paragraphics Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1973 Regulating land use policies ANN ARBOR'S latest monument to land use non-planning opened Wednesday. Briarwood shopping center is an ex- cellent example of howthe influence of big business money and the political pres- sure it can create can overcome the com- paratively meager resources of local gov- ernments and the general public. The promise of large profits often vastly ov- errides any possibility of any careful planning of how America's decreasing land resources can be used. The proposal to construct the Briar- wood shopping center was first presented to City Council in 1971. The proposal was greet'ed with considerable opposition from local environmental and limited growth advocates. These opponents argued that the shop- Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief DIANE LEVICK .........................Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER ... Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY........Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER .............. Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH .......... .. . ....... Editorial Director TONY SCHWARTZ...................Sunday Editor CHARLES STEIN ... .... ..... City Editor TED STEIN ...................... Executive Editor ROLFE TESSEM.....................Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Dan Biddle, Penny Blank, Dan Bugerman, Howard Brick, Dave Burhenn, Bonnie Carnes, Charles Cole- man, Mike Duweck, Ted Evanoff, Deborah Good, William Heenan, Cindy Hill, Pack Krost, jean Love, Josephine Marcotty, Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seldenstein. Stephen Selbst Jeff Sorensen, Sue Sttephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca Warner DAILY WEATHER BUREAU: William Marino and Dennis Dismacheck (forecasters) Sports Staff DAN BORUS Sports Editor FRANK LONGO Managing Sports Editor BOB McGINN................Executive Sports Editor CHUCK BLOOM . . ...... Associate Sports Editor JOEL GREEK ...........,... .Associate Sports Editor RICH STUCK ..............Contributing Sports Editor BOB HEUER. . .......Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Jeff Chown, Brian Deming, Jim Ecker, Marc Feldman, George Hastings, Marcia Merker, Roger Rossiter, Theresa Swedo STAFF: Barry Argenbright, Bill Crane, Richard Fa- herty, Cary Fotias, Andy Glazer, Leba Hertz, John Kahler, Mike Lisll, Jeffrey Milgrom, Tom Pyden, Leslie Riester, Jeff Schiller, Bill Stieg, Fred Upton Business Staff BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager RAY CATALINO............... Operations Manager SHERRY CASTLE. .............. Advertising Manager SANDY FIENBERG..................Finance Manager DAVE BURLESON....................Sales Manager DEPT. MGRS.: Steve LeMire, Jane Dunning, Paula Schwach ASSOC. MGRS.: Joan Ades. Chantal Bancilhon, Linda Ross, Mark Sancrainte, S u a n n e Tiberio, Kevin Trimmer ASST. MGRS.: Marlene Katz, Bill Nealon STAFF: Sue DeSmet, Laurie Gross, Debbie Novess, Carol Petok, Mimi Bar-on SALESPEOPLE: W en d i Pohs, Ton Kettinger, Eric Phillips, P e t e r Anders. R o b e r t Fischer, Paula Schwach, Jack Mazzara, John Anderson Photography Staff DAVID MARGOLICK Chief Photographer KEN FINK......................Staff Photographer THOMAS GOTTLIEB ..............Staff Photographer STEVE KAGAN .. .......Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI ..............Staff Photographer TERRY McCARTHY ..............Staff Photographer ping center would merely extend "urban sprawl" into Ann Arbor, provide added impetus to the conversion of Ann Arbor into a "bedroom community" and would cause serious environmental problems. HOWEVER, THE political power of mon- ey, business interests and city offic- ials carried the day over expert and pub- lic protests. Briarwood is now here to stay,'for bet- ter or worse. Some problems have already become apparent, such as the inability of State Road to handle the traffic. But rather than cry over spilt milk in- terested citizens and public-minded ex- perts should look to the future, and study what decisions may be upcoming-or are being presently considered - in the field of land-use planning. The political pressures against care- ful scrutiny of how land is used are tre- mendous, due largely to the strong bonds between