S ri .. _I err.. '. - e fr4iian Dait1 Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan All ethics aside for Mayor Jim 420 Maynard St:, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1974 Abusing the residency rule THE IN-CITY residency requirement for all Detroit municipal employees, seemingly innocuous enough at first glance, is proving hazardous to the free- dom of some individuals affected by that ruling. The rule, adopted several years ago, re- quires that such city employes as mem- bers of the police department reside within the city limits of Detroit. Although a circuit court decision ruled the residency requirement illegal in 1970, the decision was reversed two years later. Unfortunately, the residency require- ment has forced Detroit Police Lt. Eu- gene Caviston to choose between his job and his family. Lt. Caviston chose divorce - it was the only alternative he had to keep his 18- year job on the force and not move his wife and four children from their sub- urban home. CAVISTON HAD attempted to satisfy the requirement by renting an apartment with three other policemen and visiting his family only on weekends, but a police trial board ruled that Cavis- ton was still not meeting his residency requirements because his family lived outside Detroit. Caviston was ordered either to divorce his wife or lose his job. His wife was un- willing to move since she felt she was not "Detroit property." The residency requirement was first instituted basically for economic reasons -those who are paid by the city should pay city taxes. However, it makes little sense to force Caviston to divorce his wife if he was living in Detroit and paying city taxes. CAVISTON'S WIFE feels that the police board's ruling dicriminates against married men because the residency of single men is not determined by the lo- cation of- their immediate family nor is it affected by whom they choose to visit on week ends. The police board surpassed their power by interfering in Caviston's personal life to such an extent. This sort of action damages rights guaranteed to all citi- zens and certainly goes beyond the spirit of the rule as it was conceived. By GORDON ATCHESON jMAYOR JAMES STEPHENSON, the local Republicans' white knight and defender of virtue, has again leveled his lance at a horde of continually troublesome dragons - the kind that smoke marijuana. Having led the charge to repeal Ann Arbor's five dollar dope fine, Stephenson is expending. just as much energy, time, and wind to crush an effort to re-instate the law as a city charter amendment. Last week, the mayor spoke to his peo- ple and told them what they wanted to hear. "My office is available to coordinate opposition to the (marijuana) proposal," Stephenson declared before the city Board of Realtors. By that he did not mean he would vo- cally oppose the amendment as the mayor of Ann Arbor but rather he would volunteer the actual mayor's office as a headquarters. Other city hall officials have already ques- tioned the propriety and legality of using facilities maintained at the taxpayer's ex- pense to support or oppose election issues. And well they should question. THE MAYOR'S proposition, for some rea- son, conjures up images of the South Viet- namese election in which one could vote for Thieu or not vote at all. Or perhaps more similarly of a president running for re-election using Air Force-1 to hop from speech site to speech site - as the govern. ment footed' the bill. In each case, the people lending support were really given no option. Apparently, however, no law would be violated if Stphenson went ahead and open- ed the office tod the anti-marijuana forces, at least so says City Attorney Edwin Pear. He ruled the mayor has the right to use his office "to express his views" on the issues. Pear, though, was nominated for his post by Stephenson and received confirma- tion thanks to the mayor and the six other Republicans who surround the City Council table. While the Attorney's opinion may be tech- nically corect, his judgments have in the Spain 1 By PAUL O'DONNELL power i ON DECEMBER 20, 1973, t h e ler and president of the Spanish gov- Carrero ernment, Carrero Blanco, died in casion t an explosion, reportedly planned the agin and executed by Basque separat- Arrivi ists. This assassination and t h e Barcelo governmental reshuffling that took learned place afterwards were called by ed "un certain observers "the most im- sread t portant single event in Spanish his- killed; I tory since the Civil War." seen hi I was in Barcelona at the time of of the the assassination, but left a few singer. days afterwards to spend the It wa Christmas holidays in France. At ning pa the time of my departure the "official whereabouts of the assassins were controll as yet unknown. no news What happened between the time who ha Carrera Blanco died and the time to Fren I departed for France could only be described as a dictatorship in MEA action: Seeking to avenge the death newspa of one of its most faithful servants tional ] and to hide the causes of his as- appearf sassination. in Spai ious Sp FOR SPAIN is not only the "sun- chine-gu ny country of bullfighters and fla- were in menco dancers" that the tourist celonas agencies make it sound like; al- The a though the number one tourist wherei country in the world, it is also the took ad poorest country in Western