Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Deciding who'll do the busing 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1974 Congress to face Big Two CONGRESS YESTERDAY began what could be the most important session in its history as the question of impeach- ment comes to a head, conservative col- umnists and Nixon speechwriters attack the supposed liberal-radical-media "con- spiracy" to impeach the President, and the basic questions about the nature of the energy shortage remain unanswered. There are obviously important issues other than Watergate and the energy crisis that will have to be dealth with, and no doubt Presidential apologists will charge that Congress is irresponsibly ne- glecting everything else in a massive ef- fort to "get" Richard Nixon. It seems only proper, however, that Congress devote a considerable amount of time to the most important issues fac- ing the country. The worst government scandal in this country's history and an energy shortage that is having massive effects on the economy are certainly those issues. THE QUESTION of impeachment now lies largely with the House of Rep- resentatives. Over the holidays, Congress- persons no doubt heard the discontent of their constituents that is expressed in every major public opinion poll. Hopefully they will ignore the attempts by the White House to color the investi- gation as an attempt by Democratic lib- erals to reverse the mythical "Nixon mandate." Some members of Congress may argue against impeachment on the grounds that Americans want to avoid another major shock. But it would seem a worse shock to have the crippled and corrupt Nixon administration in office until January, 1977. Moreover, impeachment proceedings, with or without a conviction, might just give the American people the awareness that the awesome and often illegally- used power of the executive branch can be fought, if they will only raise them- selves out of their lethargy. THE GENERAL MALAISE of American citizens who believe that nothing can be done about government policy and misuse of its vast power is one of the major social problems facing this coun- try. Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief TONY SCHWARTZ .................... Sunday Editor DIANE LEVIOK...................... Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER ..................Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY..........Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY CHILLER............Editorial Director ERIC SCHIOCH .......... Editorial Director TODAY'S STAFF: News: Penny Blank, Ted Evanoff, Christo- pher Parks, Sara Rimer, Ted Stein Editorial Page: Ted Hartzell, Marnie Heyn, Eric Schoch Arts Page: Dione Levick Photo Technician: John Upton It is just such a belief that will insure that nothing constructive is accomplish- ed. An impeachment trial could shake people out of their sense of impotence, in addition to its primary purpose of de- termining the extent of Presidential in- volvement in criminal activities. Congressional actiyity to deal with the energy crisis, especially in terms of cem- mittee investigations, is perhaps as im- portant as investigation of Watergate and impeachment. The energy crisis comes at a time when government credibility is at an all time low, due to its handling of the shortage as well as the Watergate scandal. Since the crisis acquired that descrip- tion last fall, when speaking about the shortage President Nixon has used the same tactics of obfuscation so well-honed 1n his Watergate speeches. AMID GROWING numbers of reports questioning the true extent and causes of the shortage, the Energy Czar and his office have been unable or un- willing to do little other than assure us that "there is a shortage." Moreover, Congress has been unable to pass emer- gency legislation to deal with symptoms of -the crisis due to opposition from oil state senators to an oil company excess profits tax. Congressional hearings on oil company actions at home and abroad and growing support for an excess profits tax are hopeful signs, but Congress would do well to begin promotion of alternative sources of energy that are environmentally safe, a prospect to which the White House has given only lip service.. Those senators and representatives who have bemoaned the growing domination of the executive branch over Congress now have their chance to restore some balance by dealing effectively with the energy issue and initiating impeachment proceedings. It is up to the American peo- ple to see that they do so. Vote COUNTY VOTERS go to the polls today to determine whether the Washte- naw County Intermediate School district shall establish and operate a vocational training center for county high school students. Two ballot questions will deal with proposed funding for the center. The first proposition would increase property taxes one mill county wide for operations, and the second empowers the school dis- trict to issue $7.6 million in tax bonds for land and construction costs. We join other groups and individuals endorsing the passage of these proposals. Public schools have too long concen- trated on the needs of college-bound stu- dents, and neglected those who finished their formal education with high school graduation, and yet had no marketable skill. We urge you to vote in favor of Ballot Proposals A and B in today's millage elec- tion. By ERIC SCHOCH ONE OF THOSE generally un- publicized yet important func- tions of state government will be coming up tomorrow that could easily effect the lives of many students at the University. The state Public Service Com- mission will be holding a hearing to determine whether or not the North Star bus line should be al- lowed to carry passengers between Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Metro- politan