MHE MILWAUKEE JOURN~AL Publihemlisll SynlicAte, 19741 - 3 \ ' . . / . a r ~- l f . '""' .. '. r; :. AFSC: A helping hand to the world By STEVE STOJIC LOU SCHNEIDER, Executive Secretary of the American Friends Service Committee, was in Ann Arbor last Thursday visiting the local branch of the AFSC. He spoke on his organi- zation's activities and the find- ings of his trip to North Viet- nam in August of 1974. The American Friends Serv- ice Committee, Secretary Sch- neider explained, is an organiza- tion ' dedicated to traditional Quaker principles. It deplores war and offers humanitarian help to both sides in a conflict situation by making available means to help the suffering. There are approximately 125,- 000 members of the AFSC in the United States and about 509 persons are active as staff workers and volunnteers in its programs. Financial support is received from individuals, groups,hand foundations t t a, sympathize with the goals of the AFSC. The budget for the year totals $8.5 million. IN ITS international aairs program, the AFSC takes an educational approach by hold- ing seminars. It has offices bas- ed in Tokyo, Singapore, and Bengladesh, where its sponsors and supports local Bengalis in community development. In Africa, the AFSC is working with Zambians on an urban site improvement program and is helping to develop conects of community involvement. Under contract by the United Nations Relief Works Adminis- tration, the AFSC is working in the Middle East to train moth- ers in child education. In the city of East Jerusalem taken by Israel in the 1967 war, the AFSC has set up a center to provide legal and civil infrrna- tion to Arabs. The object is to help the Arabs reorient 'hem- selves to the new laws 'f the Israelis. The AFSC is aN) ac- tive in Chile, Guatemala, and Mexico. THE AMERICAN ' Friends Service Committee first b.ucatme involved in Vietnam in 1961. Since that time, a total of rl- most $2 million has been spent in humanitarian aid to both Vietnams. A sum of $1,600,1VI0 went to Quang Ngai province south of Hue in South Vietnam to provide artificial limbs and medical treatment for 'njredi South Vietnamese war ve'erans. The North Vietnamese and Provisional Revolutionary Gov- ernment (PRG) received about $300,000 in aid. Medical equip- Contrasting conditions in the North and the South, Secretary Sch- neider stated that the "sense of vitality, en- terprise, and nation- hood in North Vietnam tends not to be true in South Vietnam." He thinks the "public has no aspiration, but to survive in the South" due to the "disintegra- tion of institutions and the government struc- ture." Both food and schooling app e a r e d more readily available in North Vietnam. ment was provided to B a & h Mai Hospital in Hanoi for heart and cancer research. The PRG received penicillin, medical equipment including 100 aid kits for paramedics, and agricuitural equipment such as diesel en- gines for irrigation pumos. In response to invitations frrm the North Vietnamese and the PRG, Secretary Schneider vis':- ed Quang Tri Province fo, two weeks. He reports that of the approximately 600 villages in that province "only 3 remain untouched by fighting" and that there is a "need for hamlet and village reconstruction." Be- cause of an unusually good rice crop, he says that the minmum level of agriculture was met this year and that the North Viet- namese take pride in te fact that theirs is a "poor coon- try, but everyone eats.' SECRETARY Schneider also states thatthe North Vie'narn- ese take great pride in their developing health deliver;? sys- tem and educational system. The adult school system offers a minimum level of literacy to the population. In its develop- ment program, the PRG listed its priority needs to Secretary' Schneider as "equipment i o r small industry, agricultral equipment, home reb'ilding, health facilities, and toois fr'r the repair of medical equip- ment." Contrasting conditions in the North and the South, Secretary Schneider stated that the "sense of vitality, enterprise, ansl na- tionhood in North Vietnam 'ends not to be true in South Viet- nam." He thinks that the "pub- lic has no aspiratiob, bt to survive in the S )uth" dtne to the "disintegration of inst u- tions and government s'r iz- ture." Both food and s ;vs appeared more readily avail- able in North Vietnam. NORTH VIETNAM a unxally needs 6,000 tons of paper nod for this year it was faced with a deficit of 1,000 tons. They ask- ed help from the AFSC wih this paper shortage in their educa- tional system. The AFSC Board voted $50,000 for the, purpose of composition books. This amount provided for acquisition of about 1,800,000 books. Secretary Schneider s t a t e d that the AFSC suoports t h e total cutoff of American mili- tary aid to the Thieu regime. It supports the sending of hu- ma iitarian aid, but aot through Thieu because the corruption in the South Vietnomese govern- ment prevents this aid from reachi'g the peoale. I ooking ahead, he announed that the AFSC has a firm agreement