business and politics. For example, a proposal to form a state commission to study land use on a state- wide basis died an untimely death last year. Luckily, some impetus for such a group still exists. Land use is not an issue which often gathers great citizen awareness, for such mundane matters as zoning changes are often tedious and boring. Yet such deci- sions are increasingly important, and de- serve increased public participation. War powers FINALLY, IT APPEARS that Congress will pass a bill that would limit the power of the President to engage the country in war without the Congress consent. Considering this country's recent ac- tions in Indochina alone, which occurred largely through Executive fiat, such ac- tion has come none too soon. The measure emerged Thursday from a committee of Representatives and. Sena- tors who hammered out a compromise version of two different bills previously passed by the House and Senate. The measure would require the Presi- dent to end undeclared wartime actions in at most 90 days, thus giving the Presi- dent some latitude to act in situations considered to be emergencies. It is a moderate proposal, to say the least, yet President Nixon has indicated that he will veto the measure, asserting that it infringes on his power as Presi- dent. Of course, this is exactly the point. The power of the President to engage in war without the approval of Congress has grown to unacceptable heights. If the President vetoes the bill, Congress should not hesitate to override the veto. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Della DiPietro, Cindy Hill, Marilyn Riley, Stephen Sebst, Charles Stein Editorial Page: Zachary Schiller, Eric Schoch Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: Karen Kasmauski CO/p CR T .. O (y T, I r ' By BETH NISSEN A NN ARBOR has an eerie atmos- phere on a Saturday night. For those who have the security of an assured companion, or those with a well-established circle of friends, it is tolerable. There are several good places to go with friends to laugh, to dance, and to drink. But for those who are still rela- tively new here, those with no pressing homework, and those still searching for a compatible group of friends, Ann Arbor can be dis- mally depressing. There are a few generally ac- cepted courses of action. One can' walk confidently into a bar, order a drink and either try to pick some- one up or try to be picked up, and usually end up staring through the bottom of the glass. There are par- ties, if one knows where to go and when, but there is an uncomfort- able uneasiness in a solitary merge into the -chattering traffic of strang- ers. If you live in a dorm, chances are the majority of the inhabi- tants will be out until early, leav- ing you to wander the halls in search of another wanderer or lie on the floor of the television room smiling stupidly at off-color com- mercials. IT IS SURPRISING how difficult it is to find anyone to talk to in a town where one would logically ex- pect to find a substantial number of people with similar interests, ideas and values. The student w h o feels very much alone has few al- ternatives. Reading the D a i I y Personal column usually uncovers pleas for friendship but with an underlying hint of perversion. One can take creative hold of a Flair and release his or her anguish on a bathroom wall, or scrawl his or her phone number somewhere in Basis for Arab apprehension By AHMAD BESHAREH THE RECENT events in Vienna dramatize another facet of the Arab-Zionist feud. The Arab guer- rillas principal demand , was the termination of Austria's official collaboration with the Israeli Zion- ists in channelling Soviet Jews to Israel. When Austria's J e w i s h Premier Kreisky acceded, a world- wide campaign was mounted to pressure him into rescinding that decision. I would like to comment on the guerrillas' demand. Since the turn of this century the Arab Middle East has been the host of Jews from around the world. This is especially true of Euro- pean Jews escaping persecution or seeking a greater freedom of ex- pression. The early commers were welcomed ' by the Arabs of the area. However, as soon as the political significance of immigration became evident the Arabs of Palestine vio- lently revolted against this political threat to their entity and social fabric, as demonstrated by