Europe crackd after Portugal, and controlled by ments," a repressive military regime. zations The head of this regime, octogen- Arme arian Francisco Franco, came into ports se past occassionally been colored by a long association with the GOP and its council representatives. MOREOVER, EVEN IF Stephenson can legally institute Operation Weedkiller, the morality of doing so remains dubious. The paper, the pencils, and the utilities in the mayor's office are all paid for by the peo- ple - many of whom back the charter amendment. These persons should not be forced to financially support a political posi- tion they oppose. Stephenson has tried to legitimize his offer as a drive to educate the electorate con- cerning the marijuana ballot question. He has expressed confidence that once the vot- ers "learn" about the five dollar, law they will flock to the polls and drive the measure into the ground. The Republicans, most vociferously among them Stephenson, have blasted Ann Ar- bor's image as "the dope capital of the Midwest" and promised that getting our liberal dope law off the books would change that reputation. In his inaugural address last April, the mrayor assailed marijuana dealers as "soc- ial poison, who must be driven out of town." From such a source will not flow particular- ly unbiased information. STEPHENSON TOLD the realtors he hop- ed a direct mailing enumerating the "prob- lems" with the charter amendment will be sent out to the voters. He declined, however, to say whether it would be done gratis city hall and the taxpayers. The proposed campaign should outrage anyone concerned with the mere pretense of "well-scrubbed-clean-behind-the-ears" gov- ernment, let alone the real thing. Of course at a time when public confi- dence in government at every level has been dearly shaken by Watergate and other scandals, trying to pull off anything which smells the least bit of fish cannot be politi- cally productive or morally reassuring. Perhaps that best demonstrates how im- perative local conservative leadership feels Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK Mayor Jmes Stephenson defeating the marijuana amendment is to their constituency. It has promised to go out on an ethical limb - pacifying the hard- lines. ,NONETHELESS, THE MAYOR and the Republican party are ultimately fighting a no-win war (sound familiar?) Even after they laid the original five dollar law to rest last July, dope smoking did not decrease -although it may not be quite so open now - and the final fate of the ballot ques- tion will not alter present attitudes. Stephenson can give the anti-marijuana faction use of his office but in the long run the only things hurt will be his own already badly tarnished image and the pub- lic's respect for its officials. Neither he nor the GOP can stamp out dope - even if they rip-off the entire city treasury to finance the effort. Were the mayor to realistically assess the results of his holy quest, he would either halt the crusade or find a paunchy side- kick named Sancho Panza. Gordon Atcheson is a staff report- er for The Daily. More papers capers DESPITE THE President's brief fit of "candor" regarding his rather large tax deduction for his contribution of vice presidential papers to the National Archives questions have remained. The latest curiosity about the affair, which resulted in Nixon payment of min- iscule amounts of income tax in recent years, is the revelation that the deed for the donation was dated a year before it was actually signed. Not only was the deed pre-dated, but the signing took place long after Nixon's eligibility for the deductions claimed had expired by law. According to the Deputy* Secretary of the State of California, Thomas Quinn, Nixon's tax lawyer Frank DeMarco and others have admitted that the deed, while bearing the date March 27, 1969, Editorial Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief TONY SCHWARTZ...................Sunday Editor DIANE LEVICK ........................ Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER.................. Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY.........Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCHILLER.............Editorial Director ERIC SCHOCH..................Editorial Director CHARLES STEIN ................... .. City Editor TED STEIN ....................Executive Editor ROLFE TESSEM..................Managing Editor. EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Marnie Heyn, Chuck wilbur, David Yalowitz TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Blugerman, Jo Marcotty, Judy Ruskin, Stephen Selbst, Becky Warner Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, M a r n i e Heyn, Eric Schoch, Doug Zernow Arts Page: Ken Phynques, Diane Levick Photo Technician: David Margolick was not actually signed and notarized until April 10, 1970. In between, a law went into effect on July 25, 1969 that "would have drastically reduced the amount of deductions Nixon could have received for his papers. IT SEEMS THAT Quinn has determined that the typewriter upon which the deed was typed was not purchased by the law firm until after the deed was written. DeMarco has claimed that an original deed was drawn up on March 27, 1969, but no one can seem to find, that origi- nal deed nor any copies of it. No doubt we will be told that they are missing as a result of action taken by those same "sinister forces" that erased 18 minutes of a Watergate tape. This latest incident reveals the same lack of concern for legality that has char- acterized the entire Nixon administra- tion. As long as our elected representa- tives continue to avoid the issue of im- peachment though, we can only wait for the next installment. No comment FTER SELLING grain to the Soviet Union in 1972, a move which was at least partially responsible for the cur- rent shortage of wheat in this country, we see an article in yesterday's New York Times, the first paragraph of which follows: "A Soviet trade official offered yes- terday to sell wheat to the United States to help replenish grain stocks that have been drawn down to low levels after heavy exports over the last two years." 