wormwood It's revolutionary Monopoly! Sieze the time! rob bier (TAMES ARE big today. Perhaps now, as never be- fore, people .are playing games, inventing games and making money off them. There are the prestige "book- shelf" games put out by 3-M and NBC's Hasbro sub- sidiary. Social awareness "games," such as Smog, Dirty Water and Blacks and Whites are making news. Games People Play was 'a popular book a few years back and has now become a game itself. There are even new disciplines in the social sciences under the heading of "games theory." But in spite of the massiv6 proliferation of psychedylic boards with clever rules, one venerable board game still stands head and shoulders above the crowd, both in sales and popularity - Monopoly. However, in its nearly 40 years of existence, the rules of Monopoly have not changed. When Parker Brothers first put it on the market, most Americans were learning for the first time, from the Depression, how big business influenced their lives, and the rules were kept simple. Today, on the other hand, people in virtually all walks of life have an increased awareness' of our economic system and how it functions. Monopoly, like our other institutions, should keep up with the times. To that end, then, I would like to propose some additional rules. ** * CORPORATE CHICANERY RULE - Although mono- polies are officially outlawed, businessmen have found diverse and subtle methods of circumventing the law. Under the old rules, however, Monopoly players are left only with blatantly illegal or unprofitable options. This rule allows players to incorporate their holdings. For instance, if Karl holds two of one color and Fried- rich the other, they may combine their holdings, either overtly or covertly, to form a Corporation. Cash may or may not be part of the deal, and rents are divided ac- cording to the share of real property each owns in the corporation. No property can be sold or mortgaged with- out consent of the partner who holds the controlling in- terest. All house and hotel building is also a joint venture. Shares may be bartered for cash, although nominal own- ership may still rest with the original owner. Obviously, this set-up calls for some very difficult decisions. Friedrich would have to determine, based on both the real and potential value of his current holdings, whether incorporation with Karl will be of sufficient benefit to make success possible, or whether the benefits accruing to Karl would be too great, thus jeopardizing his own set-up. SEIZE THE TIME RULE - In these days, it is absurd to ignore the revolutionary 'potentials of situa- tions which sometimes arise in the course of playing Monopoly. Rules dealing with such situations are also necessary so that your revolutionary friends will not feel self-conscious when asked to join you in a game. When a simple majority of the players hold less than 50 per cent of the total real value of all property and cash in a situation of full ownership of all property. a Revolutionary Situation exists. When that happens, two things may occur: 1) The power elite can try to buy off enough potential revolutionaries to swing the situa- tion in their favor. No limits are placed on what means may be used to convince the potential revolutionaries that they would be better off under the present system. 2) If that fails, a Revolution occurs. The power elite is wiped out, completely and a second pair of alternatives present themselves: 1) The revolutionaries, having de- cided that they have attained their goal, declare the socialist state, put Monopoly back in the box and go home. 2) The revolutionaries agree upon a method of dividing up the elite's property (Warning: This may take -several hours.) and continue to play the game. This rule has a number of fascinating implications which may not be readily apparent just from reading it. Basic to its use is determining when a Revolutionary Situation exists. Therefore, it is in the interest of the richer players to conceal their actual wealth- by any means possible (unmarked bank accounts in the refriger- ator, for instance). It also behooves them to keep the poor as poor as possible, hoping that, in their dejection, they will not have the energy to try and determine whether a Revolutionary Situation exists. There is also the problem that even if some of the players suspect there is a Revolutionary Situation, there is no easy way to find out for sure,, short of physically wrestling the very wealthy players to the floor while someone adds up their assets. Being sure of the existence of a Revolutionary Situation is important, since calling one at the wrong time sends the Caller and, his support- ers to'Jail for the rest