the po- pular uprisings of the 1920's and 1930's. Their fear was justified in the developments of the 1940's that lead to the establishment of Israel and displacement of the Palestin- ians. SINCE THEN, Israel and h e r champions in the U.S. Congress have been pressuring the Soviet Union into letting her citizens of Jewish descent emigrate to Israel -without of course soliciting t h e opinion of these people. This pres- sure has increased immensely since the 1967 war and immigration has become significant (about 70,000 in the past three years, 30,000 of which in 1972 alone). In view of these events, t h e Arabs cannot help being appre- hensive. And the resultant image, magnified by Israeli statements and actions, can only be bleak. Moshe Dayan has recently stated that the Soviet immigrants w i lI make Sinai (captured from Egypt in 1967) Jewish. And the multitude of Israeli settlements in A r a b lands confirms the Arabs' worst fears, i.e., that continued Jewish immigration from the Soviet Un- ion will realize Israeli's implicit policy of annexation and expan- sion. Annexation leads to displace- ment of Arabs and the sequence of the pre-1948 events is repeated. The Arabs uphold the humaniter, ian principle of choosing one's land of residency. But they also uphold and defend the equally important right to one's land. The outcries over Soviet Jewry in the Western media seems to be concerned with the first right and completely ob- livious to the second. It is in de- fense of this right among others that the Arab masses have taken up arms, with the Palestinians as vanguards. Ahniad Beshareh is president of the Organization of Arab Stu- dents at the University. hopes of a miracle contact. There are clubs to join, but not everyone wants to meet people on the pre- text of a specific interest, or feels the social -urge consistently every Wednesday at 8:30. THERE IS ALWAYS the inner sinctum of your room, where you can busy yourself with homework, scrape Tuesday's peanut butter off the knife, write a newsy letter home or read last week's Poli Sci assignment. A reach for the tele- phone . can give verbal comfort if you can find anyone at home, or deepen depression if number after number, rings unanswered. And a trained 76-GUIDE voice is always ready to say reassuring things to those who can admit to themselv- es they have no one to talk to but a strangerat the end of a coiled line. And sometimes, despite hero- ic efforts, the frustration at not being with people on a people-or- iented night is overwhelming and refuses to be ignored or buried in the cranial background. Saturday night is an American institution, one in which being alone denotes a personal failure. Friends are associated with suc- cess, personal growth and matur- ity with a secure coupled relation- ship. The sixth night of each week is the traditional provation and celebration of this success: it is for good times with Special Peo- ple. Commercials on television in- sist you can't be happy unless. hand-in-hand with a lover and a balloon in a sunny park, unless staring love-eyed into the Perfect Set of Eyes. BEING HALF of a couple =- or at very least a part of a group -is a Saturday night religion; fail- ure to convert throws doubt on personal salvation as a working member of the human race. If male and unattached, by socie- tal norms you a r e suspected of aimlessness, abnormality and in- stability. It will be years before you make your first $10,000 or own your own car. If female and un- attached, by the same standards, you are an assumed lady-in-wait- ing, biting your lip and biding your time until someone proposes to take you away from distribution re- quirements and substitutes an op- pressive life of Dove detergent, Pampers and Gerber food. Except for the most hermitic, f-w students actually seek to be hn- ers. Being alone has its undeniable good points; the luxuries of silence and privacy are well-valued. But there are times when even the most confirmed loners become bored with themselves and want to reflect other personalities instead of wallowing in their own. Some- thing about Ann Arbor doesn't make it very easy. There is no an- swer, no programmed solution, only terminal relief in feeling very sorry for yourself. 