Eile £idiian DaU Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Friday, March 28, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Hardin: An obscene theory "SCIENCE FOR THE People", a new- ly formed group of faculty, grad- uate students and community mem- bers, deserves credit for its sensible decision to hold a teach-in last night following the lecture delivered by Garrett Hardin, ecologist - biologist and author of the insidious "life- boat" theory. The selection of Garrett Hardin to deliver the Marston Bates Me- morial Lecture was a cruelly ironic one which perturbed many who knew Bates. Bates was a humanitar- ian who would have been repulsed by Hardin's brand of social Darwin- ism. "Science for the People", there- fore, invited four speakers to explain why Hardin's "ethics" are not jus- tified by the facts. The "teach-in" was a constructive alternative to the obstructionism of the type which erupted during the speech of President Katzir earlier this month. Mr. Hardin's horrifying notions. clearly merited a prompt rebottle. According to his theory, the rich na- tions of the world are adrift on a lifeboat. In the ocean outside each lifeboat swim the poor of the world who would like to get in, or at least try to share some of the wealth.We could try to take everyone aboard, he says, but we would sink the life- boat if we did! Departing, from analogy, Mr. Har- din bluntly told a House subcommit- tee that we would be doing a favor to starving countries as well as our- selves if we refused to send them any more food. Hardin's "The Tragedy of the Commons" even proposed com- pulsory birth control. It stated "The only way we can preserve and main- tain other and more precious free- doms is by relinquishing the free- dom to breed, and that very soon!" Quite properly, Roger Rovelle of the Center for Population Studies at Harvard termed the "Lifeboat" ethic obscene. In Science Magazine he call- ed upon developed countries to pledge capital and technical assistance for agricultural modernization in the poor countries. Clearly, adequate nutrition must be recognized as a universal human right, applicable to the poor everywhere. In Scientific American Rovelle went on to say that the potentially arable land in the world could feed between 10 and 13 times the present popula- tion of the world. He concluded: "The limiting factors are not ma- terial resources but economic, insti- tutional, and socio - political re- straints." Hardin dangerously fails to note this. In Latin America, for example, landowners find it more profitable to grow cash crops like sugar and coffee instead of staples which could feed the population. In the Sahel region of Africa, where drought and famine are rampant, thousands of the best areas and a large share of the scarce water supplies are assign- ed by "multinational agribusiness corporations" to the production not of foodstuffs for the native popula- tion, but for raw materials and oth- er products for marketing in the de- veloped world. The Transnational In s t i t u t e trenchantly said "Hunger is caused by plunder and not by scarcity." Pre- sently upwards of 400 million peo- ple are, in the words of Robert Mc- Namara, "on the margin of life". Not feeding them is criminal. A renti~i By TIM SMITH SCENE: Save and Screw Apartment Company in a typical university town. It is the day of the lease signing, but before the lease is to be signed, Ernie presents the secretary with a list of things that he wants fixed before the next year. ERNIE: I hope you don't mind listening to a few gripes about the apartment. I thought it would be better to air them before the lease is signed. You under- stand. SEC.: Oh, not at all. We're always happy to listen. ERNIE: Good. Well first of all there's this seven inch hole in the living room rug, then the dish washer doesn't work, the john leaks, the curtains are like rags, and one of the beds is - wait a minute, aren't you going to write any of this down? SEC.: Why no. I told you I'm always happy to listen. If you make me write I won't be happy, and if I am not happy you won't be happy, because I can't listen while I'm not happy. You understand. ERNIE: Well, aren't you going to do anything about these problems? SEC.: Sure, I'll listen. ERNIE: Wait! One of the windows is even broken! SEC.: Sounds awful. ERNIE: The refrigerator door is so bent that it doesn't even close properly. All the cold air comes out! SEC.: Hey.. . you're catching on. ERNIE: But isn't there anything that can be done? SEC.: Sure, sign the lease. ERNIE: What? Are you kidding? What if I told you I wanted my deposit money back? SEC.: I'd tell you to go sit on a carrot and twist. You can't have it. 1 p1 i ta ie o ERNIE: Why not?! SEC.: We spent it already. ERNIE: You spent it? On what?! SEC.: We used it to get rid of the mice in the apart- ment. r terro rs