of the game, while their property and cash (including Get Out of Jail Free Cards, if any) are pro-rated among the remaining players. Another aspect worth noting is the result of choos- ing Revolutionary Option Number Two. If the remaining players can manage to agree, mutually or otherwise, on some method of distributing the wealth, the game continues as before. While some of the former revolu- tionaries will become the new elite, with fewer players a Revolutionary Situation becomes easier to spot, thus reducing the stability of the new order, Obviously, the greater the number and complexity of the rules, the less likelihood there is that the game will ever end. Even with the addition of just the above rules, almost the only sure end to the game is Revolutionary Option Number One. That is the rule where, having won the Revolution, the revolutionaries declare the socialist state, put the game in the box and go home. 4 ihe Mtic tau &4 Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan why then this restlessness? Walking the line-the strikers dig in by sturtW gaiunes ...== 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. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE KOPPMv\AN National Health Care: How much will we do? THE SENATE Labor and Public Welfare Committee opened hearings last week on a proposal which would establish a comprehensive national health insurance program. Though it appears that no action will be taken on the bill during this Congress, the question of national health insur- ance is likely to emerge as a key issue in the next Congress. Admirlistration spokesmen have al- ready expressed their opposition. Under- secretary of Health, Education and Wel- fare Johri Veneman told the committee the proposal was "horrendously costly" and "alien to our basic traditions." Vice President Agnew has attacked Michigan's Sen. Phillip "Hart, one of the bill's orig- inal sponsors, for "still trying to pile on more spending that the country can't af- ford." The basic question seems fairly clear. Should we attempt to guarantee decent medical care to all Americans - or should we accept as inevitable the con- tinuation of the present system, w i t h people of differing incomes being forced to accept drastically different standards of medical care? - JF WE AGREE t h a t all people should have an equal right to life and health, then free medical care for all will be just a start. The construction of medical fa- cilities and the training of medical per- sonnel should also reflect this view. The Editorial Staff MARTIN A. HIRSCHMAN, Editor STUART GANNES JUDY SARASOHN Editorial Director Managing Editor NADINE COHODAS... ............Feature Editor JIM NEUBACHER........ ..Editorial Page Editor ROB BIER... ........Associate Managing Editor LAURIE HARRIS ........ . Arts Editor JUDY KAHN Personnel Director DANIEL ZWERDLING . ............Magazine Editor ROBERT CONROW........ . Books Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Dave Chudwin, Erika Hoff, Steve Koppman, Robert Kraftowitz, Lynn Weiner EDITORIAL NIGHT EDITORS: Jim Beattie, Lindsay Chaney, Steve Koppman, Pat Mahoney, Rick Perloff COPY EDITORS: Tammy Jacobs, Larry Lempert, Jim McFerson, Hester Pulling, Carla Rapoport, Debbie Thal. Harvard Valance. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Berstein, Mike Cleply, Mark Dilen, Sara Fitzgerald, Art Lerner, Jonathan Miller, Hannah Morrison, M i c h a e l Schneck, Bob Schreiner, W. E. Schrock, Edward Zimmerman Sports Staff ERIC SIEGAL, Sports Editor drastic difference in he.alth care between some private hospitals and inner-city public hospitals is intolerable. Similarly intolerable is the training of large numbers of highly paid specialists catering to high-income groups while low-income people may find it difficult to receive the most minimal care. E v e n for middle-income people, the high cost of free-market medicine may be a deterrent to receiving proper care - and an unfortunate one whose cost in life and health is inestimable. A nation- al health insurance system would mean provicing a total of more service, since people will be less deterred from securing care. It would mean a higher standard of health for the country as a whole. It must mean, thus, a greater proportion of our national income spent on health. Support for a national health plan has grown in recent years. Even within the medical profession, which has long ap- peared hostile to public guidance, there is growing support. A recent survey at this University and at Harvard showed /more t h a n two-thirds of medical stu- dents supported national health insur- ance. And a s t u d y of national health plans long operative in Europe belies the