WHERE CARS AREN'T KING Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Friday, February 28, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Speed law unfair to poor THE MICHIGAN STATE Legislature recently provided more evidence why people no longer respect govern- ment. In an action reeking of cynic- ism and bias toward wealth, the Michigan House voted to keep the 55 mile-per-hour speed limit on Michi- gan roads but to reject handing out point penalties for those caught driv- ing between 55 and 70 miles per hour. There is no secret as to why the 55 mile - per - hour speed limit was kept. By decree of Congress, a state can lose its federal highway funds if it fails to adopt the lower, fuel sav- ing speed limit. No one wanted 55 miles per hour, but everybody want- ed the federal gravy. So the lower speed limit was accepted, but penal- ty points rejected. Without penalty points, those who can afford the twenty dollar fine for speeding can violate the speed limit to their hearts' content. The only people who are hurt are those who cannot afford to give up twenty dollars, the poor and the unem- ployed. N)PEOPLE WILL be hurt. Traf- fic fines have traditionally been less than a deterrent needed for the public safety than an easy source of municipal revnue. Parking tickets and traffic fines help ease the cost of paying the policemen that hand them out. Under the old law, anyone caught and convicted of speeding would pick up two penalty points. Twelve penal- ty points over two years could mean a loss of one's license. The new sys- tem effectively makes it legal for the rich to become highway hazards. Perhaps poor speeders will be lucky and find themselves facing one of the many traffic court judges who have gone on record as stating that they will not fine anyone for break- ing the 55 mile per hour limit regard- less of the law. To these justices, the lower speed limit is an artificial de- vice foisted on the state by Washing- ton. They therefore have no duty to enforce such a manifestly unjust law. TT IS INTERESTING to speculate on what the reaction of such a judge would be to a person using the same argument on a charge of possession of marijuana. The laughter would probably be heard from Muskegon to Port Huron. If the state legislature sees fit to pass laws that the rich and the pow- erful have no obligation to obey, they should not be surprised when the poor and powerless decide that they, too have no obligation to obey the law. French By PAUL O'DONNELL TN MOST OF the United States, and especially in Michigan, highway transport is the rule for pas- senger travel. In Detroit, auto capital of the world, The Car is King when it comes to moving people from one place to another. Bus and train service fall far behind in terms of speed, efficiency, and convenience. Even cities in underdeveloped regions of Southern Spain, with their slow-moving and picturesque trains and antiquated diesel buses, provide a more efficient, if somewhat less rapid means of transportation than cities like Detroit, where large percentages of the population live far from where they work. Ever since coming to Europe two years ago, this Detroiter reluctantly abandoned his "wheels" and took to riding European trains, buses, subways, and trolley cars. In the course of my one man study of public transportation in the cities and countries I have lived in, I have come to the conclusion - not as obvious as it may seem - that life is possible without owning an automobile, and that every car owner would profit from an effective system of mass transportation. My numerous trips on France's National Railway System only reaffirm these conclusions. This article was inspired by one such trip on France's trains. I STAND IN the train station at 6:00 A.M., watching my Express train to Paris leave without me. I had to run from the Taxi stand, and missed the departure by ten seconds . . . and I had to be in Paris before 5:00 P.M. Only one way to arrive on time: to wait an hour and hop aboard the more expensive and faster Trans- Europ-Express train. Once inside the train, I paid the conductor the dif- ference between my second-class ticket and the price of a TEE ticket, explaining that I had missed the 6:00 Express, "You're not the only one," he told me; several passengers smiled at me sympathetically and showed me their second class tickets. Then we were off . . . the takeoff was smooth. "It's not a train, it's a plane," goes one Spanish saying about the Trans-Europ-Express trains. Indeed, the similarities between the TEE and a modern jet are numerous. With air-conditioning, carpeting, com- fortable airplane-type seats, piped in recorded music, and inter-compartimental doors which open electron- ically, the inside of the train could be mistaken for the interior of a 747 jet. SUDDENLY, as we gradually slowed down, a voice came over the loud speaker: "Ladies and gentlemen. we are now arriving in Avignon . . ." As if to make the "airport" atmosphere complete, the an- nouncement was made in bt:h French and English. Even the modern