Page 4-Thursday, January 26, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVII, No. 96 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan D on't afsorgetuwe still don't have a secure mayor A real man of the world By STU McCONNELL T HE MICHIGAN Supreme Court ruled Monday that 20 Ann Arbor Township residents who voted illegally in last April's mayoral election did not have to reveal their votes. And so the ordeal is over for Susan VanHattum and Diane Lazinsky, the two women who refused to tell how they voted. But while VanHattum and Lazinsky and their attorneys are celebrating well-deserved victory, the future of the city of Ann Arbor, which has been in. limbo while the issue of the right to a secret ballot, was being decided, is still up in the air. With the national furor over the secret vote case, it is easy to lose sight of the original issue: who is the mayor of Ann Arbor? Today, nearly half-way through his term in office, Mayor Albert Wheeler still isn't sure he will retain his title until the next election. The suit from which the secret ballot case arose was filed by Wheeler's Republican challenger, Councilman Louis Belcher, who lost to Wheeler by a single vote. The suit asks Circuit Court Judge James Kelley to do one of two things: " Declare the election void, in which case the city charter stipulates that Council will determine the mayor (sin- ce the Republicans have a 6-5 majority on Council it is a near certainty that Belcher would win) * Overturn the election and declare Belcher the winner So now the problem is dumped back on the courts, and it is Judge Kelley's turn to come under a scorching spot-. light. Kelley's position is not an enviable one, and he will make thousands of ene- my's no matter which way he decides. But as perplexing as the case may be, there is nonetheless a clearcut course of action that Kelley must take. Under no circumstances can he allow the election to stand as is. There were at least 20 votes that were known to have been cast illegally, and this could easily have made the difference in a one-vote elec- tion. :So Kelley has but two choices: " Devise some legal and fair method of determining how the 20 voted as a group, without revealing each individu- al's vote " Void the results and call for a new election B OTH THESE METHODS have their problems. First, it is almost im- possible to determine how the group voted without divulging some informa- tion about how each individual voted. But, on the other hand, voiding the ]results presents even a more difficult dilemma. The problem stems from the fact that according to the city charter, if an election is voided, Council deter- mines the winner. While most persons involved with the case believe that Kelley has the power to order a new election instead, even Kelley himself admits that the law is not clear in this case. And in addition, there is the time problem. Even if Kelley could insist upon a new election, how long would the city be kept in limbo? How long would it be before we had an effective mayor? For this reason, we favor an attempt to rectify the count of the original elec- tion by means of a method we have already proposed: asking each of the 20 voters to recast, secretly, his or her votes, tally them, and then subtract the totals from the respective candidates. (4e ilict. . lltL Everybody at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport knows the best entertainment in the place is not on the TV screens or in the cocktail lounges. It's at the customs terminals. The folks at O'Hare have con- structed a sort of viewing gallery, a balcony sealed off by glass, above the customs area, where bemused bystanders can watch the U.S. Immigration people systematically rifle the luggage of incoming passengers. A woman with ten flattened Mexican sombreros; a man with three suitcases full of wine; one old man gesticulating wildly behind the glass, arguing about duties on salamanders. GO DOWN TO the customs terminals at O'Hare sometime and you may see Don Quixote. He is a slightly built, balding, 55- year-old man named Garry Davis, he syles himself "President of the World Gover- nment," and he has passed through the customs circus many times armed only with a curious blue passport issued by "The World Service Authority, 4002, Basel, Switzerland." Since the end of World War II, Davis has been a man without a country, in and out of im- migration jails for thirty years, much of his time occupied helping other stateless persons by issuing them "world passpor- ts." World Citizen Number One has given up his country for an idea-the idea of a united world. The son of American ban- dleader Meyer Davis, he became a bomber pilot in World War II. Davis gave up his U.S. citizenship in 1948 because, he says, "I realized that a very dramatic gesture had to be made." Since then he has lived primarily in France. "IT'S AS A national citizen that I was put in that bomber plane and dropped bombs on people, so that's part of my national citizenry," Davis says. "I realized that I had to somehow disarm myself, and I realized that that involved a commitment to a higher level of citizenship. 