Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973 Model Cities feels squeeze WE KNOW ABOUT the long arm of the law, but we are still unfamiliar with the long arm of the crunch. It is far away in Washington that the President and his congressional antagonists bicker over so- cial legislation billions. The lopped off millions in the capital will be divvied up as program cuts among the nation's large urban centers, of course. But now, lo and behold, Ann Ar- bor has qualified. Funding for the Ann Arbor Model Ci- ties Program runs out next week. The President's freeze on Housing and Urban Development grants. has blocked renew- al for the city's grants threatening the jobs of 90 Model Cities employes. City Council is desperately dredging up temporary funding to avoid suspen- sion of Model Cities' dental care, legal counseling and child care services. City Administrator Guy Larcom, Mayor Rob- ert Harris and Congressman Marvin Esch are trying to wrench the million dollar program's funds out of the deep freeze. They may succeed. But it is an elementary maxim of sci- ence, political and natural, that when rich uncle cuts your allowance you get less money. -ARTHUR LERNER Abortion reform By MARTIN STERN THE SUPREME Court in an historic ruling Monday declared that abortions are now legal and reaffirmed each woman's right to be master of her body. To those of us who have supported abortion reform and who voted "Yes" in November, it is truly a significant victory. In the 7-2 judgment delivered by Justice Harry Blackmun, the court ruled that "the right of privacy is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate a pregnancy." The court further ruled against the arguments of'the "pro-life fac- tions by rejecting the theory that the fetus is a person and as such, was not entitled to the protection of thestae." The social impact of this ruling is immense. The Constitution long ago established the separation of church and state, and this ruling finally makes it official. No longer will religious, theology be allowed to interfere with the private lives of individuals who do not wish such interference. Abortion laws were originally instituted in the mid-nineteenth cen- tury because at the time abortion was dangerous physically for the woman involved. The original ruling was thus protecting a woman's health, and not her morality. In recent years however, the abortion pro- cess become much safer in modern hospital facilities - some say five times as safe as actually bearing a child. UNFORTUNATELY the issue of abortion has evolved into an emotional and moral issue. The various anti-abortion groups, in stressing that the fetus was alive and as such entitled to state protection, have been able to prevent much needed reform legislation at the polls and in Congress. The ruling by the Court has put the abortion arguments in their proper perspective. Those persons who oppose abortion may continue to do so in guiding their own lives. The ruling, in legalizing abortion nationwide, also ends a discrimina- tion of sorts. In the past, obtaining abortions have not been much of a problem to those who could afford to fly to New York, California or Hawaii. This meant that those who couldn't were the lower' middle class women, especially black women. This will now end. Abortion should be accepted as exactly what it is - an alternative means of birth control. The "pro life" people have more or less accept- ed the existance of the pill, condom, IUD, foam, etq. as birth control methods. Abortion, while it may be "after the fact" is still birth control. Martin Stern is an editorial night editor for The Daily. j 4I \ \E MWAlE rgitJ ec , \ \\\ \\ uh1\ \ \ s z aliI ynaate\\ Sorry, there's no room for you here at the inn., Try the Welfare Stable down the street.' ,I Equality and not power AN ARTICLE IN a Detroit newspaper yesterday celebrating the entry of women into an exclusive Detroit men's club capsulized one of the major prob- Editorial Staff SARA FITZGERALD Editor PAT BAUER Associate Managing Editor LINDSAY CHANEY.............. Editorial Director MARK DILLEN.................. Magazine Editor LINDA DREEBEN ........Associate Managing Editor TAMMY JACOBS .................. Managing Editor ARTHUR LERNER............... Editorial Director ROBERT SCHREINER... .Editorial Director GLORIA JANE SMITH.................. Arts Editor PAUL TRAVIS...... .. . Associate Managing Editor ED SUROVELL... ... . .............. Books Editor ARTS STAFF: Herb Bowie, Rich Glatzers Donald Sosin. NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Barkin, Jan Benedetti, Di- ane Levick, Jim O'Brien, Chris Parks, Charles Stein, Ted Stein. COPY EDITORS: Meryl Gordon, Debra Thai. EDITORIAL NIGHT EDITORS: Fred Shell Martin Stern. DAY EDITORS: Dave Burhenn, Jim Kentch, Marilyn Riley, Judy Ruskin, Eric Schoch, Sue Stephen- son, Ralph Vartabedian, Becky Warner. TELEGRAPH/ASSOCIATE NIGHT EDITORS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Laura Berman, Penny Blank, Dan Blugerman, Bob Burakoff, Beth Eg- nater, Ted Evanoff, Cindy Hill, Debbie Knox, Zachary Schiller, Marcia Zoslaw. PA4ES: Dave Burleon. Bob Ilacher, Karen Laakko, Ray' urmi, Aloxsmdra Paul, Ricki Rusting, Mike Treblin, Debbie Whiting. STAFF WRITERS: Howard Brick Lorin Labardee, Ka- thy Ricke, Eugene Robinson, Linda Rosenthal, David Stoll, Terri Terrell. Sports Staff JOHN PAPANEK Sports Editor ELLIOT LEGOW Executive Sports Editor lems in the movement for people's libera- tion. Since the only women to be allow- ed into the club are male members' wives and unmarried daughters, the move is not real liberation at all and it ironically befits the media to treat it as such. Real discrimination is directed against the men, women and children who are barred from the club because of their "social status." People ignore the roots of oppression when they think the at- tainment by a few individuals of status positions within the social hierarchy is a solution to the discrimination problem. What women recent most is the power men exert over them, and the posi- tions to which they are relegated by vir- tue of the males' power. The women's liberation faction that wants only equal power, or equal pay for equal work, can- not erase inequality among people. Lib- eration can never be attained solely by increased power, but only through the disintegration of the power structures that oppress. It isn't going to make any difference to the scrub woman at the men's club that a rich woman can eat lunch there now. And it's no step toward liberation when a woman becomes an executive at the Chase Manhattan Bank. Every person should be struggling for equality through the reformation of so- cial structure. The oppression women suffer should remind us that our strug- gle must not be for equal power, leading to further oppression, but for equal rights for all people. -KATHLEEN RICKE Letters: Nixon, the Commijes and Go d 41 To The Daily: AFTER READING a number of editorials criticizing the official government position, I feel that some students at the University of Michigan may not regard the next four years as totally hopeless. President Nixon has done much to purify the minds of the American people from the lies of the offic- ial Communist propaganda. Al- though there are still a few cent- ers of dissent within the nation, such as The Daily, the President has done much to prevent the dis- senters from receiving widespread support. America needs a strong Presi- dent to prevent the Communists from continuing their program of world revolution. Patriotic Amer- icans should write their congress- men and senators to rely more upon the wisdom of the President, who is more aware of world prob- lems than the average American whose mind has been contaminated by Communist lies. We need to turn back to the Bible and recognize that thetPres- ident is the office through which God works in the world (Romans xiii). Some social scientists have suggested that social dissent is the road to domestic progress; but they forget that the Bible s a y s that Americans should kneel and pray to God, trusting that G o d will work through the office of President Nixon to bring peace to the world. Yours (not) very truly, -David Kikuchi Graduate Student Jan. 20 Women's studies To The Daily: THIS LETTER is in regard to your January 20th article about Women's Studies at Michigan. Your article was accurate and in- formative, but failed to mention several important matters. It states, for example, that the Uni- versities of South Florida and New York at Buffalo, Richmond Col- lege, and Sarah Lawrence are "the most notable" institutions to have programs in Women's Studies. In fact, the phenomena is much more widespread. At present, the Uni- versities of Pittsburgh, California (San Diego, Sacramento), Massa- chusetts, Cornell, Portland State, and Wesleyan, as well as several smaller schools have instituted pro- grams in Women's Studies. In ad- dition to this, more than 1000 cours- es on women are being offered at more than 100 universities and col- leges throughout the country. At Michigan there is tremendous student interest in and support for Women's Studies. The course, In- troduction to Women's Studies, which your article mentions, was unable to accommodate the large number of students who wished to enroll in it this fall and winter. In both terms the course closed with- out being able to admit a great many students who wished to take it. Clearly, the course should con- tinue to be offered, as well as oth- er women's