AMTRAK trains and east coast shut- tles between cities like New York and Washington can't compare to French trains in price, efficiency, and regularity. Between two stations, I was able to talk to the ."stewardess", who announced ouraarrival in important railway stations from a booth behind the train's bouti- ransit que, where the two saleswomen sold everything from plastic Eiffel Towers to wide ties and expensive per- fumes. "The train is most impressive," I told her, "especially for someone from America, where public transportation is almost non-existent, but I'm a bit surprised at the luxury." I pointed to the perfume sell- ers and the electric window shades. She replied that it was indeed a luxury train, and unlike most French trains, it was run by a private company. "Certain busi- nessmen need quiet and comfort to do their work while on trips; and for those who can't afford it, there are cheaper turbo-trains which go just as fast and offer second-class prices," she explained. WHAT ABOUT working on a TEE train? The acceler- ations and decelerations are so smooth that my cup of coffee doesn't even spill, she answered, adding that the train travels at more than 160 kilometers per hour, and was therefore quicker and more comfortable than can travel over long distances. For example, a trip from Marseilles, France's largest port, to the French capital takes six and one half hours by Trans-Europ- Express, whereas the trip takes at least eight hours in a car - more if one stops for lunch or dinner in France's horrible toll road restaurants. I arrived in Paris much more rested and calm than if I had spent eight hours battling my way across superhighways and paying inflationary gas prices. Promising the stewardess that I wouldn't use her name in the article, I dismounted the TEE in Paris' Lyons Station, walked to the subway stop, and arrived in the Latin Quarter a few minutes later, without setting foot in a car. The price of the trip was not much more than the price of a car trip of the same distance, and certainly less if tolls and parking in Paris - no less crowded than cities like Detroit and Washington -- are included in the price. CURRENTLY, car sales are dropping spectacularly, production and consumption is down in many industries, innumerable companies are approaching bankruptcy, and impoverished governments are asking for loans from richer nations. Meanwhile, the state-run French National Railway System (SNtrCF) showed a 5.1 per- cent increase in passenger traffic over the past year. Mr. Paul Gentil, director of the SNCF explains why: "Railroads consume from two to four times less fuel per kilometer than truck and auto transportation, and seven times less fuel per kilometer than air transporta- tion." The oft-repeated cliche that states that "every- thing in France which is state-run is poorly managed, and everything which is privately owned is well run," is as untrue of the national train system as it is of the semi-private and private auto industries. While the French Citrogen and Peugeot car companies are, like their American counterparts, laying off workers and struggling for survival, the Railway System is expand- ing its services, improving speed and efficiency, and converting more and more train lines over to cheaper and cleaner electric power. THE DEBATE concerning whether or not the govern- ment should favor rail transport over highway trans- port, or whether the choice should be left up to the individual citizen, rages on; everyone from the ecolo- gist - "train tracks destroy less country-side than highways, trains are cleaner than cars .- . to the truck driver, whose job is already menaced by inflating diesel prices, to the occasional highway driver and the consumer advocate,, seems to have something to say about the issue. The same debate seems to be taking place in what some call "The Land of the Ford, and the Home of the Buick" though travel in America is often left up to the individual, and what is good for General Motors is supposed to be good for America. The declining qual- ity of urban life (according to many partially the re- sult of American inner cities becoming nothing more than the business centers), increasing pollution, sky- rocketing transport prices, and economic recession may change the tranport scene in America, and even in the Motor City. One French journalist,ton the scene in D~etroit during "one of the best snowstorms Michigan has ever known," reports: "Better than all the speech- es and discourses, a snowstorm showed, once again, how much the inhabitant of Detroit . . . depend upon the automobile for their very existence." Paid O'Donnell is a European correspondent for The Daily, presently studying in Aix-en-Provence, France. on right track MITRE ads deceptive THE DAILY HAS ALWAYS tried to maintain an open advertising policy which grants open access to all advertising material, provided it does .not discriminate along racial, religious or sexist lines. Unfortunate- ly, in our fervor to preserve adver- tisers' rights to present conflicting or