community of scholars and students, to carry on research the results of which cannot be shared with the community. It seems clearly chilling to the spirit of a free exchange of ideas if some students must obtain and retain federal security clearance in or- der to participate in a research project. have been overriding reasons for allowing classified military re- search. Conversely, at the present time when some members of the university under the label of re- search are cooperating in crimes against the people of Indochina. there is an important reason for strict enforcement of a rule against classified military research. The 'only genuine argument in favor of classified research is that the scientists and engineers need the money. Yet even this argu- ment does not display an enlight- ened self-interest, b,1cause the source of many of the present dif- ficulties faced by the scientific community may be traced to the apparent willingness of scientists to carry out research and accept money without regard to the social consequences. This is the essen- tial reason we find so many of otir students on the one hand and the Reagans on the other united in their attack on the scientific in- Such; viewed text of Second' general principles must be and reviewed in the con- the times. Thus during the World War there may well tellectual community. IN THE LONG RUN the future of the scientific enterprise and of the university is dim if the ma- jority voice among is is that of the mercenaries. -Lincoln Wolfenstein Prof. Department of Physics March 24 Fast 'to The Daily: MANY .OF US share Walter Shapiro's search for a workable revolutionary tactic. His suggest- ed mass fast to replace confronta- tion in Washington, D.C., is fine except it is in the wrong place and by the wrong people. Before the D.C. military would allow fainting from malnutrition before a national TV audience, they would invoke "tresspass" laws or urovoke violence. You would have confrontation anyway. The chance to win the sympathies of the Si- lent Majority would vanish. The enemy is intelligent as well as brutal and it won't hold still for you. The place for a massive fast is probably in the high schools (and junior highs?) on a national lev- el. How would the enemy stop this visible moral / physical s t a n d against the war before the Silent Majority - their parents, teach- ers, etc.? Would the schools or homes be invaded to put it down? Not possible. Parents and teachers would have to be drawn into the scene by this example. Finally, they all would be made aware that the people who rule them are not moved by moral is- sues and acts. The barbarity and corruption would standi clear. Many minds would be set freeand all involved are of an age permit- ting decisive and direct action. -Robert V. Gray March 18 JAMES WECHSLER... Nixon on Calley: aMoral entrapment T WO NOTABLY different explanations of President Nixon's sudden personal intervention in the Lt. Calley case have emerged in the aftermath of his actions. Once again there is a certain identity crisis in the clashing portraits. According to what might be called the sob-sister version of history, as unfolded by United Press International, "an anguished President Nixon awoke in the middle of the night following the sentencing of Lt. William Calley and decided to step into the case out of compas- sion for the young officer and respect forall U.S. fighting men." After that story achieved wide circulation, correspondents cover- ing the President at San Clemente apparently reassessed this saga of inspirational insomnia. By yesterday Robert Semple Jr. was report- ing in The Times: "Some observers here believe that Mr. Nixon's judgment that he ought to do something to quiet national discontent was aimed largely at heading off a siege of national soul-searching that might in time have led to an increasing number of voters to question the fundamental assumptions of the country's involvement in Vietnam." NO DOUBT there will be many other chapters added to the literature of Presidential motivation. What is interesting about the speculation so far is that no one has suggested that Mr. Nixon seriously contemplated any effort to resist the frenzy and to elevate the level of debate - even at th risk of momentary popular disfavor. What is now being depicted by some of his press agents as his gallant resolve to "cool" the country may be one day recognized as weakness and panic under fire. The a! x .vvttrans- who convicted Calley judges - five of them Vietnam after tortured deliberation became the expendables. Certainly there is a case for the proposition that Mr. Nixon could not and shouldnot have re- mained silent in the face of the frfnational uproar. It is what he said * and did as the telegrams piled up that is at issue: There was an honorable, more valorous alternative. He could have solemnly, re- minded the country of the dili- gence and dedication of the mili- tary court. He could have spelled out the process of appeal that lay ahead -- and warned against the peril of substituting mob rule for judicial Lt. William Calley procedures. MOST IMPORTANT of all, he could have emphasizes that that trial represented a conscientious, unprecedented effort to begin the process of examining rsponsibility on every level for the wanton slaughter of innocents in the conduct of the war. Amid the charge that Calley had been made the "scape- goat" for the offenses of men in higher place, he could have affirmed his commitment to pursuit of the whole story, no matter where it led, He could have reminded his countrymen that what was being tested was our capacity as a nation to confront the truth about ourselves. FOR AS LONG as the President publicly clings to the self- righteous view that the U.S. has done nothing basically wrong in Vietnam, that our presence there remains an act of wisdom and bene- volence and that the oppressive Thieu-Ky regime is worthy of our unwavering allegiance, he faces a deep moral entrapment in the war- crime debate. At the start of his Administration, Mr. Nixon had a momentous chance to clear the air by renouncing the sanctity of our Vietnam alliance. No rhetoric he uses can begin to restore domestic tranquility and .sanity. Ironically the Calley furor, curiously uniting men of many diverse views in revulsion against the war and its consequences, has given him another great opportunity to proclaim unequivocal with- drawal. But.+to n nainatsuc noh a mnv oneamust taumn that the shnk JOA 0' !&) C-09. 60TTIm CtV5 A I'LL x I T"E PRC&CM 15~ -MAT 6012P IN) Mc. 'p W, -r 50 FAR t AMC i