C( t THE MILWAUKEE JOURIVj Fid N. xpaper~ydieaia, 9i 1)7/ 1 I) West Side ... By DOC KRALIK I GET ON the airport rapid in Cleveland. It costs me 80c. I have just gotten off the plane from Detroit. I am on my two day spring break. I wasted the other eight days trying to finish my ridiculous senior thesis. I put the latest "New Yorker" in my suitcase and take out the pad on which I write this piece. There is a couple in the car with me. They look like rejects from a deodorant commercial. Perhaps their smiles weren't wide enough. They are the only other occupants of the train. The rest of Cleveland stopped riding the trains when the rates went up. Or when they lost their jobs. We swish out of the terminal. Intermittent fluores- cent lights reveal the smash-gray concrete walls and the deep rain cracks. Out we go, into the brown and gray fog of Cleveland's west side. I see a brown swamp leading into a barren drown- ing wood. Then two huge gray piles of dirt-in Cleveland dirt becomes gray and beaded-where a highway will soon be built. The rain runs down the piles in sad streams. AN OLD COLORED man wearing black shoes, white socks and a courduroy coat comes in at the first stop. He stares at the other set of tracks. A Long Ride... few barren trees decorate the parking lot of the station. Here come the square, aluminum, smog painted, white painted, pre-fab factories with generic names like "Allied," and the dirty identical rows of dirty identical houses, with their dirty identical house- wives cooking macaroni and cheese casseroles. I can see into their sodden fenced off backyards, and I wonder how they live here. Now we are roaring into Cleveland. There are now yellow piles of dirt, (Do they make steel from this stuff?) huge disorganized white oil tanks, load- ing cars, Robert Lee Ford's Body Shop, cars decom- posing in monstrous scrap metal mountains, with the lazy arms of the cranes slowly moving the moun- tains, rearview mirror by rearview mirror. THEN A SIGN, for the benefit of visitors I sup- pose, saying that the best things in life are in Cleveland. The sign is followed by a smog covered mural advertising Paramount Vodka. People seem to leave things by the tracks, and no one seems to pick them up. I see at least four mangled shopping carts. I think with shame of the time after finals when we were so drunk we threw a shopping cart from our third floor apartment. I also see a radiator pipe, plastic orange juice bot- low down blues tIes, branches, splintered boards, two sopping doubled over mattresses, a soggy cardboard box of garbage, a bath tub with a wicked edge where the side had been smashed, a three legged stool, a re- frigerator door, and at least eighteen empty bags of potato chips. The factories are taller now, and made of brick. We slide over an elbow of green oil, and I see ore being lifted from one of the long Great Lakes tank- ers. And I see the fires of the furnaces. THE COLORED MAN with the white socks has fallen asleep. We pass the strangely bent tower of Diamond Jim's in the flats, and glide into the Ter- minal Tower. I pass out into the cold rain that is falling on Pub- lic Square. An old bum, his hat squashed down, is swaying to and fro over by the War Memorial. My thesis is finished by this ride. Who could go back to the Reserve Reading and suffer the white lights and the red carpet after seeing Cleveland's west side? I can't. So my thesis is finished. I want to celebrate. I think of my history of art class, and Raphael's Maddonnas. Had he only seen this. Or did he? Doc Kralik is not an obscure student struggling to finish his thesis. l 'N Letters: Reaction to Katzir appearance 'This is your nice friend you keep telling me holds the key to peace over here? Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, March 15, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Students: Dorms or Streets 1HERE WERE A lot of unhappy losers in Thursday night's dorm lottery who blasted the Housing Of- fice's choice of game plan in coping with the dorm room squeeze. Forced to hit the apartment-hunting trail in mid-March when the choice spots have already been signed away, sev- eral of those who lost out on dorm spaces are contemplating drastic ac- tion-dropping out of school or trans- ferring to universities with friendlier dorm set-ups. After the Housing Office sprung the lottery surprise on students this week, it provided no consolation prizes for those it left homeless. For students who had counted on returning to the dorms, it is disconcerting to suddenly have to scramble for roommates and apartments. Rather than face the ap- partment search, many clearly prefer to leave the University at the same time they unwillingly leave the dorm. Increased demand for dorm spaces during economic hard times when off- campus living is often more expensive than dorms in addition to a 30 per cent increase in freshperson applica- tions