competing material on our pages, we are sometimes forced to compromise our own ethical position on matters of social import by granting space to deceptive if not discriminatory ma- terial. On page three of last Tuesday's Daily, an ad entitled "Minds Matter" appeared extolling the job opportuni- ties presented by MITRE Corporation, and announcing MITRE job inter- views to be held on campus March 13. and 14. MITRE begins its schpiel by de- scribing itself as a "nonprofit system TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Dan Bluger- man, Ellen Breslow, Claudia Lewin, Charles Lipsitz, Pauline Lubens, Rob Meachum, Sara Rimer, Stephen Selbst Editorial Page: Clifford Brown, Paul Haskins, Steve Stojic Arts Page: David Blomquist Photo Technician: Ken Fink T AA VETOING 1hIS ENERGY L .G ILAT'ION! WWT PRICES! (l engineering company operating whol- ly in the public interest and dealing with tough problems assigned to us by more than a score of governmental agencies." A BIT FURTHER ON, the ad men- tions the "company's" need for new graduates to work in "command and control systems" and "electronic surveillance" systems, among others. The right of this company, or agency or whatever, to promote itself can not be fairly challenged. But if MITRE is what they appear to be-a security organization directly plugged into and indivisible from the federal defense and surveillance establish- ment-they should be exposed for what they are before being allowed to recruit here or elsewhere. The MITRE ad's presence in Tues- day's Daily, once again, should not be viewed as staff approval of that or- ganization's operations or political pursuits. The security establishment more closely than any other national institution embodies that which is nefarious and undemocratic in Amer- ica. WE FIND MITRE'S exploiting the knowledge of University students for the purpose of further entrench- ing the intelligence legions no less objectionable than ROTC's presence on behalf of the economic war ma- chine. 5ECAUSE,IPELIEVE CONGRESS WILL ULTIMATELY RESPONP TO The WILL OF TE PEOPLE IN TH)S MATTER! People of Palestine: The disinherited By DAVID WEINBERG IN 1948 he fled, along with a million others towards Bei- rut, towards Egypt, towards Damascus. He fled from the jeeps, the loudspeakers, of the Zionist Stern Gang and Irgun, led by Menachim Begin, fled for his life. He was eight years old and did not know perhans, that he was leaving Palestine for good. His name is Fawaz Turki, and he is a Palestine Arab of the last generation to be born in Palestine. His life has b P e n mostly lived in a refugee camp outside of Beirut, where he grew up. In his book, The Disinherited, Fawaz Turki writes: "I a 'n aware that I have been state- less for nearly all of my twenty- nine years, that I have lived and grown up in a refugee camp on the edge ofthe desert; that except for those freckl,-nosed bureaucrats in the West who from time to time endsed a shipment of food and warm blankets to me, I did not ex'st on the face of this globe;" "When for two decades I feared, I feared only the cnld of twenty winters, and whFen I dreamed, I dreamed only of the food that others ate. I am also aware that this has muitil- ated my reality and impover- ished my consciousness." Fawaz Turki's story is not substantially different from that of 1 and a half million of his brethren. Their story is a ragic one which, in this councry, Nh-s been largely obscured. To hear Fawaz tell this story is to hear a stunningly different account of something that many people long ago stopped evaluaing: "By 1948, the Palestinle peo- ple had already acquired a ccn- sciousness, had acquired a ra- tional psyche. Because the idiom, the metaphor, the ethos, the laughter, the whole essen- tial repertoire of the Palestin- ian experience for the Palestin- ian people had been derived from the land of their birth." "And therefore, for anyone to assume that the Palestinians had been absorbed by +he Arab nations is part of a whole body of mythology which has charac- terized any analysis of the Pal- estinian problem." He is a poet, and when he says such things one cannot help but be reminded of this. His voice is gently insistent and rhythmic, an ironically eloquent spokesman for a people who have had little to ;ay in their own destiny. "Haifa," he quotes an old Palestinian tolk song, "we left thee with the fish that our fishermen had caught siill thrashing in the sand." The conflict thattman' r-ofLs have labelled as the "Arab-Is- raeli conflict" has acually al- ways had its roots n the Pales- tinian problem. In 1917, t h e British Balfour D Ljaratxon helped initiate what has be- come such a bitter struggle, by condoning the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Pales'ine. At the time more than a half million Arabs were ving in Palestine in a culture -ery much their own. The Zionist slo- gan, "A people without a land for a land without a people,' was an innately false one, and most British officials invilved knew this. Arab resistence to Jewvish im- migration grew and, by 