sterical. ERNIE: Well, you DAMN WELL BETTER LISTEN! We will 'not live in that swamp. I'm not Euell Gibbons, the only wildlife I want in that apart- ment is the female kind - the female HUMAN kind - not rodents! SEC.: But they're not a problem all year long. The spring floods usually drown them. ERNIE: The SPRING FLOODS! GOD NO! TELL ME WHAT ELSE IS WRONG?! TELL ME, I'VE GOT TO KNOW BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE! SEC.: Oh, nothing else . .. that we know of. ERNIE: That YOU know of?! Well I'm going over there and talk to the girls that live there now. SEC.: Oh, I wouldn't do that. It's only ten in the morn- ing. They're probably just going to bed after a long nights work. ERNIE: Oh they work nights, eh? Well, I'll go see them tonight at work then. SEC.: Well, I wouldn't do that either - unless you make an appointment first and bring money. ERNIE: Do you mean that they're PROSTI ... SEC.: Only at night. ERNIE: I don't believe this! You want to rent us a floating hotel - complete with living hors D'oeuvres! SEC.: Well . . . it does pay their rent. ERNIE: GOD - LET ME OUT - I'M LEAVING! I'M GOING TO LIVE IN THE DORM AGAIN! I WOULDN'T LIVE IN YOUR PLACE IF.. . IF .. . IF THE DORM HELD A . . . A LOTTERY AND KICKED ME OUT! GOODBYE! SEC.: See ya soon. Tim Smith is an LSA sophomore soon to be in Ar- chitecture and Design. -Daily Photo by STU HOLLANDER ERNIE: THE MICE! How did the mice get in there?! SEC.: We let them in. ERNIE: YOU WHAT?! SEC.: To help get rid of the termites. ERNIE: The TERMITES?! SEC.: Yes, but enough of this. We're getting side- tracked. You said you wanted to talk about your problems. Besides, I can't listen while you're hy- PIRGIM SUMMER INTERNSHIP Experience, By AMY STONE small file cabin "QPEND THIS Summer as a desk for one st PIRGIM Intern," c o m- while others mah manded the poster. mic use of re The demands of law schoal 1930 desks. leave little time for students to Quotable quote worry about anything but their walls and range day-to-day' assignments, a n (I I lime .. . had given little thought to how "I think that, a I would spend the now fast ap- and passion, it is proaching summer. man that he sh The chances of finding a clerk- passion and atic ing job in a plush law office are at peril of being thinner than slim for first-year have lived." (C students, so I read the PIRGIM Holmes, Jr.) recruitment ad with more than mere curiosity. to the absurd . . The poster promised interns a "Adulterated ci chance to cure society of a person within th myriad of ills. My youthful manufacturers, se idealism had survived the 60's, any one, any cig and although I had opted to ing any ingredie leave the Peace Corps to more to health or fore adventuresome types, a chance shall be guilty of to promote social change close er." (Section 27 to home hooked that part of me Code, MCL 750. still wanting to meet the chal- winner of PIRGI lenges of the decade. Month contest). Besides, I relished tha pros- pect of telling my frisnds and THAT PLEASA family I planed to spend the feeling quickly v summer revolutionizing Amer- ever, as an aggr ica. I sent in an appli-ation. three-person team ON INTERVIEW day 1ds- terview. They sp covered the PIRGIM s t a t e an hour scrutinizi headquarters to be a less than tials and achie intimidating place. Very down- posing difficult q home, in fact. sibly designed to The office decor is fashion- creative respons ably eslectic. A door over two Some questions insight and some change ets serves as aff member, ke good econo- cycled vintage es adw >ri t h e from the sub- as life is action required of a ould shiar the on of his time judged riot to Dliver Wendell garettes - any he state who ells or gives to 'arette cntaim- ent dela-*'rious ign to tobac-o a miIemean- of the Pena, 26. May 19'4 M's Law-of-the NT down--hone vanished, hcw- ressiv wly polite n began the in- ent more than ing my cr--den- vements and uestions osten- elicit my most es. were a o it beyond my scope (how would I solve the energy cr' ;,s?) but I told myself that even R a I p h Nader would have been some- what at a loss to prov:de all-en- compassing answers. Fortunately, PIRGIM decded to take me on and I nappily agreed to work with PIRGM's legal director on a Freedom of Information pro1ect designed to improve citizen access to government informati w. The job, exciting and chal- lenging as promised, aLso prov- ed to be fraught with the diffi- culties indigenous to a low-bud- get operation. FINDING A wo-k rea proved to be a substantial problem. in- chiding five summer interns, staff outnumbered t h e desks. After initial hesitation, : learn- ed to play that popular PIRGiM game musical desk. I knew I had achieved experise when I could secure a de.k, us, it, and return its contenrs to their original state of order (or dis- order) leaving no evidence for the true owner