Airport. Presently, bus service between the two sites is provided by Grey- hound and Short Way Lines - no other bus line is permitted to car- ry passengers between those points. However, North Star presently runs several buses each day through Ann Arbor between var- ious points in the northern a n d western parts of the state and Detroit. Anyone may take a North Star bus from Ann Arbor to anywhere it might go, including Detroit, ex- cept to Ypsilanti and Metro and back. Officials of North S t a r argue that since they already have buses running between Ann Arbor to Metro, it is ludicrous to not al- low them to pick up passengers traveling between those points. BUS SERVICE is regulated in 'much the same way that utilities are regulated. The Public Service Commission, simply put, attempts to make sure that too much com- petition does not make it impos- sible for bus service to be feasible between two particular points, bas- In d i By GAIL OMVEDT MAHARASHTRA STATE, INDIA: A crowd of housewives in saris storms a village store whose own- er has been charging black market prices for grain. Angry, shout- ing, they tell him to stick to the government-set "fair price" or else. The shopkeeper gives in. Later, a group of rich farmers visits him, and pressures him to have the wo- men arrested. But the shopkeeper sticks to his bargain. Apparently, he fears the women.more than he does the farmers. In the Indian version of a sit-in, a district official is gheraoed - surrounded in his office by a group of peasants, and kept there until he grants their request. The hun- gry crowd is demanding emergency employment. The official explains, cajoles, makes excuses. Finally, he agrees to pass ,their request on up to the next level. "Don't worry," he tells them. "Something will be done." The men are ready to leave. But the women stay put. "We don't leave without a promise in writ- ing." A year of famine has heaped fuel on the smoldering discontent of Marharashtra's poor. And in pop- ular action all over the state, wo- men are taking the lead. "The women astonised us,' says a longtime union organizer who worked among poor peasants in drought-struck Marharashtra this year. "They can't read or write, they've hardly been outside their villages, they are slaves in their homes and in the fields. Yet where- ever we go, the women are the most militant." Before autumn rains finally end- ed the drought, 20 million of the state's 50 million people were left desolate, unable to scratch a liv- ing from their scorched fields. As crops died up agricultural w o r k vanished, and food prices soared. The struggling peasant union move- ment exploded in a series of marches, demonstrations, geras, and strikes. Everywhere, women led the ranks, their long-suppressed discontent erupting in actions men were too cautious, or too discour- aged to risk. ed on the normal amount of traf- fic. For example, it would be ab- surd to give permission to five bus lines to carry passengers between two small towns. No one would make any money, and the result might be no bus service at all.. Thus what the commission hear- ing will basically attempt to deter- mine tomorrow is whether there is adequate bus service now between Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and back. Short Way Lines, which r u n s about five buses each day between Metro and the city says there is. Russ Genung, Short Way general manager, notes that Short Way in- itiated a cutback in the number of runs about two years ago, axing some for the simple reason that, according to him, hardly anybody was riding them. THE CRUX of the issue seems to lie in the inability of city resi- dents to take a bus to the airport in the evening. The last bus out, a Short Way; leaves around 6:30 p.m. Many flights leave the air- port considerably later than that, of course, so if you want to go to Metro in the evening, you can take the limousine for about twice the price of bus fare. Genung argues that the later run was dropped because "it nev- er was patronized," at least n o t enough to make it remotely worth the money. However, three of the five Noith Star daily runs come after that last Short Way bus. Isn't it rather ridiculous, asks North Star market- ing manager Keith Weldy, that we can't pick anyone up when rOw more mass transit is needed? Not really, Genung would pro- bably answer. "Someone com- plains now and then," he says, but not enough to run at night. '"If the traffic warrants it," he adds. Short Way would be glad +o put runs in itself. "IF THERE are only complaints now and then, I must get them all," argues Larry Havard, w h o manages the ticket desk at the Un- ion. Havard claims that he gets a lot of complaints about the lack of bus service at certain times, especially when students leave the city in droves between semesters. Short Way does' run extra runs between Metro, Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor during periods of h 3 a v y traffic, but according to Havard they aren't enough. Of course, it is the profit motive which prompts the North Star re- quest much more than altruistic concern for the welfare of Ann Ar- bor residents. It is that same concern for re- venue that will send representa- tives of Short Way and Greyhound to the hearing tomorrow. It isn't evening North Star runs that pro- vide competition, it is those day- time runs that might drain sone revenue. Whether North Star gets their permission or not, or whether some sort of compromise is worked out, depends solely on the commission decision, along with possible subse- quent appeals. And whatever re- sults, someone is not going to ike it. Daily Photo by JOHN UPTON Feminist power from In one district largely populated by tribal people, a male organizer told me what happened when his group decided to hold a women's conference. "We expected 25 wo- men; 125 showed up. None of vs organizers were women and we really didn't know what to do -- so we let the women take over. "One by one, every woman stood up and told of the experiences in her village. At the end, one gave a summary. She said: 'We need or- ganization. But the men won't or- ganize. What is stopping them? Daru!!" (Daru, bootleg liquor, is a potent force in lower-caste village life.) "At that point a woman stood up and said that in her village, 12 miles away, she knew all the stills and liquor shops, and she knew the village policeman was taking brib- es to let them stayopen. 