to send three American school teachers to visit North Vietnam in May or June to observe the educatioial system. Ile said that although Amern'icaus think that the war in Vietnam h a s ended and have lost interest, the "level of hurnai need is very 'high." Meeting that human need is a part )f the target of the American Friends Service Committee's continuing human- itarian aid program. Steve Stojic is a staff writer for the Editorial Page. ROTC: The credit question N. ti ..: cHt~fr M1e 'Mre a~n Daily Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Friday, January 17, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 Sliding into dhe Depression GERALD FORD'S economic propos- als will cause the following things to happen in 1975: * Inflation will run between 15-20 per cent. The rate of inflation is al- ready 12 per cent. Administration of- ficials admit that the hike in oil prices to come in the next few months will add another 2 per cent to the inflation rate. So, if the over- all economic situation remains the same, prices will rise 14 per cent this year. But if things get worse .. . * Unemployment nationwide will rise to over 10 per cent. As inflation ac- celerates and sales continue to drop, the capitalists have a choice: keep workers, hold down prices, and ac- cept lower profits, or fire workers and raise prices to protect profits. We all know what happens, and the Detroit area knows better than any- where else. After the January lay- offs, the score will be Employed Auto Workers 360,000, Unemployed Auto Workers 325,000. " Tax Rebate will help the wealthy and their corporations, do nothing for the workling class and the poor. "$1,000 Tax Rebate" scream the headlines. Doesn't that sound nice? But to get back $1,000, you have to pay $8,500 in taxes in the first place. (12 per cent of $8,500 is $1,000). And to pay $8,500 in taxes, you have to make over $25,000 a year. What about a worker who earns $10,000? She may receive a rebate of a hundred or two, but that gain is more than offset by the upcoming hike in gasoline prices alone. What about the poor? Uncle Jerry wants to give $80 to everyone too poor to pay taxes. Big deal. " Corporate Profits, especially those of the oil companies, will skyrocket. Big Business is receiving some more tax breaks, including a reduction in their income tax rate. Ford has also promised total decontrol of domestic oil prices. Yippee ! * Gasoline will cost seyenty cents a gallon. Taxes on foreign and domes- tic crude oil will be raised a few dol- lars a barrel. The price of home heat- ing oil will rise drastically and gaso- line, now at fifty-five cents a gallon, will go up at least ten cents over the course of the year. * Social Security and food stamp payments will be impounded. That isn't the word Jerry Ford used, but a 5 per cent limit on Social Security and food stamp increases this year amounts to nothing less than im- poundment of funds. Jerry learned much from his predecessor. How many old peonle will freeze to death this winter? How many will starve during the year? A Deaths caused by air pollution will continue to rise. Ford wants a five year nostnonement on the 1977 Clean Air Standards. In return, the car manufacturers during that time will imnrove the mileage on their cars 40 per cent voluntarily. Chuckle, chuckle. f Budget Deficit will be 40 billion dollars this year, maybe 60 billion in 1976. This is perhaps the most inter- esting 'fact of all. It means only one thing: 1975 is the first year of the Second Great Depression. -VINCENT BADIA Life on the Tube:* Glazed-eye view By JOHN ELLIS IN CONSIDERING whether the University should give aca- demic credit for courses offer- ed by the ROTC, two mawnr questions have been raised: (1) do such courses have "aca- demic merit," i.e. are they com- parable to other University courses, and (2) what is the "moral" judgment to be made? However, there appear to be additional considerations which argue against granting credit to ROTC, regardless of h w the above questions are resoived. Even if such courses a r e academically respectable, he prior question is why the Uni- versity should permit an out- side agency to come to campus and do what is the normal func- tion of its own academic depart- ments, namely offering courses for credit. Which outside agen- cies, if any, should be given this opportunity? Clearly, this is rot a priv- ilege which the Unive-:ty norm- ally extens. Even f kne ac- cepts that the training of mim- tary officers is a covbuio to society, there are o'h"r voca- tions whien might make a claim. SOCIETY also needs w e 11 - trained clergy, new >ro ie- porters, or governm-t 1eaders. Yet we do not invite the sem- inaries, tie big city dailies, or the legisa"res to am.)jiar d then certify their pe rnje as fa- culty members and make weir training activities part of our decree program. What quickly becomes obvious in the d soussion is Viat the University's regularway of per- forming such service is urher directly 'rough its own spec:al- ized