Eighty-one 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 expressthe individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints" TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1972 Term paper rip-off BEFORE YOU buy a term paper this semester, consider what a rip-off Writer-On, Inc. really is. Write-On, a company that sells term papers to overworked or unmotivated students, currently stocks about 5,000 papers. But using the services of Write- On is fighting fire with fire-or injustice with injustice. The argument that by buying a paper you're just taking advan- tage of an educational system that you consider,exploitive and valueless doesn't stand up. College may be criticized as an elitist, super-competitive institution, a "privilege" accessible mostly to upper-, middle class students - but Write-On caters to the same crowd. At $2 pei page plus tax, or at least $4.50 per page for original research, Write-On's papers can only be purchas- ed by students able to shell out at least $30 for a 15-page paper. Obviously many students, especially those on scholar- ships, do not have the option of shirking their work and buying a paper instead. Furthermore, the use of purchased term papers may ironically worsen the educational situation that drives stu- dents to buy papers. Professors, now wary of Write-On patrons, may penalize all their students by giving in-class ex- ams, a surer measure of 'a student's knowledge and ability for grading pur- poses. Previously, a professor may have depended upon papers alone for grades. Journalism Prof. Robert Bishop, for ex- ample, announced to his Journalism 402 class this term that they would have an in-class final exam for that very rea- son. If students had not patronized termpaper companies, professors would have no reason for distrust and retalia- tion. ASIDE FROM the old argument that buying termpapers defeats the pur- pose of education, students should re- member that Write-On, like similar businesses, rips off students not only when they buy papers, but also when they sell them to the company. An em-' ploye of Write-On says that a student might get roughly $1 per page for a li- brary research paper-half of what the company would sell it for. To make matters worse, Write-On no longer has any competition in town since a rival company folded. Write-On has a monopoly and can, in effect, charge what it likes-or whatever desperate students will pay. THE SOONER students realize Write- On is a rip-off which backfires, the better. One term paper company has dis- solved. Let's off the other one. -DIANE LEVICK When By DAVID MARGOLICK WHEN THE last American sold- ier leaves Indochina, Richard Nixon will be hailed as a g r e a t peacemaker. Armed with an im- pressive mandate from the Amer- ican people, he will sing the prais- es of his Vietnamization policies, and then the nation can, at long last, forget about a war which has plagued it for ten years. There will be some, however, for whom the end will have come far too, late, who cannot be quite so blithe and proud about any set- tlement. While Richard N i x o n serves "Four More Years" - en- cumbered no more by the Viet- namese War - and far beyond, the policiestof his first term willstill live in the anguish of countless liv- es, both at home and abroad. It all makes for the greatest irony of all, that in "withdrawing" f r o m Indochina, our "involvement" there is greater than ever, and will be felt for decades to come. THE BOMB CRATERS w h i c h have made a lunar landscape of Vietnam will remain long after Richard Nixon is gone. The sta- tistics of the Indochina War a r e familiar enough: twice the ton- nage of all of World War II, drop- ped on an area the size of Texas; five hundred pounds per person and one hundred and eighteen pounds per second, on the aver- age; a total of twenty six million craters pockmarking the land of Indochina. Recently much justifiable indig- nation has been expressed over the nombing on Northern dikes, schools, and hospitals. But it is generally forgotten that the South Vietnam- ese, our allies, have absorbed eigh- ty per cent of the American a i r war. The destruction of vegetation by our bombs has renderedeareas around many craters forever bar- ren, permanent features of t h e landscape. Craters in delta or coas- tal regions have filled with water, breeding disease-carrying mosqui- toes and causing a rise in the rate of malaria. Erosion caused by bombing in hilly areas has ruined large tracts of cropland. Indeed, according to Scientific American, U.S. involvement in In- dochina has been "a war against the land as much as against arm- ies." Not only are craters found in every part of the country, in the long, namese have been forced don fertile areas becausec hundred thousand ur bombs hidden in the paddi farmers have been killed dental detonation of the Even in comparatively sa bomb fragments cut theI water buffaloes, causing and death. One needs only to lo aerial photograph of Ver a useless tract of land si3 after the fact, to see that heals very slowly. Decai even centuries from nov after Richard Nixon has b elder statesman and is d gized, Vietnam