'Lets go and destroy them,' she said. "It was nine o'clock at night. But the women couldn't be stop- ped. They marched 12 miles to that village, smashed every bottle of liquor, and made the village policeman apologize to every wo- man in the group. And then, in the early hours of the morning, they marched back to continue their conference." The astonished male organizers' memories are short: female mili- tancy is not a new force in Indian history. In the early, terrorist days of the, independence movement, women as well as men made bombs and attempted to assassnate Brit- ish officials. When the movement took on a non-violent character during the time of Gandhi, women took to the streets in mass de- monstrtions and helped fill t h e jails. The wives of nationalist leaders like Nehru often took over major organizing jobs when their hus- bands were jailed. Women were ac- tive in the peasant leagues t h a t sprang up during the 1930''. The movement took up the demands of women along with those of work- ers, peasants, and untouchables; and women gained full legal rights, though not social or economic equality, when India won independ- ence. Today, a small feminist move- ment is developing among educat- ed younger women. In some cities this year the famine provoked vio- lent demonstrations by housewives. But the strongest women's move- ment at present is among the poor peasants and landless field work- ers. Like poor women everywhere, poor women in India carry a double burden: doing all the family's work as well as working to feed t h e family. They are up at dawn, bring- ing water from the well or river in big brass pots. Morning chores done, they work all day i.i t h e fields - where their wage rate is ditionally feminie women of the millde and upper classes. Hard as their life is, women vno worn in the fields, accustomed to daily con- frontations, with landlords and of- ficials, are more "liberated" than the secluded higher-caste house- wife. In a village in Dhulia District. composed mainly of the mud and thatch huts of landless agricultural workers, I attended a mass meet- ing where the women were taking part equally with the min - and speaking up with greater fhry. Two' women shared the place of leader- ship with two men on the only cot. "The women astonished us... They can't read or write, they've hardly been outside their vil- lages, they are slaves in their homes and in the fields. Yet wherever we go, the women are the most militant." per . "'.'}} a ,. {.vc.................... )elow, enough to save the nation s firs woman premier, Indira Gandhi. "Indira Gandhi is a nypocritet Indira Gandhi is a liar," exploded one laborer, a tall haggard woman of 40. She was one of a group of workers on a government relief project. The government was sup- posed to pay them for breaking rocks. They had been sitting at the jobsite for three days waitin to collect their wages that were three weeks late. When the money finally came, it was one week's pay, not three, and for most of the women it amounted to 5 or 6 runees a day (1 rupee equals 13c). "I sent my three sons to school - they have no jobs," she said. "I had six acres of land-the govern- ministers ate up the land. She must give jobs to my sons, she must give us work, she must give us land. Then we will give credit to Indira Gandhi." Another woman nodded agree- ment. "Indira Gandhi gave us work, she gave us pay. But we had to demonstrated to get the work, then demonstrate again to get the pay." s~ h "What is the remedy?" I asked. "We must organize," she said. "We must have unity." Like young girls everywhere, the daughters of these women get to- gether and sing. But their songs are political. Sometimes to traditional melodies, sometimes to tunes from popular films, these girls and wo- men compose songs about their demonstrations, their times in jail, their victories. in getting prices lowered. One song widely sung in famine areas this year is called "Questions of a Woman Agricultural Laborer'. It begins: "All our life is on fire, All the prices are rising, Answer our questions, Oh rulers of the country' Ms. Gin edi is Assistant Profes- sor of Sociology at the University of California at San biego. She has just completed an extensive journey with peasant organizers through India's Maharashtra State. (Copy- right, Pacific News Service, 1973) half what men earn - keeping one eye on their children left in shelters nearby. If there is food for an evening meal, the women leave the fields early to cook it. Their working day is not over until the meal has been cleared away and the floor of the mud hut swept. It is the women who meet the famine head on, in the food shops. Over and over again women told me how, with each trip to the store, the bare necessities were getting scarcer and harder to pay for. After one village meecing, two women drew me into a windowless hut. They wanted to show me the food they had in the house: a cju- ple of inches of murxy oil in a bottle, a few chilies, a potful of limp green vegetables --- notning else. "How can we live on this? We need more than a few cents extra in wages. Even