Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan off the record Oglesby looks back at the New Le ft 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1973 SGC and, minority allocations STUDENT GOVERNMENT Council re- established Its reputation for poor judgement and spendthrift policies dur- ing last week's meeting-this titne with an appropriation that will squander $200 for a Jewish newsletter. The proposal is by no means a new one. For its sponsor, SGC member Matt Hoffman, the motion has become an an- nual event. This year's proposal is mere- ly a dusted-off version of a similar mo- tion last year that was rejected by the Jacobsonian Council in one of its saner moments. Even back in riotous Council sessions that characterized the Bill Jacobs ad- ministration, certain criteria were con- sidered in allocating. funds -- usually need, the group's ability to seek funds from other quarters, and how imperative the project (in this case, newsletter) was to the organization or group. Whether the Jewish organizations will flounder and eventually dissolve without the unity provided by a central informa- tion service is not even within question. JEWISH GROUPS on campus and elsewhere are highly-organized and self-supporting, with everything from He- brew classes to social gatherings to bind them together culturally. The backers of the proposal have also chosen to ignore the fact that these groups already have a newsletter. Published monthly by the Hillel Foun- dation, the "Nefesh" informs its readers of local Jewish activities and events - presumably the same function Hoff- man's proposed newsletter will perform. The redundancy of the second news- letter is even more frivolous in light of SGC's dwindling financial resources. The night the proposal was discussed, Treasurer Rosemary Mullin announced that SGC is now running $5,900 to $7,200 in the hole. The Jews heavily outweigh almost any other "minority" in financial re- sources. The Jewish community's capacity to raise money for Israel, for example, exceeds that of the Arabs by 100 to 1. THE $200, IN ANY case, is a drop in the bucket compared with the funds the Jews have been able to generate on their own or the amount needed to produce a newsletter on a regular basis. It is little more, in fact, than a token allocation. This is precisely what the backers of the proposal had in mind - still another opportunity to carry their "If you're a minority, I'm a minority" policy to its absurd extreme. Some members have registered their disapproval for any minority allocations this way. By finding pretexts to include as many proposals as possible under the minority umbrella, they attempt to make all minority allocations ridiculous. SGC has neither the time nor the money for this childish game-playing. By TED STEIN "We regard men as infinitely prec- ious and possessed of unfulfilled capa- cities for reason, freedom and love. In affirming these principles we are aware of countering perhaps the dominant conceptions of man in the twentieth century: that he is a thing to be mani- pulated, and that he is inherently in- capable of directing his own affairs." Port Huron Statement, 1962 * * * HERE IS a strangeness to Carl Oglesby's feverish talk as he sits on the Aud. A stage in late autumn afternoon. A torrent of words is pouring out of his drawn, mustachioed face. He has just lectured about the religious aspects of student rad- icalism, and he looks to the casual eye more the part of theology student t h a n firebrand. More than a decade ago, as a University student and SDS leader, after his talk he would have been telling the handful of attentive students who remained about Vietnam and how to organize around it. But that was in a time of answers. Now the talk is of ruling class "yankees" and "cowboys," of how power is divided between an old Eastern elite and the bur- geoning Texas oil and California aerospace interests. No more rhetoric about "participatory democracy" or fulfilling human potentiali- ties. The expectant idealism of SDS' found- ing Port Huron Statement is long gone. The commitment of those years still burns in Oglesby, but it's different. NEVERTHELESS, he illustrates h o w much we've lost in such a short time. For a moment we might be able to con our- selves into believing that Tom Hayden filled Hill Aud. because South Vietnamese are still tortured for their beliefs, and not because he came with Jane Fonda. But for Oglesby there can be no illusions. "You can't rule out the fact that the New Left was murdered," Oglesby says. "If we had known we would get infiltrat- ed and then subverted we might have done things with a different consciousness." from the Something profound was afoot in the early sixties and that's what frightened the "manipulators" into exploding the New Left from within. A power to humanize Amer- ica was growing and that's what was most tragically snuffed' out., THE NEW LEFT promised to be a me- dium for cultural social commitment, and in the early going, when Oglesby, Hay- den, and, a