courses on an under- graduate level. At present, of the courses on women offered in LS&A only two are open to underclass- men. THERE IS NO WAY, however, that Introduction to Women's Stu- dies can continue to be taught on a voluntary basis. There is n o reason it should be. Women have made significant contributions to our culture. History, Anthropology, and Psychology, as they relate to women, are only beginning to be expanded. Women writers, c o m- posers, and artists have been, all too often, ignored in undergraduate courses. The University of Michi- gan should, therefore, recognize Women's Studies as a legitimate and necesary part of the academic curriculum. We urge students to express their support for the Women's Studies Proposal which is presently being considered by the LS&A Executive Council. -Undergraduate Committee for Women's Studies at Michigan (83 signatures) Jan. 22 DES To The Daily: ALTHOUGH I commend you on your editorial stand against dis- pensal of the morning-after p i I 1 at our student health service, I think it is unfair of you to deprive your readers of some of the juicy history (and The Daily's role) be- hind this now nationally publicized scandal. One person - Kay Weiss - is responsible for Nader's dis- closure. She took a concise, ter- rifying, 11-page summarization of her research concerning DES to Washington D.C., less than two weeks ago. One fact listed in Weiss' report reads: BILL ALTERMAN...........Associate Sports: BOB ANDREWS ............ Assistant Sports: SANDI GENIS..............Assistant Sports RANDY PHILLIPS.........Contributing SportsI MICHAEL OLIN.......... Contributing Sports CHUCK DRUKIS........CContributing Sports JOEL GREER........... Contributing Sports7 Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Photography Staff DAVID MARGOLICK ............Chief Photographer ROLFE TESSEM ....................Picture Editor DENNY GAINER ...................Staff Photographer THOMAS GOTTLIEB .............Staff Photographer KAREN KASMAUSKI............Staff Photographer Business Staff ANDY GOLDING Business Manager STEVE EVSEEFF............. Circulation Manager SHERRY KASTLE.............Advertising Manager PAUL WENZLOFF............Promotions Manager DEPARTMENT MANAGERS, ASSOCIATES, AND AS- SISTANTS: William Blackford, Ray Catalino, Linda Coleman, Jim Dykema, Sandy Fienberg, Cynthia Kaufman, Dave Lawson, Elliot Legow, Caryn Miller STAFF AND TRAINEES: Joan Ades, Dawn Bare, Linda Cycowski, Deborah Gelstein, Gregg Gunnel, Alan Klein, Steve LeMire, Beryl Levine, Paula Schwach, Ross Shugan, Tom Slykhouse, Edward Stieg, John Totte, Debra Weglarz, Sandra Wronski, Ross Shugan SALES: Dave Burleson. Bob Fischer, Karen Laakko, Alexandra Paul, Mike Treblin, Debbie Whiting. STAFF ARTIST: Denny Dittmar. "A Nader task force investigated and reported on the carcinogenicity of tiny amounts of DES in our food. To our knowledge it did not mention that hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting women are given 167,000 times the dose in the morn- ing-after pill. Nader's statements and stories in newspapers across the country are based solely on Weiss' work. The interesting point, however, is that not only did the same in- formation appear months ago in herself but Weiss has been trying for months to give the Daily the same information which Nader found urgent enough to publicize immediately. First there was the Daily article which claimed no ev- idence existed which demonstrated DES to be unsafe for human con- sumption. Remember that one? Weiss, of course, was horrified. Upon confronting the author of the article with an incredible body of evidence which clearly proved DES to be harmful, Weiss was informed that the Daily would not fully re- tract the article because it was the author's first science article and the poor girl might be embar- rassed. How many women have in- creased their chances of getting vaginal cancer in exchange for the author having saved face? Then there's the recent article about Ad- vocates for Medical Information. The Daily interviewed a misin- formed office worker for that one (instead of Weiss of Cowan as they should have). The results were spectacular. The statement that DES is correlated with some really weird maladies (I'm not even going to name them here) was incorrectly atributed to AMI. Ad- vocates for Medical Information lost credibility before it ever got off the ground. I have two suggestions for the Daily. First, why not subscribe to herself? Secondly, instead of trying to create scoops why not work on sharpening your powers of observation so that you'll re- cognize one when it walks through the door and plops itself down on your desk? -Dean Falk Highway story To The Daily: AT 7:45 A.M. January 2, I stood on I-75 between Cincinnati