I had evfn been there. Development of a PIRGIM project follows a tr ed and true pattern. One identifies the prob- lem, then formulates the goaLs anda methodology to reach the goals. But even the ma. car efu'ly designed methodology will n c t always achieve fruition. in mv case, we discovercd midway through the sum ner that Plan A had to go. Thos, I learned that public in-are vt work, us- ually exciting an.i rewai Ing, is not without Lruia ins. joyed the expe ice. If you'd like !o aonay for the 1975 program, s b'nit a resume including yow.' address, teoe- phone number, ihe nmes and addresses of two or m"'e refer- ences, a sample of yoar writing "Development of a PIRGIM project follows u tried andl true pattern. One identifies t h e problem, then formulates the goals and a meth- odology to reach t0fe goals." Congress meeting challenge TN THE SHUFFLE of an unprece- dented Presidential transition last summer the advice of several liberal economists, that the nation needed a tax cut to halt the eco- nomic downslide, went unnoticed. And the new President, like his predecessor, was far more concerned with fighting inflation than reces- sion. As recently as October he was considering a tax hike and other measures to cool the mercurial up- swing of the price level. But as the evidence came in dur- ing November and December, as one- quarter of the auto workers began to draw unemployment benefits, and as the housing market plummeted to new lows, the grim truth became apparent that a depression was in the offing unless immediate steps were taken. And so, unhappy ideologically but convinced pragmatically, Ford an- nounced his support for a tax reduc- tion in January. Still a fiscal conser- TODAY'S STAFF: News: Susan Ades, Glen Allerhand, Steve Hersh, Jo Marcotty, T o m Preston, Jeff Sorensen Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, M a r a Letica, Stephen Selbst, Steve Stojic Arts Page: Jim Valk Photo Technician: Steve Kagan vative, Ford could give the proposal he sent to Congress only lukewarm support, originally offering a small reduction, then upping the level to $16.2 billion. THIS HAS BEEN the tradition in . American politics for the last quarter-century. The President pro- poses, and even the Congress reacts. A considerable body of political sci- ence literature grew up in that time to rationalize the inability of the Congress to initiate policy proposals. But the pattern has been chang- ing since Nixon's forced resignation. The do-nothing label will never be applied to this Congress. Acting swiftly, both houses passed tax re- lief packages much larger than Ford's proposal. The conference was brief and am- icable, and the resultant package calls for a nearly $25 billion slash in tax collection. The bill runs counter to Ford's policies, and the President, under pressure from Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns, may well veto the bill as excessive. THE NATION IS still a long way from being out of the weeds; this program isn't a panacea. But it is comprehensive and bold. More than that it's necessary and attacks the recession head on;the President's fails to do so. For their diligence and energy, members of Congress deserve a strong measure of praise. THE FREEDOM of I o ma- ion project, th)u' h a !ite be- hind schedule, is comig along nicely, and it ao)ks as though the results will sv tie light of day very soon. Mine was to "e a ..mnnier stint, but I found myself s 11 working with PJRGIM thrcugh December. In Octooer, I had the opportunity to teetifv f r PIRGIM before the Na-ural ke- sources Commis:. z' on 'Ye adoption of admnfsirathie rules on records ace s. Well, M ite- volutionizing America caa't be done in one ,um.ner, but I en- ability, previous relevaat Pxper- iences (if any), and any other information wrien may' prvide an indication >f -our pontial for success in tle program. Mail the appli ration to. PiR- GIM Intern Program, 615 E. Michigan Ave., Lan-.:g, Mich- igan 48933. They even nay $60 for the summer! Amy S/one is a student at Lansing'sCooley Law School, an LSA grad and former PIRGIM summer intern. Letters to The Daily ERIM To The Daily: THANK YOU for the notice of the then-pending publication of my contribution to the under- standing of the ERIM research matter. As nearly always happens in human affairs, a few misprints occurred. I amnot writing to demand publication or correc- tions, but do want to put you on notice about two which I feel changed the meaning from what I had written. Where this may me worth-while is only if any reader responses prove to be based on these erors (above all, don't publish that last awkward sentence.) Both of the erors I am re- ferring to were in the I a s t column. Near the top, my words "one of the few much- publicized . . ." became "one of the new . . .". To call the practicaly obsolete U-2 a "new" device