few other SDSers here at the University were finding themselves politi- cally, it seemed it just might work. "It really sang then", as Oglesby puts it. It was a time when being a radical meant more than raising an angry, clenched fist. Then a handful of radicals struck out as mavericks to preach the new human- ism, shunning the more comfortable road of professional schools. Somehow they would bring the war home, fight poverty and rac- ism, and throw the power-mongers out of government. Beyond this, there was a spiritual quality to SDS' political quest, according to Ogles- by, which may explain why Rennie Davis gave up politics to follow a 15-year-old guru. "How could we imagine we had a right to revolution without somehow undergoing it internally. Whether we're talking abont salvation or revolution, we're really still talking about the same thing," Oglesby says. OGLESBY'S MESSAGE is not delivered in the high-pitched tones of the sixties any longer, but if it was we'd hardly listen. It has a distinctly middle-aged ring to it. It is a "step-by-step" process that he advocates. "What we have to do it develop the idea of the critical life, the critical imagination." In the sixties, Oglesby had a context from which to work. Now he is alone, quietly committed to fighting the system. To an audience that has dwindled down to a sparse few in Aud. A, he launches into a hatful of conspiracy theories. Oglesby talks of James McCord as a double agent hired by the Kennedys, and how Nixon got the Serelli Mob to down a United Airlines Jet carrying NHoward Hunt's wife and untold Republican secret documents. It's more than a little bit perplexing. A lesson Los Angeles fire U.S. aid props 'liberal' junta By GORDON ATCHESON PERHAPS ONE resident heard an unusual noise. Then he stepped into the second floor hall- way to investigate. Impenetrable black smoke filled the corridor as a roaring inferno engulfed t h e stairs. He opened his mouth to scream, but before he could the fiery air burned out his lungs. Death was instantaneous. Of the 24 people who perished in the blaze, which destroyed a Los Angeles apartment building 1 a s t week, that man may have been the luckiest. One floor up, a baby slowly as- phixiated. She struggled helplessly in her crib, bleating for h e r mother. When a fireman found the body several hours later, he near- ly vormited. The stench of char- ed flesh blanketed the bedroom. Eight other children died in that firetrap. THE CONFLAGRATION w i 11 claim victim number 25 this after- noon. She will succumb to a frac- tured skull suffered when she jumped from the top of the build- ing to avoid the flames. But the effort came a second too late. Her hair and clothes caught fire - she became a human torch as she plummeted to the ground. If the fracture didn't kill the woman, the third degree burns which covered her body would have. Several other people who now lie in the same hospital were not burned as badly. They will live. Still, they will face years of ex- cruciatingly painful treatment and before the process is complete they may wish they had died. Years later when one of them walks by people will look the other way in self-defense. This fire appeared to be at least partially the result of negligence. The landlord allowed the structu e to deteriorate. It could not meet the Los Angeles housing code and he had been told to make repairs. But indLA there are too many hous- es and too few inspectors. There just wasn't time to follov-up the case and make sure the improve- ments were made. ANN ARBOR has been fortun- ate - no tragedies yet. However the conditions are ripe. The hous- ing inspection department is un- derstaffed and overworked. There just isn't time to follow-up all the cases. The inspectors make finding fire hazards their top priority and do a pretty fair job on the nouses they get a chance to check. Unfortuin- ately, the nine inspectors are hu- man while their task has become Herculean. Ann Arbor had 20,000 rental units alone,each of which should be checked every two years. Last year the inspectors got to 1,610 rental units. The year before that about twice as many. In 1974 the total may be lower still. To save money, the city may cut back personnel and the hous- ing inspection staff has been men- tioned as an expendable area. Three inspectors probaoly won't be retained. GENERALLY the public and City THE CURRENT STUDENT uprisings in Greece are symptomatic of the pent- up fears and hatred of a populace that for the last six years has been victimized by a repressive and dictatorial govern- ment. Student demands, originally centering on the issue of greater academic free- dom, have telescoped into a full-scale condemnation of the Greek government. Among the students demands are an end to American support of the regime, 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 EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Marnie Heyn, Chuck Wilbur, David Yalowitz DAILY WEATHER BUREAU: William' Marino and Dennis Dismacnek (forecasters) STAFF