I "ONU'd I .A\ C I *J sE~v, O PN N 615 ME MA. I. LIST Js TO M ? '_ T~ Wbop4C CAsou v [ A RAC xA t T YOU. WJT REM4 I T A blessing By JONATHAN MILLER I'M ALWAYS IMPRESSED by Walter Cronkite. He's a cool dude. He even sneezes in a dignified way. And that night when LBJ kicked, well Walter was just magnificent. He held up his finger to the audience as he talked to someone on the telephone. "Just wait a minute, America, I've got something to tell you," that finger seemed to say. Well, Walter is all upset these days about a thing called the Energy Crisis. And when Walter's upset, I guess we should all be upset, too. Hardly a night passes now when Wal- ter doesn't have something to say about this new problem, And, as a tribute to Walter's enormous influence on Ameri- ca, everyone else now seems to be jump- ing on the energy crisis bandwagon. The oil companies are buying space on the Op-Ed page of The Times to ex- plain their, peculiar, perspective on the problem. On Capitol Hill, our elected representa- tives are starting to sit up, or rather wake up, to find that a new crisis is upon us. Any day now we will probably hear a hit record devoted to the theme. But before we go rushing out to stock- pile gasoline, we should take a closer look at this particular crisis. We must look beyond the immediate issue, which is the greed of the oil lobby and the irresponsibility of the govern- ment's energy policy. IN A WAY we should hail this energy crisis as a good thing. As a starting point for debate there is nothing like a good crisis. We should remember that this crisis finds us in the position of the world's 0 " in disguise largest consumer of power. But despite our massive consumption, we are unable to cure many of the social ills that af- flict the population. While welfare mothers have never had enough money to heat their homes pro- perly in the winter time, those of us in the fortunately affluent majority find that we have power to spare-power for 8-cylinder cars capable of speeds unsafe by any criteria, power for electric tooth- brushes to keep our mouths sexy, power to air condition our dog kennels and set our thermostats at 80 degrees. We leave our porch lights on by day, we the most energy plentiful nation on earth, yet we face an energy crisis. Shouldn't we ask if this energy crisis is real, or if it is simply a product of our own inflated ideas for ourselves? Yes, we use and have more energy than anybody else. But we waste more than anyone else, too. And yet, the oil company ads scream, WE NEED MORE POWER. NO. WE NEED no more power. We merely need to start to respect the limi- tations of our planet and learn to live within them. We need to use the power we have in a more realistic way, and each and every one of us should start to become just a little more aware of what goes on in the world every time we look at a new car or turn on a light switch. We used to laugh at LBJ when he walked around the White House turning out lights. But, at least on that issue, he was a man ahead of his time. Jonathan Miller, a Daily staff writer, drives a four cylinder automobile and uses a 'manually opierated tooth brush. ti 4 J iJ +i Letters; To The Daily: THE EXECUTIVE Council of the LS&A Student Government deeply deplores the recommendation of a Chemistry department committee that Professor Mark Green not re- ceive tenure. In every respect Pro- fessor Green has distinguished himself and his department - by the quality of his research, by the ability and enthusiasm demon- strated in his teaching, and by his sensitivity to the moral dimensions of his calling. It is the considered opinion of the Executive Council that improper considerations of political prejudice and personal pride has overrriden those stand- ards of academic excellence which ought to govern any tenure decis- ion. Fortunately, this ill-advised ac- tion is only a recommendation. The responsibility for Professor Green's career rests, as it always has, with the Dean and Executive Com- mittee of the College. Pending the thorough reform of tenure proced- ures, careful review of all tenure decisions by the Executive Coi- mittee is the only check on de partmental parochialism. This difficult deision will test, as have few decisions during the present Administration, the depth of its commitment to academic freedom. It will also test its re- spect for and responsiveness to the strongest- convictions of the Col- lege's student majority, since It should never be forgotten that Pro- fessor Green's cause has the sup- port not only of his own students but of Innumerable other students as well. -LS&A Student Government Executive Council Feb. 3 Oops To The Daily: A CORRECTION to The DaIlv's editorial (Feb. 6) on the rejection of the LS&A grading proposals. "The proposals do not force the strident to' take advanced coures either pass/no entry or graded. The choice is left up to the student. Those planning on graduate stu- dies are free to elect upper-evel undergraduate courses on a gad- ed basis." That is true only in upperlevel courses which the in- structor grades; but the instructor himself has the option of imposing pass/no entry on his course and the student then would have no redress. This is just one of a number of booby-traps in the proposals which raise