created this year's housing crisis. Since 4,000 students were fight- ing for 3,000 spaces, Thursday's lot- tery pushed 1,000 students onto the streets. THE HOUSING OFFICE danced around the dorm squeeze, side- stepping its obligation to notify stu- dents early of their status. It should have made a far more concerted ef- fort to have held the lottery before spring break when students could have mobilized to locate other hous- ing. At least the Housing Office should have urged students earlier to explore other living options. Students with no affinity for apa'rtments who had counted on dorms where meals, laundry and housekeeping are more convenient naturally resent being squeezed out of dorms at this late date. The lottery, which gave equal chances to students, regardless of class, was perhaps not the fairest method of choosing up spots. The Housing Office could have imple- mented a priority system which would have given sophomores preference over juniors and seniors. Sophomores often do not want to relinquish the dorm's close group living after only a year, and it is perhaps easier for seniors who have had the benefits of dorm living for three years to give up its security. IN THE FUTURE, the Housing Of- fice should size up the living situation early in the year when evicted students can begin exploring alternatives to dorm living. This is one lottery where the wheel was not spun with fairness for all. To The Daily:1 IT IS unlikely that the deci- sion to confer an honorary de- gree on the President of Israel was based on his academic cre- dentials alone. President Flem- -ming owes his university com- munity - students and faculty alike - an explanation as to why, why this man? However we would be naive to think that the truth would come forth from our President's mouth. We would hear nothing of the strong Zionist influence that permeates this university. How disgusted our righteous academicians appeared on the podium in Rackham - horrified that this prestigious ceremony was sullied with shouts of "demonstrators." How else, may I ask, could intense dis- approval of honoring a man who leads the nation whose very creation and continued ex- istence as a Zionist state has made millions of Palestinians suffer the agonies of exile and wandering? PERHAPS the demonstration would have been more disciplin- ed and orderly had some of our honorable professors joined in - as they have in the past in demonstrations against the US support of the slaughter in Southeast Asia. Somehow these same professors can compart- mentalize their morality. They abhor the war in Vietnam and Cambodia but continue to give moral support and urge military support to Zionist Israel. No,the demonstrators should not hold their heads in shame, President Fleming, for disrupt- ing your convocation. Those'who continue to discount the rights of the Palestinian people to re- turn to their homeland are the ones who should be racked with guilt and shame. Yolanda Spence March 13 To The Daily: THE ARAB STUDENTS at the University, during their demonstration protesting the granting of an honorary Doctor of Laws degree to President Katzir of Israel, called for peace and justice in the Middle East. The Jewish students community on campus is will- ing to start a dialogue with the Arab student community on the situation in the Middle East. In fact, our B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation is the only unit on campus,academic or otherwise, which has held forums that dis- cussed the opposing views in a human, rational, and decent fa- shion. Such a forum was held on Sunday evening, February 23rd. The participants were Prof. Itamir Rabinovitch, Tel- Aviv University; and Prof. Mitchell, U. of M. However, our efforts have been met with noth- tempt to distinguish between the majority of Jews as being religious, and a minority of Jews being nationalists. In real- ity, though, this distinction can- not be made. The overwhelming majority of the Jewish people consider themselves Zionists. Judaism is not just a religion, but a world view possessed of a deep-rooted conception of peo- plehood centered in the Land of Israel. The Jewish people are united in their love and support for the people and state of Is- rael. By use of this slogan, anti- semitism is now transformed anti-Zionism. There is no dif- ference between attacking Jew- ish people and Zionists; they are one. However, those who use this slogan, purport to make this distinction, do they really? Are they just anti-Zionists? THE TRUE NATURE of the slogan comes out, "Zionism, no; Jewish people, no". This is a line that we have learned six million times over. The Jewish student com- munity would like tohave dia- logue with the Arab student community, but is such a dia- logue possible in an atmosphere of hostility and irrational fren- zy exhibited by the demonstra- tors against Pres. Katzir. After the rally, at