WRITERS: Pmakash Aswani, .Gordon Atcheson, Dan Biddle, Penny Blank, Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Daye Burhenn, Bonnie Carnes, Charles Cole- man, Mike Duweck, 'Ted Evanoff, Deborah Good, William Heenan, Cindy Hill, Jack Krost. Jean Love- Josephine Marcotty, Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seidenstein, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Sue ttephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca Warner TODAY'S STAFF: News: Prakash Aswani, Penny B I a nk, Gene Robinson, Charlie Stein Editorial Page: Zach Schiller, C h u c k Wilbur Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: David Margolick. which included $29 million in military, aid in 1972. The past months have seen the imple- mentation of highly visible democratic reforms which lack substantive value. The reinstatement of martial law in an at- tempt to stifle student demonstrators -the so-called enemies of democracy - further underscores the deception of the Papadopoulos government's 'liberaliza- tion.' LAST JUNE, Papadopoulos proclaimed himself president of a new republic subject to approval in a voters' referen- dum. The ensuing vote was later de- nounced by King Constantine as "blatant and shameful fraud.' Continuing in this new found demo- cratic tradition, President Papadopoulos selected Spyros Markezinis as premier of the first Civilian Cabinet since 1967. Markezinis was virtually the only politi- cal leader who did not denounce the mili- tary junta when it seized power in 1967. Now he believes he can lead the nation to representative government. Markezinis promises 'impeccable' par- liamentary elections in 1974. However, Papadopoulos still maintains absolute control over defense, foreign affairs, and internal security-hardly the conditions for a free vote. While Papadopoulos continues to hold the real reins of power, the United States remains his pillar of support. State De- partment prattling about democracy to the contrary, the U. S. - as it has in so many other countries - has sided with dictatorship and reaction once again. Hall officials take services like housing inspection for granted ur- til a catastrophy occurs. Los An- geles will now undoubtedly f i n d some money and tighten up is tin- spection procedures.' While an effective fouaing in- spection program cannot elihi- nate fires, it would significantly re- duce their number and magnitude. Besides, the more inspections done, the better the overall quality of housing. The city, however, seems to ig- nore the necessity for a :7eason- able level of housing inspection. Nonetheless, by not having an adequate housing inspection tearm, the city has been playing Russia'n Roulette and is now getcing ready AP Photo to lower the odds a little further. Nobody can win at the game and of course it's only a matter of time until somebody loses. May- be Ann Arbor will luck out for ano- ther ten years. Maybe nor. I Gordon Atcheson is a, writer. Daily staff Holiday forecast: So ybeans an yone? By MARTIN GELLEN IF THE price of turkey is hav- ing a bad effect on your holi- day appetite, forget it and en- joy. Next year, you may be eat-, ing soybeans. But you will be en- titled to wash them down with the cheering reflection that you are helping to boost U.S. foreign in- vestment. While citizens tighten their belts and turn down their furnaces, U.S. corporations are reporting record profits, military spending is on the increase, and overseas investment is rising. The key to this paradox is not hard to find. As a matter of government policy, the cost of steadying our long-unfavorable bal- ance of payments is coming out of your family budget. When food prices began to soar last year, the government blamed the weather. The press blamed the Russian wheat deal of July, 1972, when giant wholesalers, report- edly tipped off to Soviet purchas- es in advance, held vast stocks back from the domestic market for shipment to the U.S.S.R. MORE RECENTLY, government spokesmen have been saying that Americans are simply eating too much. But the astronomic rise in grocery bills is rightly seen, not as a punishment for overeating, but as the price of the fruitless war in Indochina. The most significant economic consequences of the war have been inflation and the fall of the dol- lar. Inflation has so distorted the price structure of the American economy that foreign competitors have penetrated deeply into key markets such as autos, electric ap- pliances, steel, chemicals, and of- fice machinery. And it has wiped out the competitive edge of Amer- ican manufactured goods on world markets. Perhaps the simplest way to un- derstand the current economic di- The Greek student demand that U. S. prop be eliminated is the onlyi democracy will ever come to Greece. the way lemma of the United States is to imagine the nation as a wealthy gambler who has been spending more than he earns for far t o o long. His lines of credit have be- gun drying up, and bill collectors are knocking at his door. Faced with the choice