school such as medicine, education cr law - o ivdirecty - through various ' academic programs which gi e suSilets the background for useful social roles. The outside agency (e.g, the hosital, the school )r :e oar) makes the Universltvs faculty and courses part of its rain- ing activity, rather tha tryn to bring their pers mnncl ,rnd programs onto camo"5 Should the Univerity, thcn, not grant "cedit for the R)FC program bt rather establiin its own school or deratieit of military s exice? THE LSA Commitree w . i h undertook a review of P)TC courses si,,died them iti IC ;r categories and ind'ated t Ii e schools which ofer similar cour'- ses: histo:v - poliI ,al s c i - ence (LSA): management - leadeshio (Business Admiis- tration, Engineering, Educa- tion); technical, non-r:utry (Engineering, Natural Resourc- es); and military (no academic equivalence). Clearly, in the first t h r e e areas, the Universiu already has substantial courre offer- ings, and in many if not most cases, the Universtys p r o - grams are regarded as among the best in the nation. With regard to the four:h category, the military, does "no academic equivalence" simply mean there are no such courses at present in the schools or :leges, or does it refer to the subect mat ter itself? According to a ,'evieV corn mittee member rec inly qu-ted in The Daily, the miliarv cize- gory "contained cwrses t n o military to tontain caaug pure- ly academei content. We did no, recommend credit far courses on how to kill peop). IF ONE ACCEPT tha: re- striction, the Unive sity arc idy has the resources, without a- tablishin~ ar new d If the military winhes to have college graduates in i's officer corps rather than oily the pro- ducts of th? military .cademies, there see'-'s to be a radvantage in hNavin> those graduatez take ":ilege" ;-orses rath r than co'lrses offered by the mini- military aidemies woi ch ROTC programs in fact n'>w are. THESE considera'ions, then, point not only to iCxying aca- demiccredit, but to the desire- ability of disbanding r ost of the existing RrTC cour v.- and re- ;laving them with U7niversity co" rses as a regular pact of of- By CLIFFORD BROWN WELCOME TO the real world. tr When I first arrived in De- troit for the break between the fall and winter terms t h e s e thoughts flew immediately through my mind. I saw differ- ent architecture and more im- portantly, I felt a different at- mosphere. Again, I character- ized Detroit as the real world but I then had no idea of how true that would be. The real world is different from the artificial one we live in. Ann Arbor, particularly around the campus area, is a place heavily populated with poeople of the same relative age group, that being 18 to 26, and it is not only a homogeneous area in terms of age, but also in terms of intellect and social and economic class. Ann Arbor Ls also radical and different. Things that are done here peo- ple in the real world never think about doing. In Ann Arbor, mass boycotts are in effect against denced by all the new ones that have hit the scene since I last made snide remarks at the T.V. listings in August. They have great ones like 'Money Maze' and 'High Rollers' and a song show that is definitely not for music lovers called 'Name that Tune.' They a I I seemed to be aimed at house- wives as the ads between the garbage advertised things from toilet bowl cleaners to pills for "female complaints." S o a p operas still abound all centering on marriage, infidelity, c hir ld bearing and blackmail or drug addiction. In every one there always seems to be an 'illit' love affair between unmarried persons, not to mention those illicit affairs between two pe- ple who are married. And V' each other! TELEVISION sexism be ;ays itself. There are basically four kinds of people on television: Men, boys, girls and ladies. Boys usually become men at Television's sexism betrays itself. There are basically four kinds of people on tele- vision: men, boys, girls, and ladies. Boys usually become men at the age of sixteen. Girls become ladies at the age of forty-five. *****a.. to provide a good ,"t of the training which the ROTC now does itself. Why d )ri' t h - ROTC nrogeam cero#W Univer- sity courses as part of i t s 'cred.it-oeirmngr acg", ; have University co'vves coUnt toward a commissi: 1 raher than ask the Unversitc to grant ROTC academic creiJK While ROTC and 'etuiar Un>- versity courses might be com- parable, )r even nave the same "academic m.