least five Jewish students were physically attack- ed by the demonstrators as they left Rackham. In this atmos- phere of violence, is rational humane discussion possible? In trying to stop Katzir's scholarly talk, the Middle East Liberation Committee has shown what will happen to those who hold slight- lv different views in their "free democratic secular state of Pal- estine", which they hope to es- tablish. Harvey Sukenic Chairperson R'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation To The Daily: ON WEDNESDAY, the peo- ple of Ann Arbor were given a representative view of the na- ture of the methods used by the Palestinians and their support- ers. Following the special con- vocation at Rackham, which they were asked to leave, the pro-Palestinians milled and marched in front of Rackham while those who attended the convocation were leaving. One man who demonstrated his sup- ported of Israel by doing no more than unfurling an Israeli flag, was attacked. (No such thing happened to the holder of the Palestinian flag.) It was then noticed that one of the Palestinians had brought a wooden baseball bat. When the possession of this weapon was reported to the authorities, the man who reported it was sub- sequently surrounded by a group of Palestinians and their supporters who began to hit and kick him. WHAT KIND OF people are these? Speaking of "rights", they deny them to others; "de- siring of peace", they come armed, speaking of "peaceful unity" they attack innocent people. The time has come to recognize this pseudo - revolu- tionary and anti - humanist hy- pocrisy for what it is. It is our responsibility to ignore those who come to bargain with arms. If these people want peace and jilstice, let them come, but let them leave their weapons home. Name withheld by request March 13 To The Daily: IN YOUR editorial of the 14th your focus on the possibility that the speech by president Katzir might be odious ob- scured the conclusions drawn by the editor, and was not a full and accurate recounting of the events of the afternoon. A small number of those present found the honoring of Katzir distaste- ful; the majority did not. How- ever, the Palestinians, in their physical attack upon the photog- rapher, and the two individuals (who you neglected to mention) on the steps of Rackham was disgusting. Being one of those attacked (from the ratio of fourteen or more of them to one of me) I cannot find them very convinc- ing that they would make good neighbors in a "free democratic state." Why, if they did not like the results of a vote, they could jump you! Such behavior is, af- ter all, not without precedent. IF ACTIONS do speak loud- er than words, than the actions of these Palestinians in Ann Ar- bor are a clear statement of their approach to the resolution of problems, i.e. if you don't like something, try to destroy it. Do you want to live in a world like that? That would be odious! Name withheld by request March 14, 1975 justice To The Daily: TWENTY-TWO YEARS ago, on June 19th, 1953, two peo- ple - Julius and Ethel Rosen- berg were electrocuted by the United States government, ac- cused of conspiring to steal the secret of the atomic bomb and to transmit it to the Soviet Un- ion. In the past few years there's been a tremendous re- surgence of interest in the Ros- enberg Case as numerous con- tradictions have become ap- parent in the trial and testi- monies of that heated, anti- Communist, McCarthy Era. Books (in particular Walter and Miriam Schneir's Invitation to An Inquest), magazine articles and television programs have renewed the debate about the guilt or innocence of the Rosen- bergs and the role of the gov- ernment in their prosecution. A National Committee to Re-open the Rosenberg Case has been formed, with local organizations in many cities. EVIDENCE supporting the trial and the execution of the Rosenbergs has become more and more ambiguous and grows to support the belief that the Rosenbergs were framed in this crime and the government con- sciously forged evidence in or- der to prosecute the Rosen- bergs and Morton Sobell. He served eighteen and a half years in prison. The National Committee seeks not only to clear the names of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and Morton Sobell, but to show that gov- ernment illegal actions reach beyond Nixon, past Johnson and Kennedy and permeate the activities of the FBI, and CIA for the past twenty-five years. The Rosenberg frame - up is part of a larger design that has developed most strikingly since the end of World War II when the foreign espionage agency, the CIA, was created, and was used by the government to sell the myth to the American pub- lic that a vast Communist con- spiracy threatened our national security. IN LIGHT OF the events of Watergate, we believe the American people are ready for a reexamination of the history that made those events