s4e SidAi4n Pai Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Sheehan swaps city woes for sunshine 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1973 SGC takes a giant step back By GORDON ATCHESON ANN ARBOR'S CHIEF munici- pal finance officer bid the city and its scarlet-scarred ledger goodbye last week. Neither of them shed any tears over the parting. The local fiscal picture is no brighter. Of course Asst. City Ad- ministrator Kenneth Sheehan no longer receives pay checks here. But that insignificant cut in ex- penditures won't placate state officials who have ordered the city to shore up the worst money crisis in its history. Likewise, the crusty Sheehan expressed no sorrow when tender- ing his resignation. The only folks who may be happier about Shee- han's departure than he himself are several City Council members who often lambasted the adminis- trator as an incompetent; a liar or a crook depending on the situa- tion. As the financial expert for a city $1 million in debt, Sheehan has justifiably had his share of critics. The most vociferous, Jerry De- Grieck (HRP-First Ward), has de- manded his dismissal for negligent if not dishonest conduct by not keeping council informed of the city's fiscal staus. Other council members have commented that the charges are out in left field. Maybe, but that still puts them in the ball park. SHEEHAN, THOUGH, has said he warned other officials and coun- cil about impending fiscal prob- lems. For some reason the mayday signal never got through - if ever clearly issued., The man gave council reports that consisted of page after page of numbers with little explanation. Verbal explanations were often couched in equally technical terms. Most of the council members are not financial experts and the abs- truse communiques didn't clarify matters much. However, a council which does not realize how bad the budget situation is cannot pres- sure the administration about the problem. In that respect Sheehan has mas- tered the bureaucratic shuffle and the administrative quick reverse. He could make those budget fig- ures prove just about anything. A portable calculator seemed to be his constant companion and he punched the buttons with the same finesse Van Cliburn demonstrates on the keyboard. ALTHOUGH THE CITY'S finan- cial condition was bad before Sheehan arrived here several years ago, it has gotten steadily worse. Some of the blame must fall on council, the administration as a whole, and that old nemesis infla- tion. Despite his other talents, Shee- han cannot halt inflation, antici- pate the unpredictable, or spin, straw into gold. Still, the city's crisis developed slowly and while Sheehan alone could not have arrested the condi- tion, he sho'ild have diagnosed the disease and directly told the pa- tient. The budgetitis has now become a particularly virulent epidemic making the rounds among various city officials. Sheehan packed his bags and took the top financial job in St. Petersburg, Fla., before the virus infected him. St. Petersberg with its sultry climate, consistent surplus bud- gets, and "extremely sound finan- cial base" is a veritable paradise compared to Ann Arbor. Sheehan, will probably have to spend more time worrying about sunburn than budgetitis.} IN THE SPRING of 1970, approximately 70 per cent of this campus boycotted classes in a strike to support the Black Action Movement (BAM) demands of 10 per cent black enrollment by 1973, and the necessary supporting services. In direct contrast, Thursday night Stu- dent Government Council took a giant step backwards by censuring the alleged University use of "quotas." Matt Hoff- man, who submitted the resolution, ad- mitted that the target was the.BAM de- mands. In doing so, Hoffman and the resolu- tion's supporters have placed themselves in opposition to the commitment this University made in 1970 to eliminate ra- cism in admissions policies. * Hoffman attacks the BAM demands on the basis that it is a "quota" rather than a "goal." Hoffman bases his argument on his ideology of the perfection of laissez-faire policies in all aspects of life. WHATEVER ITS underlying ideology, the implications of Thursday's vote and its supporting arguments are racist, for they ignore the hard facts of reality. For unless large institutions like this university take strong stes, the cumu- lative effects of 400 years of racism can- not and will not be overcome. The argument that there should be no quotas implies that such decisions should be made on the 'good old American" basis of qualifications and credentials. In the past, however, the terms "un- qualified" and "lack of credentials" have been used to blithely deny rights to mi- norites and women. Furthermore, basing admissions on so- called "qualifications" is effectively ra- cist, because American society has often denied to minorities the same education- al opportunities it has provided to the white middle class, which this University so strongly represents. THUS QUALIFICATIONS which many minority students are denied the U Corporate UNION OIL, profits up 62 per cent. Exxon, up 81 per cent. Crown Central Petroleum, up 262 per cent. Gulf Oil, up 91 per cent. All but one of the nation's oil compa- nies raised its profits during the third