}'it " there are not doubt some differences Why else would the ROTC pre- fer its own instrutors a n d courses? ficer tranim'. The 'military" co-rses wouilJ no dout remain, b-'t not fwr Universjxy credit. In addition, the ROTC Pro- gram might incorp'o:ate Uni- versity courises in other areas. Given the conduct at tl'e U.S. military in Indochinr in the last decade, courses in ethics, or other coir es in the h mianities dealing with the value of human life, might be included in the training of military >fficers. John Ellis is a graduate student in the Center for the Study of Jlgher Education Energy splurge must end WE'RE RUNNING OUT, folks! Even the President admits it. The great era of energy splurge is over. President Ford is proposing a gaso- line tax as a negative incentive for conserving. In addition, Ford is extending the deadline for stricter pollution controls until 1980, instead of this year. The auto industry only has to meet the standards applied for California, a task which the auto industry already has the technology to accomplish. For the sake of prosperity, the en- vironment gets shafted again. Why are businessmen and ecologists al- ways bumping heads? Environmental control could become big business. It seems an efficient engine would be both gas-saving and clean. The gov- ernment could give incentives like untarily install pollution controls. In- stead, we have non-cooperation as ex- emplified by the Gary steel ~mills. Given four years to clean up their stacks, they instead chose to delay, and the plants were shut. It dips too much into the companies profit mar- gin to control their wastes. IN THIS country's attempt to free itself from foreign energy (or enemy as President Nixon described them) sources, shale oil deposits in the west will probably be tapped. President Ford won't mind unless it affects Vail. In curtailing the use of oil, other measures should be employed. The money from the gas tax should be used to develop other energy sources, especially solar energy. The use of gas eating recreational vehicles, such grapes and grape products in support of the United Farm- workers. In the real world many people have never even heard of the United Farmworkers. Sad to mention is that they have all probably heard of Gal- lo and Boone's Farm's, what "great' wines they are because of their advertising. A BIG THING I noticed that was very different in the real world was in the area of sex- ism. I saw few women in the real world only girls and ladies. And strange ladies they were. People in the real world couldn't seem to differentiate between girls and women. I wondered why. As I sat down for an afternoon of entertainment at home one day, I discovered a social phe- nomenon, and it just happens to be one of the biggest sexist soc- ializers of them all. It happens to be the love of many Jives, that great entity affectionately known by such names as idiot box and boob tube and various the age of sixteen. Girls usually becomes ladies at the age of forty-five. Rarely does one have the privilege of seeing a woman. It's almost as if they didn't exist. Television makes you doubt such things. In the real world, people seem to be much mor ; in- volved in roles inhtheir rela- tionships than people indulge in here in Ann Arbor. Traditional dating roles are very much still in existence, (and V've b e e n informed they still exist a- plen- tv of other colleges), much more than in Ann Arbor. i, our ar- tificial world we seem to have built up a more positive way for human beings to think and in- teract with one anoThe^. Mu ,h more than in the real world, people are aware of a lot of different struggles for human liberation, and even if tnev do not really care, being aware is a step in the right direction. But for all of us in this artific- ial world who plan to l'.eave it someday, we should not forcet to apply the things we've learn- Letters: Bogus ed undergrads To The Daily: AS AN undergraduate who has frequently studied at Rack- ham, I was appalled to find my- self barred from tie study lounges by military like guards. Although the lounges we'e vir- tually empty at 7:30 p.in., I was turned away on the basis of the Calley-like reasoning of "just following orders." Even my of- fer to leave, were it to become apparent that I was displacing a graduate student, proved of no avail. I have never seen the Rackham study lounges so crowded as to be ina^cessable to a student. Furthermore, if this university university, as oppose I to a col- lege, can offer, ther.a i no reason to put up wi h the flaws in the undergradu-ife. system. After all, graduate srudent, are allowed to take u idergraJucate courses at the 400 le-&I, and it strikes me as highly iliogical that a graduate st'uent study- ing the same material as I can do so on univers.ty preises denied to me. MOREOVER, if gradiate stu- dents feel it necessary to be- come so arrogant tovard under- graduates, it would behove them to consider moe slate of higher education in tnis coon- try today. Most gradoate stu- dents aim at a coll ne teaching C r r ' -r" nufiror tho i, fl, . 4~ ~ ucation passes away who d'turing his life- time achieved greatness. 0 n e such individual was William A. Vreeland, Accounting Depart- ment employee for the p a s t twelve years. He passed away December 1, 1974. Bill Vreeland was a competent, cooper3Ive, most helpful Unive'stty ployee. He will be greatly ver y and e m - miss- ed by his co-workers, faculty, staff and vendors of The Uni- versity of Michigan. -Raymond E. Carlson Housing Division January 15 I Letters to The rT .aaI"' "hi~