136, had risen to a peak and cli- maxed into a three-year perid of striking and rioting across the land. The turbulence of tni~ so-called "Mandate Pecio'l' ul- timately forced the British to give up their claim to Palestine, in deference to a partition plan of the United Nation,~, which sectioned Palestine into desig- nated "Arab" and "Jewisl." sectors. In the violent period tha ol- lowed, Zionist forces atempted to rid the land of Arabs, and they were exiled into an outside Arab world that neither welcom- ed nor liked the Palestinians. So often the question has been ask- ed - why did the Palestinians flee so readily from ther home- land? To this Fawaz Turki answers, "That question is of p;.rely academic significance. N o w whether the Palestinians i-ft voluntarily, or whetner t h e y were physically evicted, or whe- ther they were terrorized into leaving, or whether they left in response to appeals by the Arab governments, is really of no significance at all." "Because a refugee does not forfeit his right to return to his country, becaisa o: the manner in which he lefl it. Yes, there was terror. It was carrie.1 out in such tactics as were used in the village of Deir Yassim. Deir Yassim was a village in the North of Palestine which was attacked by the Irgun, who killed 254 men, women and children. It was a hileous kind of massacre. Many of the sur- rounding villages and towns, hearing about Deir Yassim, es- caped in terror. But whether a Palestinian left in this manner or that, he does not cruse to be a Palestinian simply because of the manner in which he left his country," asserts Turki. Asked about present-day ter- rorism, he quickly becomes en- raged, and says, "How can we condone the killing of innocent Israeli children by Palestine re- fugees? No one can condone that. How can we condone the napalming and the killing of Palestine children in refugee camps-- no one can condone that, either." Turki raises an inte-c._ting is- sue with regard to American media coverage of the Palestin- ians -- namely, that our und.r- standing of such struggles 1has been limited by an underlying racism towards them: "The media have a kind of contempt, a kind of inability, to relate to the suffering, to the pain, to the vision, to the strug- gle for liberation, of a people with whom they do n't s;sm to share the same system of values, and the same system of consciousness," ne says. "You may recall, ' he adds, "how simplistically the media covered the struggle in Vietnam duringthe early 60's. The free- dom-loving people of S o ui t hi Vietnam, and their beloved read- er, Diem, against the d i r t y Commies in the North w h o were going to oppress them " "It wasn't until the struggle of the Vietnamese people be- came just as equally relenie s as the American agg~ressors, that the media here was forced, willy-nilly, so to speak, to re- cognize it for its true fotn.da- tion and basis." Of Kissinger's efforts in the Middle East, Turki zornnts, "The settlement that Kissiager is seeking at the m nient is something that I constier with tremendous suspicibn. It is wishy-washy, full of in -erim so- lutions and withdrawals, a n d totally ignoring the eery essentce of the conflict in Palestine - the Palestinian proble.' "And indeed," he continues, "it is now generally recognized that without the Pilin'ans, peace in the Middle East wou'ld be a kind- of ripe irean. It is paradoxical. that the Palestin- ians, who are really the voice RD r. 1 1 Fawaz Turki Purists are obscene'--Graffiti I \\\Ulllllll\\1 ,R, i. -;r*,\ By CHRIS KOCHMANSKI PSYCHOLOGISTS TELL US that graffiti, especially of the lavatory wall variety, is an expression of the creative urge in all of us. On another level, art histor- ians define art as an extension of the artist himself. Shouldn't then graffiti be critically judg- ed in the same manner as art? Can it not be determined that graffiti is too an exten- sion of its perpetrator, and therefore an art form? Is it so inconceivable that a lav- atory wall, marred by pencil scribblings, ments. Still the University offers no organ- ized program for the development and re- finement of this skill, one that the student takes with him after graduation and re- tains more readily than, say, balancing equations. THE UNIVERSITY has admittedly been generous in providing us with a healthy at- mosphere for learning and creative endea- vor. However, there has been no effort on the administration's part, not even a token allocation of funds, to support the ever- burgeoning practice of stylishly defacing well-meaning but narrow-minded authorit es discouraged freedom of expression and es- tablished, at least in my mind, a very de- finite form of artistic censorship. Studies have shown that most practition- ers of graffiti work in lavatory stalls. Un- fortunately, many of these artists are lit- erally caught with their pants down when their pencil leads snap in moments of su- preme inspiration. THE OBVIOUS solution is to provide lav- atory stalls University-wide with reliable pencil sharpeners so that no message,