quarter of this year (July through Sep- tember). Taken as a whole, oil company profits were up 63 per cent from the year before, to the tune of more than $2.4 billion in the three month period.. While these happy statistics continue to float in, new industries report each day that they are- threatened by the oil shortage. Chrysler has announced a brief shutdown of four plants due to the lack of available plastics; , the deficiency of crude oil for the petrochemical industry has already made penicilin scarce. Our hearts can hardly go out to Chrysler and most of the rest of the cor- porations affected by the energy squeeze, as they have experienced a widening pro- fit margin themselves. The 105,000 work- ers who may be laid off by General Mo- tors, however, are in a far different posi- tion. 'THE AUTO WORKERS lay-off is merely the first omen of what many economists now say will be a general economic slump next year. Herbert Stein, for instance, chairman of the Council of Economic Ad- 11t rjial ai 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 STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atchesonr Dan Biddle, Penny Blank. Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Dave Burhenn, Bonnie Carnes, Charles Cole- man, Mike Duwack, Tea Evanoff, Deborah Good, William Heenan, Cindy Hill, Jack Krost, Jean Love- Josephine Marcm'ty. Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seidenstein, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Sue orephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca right to obtain are irrelevant, and poten- tial becomes considerably more import- ant. This newspaper believes social justice is a goal for which we must all strive to- gether. To ignore the rights of those who are oppressed is both.immoral and sui- cidal. The University; being an important contributor to society, must therefore work to improve society, or else its exist- cnce is pointless. Some student may react emotionally to affirmative action policies, feeling that they are being denied opportunities due to preference given to minorities. Such attitudes may be understandable, but they are not very helpful. If this country is to progress socially, making up for 400 years of oppression to blacks, there will have to be some costs to, the de- scendents of the oppressors. UNFORTUNATELY THE 10 per cent en- rollment has not even been reached. Moreover, the programs for student serv- ices that were to accompany the increas- ed black enrollment have never been adequately funded. Hoffman has admitted that he has no evidence that quotas are being used by the University. But the issue of termin- ology, whether it be quotas, goals, com- mitments or whatever fades in import- ance to the fact that the University has agreed to take steps toward equality by increasing black enrollment. Thus the SGC-passed resolution has the basic effect of attacking the basic ideal of increasing minority access to this University,. With the 10 per cent goal unfulfilled' and the assistance programs underfund- ed, SGC should be working positively for social justice rather than setting itself and the students it supposedly repre- sents back 20 years. The first step should be to repeal the Hoffman resolution. BEFORE DEPARTING sunny south, Sheehan got word with council in a for the the last haughty Letters to, the Daily so what To The Daily: FOR THE PAST few days I have observed Bo "lashing out" and "players stunned," local politic- ians "ripping decisions" and De- troit sportscasters wrinkling their noses at the foulness of it all. I have been treated to various ru- mors of "Somebody was bought," and have read the charges of pet- tiness made by this paper against the athletic directors of the Big Ten. Perhaps I too could join in this communal indulgence of self- pity and self-congratulation were it not so obviously misplaced. In amateur athletics, we are re- peatedly told, "'tis not the winning but the taking part," that we can say, with Plato, "Virtue is its own reward." In view of this flood of childish yowling, the virtuous tak- ing part is obviously not enough - for Bo, for this paper, for the city council, for all those stunned ath- letes, for Al Ackerman, and above all for that great overbearing boo. boisie which engulfs Ann Arbor every damn football Saturday. Taking part would probably be enough for amateurs, but then, the Big Ten does not play amateur football, but minor league. Why the University and not the NFL supports the minor leagues-that is, carries athletes as students in- stead of allowing students to work as athletes - is a question too deep for this-letter. After all, sports fa- cilities to students have been cut back. And ask your local T. F. the last time he "made allowances" at the request of members of the Ath- letic Dept. so that a track star could keep his eligibility. But this should be no real news to anyone. Virtue was not reward- ed because virtue wasn't enough and indeed was never the question. That is, not until recently when the Great Ann Arbor Fan brought him- self to believe that he deserved the vicarious thrill of an assumed Bowl Win, and the Athletic Dept. a cut, I presume, of the Pasadena gate. As a member of the University academic community, I can