all kinds of difficulties, not all of which were discussed at Monday's meeting. It is why an overwhelming majority of the fa- culty, considering proposals which are interesting in many ways, nonetheless could not support them. -T. V. Buttrey Dept. of Classical Studies Feb. 7 Green support the right of the press to criticize government. I am also aware that as a public official I will person- ally be subject to criticism. How- ever, The Daily should be aware that it has an obligation to main- tain the standards of respossible journalism. In this instance, The Daily has violated these standards and has irresponsibly ignored the distinction between valid political criticism and libel. When SGC commits an act which the editors of The Daily deem inap- propriate they waste little time in printing their opinions. It will be interesting to see if The Daily has the courage to admit its own mistakes and print a full apology to Dr. Koza, Ms. Miller, Mr. Schaper, and myself. -William Jacobs President, Student Government Council Feb. 7 Food co-op replies To The Daily: AS CURRENT workers in the Ann Arbor People's Produce Co- operative interested in a growing people's community based on trust, truth and good food, we feel com- pelled to respond to the letter in The Daily (Feb. 6) written by Cliff Sloane. This letter combined ncomplete truths, gross falsifi- cations, disconected reasoning, and finally a lot of mudslung bull--- mis representing Ann Arbor Peo- ple's Produce in a devious attempt to smear David Sinclair's c a m- paign for second ward councilper- son. At the inception of the co-op, Rainbow House was one of eight original members. Now, with at least two hundred active members it seems obvious that the A2 Peo- ple's Produce is not controlled by the RPP. The co-op's policies are determined in open publicized meetings, in which all members have on equal voice. Ann Arbor People's Produce has never acted in a competitive man- ner with any of the co-ops in the community. Now, as in the past, People's Produce has made efforts to work with other food co-ops as often as possible. We have at var- ious times shared transportation with Itemized (Dec., 1972), held meetings conjointly with Itemized about marketing, loaned money to the Grain Co-op for legal aid, and regularly referred prospective members to Itemized when their needs couldn't be met by our own co-op. In the Ann Arbor S u n No. 39 Sept. 1-1S, 1972, the Tribal Council Food Committee, of which the Ann Arbor People's Produce is a member, published an article describing the Itemized Food Co- op as a shopping list to which all orders of food by community peo- ple were added. The co-op then passed the food along to the cus- tomers at wholesale prices p u s 5 per cent for expenses. We see no reason for competition among the co-ops in Ann Arbor when the constituencies of each co- op have different needs that are being met by these co-ops. We see the need for greater unity among the co-ops since only a small frac- tion of the people's food needs are being met at this time. We question the motivation be- hind Cliff Sloane's letter. It ap- pears he is trying to attack David Sinclair and the RPP at the ex- pense of the food co-op community. We feel that this kind of dirty poli- tics only serves to divide our peo- ple and is not in the best inter- ests of the community. We also feel that the Daily's headlines, "Food Co-op Feeds Power Hungry", is an .insult to anyone who has partici- pated in the food co-ops in Ann Arbor. Sloane's comments about the munity recently. We feel that these scare tactics only serve to divert the community's attention from the real issues in Ann Arbor. We should be concentrating on unifying and building our community. -Members of Ann Arbor People's Produce Co-operative Feb. 7 To Nixon Dear Mr. Nixon, c/o The Daily: WITH THE ENDING of the war in Vietnam our country is bound to go through socially significant changes. Redistricting of priorities and the like. However, there is one very real problem that h a s surfaced with the culmination of the war; how to handle the so- called traitors that refused to serve in the military. You, Mr. Nixon, have already come forth and stat- ed "there will be no amnesty." Not knowing your mind, I can only rationalize the reason behind this statement. The conclusion I have reached is this: the draft resistors are as much the enemy as the North Vietnamese! If this is so, I would like to raise a point forsyou to consider. How? Mr. Nixon can you considerddividing this enemy we fought during the war (the North Vietnamese and our, Ameri- can resistors') into two groups; and furthermore consider sending aid to the -foreigners who were o ui r enemy, while condemning t h e enemy who is the American re- sistor! Essentially Mr. Nixon, I see you rewarding the destructive abilities that reside in the aggressive man, thus encouraging future happen- ings; whereas I see you punishing the spirit in the conscious man, thus thwarting the future develop- ment of man's conscience. -Edward J. Skurtu Feb. 6 Basketball woes To The Daily: I HAVE BEEN reading w i t h great interest the reports of the Michigan-Iowa basketball fracas on Jan. 29th in Iowa City. There is no doubt that Iowa City is not a pleasant place to visit