974: Fascism in tourist town n 1939 with the help of Hit- Musolini. The death of Blanco gave me the oc- o observe the real nature of ng dictatorship. ng at the University of na for an examination, I that the building was clos- til further notice." Rumor that the president had been I couldn't believe it; I had s picture on the front page morning paper with Kis- s, however, true. Tie eve- pers ran a one-paragraph J version," but the State- ed television and radih had broadcasts all day. Those d powerful radios listened ch and Italian stations. NWHILE, many foreign pers (including the Interna- Herald Tribune) did i o t for several days afterwards n. Numerous arests in var- anish cities resulted, ma- in carrying Assault guards creasingly visible on Bar- streets. tmosphere was tense everv- in Spain; the government vantage of the situation to down on "subversive ele- including workers' organi- and certain Jesuit priests. d guards checked our pass- everal times on the way to versives or assasins, they allowed us to pass into French territory. LE PERTHUS, FRANCE, is not much different in appeacane from La Junquera, on the Spanisn side: both are lined with souvenir sn,)s, money-changing shops, and post- card sellers. On both sides of t h e border the countryside is also much the same: the majestic Pyrences which have for centuries served as a natural boundary between the two countries. Beyond the surface similarities, however, enormous contrasts are evident: on the French side anti- Franquist grafitti abounds, FR'AN- CO ASSASSIN, -and DOWN WITH .JUAN CARLOS are typical exam- ples. Wages on the Le Perthus sine are also considerably higher; on the Spanish side labor protection laws and unions are in practize nonexistent. Further on down the road to Per- pignan, posters of France's num- erous political parties and groups and spray-painted anti-Gaullist slo- gans are splattered over walls and signposts. The messages range from the extreme left to the ex- treme right, every group from the Maoists to the Monarchists encour- ages French citizenry to support its cause. THE CONTRAST between this and Spain, where there have been no free elections since 1939, is striking. The first thing I did when I (ross- ed the border into France was buy newspapers (to find out what was really happening in Spain). It was a pleasure to read newsprint that hadn't been directly controlled and censored by the government. While in Paris I saw two movies a day (movies suffer an even more rigorous censorship than printed material does in Spain), and visited numerous bookstores. I enjoyed being in a country which, althought it has its own Watergate scandals, its own corrup- tion, and serious racial problems, has maintained the right to criti- cize openly and to oppose the gov- ernment (I have often seen Spanish people close the doors and windows and talk in whispered voices when discussing politics in their o w n homes). I REFLECTED OVER the dif- ferences of the two countries as I crossed back over the Pyrenees in- to Spain last week. Although it seemed that the air was cleaner on the French side of the Pyrenees than on the Spanish side, it must have been my imagination. Paul O'Donnell is a Univer- sity student in foreign lan- guages and journalism. He has spent most of his college career studying in France and Spain. Gen. Francisco. Franco Le Perthus on the Fren:h border. At the border there was a final se- curity check; with all the rifle-tot- ing guards and check points, I had the impression that there might have been an "iron curtain" be- tween Spain and France. Our pap- ers were all "in order," and as- suming that none of us were sub- I . Letters: CIA case importan 1973 HAD7 INFLATION i K , THE WORST N RATE IN 27 YEARS. f AND I'M PAYING 50 CENTS FOR A GALLON OF GAS WHILE SOME OIL COMPANY PROFITS ARE UP 50%! THIS ADMINISTRATION IS SAID TO BE THE MOST CORRUPT IN AMERICAN HISTORY. LET'S GO SEE THE "EXORCIST." I COULD USE A LITTLE CHEERING UP. 7 To The Daily: A JOKE with no humor, h o w true. Gary Thomas (Daily, Jan. 23) has aptly soothed our paranoia about the "Operators" of the CIA and their Rube Goldberg schemes. Rootin' tootin' Adam Wests ready to head 'em off at the plot. They are mostly a bunch of assholes with some crazy projects. Yet, at the same time we must not forget that they are Fearful and Loath- some dead-serious assholes with a trick or two up their trenchcoats worthy of notice. In seeking to prevent former agents Victor Marchetti and John Marks from spilling the beans about the CIA's ineptitude in a book, the dirty