and Dayton. Because much of Dayton's labor force commutes, heavy traf- fic crowded the freeway at t h a t hour. Unfortunately, no one stop- ped to pickme up. Twenty minutes later, an Ohio state trooper pulled up to where I stood. His chrome-studded uniform glistened in the morning sun as he stepped out of his car and placed his wide-brimmed, pointed cap on his head. He wore mirror glasses, wide-hipped riding pants, knee high boots, and an incredible array of chrome ornaments. "Boy, you're creatinga traffic hazard here. Move on back to the entrance ramp," he said. Obeying his command, I walked toward the entrance ramp. After he disappeared from my sight, I figured that neither he nor any other cop would cruise through again for at least another hour. I returned to the expressway. No sooner had I reached t h e freeway, when the same s t a t e trooper pulled up again. "Boy, if I come back here again, and you're still standing here, I'll have to take you in," the trooper said. I minutes, I saw the state trooper go up the exit ramp on the other side of the expressway. I thought this would be the end. Just as the cop crossed the via dock, a white Rolls-Royce stopped next to me and a soothing gentle voice called out, "Get in, man." I took a bottle of Medoc Bor- deaux from my suitcase and we floated on to Ann Arbor. Ira C., the owner of theRolls, played some original tapes he made in Eng- land. Ira plays piano and sings. While in England, he recorded with T. Rex and other groups. When I ask- ed him if he knew the Rolling Stones, he pulled a necklace from under his shirt and said, "Charlie gave this to me. He's a very gentle person." stuffs his cap into his coat pock- et. Momentarily halted, their breath rushes into each others fac- es. Their cold tears feel good on their flushed cheeks. "My god, the War is actually over. I . . . this is the first time I've . . . we've been at peace. We are actually at peace." "Right now, some soldier thinks of us and is happy, he is alive and happy and doesn't have to kill'any- one anymore, he can put down his gun and come home . . . He'll stand up, turn around and walk away from his rifle . . . and his enemy who has him in his rifle's crosshairs will hesitate, he will re- main still and watch the first sold- ier walk into the jungle and out of sight. Maybe for the first time in his life, he will take his finger off I Today's staff: News: Mike Duweck, Tommy Jacobs, Debbie Pastoria, Sue Stephenson, Sue Tretheway, David Unhewehr Editorial Page: Robert Burakoff, Arthur Lerner, Kathleen Ricke Arts Page: Richard Glatzer Photo Technician: Randy Edmonds "We need to turn back to the Bible and recog- nize that the President is the office through which God works in the world." 1.23 I MAY S6.6 6~rthEQ MzK HA$ I1OL Dist. Publishers ue HOITH , 1 T susTR(thi, NUD IRA SAID he bought the R o1Il s because of its reliability. (The Life expectancy of a Rolls-Royce is over thirty years.) This one is a 1958 model and is valued at $10,- 000. This amazed me because the auto seemed brand new. It is im- maculate - inside, outside and un- der the hood. Ira was born in Windsor, Ontar- io 26 years ago but lived in Ypsi- lanti and went to EMU prior to his musical adventures in England. On his boat trip back to t h e States, he entertained Mr. and Mrs. Salvador Dali. "They were very beautiful but strangely enough, Mrs. Dali never smiled except when I played piano," Ira said. After making his fortune in Eng- land ,he decided to come to Ann Arbor to jam with the locals and continue his musical career. As we crossed the Michigan state line, Ira said, "I'm so happy to be com- ing to Ann Arbor., This is the most exciting day of my life arid I'm just so glad we can share this beautiful day together." the trigger . . . and rest . . They drink another toast and embrace tighter. -Lee Johnson Jan. 23 Review criticized To The Daily: I HAVE JUST finished an article, ostensibly a book review, written by Michael Castleman. I could not resist the temptation to register some criticism of it. It has always seemed to me that when one writ- es a book review, the result ought to be a book review. Mr. Castle- man; disregarding this maxim, has written an editorial. It is a very good editorial, I think, as b o o k reviews go, but it was not exactly what I wanted to read when I turn- ed to that page. In better than three columns of newsprint, -I found very little about the books in question. I did find a great deal about Henry Kissinger in what amounted to, if you don't like the term "editorial", a critical bio- graphical sketch of our c h i e f National Security Advisor. He crit- irvn thsa h. . ri a _ n hm F r-Hatt Syn~dicate <5 MY T06 tO:2LP - OV'ER t f k)J MPcSK T.,j 1V14' t SEE- ' p -rOILrHER onc. OV -