when our wages are doubled they don't keep up wih the prices. We need more. We need land, and revolution." In their toughness and militancy, these poor women provide a strik- ing contrast to the soft-spoken, tra- (In rural India, the issue of who sits on a chair or cot it a meeting, and who sits on the ground, h a s great symbolic importance.) From the back doors of their brick hous- es, landlords' wives stared w it h amazement at this invasion of the traditionaly male realm of poli- tics. In another village, a group of women in faded cotton saris poured forth their grievances as we all sat in one woman's hut. Attracted by the crowd, perhaps by the rumor of a foreign woman visitor, a higher- caste woman in the brnght nylon sari entered and sat quietly at the' edge of the group. She was a well-to-do peasant whose family was able to hoard grain and sell it during the fa- mine at black market prices. Land- lords and richer peasants from families like hers have orofited widely from the famine situati,,n. The other women pointedly ig- nored her. They knew that their misery was paying for he:- new clothes and her husband's new motorcycle. "Sisterhood" was not powerful enough to save her from their anger, nor is it powerful Letters: Comin down on the IRS f i 7o.4fl t. To The Daily: I ACQUIRED a list of entities re- cruiting this semester through the Business School Placement Office. Sadly, the Internal Revenue Serv- ice was listed. For the reasons be- low, I couldn't let this occur un- challenged. The IRS compels citizens to file an annual tax return. This require- ment violates the 4th, 5th, and 9th Amendments to the U.S. Constitu- tion and the Supreme Court 'Mir- anda' decision. They guarantee a citizens right to privacy from the government. The coerced filing also violates the first line of the IRS Code of Ethics which states that income taxes are based on "volun- tary compliance" of citizens. Consider the practices of the [RS. Newspapers, magazines, and IRS employees report that the In- ternal Revenue Service commits armed robbery, extortion, kidnap- ping among other coercive crimes. By what moral right can the IRS :ollect taxes? Absolutely NONE! If collected voluntarily, they would not be taxes. In forcing people ing anti-IRS signs outside of the Business School between 8-9 a.m. Friday, January 25th. Others wish- ing to join us will be welcome. -Patrick Heller, '74 Jan. 19, 1974 the real American To The Daily: AFTER HEARING Gordon Sin- clair once too often I think it is time to say something regarding t h e real American, one of the strangest and most ill-conceived of God's hu- man creatures. What a great nation we are is re- flected in the way we react to problems. It seems more likely than not that Americans are the most selfish people among them- selves, the most prejudiced, and the least cultured people in t n e world. When I began reading history in school they never dealt with the fact that my country, as a colony of Britain, burned people as witch- es because they were different soc- ially; that as a newly emerging them. Germany killed millions of Jews and Gypsies during Word War II and paid with millions of its own people. Eastern European countries regularly have experienc- ed pogroms and seemed unable to stop them until the complete poli- tical repression of Communism ended the liberty of all. Each period of American history brings forth a new group to he chastised, ridiculed, and expelled from the mainstream. It took 200 years to free the slaves the colon- ists brought to the new shore of America, it will probably take 200 years to give all citizens e q u a 1 treatment economically, socially, and politically. We do not kill the objects of our hate quickly. No, America kills its oppressed through the condi- tions which breed violence, by sap- ping inner strength with dscrimina- tion, humiliation, and the frustrat- ed hopes of the America we see on the television. In other countries political scan- dals revolve around call girls and past political associations. In Great locations are lived with. Only in America could one see gas-guzzling cars packing gas sta- tions from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., cars blocking freeways while for- getting about the quickly buried plans for mass transit, or people waiting hours for fuel to power snowmobiles so they can make the forest into. a city of pollution and noise. We have so much to be pa- triotic and goose-pimply about. -David R. Haarz, Law '76 Jan. 17 SGC chaos ro The Daily: THIS LETTER is written in re- sponse to The Daily's commenda- tion in the January 15th editornial, "Revitalizing Student Action." There is a need for more student involvement and interest I'in stu- dent government; however, not the type of involvement displayed at last Thursday's SGC meeting. Last week's meeting was disrupted by a group of students, consisting of constituents and SGC members,, which proceeded to lock the main larized an already fragmented group. Certainly, their actions will prove more detrimental then bene- ficial in unifying SGC and strength- ening student power. -Debby Zeff, '77 Jan. 15 expose To The Daily: I WOULD LIKE to suggest that one of your reporters do an expose on the cleanliness conditions in the women's shower and bathrooms in Barbour Gymnasium. It would be especially effective if you chuld call attention to the fact that there is no hot water in the women's showers, although there is h o t water in the men's. In addition, photograph the filthy showers and bathrooms *o point up the lack of concern over women's physical education facilities. I have already brought this sit- uation to the attention of the ma- tron and suervisor of Barbour Gym and to the Director of Buildmg Services, D. W. Wendel. Thank you for your attention to