claims that a collapse of the doctor-pa- tient relationship or national bankrupt- cy must result from such systems. THE PLAN currently being considered in the Senate falls short of the ideal in many ways. For one, it does not apply to all medical expenses. Also, it is pro- posed that the program be partly financ- ed by a regressive payroll tax, similar to Social Security. But the plan is a start. Our present health care system is one of our most grotesque national scandals. This propos- al would be a turn in the right direction. As the wealthiest nation in the world, the question is not what we can afford. It is what we are willing to do. There are few more important goals for us than the provision of decent health care for all of our people. -STEVE KOPPMAN The inside straight BEFORE TAKING OFFICE as vice pres- ident for student services, Prof. Rob- ert Knuss saidhp wuildrsinaif nav o rf WILLOW RUN OUTSIDE THE GATES to the Chevy plant on Tyler Road, last Thursday, the gusting wind whipped fine showers of dirt and soot on the workers standing on the UAW picket line. Huge tractor-trailers rumbled down the road every few minutes, their diesel engines spewing smoke and drowning out conversation as they passed. Strike posters left lying on the ground were scattered 'beyond the small groups of men gathered around the gate. The near-by factory-an empty parking lot away-stood idle. Only the management offices remained occupied. But the glass and concrete building stood seemingly under seige. Surrounded by late model cars, and hidden behind white curtains, the Chevrolet management still works during the strike. What they do is hard to say. From the line, you only see men come and go to work or lunch. Office buildings are not like factories; they stand silent. Only the flag high atop the com- pany flagpole was restless; whipping, snapping and straining in the fall winds. BY THE SECOND WEEK of the UAW strike against General Motors the daily patternfor the men on the picket line had been set. Once a week for four hours a day, each worker comes to the gates of the factory to stand picket duty. The men stand around the gate sipping styrofoam cups filled with coffee (which the union provides in a 10-gallon rented thermos). When management, employes entering or leaving, the workers on the line casually bantered with the men in their cars. A car drives up to the gate and the workers say "Hi-ya punks" at the white-shirted men inside. Then the electric window of the car smoothly lowers and a smiling crew-cut voice blurts "Do ya want Pabst or Altes this time?" Later, a typewriter repairman pulled up in a van and asked could he cross the line. After a short confab, a worker yelled out to the driver: "They don't need their typewriters fixed." "That's all I wanted to hear." The repairman shot back as he popped the clutch of the van and screeched away down Tyler Road. However, when Cassady drove up in his new Gremlin (The Amer- ican Motors' economy car) to stand on the lite from 10 until 2, small groups of men wandered the few yards to where the car was parked to admire and check-out the sleek white machine. Cassady ordered the Gremlin before the strike started but he didn't pick it up until after he was out of work. Men walked over, to the resting automobile, examining its lines, engine and Interior; always comparing it to GM's Chevy II which they assemble. The men talk about the car in a way which only an autoworker or a mechanic could understand. "People don't know cars like we do," Cassady drawled as he walked back to the gate to get a cup of coffee. "We see things that the average man might miss." TWO SECRETARIES DROVE UP to the line greeting the men with smiles and cigaret smoke. Surprisingly the workers wouldn't let the car through. -Why did they do that? "Probably just to watch them walk. The blond's pretty good; she lives near me. Her father's from Ken- tucky." Meanwhile the girls walked on, their hips swishing and swing- ing toward the Chevy office. A worker walked over and sat on the curb next to Cassady. "Whad do ya think of the suspension on that Ford Camper over there?" "Looks a little higher than the Chevy; I bet she would really be something all filled-up and doin 70 on the highway." Company cars crossing the line unsuspectingly went through their own inspection. One car was lousy, another needed a valve job; "Look at the way she burns oil." The men looked upwards as a small plane passed over the factory; cutting through the grey sky. The plane struggled in the gusty wind: "Look at that mother shake ... I'd sure hate to be up in this weather." A Cadillac full of suited company men came back from lunch; freshly lit cigars let fine blue wisps