is not very realistic. (NASA is still flying a couple of them,, painted in bright, vis- ible colors instead of their old traditional flat black.) Farther down in that column, my "doing faulty testing" be- came "doing faculty testing": - perhaps an example of an 'academic slip'? This error of- fers readers an opportunity to ponder what University-connect- ed skulduggery I might be re- fering to, whereas no such con- nections were implied by my original text. Finally, my intended quota- tions above are from memory, which is also humanly fallible. I am sure of the key words that are underlined, but some of the surrounding ones may differ from the originals. Be adaptable -- that's as hinan as one can get. -Richard B. Innes March 26 Camnbodia To The Daily: LAST WEEK President Ford posed the following question to the American people: "Will we stand idly by and permit a bloodbath in Cambodia?" This question, unfortunately, flatters the American people into be- lieving not only that they re- present the forces of moral righteousnes in the world but implies that Americans weild more power than they actually do. Furthermore, it complfetely ignores America's historical role in the area. Let us not forget that in the 1940's the United States sup- plied money and munitions to the corrupt Nationalist Chinese "government' under Generalhs- simo Chiang Kai-shek, though the Comunists were more effec- tive in mobilizing the population against the Japanese aggres- sors. The Nationalist "soldiers" were removed for their cruelty towards Chinese villagers and ac- tually flooded a dam, killing thousands of Chinese, 'as the "army" ran away from a Jap- anese advance. When in 1949 it became apparent that the Na- tionalists were despised by the people and had no base of sup- port, they moved to Taiwan. There, they killed large numb- ers of inhabitants only t w o years after they savagely sup- "Republicans" accuse the "Democrats" in Congress of "losing" Cambodia, or e v e n worse, of causing a "blood- bath"? Will they point to South Vietnam, a portion of a country that was raped, tortured and blown apart by the American military complex and say wilh a straight face, as William Saf- fire did, "Nixon's Vietnam za- tion program worked; after li, there is no communist flag in Saigon, is there?" Many Americans still recall the lonely depression they felt upon hearing ofbthe senseless "Christmas bombings". 0 u r dear Mr. Kissinger will not ne- gotiate with the Cambodian peo- ple now, however, because this honorable nation will only "re- gotiate" from a position of "strength." The Liberated Daily summarized Henry's tactics well: "You take the carrot we offer you or we bash your head in with the stick!" A MAJOR FAULT of our .ov- ernment institutions, as illus- trated by the investigation com- mittees of the Watergate acci- dent, is its failure to exam- ine contemporary problems in historical perspective. 0 n r government asks questions like "Is Calley innocent or guilty?", not "Why were Calley's actions standard procedure?" I would like to see congres- sional committees and all peo- ple of this country ponder the following questions: Why has our government tried to trans- form self-sufficient agrarian nu- tions which were beginning to industrialize into crippled and corrupt totalitarian ones, kaow- Katzir To The Daily: LET IT BE recorded and pro- tested that on Wednesday, March 12, at 4:20 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall of the University of Michigan, freedom of speech received a grievous blow. An honored guest of this university, Ephraim Katzir, President of Israel, was on the podium speaking gracefully and humanely on the occasion of be- ing awarded an honorary Droctor of Laws - in the presence of President Fleming, Regents, and Regents-Emeriti. At that moment, a sizeable group~ of rowdies interrupted Katzir and continued to disrupt the proceed- ings for some twenty minutes. Afterrnumerous warnings from the rostrum these enemies of decency had to be evicted by the police. We, the undersigned, wish to express our outrage at this at- tack on the humanity of dis- course that is the hallmark of a university. It is not only a dis- tinguished guest of the univer- sity that was dishonored - the University of Michigan ;tself was dishonored. WE URGE all who revere de- cency, freedom, and humane be- havior to help restore these con- cepts to our campus. March 12, 1975 will; alas, remain a tragic blot in the history of our uni- versity. The hurt is deep and cannot be easily mended. Those who participated in this das- tardly action have no M 1 a c e among decent men. M~CMO'ro M~&6LF R[Y V £FCT1V l 6J$$ /fpo GUELr? ic. HUL4OS OE sarte r.H THEY &fel-ATA6UMf AT IC tO9JT CFOA TREY IC( T TAT MU. MORIW AID T BLOOD BATH. I4XZ'T Ik)1V~TAL- AKJ 1H1Es A kIIJR tAUC-(16t a-r~Q~ ThI&)k' T hUrat Wn rT AjTy 2