if you are trying to win the Big Ten basket- ball championship. Minnesota can certainly testify to that. One cannot help but reflect back on the aftermath of last year's "Incident" in the Big Ten - the Minnesota - Ohio State fight. Don Canham, Michigan's Athletic Di- rector, and Johnny Orr, Michigan s Basketball Coach, two people who had nothing to lose by taking cheap shots at the Minnesota players in- volved and also Minnesota Basket- ball Coach Bill Musselman, d i d their very best to further incite public opinion in an already explos- ive situation. That is, had noth- ing to lose until about 9:30 the night of January 29th, 1973. It is clearly true that Coach Musselman. failed to sprint 120 feet and subdue 6'10", 225 lb. Ron Behagen and 6'9", 220 lb. Corky Taylor in the split second avail- able to him before the fight was in full stride, but then he didn't at- tack the referee either. I'm afraid that basketball players will, on occasion, lose their tempers - at least as long as there are c o s e games and human referees. Coach- es are supposed to know better. If, as the country's press thought, Canham and Orr were on the right track last year when demand- ing career suspensions for Behag- en and Taylor, plus sanctioning of Coach Musselman, then certainly their brilliant reasoning must still be valid. The only question remain- ing is whether the Big Ten is go- Future-Yesterday By DICK WEST TODAY'S REPORT deals with alternate modes of transportation, which may be needed sooner than you might think. For it recently was revealed that gasoline rationing is one of the steps being contem- plated by the Office of Emergency Preparedness in event the fuel shortage worsens. With .that in mind, I paid another visit to The Future Is Yesterday Corp., a prominent research center and "think tank" that is meeting the energy crisis head-on. "There's no reason we have to depend on gasoline-powered vehi- cles," Harry McErst, one of the research assistants, told me. "Take a look at this." He pointed to an open field beyond the visitors' parking lot. Moving across it was a large two-wheeled conveyance pulled by four horned bovines. "We call that an oxcart," McErst said proudly. "As you can see, it provides a means of transporting cargo, in this case a bundle of flax, without any sort of motorization. We believe it will eventually re- place the trucking industry." "Jimmy Hoffa would . love it," I said. "But hauling freight is only part of transportation's function. How are people going to get around when the gasoline is gone?" McErst raised a hand in a gesture of reassurance. "We here at The Future is Yesterday are fully cognizant of the need for personnel carriers," he said. On a test track in the rear of the plant, to which we now repaired, technicians were assembling a two-wheel carriage from which extend- ed two thin wooden shafts. "Imagine a whole fleet of these on the street,"' McErst said. "One or two persons ride in the carriage; someone else propels it by jogging along up front." "It looks like a real breakthrough," I said admiringly. "Individual- ized mass transit." "Thanks," my guide responded. "Technology got us into this mess and technology will have to get us out." Dick West is a special feature writer for the United Press Interna- tional news service. I Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 4' 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 I Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted il all reprints. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1973 Griffin's politics Brando returns Responsible journ To The Daily: AT A TIME when the bas dom of the press is being ened by the more fascist e of the country, it is totally d ening to see a journalist fl ly abuse. the power of th I am referring to the taste cuse for a feature article Daily by Robert Barkin enti new secret plan for a United (Daily, Feb. 6). . To say the least, the arti personally insulting and c as well as sexist. Moreove absolutely disgusting to se The Daily had the unmitiga to print such sarcastic driv by side with an editorial in of the freedom of the pres alism ic free- threat- lements isheart- lagrant- he pen. less ex- in The tled "A I SGC". cle was hildish, r, it is ee that ted gall vel side defense ss. RICHARD NIXON - "Na- ROBERT GRIFFIN - "We tion of sheep". have heard from the special interests, now let us h e a r from you." By CHARLES HERRINGTON THE U.S. CONGRESS has traditionally been the voice of the people. In a representative form of government such as ours, the Representatives and Senators are supposed to safeguard the interests of the general public, and not, as President Nixon himself phrased it, "The Special Inter- ests". This task is not easy. There are many hurdles in the path of a congressman that may, in various ways, push him off course. Temptation comes in many forms, but power and prestige are the most prevalent. Our own Senator Robert Griffin is a case in point. It seems that in his quest for power and influence at the White House, he has forgotten his constitutional duties as a de- fender of the public trust. Griffin did not support any "end the war" legislation. His voting record of pollution and social welfare laws leaves much to be desired. He has even supported