of smoke slip out the car's windows. The smooth simonized body of the car slowed to a crawl to pass the garbage cans around the picket line. Cassady tossed a stone into one of the cans. "Wouldn't it be a shame if their car got scratched," he muttered as the chrome and steel rolled by with its load. Cassady would never own a car like that; the Gremlin is all he needs. "I'm not that ambitious. We could have more; a lot of guys' wives work. But you lose something along the way. All we need is a place to live, something to eat and to stay clean." But as the strike continues, Cassady's payments are building up. He needs a job. This week he might try several places. "You can get a job at any service station. One place needs a muffler .man but that's a dirty job." BEFORE THE STRIKE Cassady liked going to a drive-in movie on weekends. He's even made movies himself in the past few years. "I have a Kodak Super-8. I shoot a lot of with my kid . . You can create all kinds of illusions and actions with movies if you watch carefully. r Letters to The Daily 4 Naivete To the Daily: J. YALE-ALLEN'S "An his- toric precedent for university tur- moil" (Daily, Sept. 26) is ironic in two respects. The author is seem- ingly trying to draw an analogy between pre-1917 Russia and the U.S. today as far as student move- ments are concerned. Whet is ironic is Allen's implication that after 1917 students were somehow better off. What incredible naivete. After 1917 if a student were to slap a student inspector that would be his last deed as a mortal. Any dissent in the good old peo- ple's paradise has been and is re- warded with jail terms, expulsion from institutions of higher learn- ing, and subsequent job ostracism. THE OTHER POINT of irony in Mr. Allen's article is the state- ment: "Found guilty by associ- ation, unable to travel abroad, and discriminated against in employ- ment, the red haired student was to follow the only path open to him: revolution." Here again we have the old revolution myth. Gentlemen, open your East Euro- pean history books. Lenin and his Bolsheviks did not pull off the revolution, i.e. against the czarist regime, instead it was liberals who did it. The best Lenin and his boys could do was to pull off a coup d'etat on Kerensky after it was all over. -Bohdan Wytwycky Sept. 26 not even receive money for nmime- ographing or Xeroxing which we must pay for out of our own pockets. COURSE MART courses are all approved by the Curriculuna Com- mittee of LS&A for reguldr aca- demic credit. Consequently, this program is a great bargain for the University which receives hun- dreds of student-credit hours gratis-credit hours which would ordinarily cost thousands of dol- lars if they were taught in the departments. We who are active in these courses offer our services because we feel that the subject matter is important and ought to be taught for credit even if we are not paid. Nevertheless, we feel that it is not right for these cour- ses which have been. judged aca- demically worthy to be denied funds which all other accredited courses receive. Sincerely, -Andrea Solomon Charles Cell, John McConnell Carl Goldberg Organizing Committee for College Course 324, Military in Modern America Sept. 23 In support To the Daily: AS MEMBERS of a Christian student organization, we consider it an obligation to foster :ind sup- port those movements and organ- izations that we feel witness to the teachings of Jesus Christ. It 's our grams is a far better and more ef- fective means of alleviating social ills than is the paternalistic char-_ ity ;that is so characteristic of white America. WE REALIZE that the task that BEDL and WRO has set out to ac- complish is one which will need the support not only of churches and social organizations, but also of the local, state, and -federal governments. The support of the Newman Student Association will not go far in realizing the aims of BED4 - WRO, but we hope that our contributions-financially, in manpower, and in any other form that may be of service--will serve to elicit similar support from those institutions a n d organizations whose resources are greater than our own. -Newman Student Association Steering Committee Offensive ads To the Daily: ON TUESDAY, Sept. 22, you ran an ad for the Grad Coffee Hour which showed a Mexican in a sombrero labeled "Manuel" speaking to his "amigos." The ad misspelled words like "theenk" in- tending to represent the way Mex- icans speak English. I found the ad extremely 'offensive, as it stereotyped Mexicans in the usual way as being stupid and not able to learn to speak English properly. I am tired of seeing this stereo- typing in the press and on T.V. Perhaps when we all finally re-