of selling his es- tates abroad, or drastically reduc- ing his spending style, he d o e s neither. Insteads, he mortgages his family home and cuts down on support to his wife and children. IF "FOREIGN estates" s t a n d for foreign investments, Pnd "gambling" for costly military ad- ventures, this is the situation we are in. American corporations are not going to give up foreign in- vestment. Drastic cuts in the de- fense budget are equally unlikely: the Administration has asked for an overall increase in military spending for fiscal year 1974. To right the balance of pay- ments, the Nixon administration has resorted to a second line of defense - austerity at home coup- led with a trade offensive abroad. The United States is launching an export expansion drive aimed at achieving a trade surolus of $5 to $6 billion annually. Since the de- ficit in 1972 amounted to almost $7 billion, this really means an increase of some $13 billion a year. OUR MOST competitive export is food. With a vast area of prime farm land in the temperate zone, and the world's most highly de- reloped agricultural technology, the U.S. can grow food more cheaply and in greater abundance than any other nation on earth. Over the past three years, ex- ports of U.S. farm products have soared to unprecedented levels, climbing from $5.7 billion in fiscal year 1969 to nearly $12 billion in fiscal 1973. By next year, over half the dollar value of all U.S. ex- ports will come from food. harvests in Russia and Europe and this year's famine in Asia and Af- rica. AFTER THE first devaluation of the dollar in early 1972, Peter J. Flanigan, then assistant to the President for international econo- mic affairs, commissioned the De- partment of Agriculture to aaafyze policy alternatives for the coun- try's agricultural trade. Complet- ed by June, 1972, the Flanigan Re- port argued that the United States should seek trade agreements with socialist countriesaand libarali za- tion of agricultural trade barriers with Europe and Japan. If such agreements were reached, the re- port argued, U.S. agricultural ex- ports would rise sharply, reaching $18.4 billion by 1980, and ". . . the net balance of trade would be im- proved by at least $8 billion." The report envisions rising pric- es as the "normal mechanism" by which farmers would be encourag- ed to expand production in order to meet the growing export demand. In other words, consumers' grcc- ery bills must be doubled to guar- antee large supplies for export. ONCE SUCH a strategy is em- barked on there is no turning back, as Forbes Magazine, a praminent investment journal, points out. Perhaps the rise in prices will level off, but if the N i x o n gamble works, the American people will never again know food as cheap as they have had in recent decades. The govern- ment will have to see to it that prices stay reasonably steady. Consumers may be angry at high food prices, until they get used to them. But farm- ers would never forgive a party that encouraged them to expand and then let their market col- lapse. From the very early days of the out two freezes and four phases. THE RESULT is that domestic and foreign buyers are now heat- edly competing for U.S. farm pro- ducts, and price controls p u t domestic buyers at a distinct dis- advantage. Withno price restric- tions to hinder them, and with a billions of devalued dollars to fin- ances their purchases, foreign buy- ers have swept the market. r., The policy has already backfired. Last August, while farmers sold huge quantities of grain and live- stock to Japan and Europe, beef all but disappeared from super- market counters. Wholesale prices of raw farm products -rose 66.4 per cent, those of processed foods 37.4 per cent. Shortages finally forced the government to impose export restrictions - an embarrassment to the Nixon Administration, which wanted to demonstrate that U.S. farms could be depended upon to deliver the goods. IN BASING the health of the dollar on foreign demand for U.S. food, the Administration is-making the economy vulnerable to the kind of instability that affects banana republics. What happens if moth- er drought of 1930's ,magnitude should hit the Midwest? Or if good weather, boosting foreign har- vests, should produce gluts at home? This year, the Russians re- ported a bumper grain harvest of 215 million tons - 25 per cent above their 1972 output. Even Administration officials ad- mit that the export policy is a gamble. Carroll G. Brunthaver, as- sistant secretary of agriculture, said recently that if, ex',ort sales fall, the whole 'Nixon farm policy would fail and the dollar would again be endangered . A switch to soyburgers is no gurantee of. eco- nomic security. A, Y(AP$ A60 1 tZA PUS TZR I t- t 'soYE I fl UATER W ME. 00OK FOR~ LeAR6 LATR T tOcJ% m E kvipP/ / MY FAM Ā£AIPV F1 VC EtAR' LATR Z'LOOK) TWA R)M~Y AWLAP FOR PLAY WR( T[WY. - MY FATH6 f S fV'aW2:~t ARE YOU) 0-0106 T4 M-At~ C5H i.,} C N '{rt AWE~ D Ire " FATU ' 172 Pmc - C D b~)HOS~ ("QUO /f I ~/ -~ ?XL-L-$ I / ;Ac)s AMT f