tricksters scored what Taylor Branch recently called in Harper's (Jan.) "a Newtonian advance in the prospects for quiot, discreet government." In April 1972, the U.S. government got a permanent court order enjoining Marchetti and everybody he knows from disclosing any information without the prior consent of the CIA. To quote Branch: "The Justice Department, representing the Agency, sees the sanctity of con- tracts as the real issue. Marchetti - like Ellsberg, Marks, and any- one else dealing with classified material - got his job only after signing a contractured agreement not to reveal secrets, and the gov- ernment successfully contended that such a contract overrides Mar- NEEDLESS TO SAY, the ACLU is freaked-out. No more haggling for the CIA about National Security and First Amendment objections to prior restraint, before a jury with lots of publicity. Just a boring se- cret hearing before a judge to en- join a government dissenter from breaching his contractural obliga- tion not to reveal classified in- formation. The final outcome in the courts about Marchetti could be, as Branch puts it, "a victory for zipper-lined government snat- ched from the ashes of the Ells- berg case, achieved quietly while the public is pre-occupied with Nix- on's sanity and his character flaws." -Steven McClure '72 Jan. 29 Regeneration To The Daily: LEE GILL'S resignation as SGC President paves the way for the regeneration of student govern- ment at Michigan. As an observer or participant in student govern- ment since 1969 perhaps my per- spectives are of a little interest. Until early 1972 SGC had its ups and downs but on the whole it was a reasonably representative and sometimes influential body. I t s supportive role in the 1970 BAM strike was quite important, and its attainment of student control over the present Office of Special Ser- vices and Programs was an ad- pretense of restoring democratic student government. There remains no excuse for the corporate University to meddle in student affairs. SGC ought to en- act a workable new constitution - perhaps as a federation of school and college governments - b u t whatever form it takes, all students should repudiate continued Admin- istrative/Regental usurpation of student self-determination. -Bob Black '73 Jan. 10 obfuscation To The Daily: ON DECEMBER 6, an advercise- ment on Arab racism and anti- Semitism was published in t h e Michigan Daily. Even if We as- sume that all of the examples of racism and persecution of minori- ties by the Arabs are correct, the article still did not clarity t h e issues directly relating io the Arab-Israeli conflict and diI not contribute to producing an atmos- phere in which these problems might be rationally discussed. For years Arab propagardists have tried to argue that the on y- solution to the Arab-Israeli con- flict was the liquidation of the State of Israel. In order to justify this claim they tried to picture Israel as a racist state This Arab propaganda also does not contri- bute to creating an at iisphere i- which the real prN'em of tnu of no Arab state which is m o r e democratic than the State of Is- rael and I do not ueieve that ie placing Israel by a democratic Arab state would give thy citizens of Israel more freedom, equality, and democracy :han they already have. Arguments abort Israeli racism and the replacement of Israel by a democratic Arab state siniply serve to obscure the real issues of how a peace can be negotiated between Israel and her neighbors. They are arguments presented by those who want Y.o peace.,' After 25 years of hostilities Arabs and Israelis are finally beginning to negotiate directly. Ther is no assurance that theie negotiations will lead to dramatic breakthroughs in the immediate future, but if the Arab states and Israel have pro- gressed to the stage wheye they are trying to resolve their differ- ences, it might be the right time for both pro-Arab and pro-Israeli propagandists to start disdussing and not obscuring the issues which can lead to a peaceful resolution of the conflict.' -Stephen Segall, Grad Jan. 9 fortitude To The Daily: UPON READING the frighten- ing tale of the recent armed rob- bery incidents, we were impressed by Tim Ryback's stoic action in a I denly a masked man opened the driver's door and forced the cou- ple out of the car. Drawing a circle in the dust next to the roadway the villian demand- ed that the U of M student stand in it, moving only under penalty of death. The deviant rogue then pro- ceeded to destroy the young man's car with an axe. He looked at the student, w h o stood in the circle with a s t-eat- ing grin on his face. The bandit pushed the demolished car off the cliff. A grin creased the face of the circle stander. The scalawag grabbed the young coed, r a p e d her, and threw her to her death. The Ann Arborite grined on. THE SWARTHY SCOUNDREL was exasperated, "I don't under- stand you, man. I destroy your car; push it off the cliff, rape your girl, and throw her off and you just stand there grinning. What's the story?" The maize and bluester smugly replied, "I stepped out of the cir- cle three times while your back was turned." -Unsigned Jan. 29 The Editorial Page of The Michigan Daily is open to any- one who w i s h e s to submit articles. Generally speaking, all articles should be less than 1,000 words. « ..., y (I' W -.21%, - K:4- 1 M A