Nixon's latest and most outrageous powerplays; that of not spending funds that Congress has appropriated., However, there may still be hope for Robert Griffin. It lies in directing his talent and ambition in a more productive direction than has been the case in recent years. He has climbed high in the Republican party, but only at great cost to both himself and the people he represents. Michigan has in effect lost a Senator and gained a marionette controlled by Richard Nixon. SEEN IN THIS LIGHT, it would be fitting that Nixon himself be responsible for a new-found hope in Griffin. At a recent press conference Griffin parroted Nixon's line about the special interests, saying, "We (Congress) have learned from the special interests, now let us hear from you." That statement can be taken as a challenge. Griffin mimeha ~nmrnrad +nt ta ,,,hln ; -_;_+-+-A- .n By PETE HAMILL After all, it is no more sur- prising to be born twice than it is to be born once."-Voltaire. MARLON BRANDO was the great New York actor of the g9s. He came to New York, and lived among us, and he gave us back something quite important. It came from all-night parties at Eddie Jaffe's on 48th St., and from afternoons at Stillman's Gym with Graziano, and from the streets of the town itself. He gave New Yorkers a style, the way Cagney gave us one in the '30s, and it happened because Brando did not mock us; he em- braced us; he loved us. With a handful of others, including Sina- tra, he taught the generation of the '50s how to feel. And then Brando went away. We never saw him again on a stage. He made movies that seemed more and more indifferent; through the '60s, he seemed to stomp on his own talent. Those who cared for him, who respected his craft, who cherished his great gifts stopped going to his movies. It was too much like watching Joe Louis after the war, when fat and time had strangled the beauti- ful skills. Sometimes, late at night, you would see people leave saloons to watch "On the Waterfront" on a late show or "Zapata" or "Streetcar." But otherwise . . . well, Brando just didn't matter much anymore. the film was written by Bernardo Bertolucci and Franco Arcalli; but nobody except Brando could have made the dialogue, could have drawn so confidently on the com- mon language of Americans (a language so infrequently used in movies that it surprises us with its freshness and invention). It comes directly from his .autobio- graphy. But movie stars of the magnitude of Brando have double biographies: first, the lives they have lived (Brando) has finished almost a de- cade of life in a flophouse hotel run by his wife. Now she is dead. Flophouses are not whorehouses, they are hotels of dismal medio- crity. And Brando, like the character he plays here, had wasted t o o much time in dull safety of medio- crity. It takes death to free him from the circus and the zoo. He expresses this in the film with a bitter, searing monologue beside the casket of his unfaithful wife, her face waxen, engulfed in flow- ers. And he curses her, curses all mothers and all wives, using the vilest language to debase her and death itself, defiantly slaying all the creatures of macho nightmares, driving the stake into the heart of the bitch-goddess, the words as vio- lent as any overt act, until he ac- chieves catharsis through violation, and is free. In the film, Brando is free to love again, but it is too late to love his own golden youth, and the re- sult is tragedy. The girl Jeanne, played by Maria Schneider, sees him as just an aging man; she is too young, too invulnerably middle- class to ever understand him. There is one brutal scene at a Tango Palace, when Brando lap- ses into his bogus Fletcher Christ- ian mannerisms to cover up his need and his hurt. He runs after her through the gray daylight of Paris, and ends up dead at her hands. The girl reverts to her middle- class origins and begins to frame a lie to cover up the killing. But before dying Brando tucks a wad of gum under the railing of a bal- cony, a wager on survival and the possibility of hope. In this film, Brando breaks free again. It is a performance t h a t other actors and movie makers will learn from for years. But it has also broken into the encysted feelings of all of us, al- : f Marlon Brando And then, the comeback. started last year with "The father." Suddenly, there It God- was Brando on a screen chest, showing how it could be done. Like his great performances of the 1950s, it was so powerful that it immed- iately invited parody. Brando had walked back into the again, alive, breathing, an Archie Moore, with his arms fold- ed across the room, and there was nobody there who could handle him. And now comes "Last Tango on the screen, all those roles which have combined to make the image; and, second, their real lives. "The image," as Kenneth Boulding has said, "develops as a result of all the past experiences of the posses- sor of the image." So Brando talks in this film about a variety of previous lives: as a boxer (Terry Malloy), a bongo player, a voyager to Tahiti (Flet- cher Christian), among others. Old lions must remember great hunts, including those that failed. But there are also references to Brando's actual life, or at least, to his career. In the film, Paul k Aj i