will bear testimony to his policies. THERE WILL be others not forget the war so qt is estimated that there, perhaps hundreds of thou illegitimate children fatl American personnel in Since their round eyes an ed shoulders are constant ers of their unpopular GI these children are scorned Vietnam, particularly tho fathers -were black. According to the Nem Times, this hostility is c ed by poverty, which mal bleak prognosis; the chili receive little or no school the likelihood of lifetimes cycle drivers, prostitutes,. or soldiers. Since these children; American citizens, they considered American p "The care and welfare unfortunate children,"say partment of Defense pape has never been and is not sidered an area of Govern snonsibility." Yet while Nixon and his advisors brating the withdrawal of American soldier, these will remain, with others edly still to be' born. Fi Vietnamization was nothi than "Americanization," won't end in time for elec Richard Nixon will som third or fourth from the la Golden Book of Presiden his policies will live on of these people.' NORMAN ROCKWELL er paint a picture of thei to aban- of several nexploded ies. Many by acci- bombs. ife areas, hooves of infection ok at 'an 'dun, still xty years the earth des a n d w, long ecome an duly eulo- eloquent who will uickly. It are tens, isands of iered by Vietnam. nd round- t remind- [ fathers, in South se whose w York ompound- kes for a dren will ing, with spent as servants are not long war is over traditionally experienced by re- turned soldiers, but compounded this time by a sense of futility and confusion over what their mission actually was. Kissinger' ssecret talks FOUR YEARS ago today, Presidential candidate Richard Nixon stated that if a President failed to achieve peace in four years, he didn't deserve to be re-elected. By his own standards Mr. Nixon should not be running for office. Nevertheless, the President is cam- paigning for a second term. To justify his failure to end the war, Nixon has campaigned on the claim he has done everything possible to bring about an "honorable" settlement of the war. Nixon has sent Henry Kissinger for' another session of talks with North Viet- namese negotiators in Paris. Though quick to announce that the Kissinger talks are being fheld, and drop hints left and right, the White House refused to reveal anything substantive about the meetings with the North Vietnamese. The White House has only said that negotia- tions are at a "very sensitive stage." Only results can dispel doubts that the Kissinger talks are just sophisticated propaganda to appease the American public. NIXON IS well ahead in the polls, so there is no reason for him to settle the war out of political pressure. A set- tlement now would involve concessions to the Vietcong, something Nixon is not willing to do. Such a settlement would cost him the active support of some con- servative elements now behind him. But at the same time, the Kissinger talks serve as a facade to muster support from the more liberal factions in society. In an attempt to gain the, backing of persons who desire a quick end to the war, Nixon can point to the Kissinger talks. And as long as he refuses to re- veal anything about the talks, his op- ponents are crippled - they have noth- ing substantive to attack. As evidenced by the last four years, President Nixon remains the consum- mate politician. On the Vietnam issue he is able to maintain his conservative, support, create support among liberals and deny his opposition a receptive audi- ence for meaningful criticism. And he has done all this without revealing his stance at the secret talks. ONE CANNOT argue with the effective- ness of Nixon's political tactics. But one must take exception with the results of his policies. His term is all but over and the war still continues. -JIM REUS "While Richard Nixon serves his 'Fourl are n o t Most of us know at least a couple problems. of young men, seemingly stable of these when they were sent to Vietnam, ys a 'De- whowere never able to readjust to r, ". . . the routine back at home. Accord- now con- ing to reputable psychologists, up ment re- to fifty per cent of Vietnam veter- llichard ans need professional help; but are cele- facilities are overcrowded and the the last government is unwilling to acknow- children ledge the extent of the problem. undoubt- Because of the low socio-econom- or them, ic and minority group background ng more of most of these men, their diffi- and it culties often go unnoticed or a r e tion day. deemed inconsequential; m a n v eday be turn to drugs in lieu of psychiatric ast in the care. Photographs of Nixon greet- ts, b u t ing them on the walls of V.A. hos- in each pitals does not exactly help their treatment. The POWs - those interred from will nev- the start of Mr. Nixon's tenure and returning those shot down once he resumed the bombing - will come back to a ..::....tumultuous reception and p h o n e calls from the White House, b u t More they will face even more obstacles than the others. "There is redly no such thing as a hapoy ex-prison- etna- er," says one U.S. medical official; loss of motor abilities -while in cap- f his tivity will force them to relearn basic skills, while depression, loss ount- of memory, and sexual impotence will, according to Newsweek, be factors in a high suicide rate among them. OUR OWN SOCIETY will bear " the scars of Mr. Nixon's policies world is far longer than the "Four M or e he cover Years" he claims he deserves. It Post. The will feel it with every penny c'f returning the war chest which should have manifest been spent at home and with the e, in the millions of dollars yet to be spent ins. They for veterans' benefits over the next ionment, five or six decades; it will feel it problems in the anguish over those who need- lessly died and those who happen- ail stff ed to survive; in the disaffection iiy staff and apathy of a generation of Am- cent con- ericans - weaned on Diem, Thien, and Ky, on My Lai and tiger cages, on dikes and defoliation - which was virtually taught how deceptive and immoral its leaders really were. The nation has become divided and calloused to an unprecedented degree, and among the losers are again the Vietnamese themselves, to whom we should feel a moral commitment to repair the destruc- tion which we have unleashed un their land. As the nation settles back into a, false complacency, Richard Nixon can congratulate himself on a job wel Idone. He has taken an ex- plosive issue and defused it. To the acclaim of what may well be a election year majority of unprece- dented proportions he has upheld some vague notion of American honor. THE TRUE legacy of the Nixon years, however - of those scarred by an ill-conceived war shame- lessly perpetuated - will never be enshrined in the Nixon presidential library, or anywhere else for some time to come. As folksinger Steve Goodman wrote about war widow Penny Evans, "They say the war is almost over, but I think it's just begun." Years'-encumbered no more by the NO mese war-and far beyond, the' policies oy first term will still live in the anguish of cc less lives, both at home and abroad." w= fields, paddies, swamps, forests, and along roadsides - five million acres of forest and cropland have been defoliated. Massive bulldozing has left t h e land "torn as if by an' angry giant." The timber industry h a s suffered tremendously, not on 1 y from the destruction of trees, but also from the breaking of s a w blades by bomb fragments embed- ded in the wood. Most poignantly of all, the Viet- Vietnam veteran, whose a little too depressing for of the Saturday Evening P severe stress on the GIr to civilian life will also itself for decades to come lives of countless veterar will face anxiety, disillus apathy, bewilderment,1 David Margolick is a D photographer and a frequ tributor to this page. Porno, sexual freedom and decadence A anew' kind of prisoner REE WEEKS ago Calvin Dow was convicted of manslaughter, posses- sion of a dangerous weapon, and escape from an Oregon prison. He was sentenc- ed to 25 years. Dow did kill the prison guard whose death led to the extension of his prison stay. But to the members of the Calvin Dow Defense Committee, Dow represents a new kind of political prisoner. Unlike Angela Davis, Dow was not framed. Cal- vin is like thousands of other inmates of the federal prisons, a victim of intol- erably oppressive conditions who, instead of buckling under pressure, stood up and resisted prison authority at every j unc- ture. " Such strength, however, comes at a psychological cost, which Dow has had to pay. DOW FIRST went to prison at 17 when he was convicted of auto theft. The oldest of seven children, Dow comes from a white working class family and never finished high school. Sentenced to two years at the Oregon State Correctional Institute, he spent 11 of his 13 months there in "the hole", a severe solitary confinement cell. During this period the prison was run by a par- ticularly oppressive administration and beatings of prisoners were a daily oc- currence. As Dow's experiences worsened and his political awareness expanded, he became an extremely serious and introverted man, according to fellow prisoners. From this point on he began reading and be- came a socialist. As a radical leader Dow was deeply respected by other inmates, and constantly harassed by prison of- ficials, who shipped * him around the country on a tour of more than five fed- eral prisons. aOW'S DEFENSE committeehoped to have him found not guilty on the grounds of temporary insanity. The man- slaughter he was convicted of took place after a fight with another inmate, when the guard tried to take a knife away from Dow and he reacted instantaneous- ly by stabbing him. Witnesses agree that Dow killed the guard in a moment of in- sane rage. Unfortunately, two defense psycholo- gists found Dow sane at the time of the killing. Dow's lawyers were court ap- pointed, because neither his family nor the committee could afford an expensive private defense. So Dow pleaded guilty and got a sentence of 25 years, instead By MARTIN STERN THE SEXUAL Revolution goes on! 1972 may well be remem- bered in years to come as the year women struck back. After decades of media exploitation of the fe- male body for