'Letters to The Daily parking To The Daily: I WISH TO comment on the total inequities of the parking system around the University. Possibly it will be seen by someone in author- ity who will have a sudden flash of enlightenment, and will do some- thing about it. I understand the premise that the University of Michigan is not a commuter school. However, there are a number of students who do commute, often because they sim- ply cannot afford the outrageous rent in Ann Arbor. So, the com- muter has the problem of finding a place to park every day. Unless you arrive at school at six o'clock p.m. and finish sleeping in front of Angell Hall, this is impossible. One must park at least a mile from campus. If one parks a mile from campus, how are they supposed to get to their car during ten mii- ute between-class-breaks to feed the parking meter? Obviously it is impossible, and who could afford all those dimes for parking every day, anyway? Consequently, one receives a parking ticket for an expired meter. When one accumulates ten bark- ing tickets, which isn't hard to do, the city tows their car with- out any notification to a junk yard outside of town. There it sits, until the culprit pays 1-the t.)w- ing fee; 2-a fee for having the car sit in the junk yard; 3-all the unpaid tickets. No one seems con- cerned that since the city took the person's car, they have no way to get out to the junktyard where the car is. Of couse, there are no buses that go that way. A great portion of these difficul- ties could be alleviated if there was somewhere on campus fir commuting students to park. But who gets to park in University parking? Faculty members, who pay a small fee for the privilege of the omnipotent parking sticker. Students cannot get one. It seems to me that since stu- dents are usually poor and profes- sors usually are not, that is it grossly unjust to provide inexpen- sive parking for them and not for commuter students. There is a simple solution. A just system could involve a student proving that he lived 'X' number of miles from campus, a distance too great to walk and from which there is no bus service. These students should be able to purchase park- ing stickers and park in University designated parking lots. It's about time the University stopped ignor- ing the commuting student.- -Sherry Spalding Whitmore Lake Sept. 22 i a w Duck Soupi Reefer Madn UAC-Mediatrics, Nat. 7, 9:30 Sat. Duck Soup is the. u lustration of politics as Or, in the words of a D goer, "It's just hilari( all." Although Duck Soup have the style or grac at the Opera, it has1 Groucho Marx stars as Firefly, ruler of Fred( Chico and Harpo spy f ponents. Reefer Madness, at t funny, hits home withi Unfortunately, the audi see the film are often and boring as the pic laughter in the theater hard to concentrate on humor. Nevertheless, Madnes viewing if only for its of harried contempt - f ers. -MICHAEL Some Like It and The Mis New Morning, MLB A Both films at 7:15, 9:30, After 10 years of beir and ed to the late late show, Playboy's first Playmate, Marilyn Monroe, ess is finally receiving long overdue Sci. Bldg. recognition for her considerable acting talent. iltimate il- Directed by Billy Wilder, t h e absurdity. 1959 Some Like It Hot stretches aily movie- one basic joke into what must be ous, that's some of the funniest two hours of film ever made. The film also fea- may not tures Tony Curtis, Jack Lemmon, e of Night and Joe E. Brown. the talent. The Misfits unites Monroe with Rufus T. a far older Clark Gable. Thanks to onia, a n d Marilyn's on-set temper tantrums for his op- and the resulting producing delays, Misfits ended up as one of the -STAFF most expensive black and white films ever made - and the ten- sion, some say, contributed to times very Gable's death shortly after t h e its parody. movie's completion. ences that Nevertheless, the picture pro- as drugged vides conclusive proof that Monroe ture. The really could act. makes it - -DAVID BLOMQUIST the film's * * almost as long. The film juxtaposes footage of Marjoe in action as an ecstatic holy roller, of Marjoe lolling on a waterbed, parodying h i m s e 1 f ("Glory gee to Beezus") and de- livering monologues on hypocrisy to the camera. Produced and directed by Village Voice writer Howard Smith an d Sarah Kernochan. -JAMES HYNES with Charles Grandval in a me- morable Renoir masterpiece about Paris in the 30's. -MICHAEL WILSON * * * a fine effort from itely worth seeing. -DAVID * * Jewison defin- BLOMQUIST * Fat City Cinema II, Aud. A Sat., 7, 9:30 Huston's chronicle of the world through two case makes this one of the bet- John boxing studies vv: r. :::.. .::.":::". : :"::::::::::.":: i". ". :::. :............ cinema weekend s is worth final scene or its view- WILSON Hot fits kud. 3, 4 Sat., Sun. ng relegat- . a..'.Y.":.:... :. . .Y :: J. :.::J:J: . ..":"::::t.:iN:":t /ar joe Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud. Sat., Sun., 7, 9:05 Marjoe is the most powerful at- tack on evangelism since E 1 m e r Gantry; it is even more power- ful, since it is true. The film documents the last tour (before attempting a more legiti- mate career in show business) of Marjoe Gortner, evangelist from age three and a non-believer for Boudu Saved from Drowning Cinema II, Aud. A Sun., 7, 9 This 1932 Jean Renoir film, made just two years before his innova- tive Madame Bovary, concerns a desolate tramp and a bookseller who cares for him. The great French heavyweight character ac- tor Michael Simon (Candide) stars j. N.J : . Poco 's efforts pay off on new LP; By TOM OLSON1 Poco has evidently put a lot off work into Crazy Eyes, (Epic KE 32354) and it has paid off. The titlei song is a genuine epic, with a melody that sounds like what1 Strauss would write if he were asked to compose the Marlboro Man theme.t For the occasion, Richard Furay1 has even traded in the usual Pocoi fiddles for a set of violins. Doors, Looking Glass OK ter films of 1972. It is Huston's best directorial effort since African Queen and surely ranks as one of his best films. Stacy Keach is the pathetic slap- happy comeback fighter. Jeff Brid- ges in contrast plays a young box- er on the make. Both perform- ances are superb. His characteri- zation of the wash-up is not to be missed - but prepare yourself for a mammoth manic depression af- terward. -MICHAEL WILSON Jesus Christ Superstar State Will Jesus ChristtSuperstar bring down the government of G o 1 d a Meir? Probably not. But Norman Jewison's latest film, produced in Israel with the assistance of the AR Heavy Traffic Fifth Forum Heavy Traffic is a highly per- sonal, semi-autobiographical car- toon by Ralph Bakshi (Fritz. the Cat) about coming of age in New York City. The film is much more like the city it portrays: gaudy, violent, of- fensive, morbidly funny. Yet it is an oddly powerful, moving film. If it seems rough around the ed- ges, it is only because Bakshi is breaking away from both the Dis- ney and the Yellow Submarine brands of animation and forging off on his own. - -JAMES HYNES * * * Siddhartha Campus Theatre Siddhartha, finally released af- ter seven years of preparation in India, is one of the larger disap- pointments, for this is a film I al- most desperately wanted to like. Conrad Rooks' earlier Chappa- qua, a film about his hallucinatory withdrawal from heroin, was a demonically creative, if disjointed, work. And so, with Bergman's mas- ter cinematographer Sven Nyk- vist, one might assume that the Herman Hesse tale would come alive in all its simple grandeur. The simplicity is there, but with nothing else but a mulling-over of eternal questions shot with back- grounds of winding rivers and, old men blowing hashish. I'm glad someone got high. -BRUCE SHLAIN Romeo and Juliet Michigan The adaptation of literary clas- ics to the screen is always cause T S banjos and all, the song makes a fascinating nine minutes. The rest of the album contains no major breakthroughs for the group, but the songs are excel- lent state-of-the-art Poco. Looking Glass's new album, Subway Serendade (Epic KE 321- 67), is a competent and thorough- ly commercial recording of origi- nal songs by the band members. Looking Glass lyrics are typical of the forbiddingly intellectual New Jersey School of rock and roll: "Jimmy loves Mary Ann! Jimmy wants to be her man/Jim- my loves Mary Ann/She thinks it's all right." But even these austere abstractions sound natural sung over the bubbly Top-40 back- grounds that are the group's spe- cialty. Elliot Lurie is the leader of the band. He seems to have learned his vocal techniques from Van Morrison, the man who elevated miushmouthedness to. an art form. He and bassist Piet Sweval can turn out lightweight soft rock with CU!' JtRF r\!EMIAR\. lt\M\\\\Z"IIEELLtk-v II I a MOM A v 4' I II