feel no more sympathy for the Ann Arbor football establishment than for the Green Bay Packers, since both stand in the same essential rela- tionship to the University- ab ex- tra. Breast - beating and mewling and "We Deserve" all for the semi- pros indicates that hyprocrisv is not confined to the Athletic Dent. Let Woody have his game. It's done damn few of us proud. Steve Schwartz Grad Nov. 28 affirmative action To The Daily: IN ITS STAND on the Affirm a- tive Action Programs The, Daily has once again shown that it is out of touch with both student opinion and the laws of logic. Your editorial of November 17, 1973 claimed that when students criticize Affirmative Action they do sobecause not enough is being, done. This is categorically false. A random survey taken in Alice Lloyd, East Quad, and South Quad last year showed 42 per cent of the students against the pro- grams, 38 per cent in favor, and the rest undecided. I hate to shat- ter your dreams but a substantial number of students are thus, against 'the .programs. You have attacked my attitade against quotas as being "disgust- ingly similar to that expressed by V.P. felon Spiro Agnew." As you probably realized but chose to ig- nore, simply becausetan evil per- son believes in something doesn't necessarily make that idea false. That "logic" leads to arguments like: "Since Hitler was bad and he liked Social Security, Social Se- curity is bad." Finally, the Affirmative Ac-ion programs arp not an attempt to make whites compete with minor- ities, as The Daily stated. These programs provide that minorities are to be given preference in hir- ing, admissions, etc. I believe wholeheartedly in free competition but these programs make -special efforts towards mi- norities. Competition is blind to race and looks only at ability. These programs look mostly for race and then consider ability. That fits the dictionary definition of racism. Now, The Daily may argue tnat since minority groups have suffer- ed in the past we have to treat them with kid gloves now and pro- vide them with special treatment. But if you must take this unjust position at least be honest enough to admit that you want to use :ac- ist means to mollify the effects of racism. -Matt Hoffman SGC Member Independent Housing farewell performance, as he pre- sented a five-year budget projec- tion showing the city will be in for some tough times. During the presentation, one co'ncil member interrupted the finance minister to pose a ques- tion. Instead of answering, Shee- han set his jaw, glowered at the challenger, folded up his notes, and stalked out muttering, "I have the right to talk without being inter- runted . .. He also pulled a perfect disap- pearing act after the unprecedent- ed outburst, which several council members condemned as inexcus- ably insubordinate. Retrospective- ly the gesture appeared to reek of premeditation - Sheehan's way of telling the critical voices to 'cram it.' Since council finally grasped the seriousness of local money woes about four months ago, a stream of derogatory remarks have been poured on Sheehan. HE PARTICULARLY raised the group's ire when he told them the present budget - which he pri- rasnly authored --failed to in- chide appropriations for severance nav and sick leave. Consequently $300,000 originally 'earmarked for debt rad,,tion would be unavail- abg for that purpose. Sheehan's exolanation for the ov- ersight w-s characteristicly vague and needless to say pacified no one. If the criticism was not enough to cause the administrator's hasty derrtire, nredictions that budget problems will get worse - bring- ing a reduction in municipal serv- ices and the distinct possibility of a local income tax - before im- proving, certainly is. Sheehan should not be blamed for leaving when he did. The move was quite beneficial for him from a personal stand point. And as the old maxim goes "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kit- chen ... IN ALL LIKELIHOOD, however, .Sheehan's ghost will be made a scapegoat for the money malades dring next April's city election. Which is not to say that if' the real McCoy were here instead of in St. Petersberg, he would be ex- cused from a similar bludgeoning. Still on balance, Sheehan, unlike the city, has ended up in the black - the guy has left a commissary where the beans are burning for one featuring vichyssoise as the house specialty. A Nov. 23 Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial' Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications. business office in the Michigan Daily building. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Direc- tors reserve the right to edit Al letters submitted. 