male sexual enjoy- ment, women can now flip through an establishment women's publi- cation, and drool over a naked (and hairy) male playmate of the month. Burt Reynolds has become t h e pioneer of the above board male "nudie foldout." His exposure has subsequently led to male nudes in other publications, and the re- lease of several colorful male pin- up calendars. Now we're hearing complaints that female exploita- tion was bad enough without hav- ing males exploited also. The key point here is whether this "sexploitation" is bad for our society. Will it hamper efforts to reach a level of "humanism" where we all will be judged for who we are, and not just for our appearance and sexual append- ages? SEXUAL EXPLOITATION pro- bably reached an all-time high in the late sixties. Sex invaded our living room via television, class- rooms, literature, movies, into our personal lives at a rate never be- fore equaled. The moralists a n d preachers condemned the decad- ence of the times, and foresaw the decline of our society. Well, - we're still here, decadent as ever. But honefullv. with health- the candy we couldn't have or the toy we couldn't afford, the naked body became the forbidden fruit for us. And when we began dating, to many of us, it was not an oppor- tunity to develop a meaningful re- lationship with a female, but rath- er, our chance to taste the for- bidden fruit. Locker room talk con- sisted of post-conquest talk: "Ya, she let me get her in the back seat " THEN SUDDENLY, nudity was over-exposed. The novelty of two breasts and a vagina wore off. "You've seen two, you've seen them all." Males began concen- trating on relationships involving personal qualities and enjoyed characteristics between two peo- ple. True, sexual intercourse re- mained, but it became more than just "a piece of ass"; it became an expression of two persons shar- ing emotions with each other. Females also began to throw off their "yoke of expression." Cul- turally conditioned to believe that their body functions were some- how vulgar and unenjoyable, the new sexual freedom allowed many women to appreciate their bodies and its effect on men, instead of fearing them. Statistics bear out this over-ex- posure idea. In societies featuring pornography in extensive amounts, its sales have declined. The porno- graphy trade in Germany, for ex- ample, does the majority of its business with tourists. The Ger- mans have become disinterested in the stuff. In Denmark, the sex crime rate has dropped, a fact that some attribute to the open atti- tudes toward sex in that country. BUT WHAT of exploitation of the nude male body? What will be the consequences? Will women go about whistling at men, "taking advantage of them on dates, and. perhaps even gang-raping them? Highly doubtful. Indeed, 'exposure of the naked male body will ;help to bring it "out into the open," so to speak. Just as men have begun to develop healthy attitudes about the naked female "bod," so it is that women will learn to appreciate and ac- cept the male body naturally. LET THE nudies continue. It is only a pasing fad. In the long run we'll be able to look back and laugh at our sexual immaturities. And in the short run, how about Frank Kelley and Bob Griffin on a bear skin rug? THE INDIVIDUAL What good's By SCOTT ZIMMERMAN "FREEDOM'S JUST another word for noth ing left to lose." These words, uttered by Kris Kristofferson in one of his songs, had an indeterminable meaning at the time they were written, but al- ready delineate the encroaching dilemma of steadily increasing world population and in- versely diminishing resources. The concept of freedom, the philosophical approach that each man is the best judge of his own best interests and should be afforded the freedom to pursue his interests, will inevit- ably bring ruination to all. As the population swells and the need for additional resources in- creases every man's decision to act in his freedom if there's nothing? drilling; we are free to fly 100 people a few hundred miles while the 50,000 inhabitants below shudder from the noise; we are free to consume in our homes endless kilowatt hours for air-conditioning, television, and endless household conveniences, and then curse river damming, strip mining, and oil and gas drill- ing, the providers of our power-consuming lifestyles. Individual consumption, though innocuous in the singular is tremendously maleficent when multiplied by similarly-acting individuals- inducing a future where there really is noth- ing left to lose . . . or gain . . . for any- one Far be it from truth however that these considerations are taken into account by aver- age citizens -when planning a family or a home. In our contentment, we tend to dis- regard the negative utility, of an action when the consequences do not seem to entail pro- found hardships during our immediate life- time. Each, as an individual, benefits the most by denying the truth. Society, by shar- ing the burden of consequence, lessens the impact felt by any one individual. FREEDOM IS an erroneously idealistic con- cept when, in our present crisis, it permits breeding and consumntion for convenience's