possi- ble. The reopening of the Rosen- berg Case is an attempt to lay bare the facts to public and legal scrutiny. Hopefully par- allels between past and recent government activities will pre- vent their recurrence. The re- cently strengthened Freedom of Information Act sets time limits forcing the government to respond ranidly to requests for records. Robert and Mich- ael Meerpool, the Rosenberg sons, have made public their dom of Information Act in con- nection with the Rosenberg - Sobell case. The Ann Arbor branch of the Committee to Re-open the Rosenberg Case will have a table set up in the Fishbowl on campus daily in the week of March 17th through 21st. We will be collecting con- tributions that will support the funding of this ad, and distrib- uting information in regard to the Rosenberg Case. Books and buttons will be available also. Anyone interested in making a contribution or becoming in- volved with the Committee should come to the Fishbowl during that week or call one of the following numbers: 668-6434 or 665-3508. Marcy Fink Ann Arbor Branch of the National Committee to Re-open the Rosen- berg Case February 26 straight talk To The Daily: AFTER READING Professor Trowbridge's letter in today's Daily, I think that it would be a good thing for the Fourth Ward Candidates to get together for some straight talk about those things which concern the vot- ters in the Fourth Ward. The only condition I would have for such a meeting is that there be a fair and impartial moder- ator (surely Professor Trow- bridge would require this of any fair debate). Finally, Professor Trowbridge may "know only the side of his own case" too well. He failed to mention which party he repre- sents. Just so there is no doubt about my party affilia- tion, I am proud to say that I am the Democratic candidate for the Frnirth Ward. William Bronson Democratic Candidate Fourth Ward March 12 basketball To The Daily: AMIDST THE RECENT dis- heartening turmoil and contro- versy on the U of M campus, one bright light shines through: the year-long performance of the University of Michigan Var- sity basketball squad. To be congratulated wholeheartedly on an outstanding season are the Joe Johnsons, the C. J. Ku- pecs, the Wayman Britts, the Steve Grotes, and the Johnny Robinsons to name a few who helped bring it about. But, above everyone else, however, the spotlight must focus on Coach Johnny Orr for doing such a marvelous job with, rea- listically speaking, nothing more than mediocre collegiate talent. I owe an apology to Orr who, for the first two years of my "Michigan experience", I downgraded as less than medi- ocre himself. But the job he has done the past two years in lead- ing the UM to consecutive NCAA plavoff berths with the talent he has had is virtually beyond belief. Last year, grant- ed, he had a superstar on the scniad, around whom he de- ploved for adeanate, if not sen- sational, starters. But this year, with those same four Dlavers, not one a legitimate All-Ameri- can nominae, pls a few new- comers, Orr molded a finely tuned, homogenous, at times sner, but alwvs exciting sod of rondballers. To Orr and his team: congratulations on a job well done, and "do it to the Bruins!" To AD Don Cnnhan: congratulations on tvrnine vor back on the boo- Red Cross needs donors GIVE BLOOD, you'll feel better for doing it and help somebody live longer. This year the need for the University community to contribute to the Red Cross is especially critical. While the demand has met the an- ticipated annual rise, the projected supply has not kept pace for reasons directly related to the faltering economy. Every spring the Red Cross blood donation staff makes a tour of area auto and other industrial plants to collect for this most crucial cause. Due to layoffs and cutbacks, how- ever, collections levels this spring are anticipated to be lower than ever, according to area Red Cross coordina- tor Bob Moyer. In an effort to meet never-ending demand the Red Cross will staff the Michigan Union Ballroom for a third TODAY'S STAFF: week this year-the first time they have done so in their many years on campus, I)ONATIONS CAN BE made on a walk-in basis during the week of March 31 to April 4 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students, faculty and citizens are asked only to bring some kind of identification to the clinic. The Red Cross staff will move to the St. Thomas High School - State St. north of Huron Ave. - on April 7 and 8. If neither of these times or locations are convenient, you can still give blood at the Red Cross office at 2729 Packard. For laid off workers and others suffering the worst effects of the economic hard times, the University Hospital's Blood Bank is paying $20 for donations from acceptable donors. If you want to find out if you are eligible to give call the Blood Bank 971-5300 on Tuesday afternoons. rth oranizationns reuire reeini-