4 Gordon Atchesow er for The Daily. is a staff Writ- 4 black gold visors, now forecasts a sharp increase in the unemployment rate due partly to the cnergy shortage. Stein notes that a recession was a pros- pect anyway regardless of the energy sit- uation, an estimation which was prob- ably correct. The shortage of oil has just brought the crisis on quicker and harder. Less jobs, less heat and less gasoline are not the only effects of the energy shortage. Last month's jump in the con- sumer price index was in large part due to skyrocketing oil costs. WHILE THE American people suffer from the effects of the shortage, in other words, oil company profits leap to higher levels. The same corporations who helped bring the crisis on by refusing to build new refineries (there was no "economic incentive") are the very ones to profit by it most. This situation makes a mockery of Presidential pronouncements that the cnergy crisis is something we must all suffer through together. War powers RECENTLY, STATE Department offic- ials have been suggesting that the recently passed War Powers bill may give President Nixon the right to resume the bombing of Indochina if the North Viet- namese launch a military offensive. In the past Nixon has need no authori- zation at all to drop record amounts of bombs on the people of Indochina, yet it is not particularly surprising Nixon ad- ministration analysts are attempting to find anything that will "allow" the Presi- dent to resume air attacks if he finds it "necessary." The American government still believes that it in its interest to keep South Viet- nam under the yoke of a repressive dic- tatorship in the name of democracy, free- dom and the "Free World." The war in Vietnam has been and re- mains a civil war in which the United States should have no part. To resume the bombing in Indochina would be in- Graff iti' Moldy American Pie' By BRUCE SHLAIN Cruising for burgers, listening to the radio, later at the hop, the class president dancing with the cheer- leader, getting hold of some hard stuff and siphoning the booze into Coke bottles - the American Rites of Passage. How does anyone ever make it out of that world psychologically balanced? Well, that is not a ques- tion for this article, for American Graffiti, now playing at the Mich- igan, is not too anxious to answer that one either. It is in the main a film that is dream-like in its simplicity, a mon- tage of Sixties rock with an over- whelming tongue-in-cheek interest in the misadventures of a few 17- year-olds at the peculiar and awk- ward stage when one is just learn- Our pecl depic ted By PENNY BLANK Precision of characterization and excellent comic-tragedy timing are only two qualities of the Univer- sity Players fine Showcase Pro- duction of And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little, enjoying a success- ful run this week at the Frieze Arena Theatre. Playwright Paul Zindel's skill in presenting strong and complex wo- men's characters, as previously shown in his Pulitzer Prize win- ning Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds, shines in this production. Through no fbult of its fine cast, the play lacks conclusive actions and fo- cus, unfortunate shortcomings of the author's product. The play, which could be called "The Effects of Perverse Mater- nal Prudery on the Reardons", holds up to the audience the lives of three school teacher sisters each with their own way of dealing with the past and coping with the pre- sent world going mad. The plot revolves around Anna, the youngest sister who is losing all sanity, and how to deal with her. Catherine who lives with Anna ing to mouth the words "This does not make sense." But the words never get out. The film expresses this absurdist attitude in its brief epilogue, tell- ing where four of the boys wind up in later years. One becomes a truck driver, another an insurance salesman, one a writer, and of course, one missing in action in Vietnam. I say "of course" be- cause the highly sexual scent of the euphoric tail-pipe exhaust be- gins to stink, and it becomes ap- parent that the "fall" is immin- en t. The kids in the film, however, are hardly tragic heroes. There is not a sense of a larger wisdom hidden by their iinocence, as Jam- es Dean created in Rebel Without a Cause. They border, for the most Uliarities byZindel ing deeper peculiarities in all of them. Even a neighboring couple who drops by to see the maddened Anna are soon disclosing v e r y personal oddities of their spouses to all. Emotions peak only to be brought back to their absurd per- spective by quips of comic-relief from Catherine. The plot realy goes nowhere except to bring about the mass demise of the personalities on display. The production is really brought to life by its players who combine their talents with director Mary Pettit for a dynamic result. Margo Martindale's portrayal of Catherine contains wit, showing a comic's sence of the importance of movement. Her matronly waddle turned tipler's toddle and adroit handling of stage-business are pleasures to watch when other characters are in the spotlight. When one tires of Anna's g o r y allegorical tales embellishing the reason behind her breakdown, there is Catherine's nibbing of raw meat from a candy box available to watch like a sideshow to the play proper. The cold, survival instinct of Ceil is well-played by Denise Koch, part, on the imbecilic, the whim- sical attitude of self-indulgence; painless, complete even. Director George Lucas, working in conjunction with producer Fran- ces Coppola, has tried desperately to make the film transcend the con- fining bounds of a boring Saturday night by taking each of the char- acters on a quintessential odyssey through their high school lives, creating in one night a campy, cliche-riddlen summing-up of their experience, thereby indicating the transience of it all. The year is 1962, Kennedy has not been assassinated, one of the boys, Curt, used to have as his highest ambition to shake the pres- ident's hand. But those hopes are for a frozen past, frozen forever in those icy graduation photos that have their way of saying that a whole culture is over. Indeed, the small-town s t r i p where they hang out is quickly de- generating. As John, of the jack- ed-up hot rod says, it used to take a full tank of gas to do the cir- cuit. But now the girls areugly, and when he does go out cruising, he ends up with a 14-year-old wh wants to know, when he shoves her head under the dashboard to save his reputation, if this is what they mean by "copping a feel." And there is even a reference to rock being dead after B u d d y Holly, giving vent to a whole slew of mind-benders like Is the Dream Alive?. Is Don McClean obnox- ious? etc. The sheer nostalgic quality, how- ever, is nicely mediated by a few lewd words and appropriate ges- tures (including a genuine, pressed- against-the-car window moon), giv- ing the film a texture somewhere in between the myths it.is explor- ing and the reality that inconspic- uously invades it. Lenny Bruce once said that comedy is only "tragedy plus ten years.' Films like Summer of '42 have t.ishered in a new proverb if nothing else, that stupidity plus time equals nos- talgia, the sheer, glossy, gossamer kind. Graffiti has managed to eschew this slickness, thanks in, part to having Haskell Wexler as visual consultant. The film jumps f r o m character to character, the Jriving gets faster and faster, as if the glance that the well-balanced ir- dividual is insane. The characters in Graffiti really have no voice, their expression handed over to the DJ rantings of Wolfman Jack, inviting his listen- ers to "rock 'n' toll themselves to death."' And when Curt visits him in the control booth to help him find the ultimate girl, Jack denies that he is the Wolfman, in- sisting He is an ethereal enti: : "He's everywhere, man."' With the make-believe settng crumbling, the choice iyecomes one of whether to go down with it or, as Curt must decide, go t) college. He has won the Moose Lodge's first scholarship award, but has trouble deciding whether to go. His last night is spent in a mad, comic, fling at juvenile delinquen- cy, with the Pharoahs, stealing a car for a joy ride, just as cars fig- ure in the final scene, the Teen Apocalypse, where the drag rac- ers end in flaming autos, and the Wolfman is nowhere.e But this is a remembrance if things past, not the .things them- selves. Just when one expects the soundtrack (which goes from "Love Potion Number Nine" to "Green Onions" to the Beach Boys) to break into J. FranK Wil- son's "Last Kiss", the teens emer- ge unscathed from the cars and the lovers embrace. The Midsum- mer's Night Dream atmosphere Ms indicative of the way we like to think of the anguished or chaotic past. Perhaps only in Penn's Alice's Restaurant were the links between people's musical and romantic con- ceptions of their culture and how they actually relate to it cinemati- cally established. Both Penn and Lucas deal with a group of people who are right on the edge of ar- ticulating what was "in the air." It is almost time to compare their premonition of what w a s blowin' in the wind to what act- ually has happened, but that is all very 'sad and who has the time, and besides, they say Dylan's going on tour this year. , e II The Bald Soprano, performed, superbly By DAVID BLOMQUIST It isn't a very glamorous setting. The audience sits on folding chairs. Noise frdm the crowd around the pinball machine across the h a 11 wafts through the door. There's no curtain; the stage - or, more ac- curately, the space at the front of the room - is lit by only three or four spotlights. But, of far great- er importance, the acting and di- rection is superb, and, consequent- ly, the Union Gallery's version of Eugene lonesco's The Bald S o- prano may just turn out to be the Ann Arbor dramatic sleeper of the year. Director Marilyn Heberling took on a formidable task - a cast com- posed entirely of non-frofessionals attempting an extremely challeng- ing script. Bald Soprano is a scath- ing look at our inability at times to communicate clearly with each other, told with some of the most atrocious puns since Shakespeare's telling stories, but, somehow, the idea just doesn't suit their temp- erments. Either one of them does not get the point, finds it boring, gets lost in the middle, or is of- fended by the material. One can sense the frustration, tension, and rage building up until, finally, one ill-timed curse brings forth a fountain of verbal seman- tics, terminating in a deterioration of language to the point where the cast no longer speaks in entire words, but in syllables and even individual letters of the alphabet. Heberling wisely chose to insert many facial gestures throughout the play, underlining the charac- ,ters' need, to find some kind of substitute for the language they seem unable to use. She took ad- vantage of the no-platform, inti- mate layout, moving the perform- ers (and, thus, the play) into the audience at points, especially at the end: an old, trick, yes, b u t il