4, 1953. "There's no first step to gover- nment," Davis says. "I mean, you set up the government. You don't jump a chasm in two leaps." World peace is a consequence of world law, says Davis, and un- til some organization is sovereign over all nation/states, the leaders of those states will continue to act as international outlaws. "THE NATION/state leaders now are in a totally schizophrenic position," Davis contends, "because they're the represen- tatives of law and order to their citizens. Jimmy Carter is the Chief Executive of the laws of the United States of America. "At the same time, Jimmy Carter is the Commander in Chief of all the forces of this one nation/state, and uses these for- ces in the name of the people, as a war machine vis a vis all other nations. Why? Because there's no EDITORIAL STAFF ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Editors-in-Chief JIM TOBIN LOIS JOSIMOVICH ...................Managing Editor GEORGE LOBSENZ..... ............Managing Editor STU McCONNELL... ..............Managing Editor JENNIFER MILLER .................Managing Editor PATRICIA MONTEMURRI ............... Magaging Editor KEN PARSIGIAN..... ..............Managing Editor BOB ROSENBAUM ...................Managing Editor MARGARET YAO....................... Managing Editor SUSAN ADES JAY LEVIN Sunday Magazine Editors ELAINE FLECTCHER.. TOM O'CONNELL Arociate Magazine Editors STAFF WRITERS: Susan Barry, Richard Berke, Brian Blan-; chard, Michael Beckman, Lori Carruthers, Ken Chotiner, Eileen Daley, Lisa Fisher, Denise Fox, Steve Gold, David Goodman, Elisa Isaacson, Michael Jones, Lani Jordan, Janet Klein, Garth Kriewali, Gregg Krupa, Paula Lashinsky, Marty Levine, Dobilas Matunonis, Carolyn Morgan, Dan Oberdorfer, Mark Parrent, Karen Paul, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Martha Retallick, Keith Richburg, Diane Robinson, Julie Rovner, Dennis; Sabo, Annmarie Schiavi, Paul Shapiro, R. J. Smith, Elizabeth{ Slowik, Mike Taylor, Pauline Toole, Sue Warner, Jim Warren, Linda Willcox, Shelley Wolson, Tim Yagle, Mike Yellin, Barbara Zahs, Jim Zazakis Mark Anarews, Mike Gilford, Richard Foltman Weather Forecasters SPORTS STAFF KATHY HENNEGHAN..........................Sports Editor TOM CAMERON.....................Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIS.........................Managing Sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN ..............Associate Sports Editor JOHN NIEMEYER .............. Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Paul Campbell, Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt; Jeff Frank, Gary Kicinski, Rick Maddock, Brian Mar- tin, Bob Miller, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Cub Schwartz, Errol Shifman and Jamie Turner. about for 2,000 years," Davis says fervently. "All our gurus and masters have been telling us for 2,000 years that we're all one family. "WHAT IS THE political equivalent to that? It's not American citizenship, it's not French citizenship, it's not Israeli or Palestinian citizenship ... it's world citizenship." Davis is not worried about the mechanical details of world government since, he points out, it is only an extension of the American federal system of 1787. "Every state is an example of how to 'make government,' so there's no problem with that," he says. "From the administrative point of view-no problem." What bothers him more are the moral questions of government, although he hesitates to call his movement a religious one. "I DON'T care what you call it," he says. "You can call it religious if you want, it's OK with me. I don't happen to be religious." Davis was originally a Broad- way actor, an unfderstudy of Danny Kaye, whom he appeared with in films before the Second World War. He enlisted as a bomber pilot and served in the Eighth Air Force. The ar left a permanent mark on Davis' thinking. "I was dropping the boms, Garry Davis was dropping the bombs," he says, gesturing towards himself with his-hands. "It was personal. It was intimate. "WE (THE PILOTS) were legal murderers. We were killing women and children, we weren't killing soldiers." After the war, Davis says, he and other soldiers trusted "The diplomatic world, the guys who get paid for it" to create a world order. But the United Nations left him disillusioned. _ "(the U.N.) was never set up to do the job," Davis says. "It was a sterilerexercise in diplomacy. deliberate on the part of the four powers." The victors of World War II "had no intention of givipg over sovereign power to a world government." Unfortunately for Davis, ,ihey still don't. He claims to: have issued 25,000 "world passports," which does not please imn- migration officials in most nations. The document is recognized in Ecuador, Upper Volta, Zambia, Mauritania, Kuwait, and Yemen-not exactly a normal itinerary--but not in the U.S. and France, where Davis has spent most of his life. Davis is basing his current case with the U.S. Immigration Ser- vice on a section of article 56 of the U.N. Universal Declaration of Huiman Rights which says, in part, "everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return ,to his coun- try." The Declaration was ratified by the U.S.; thus, Davis says, the U.S. must abide by its provisions. ULTIMATELY, of course, Davis bases his case on the strangely idealistic notion of in- ternational brotherhood, which many national leaders supportin principle, but none in fact. "They buy (the Declaration) in principle, but they cannot act because their mandate is national," says Davis in a rare moment of, if you will, worldliness. "It's not the national mandate that's important, it's the global mandate." Garry Davis' philosophy really doesn't differ much from that of most national leaders, and he has a sheaf of statements on "world peace" from many of them to prove it. It is only his method which is rather queer: if the world's a mess, go out and start another one. "You don't need a mandate to be just, to be kind, to be courageous," says Davis. "You have that in you." "You can't argue against love or justice or courage or kindness. That binds us all." 'We're politics in everything happened Twentieth We've got bringing line with else that's in the Cen tury. the Twen- tieth Century im- plosion of time and distance which lit- erally made every- body a de facto world citizen. . . and yet the political framework is horse and buggy.' Garry Davis rv. . . .fl, . .. .. ..; .: v .r . . -. .{i...:. "' : : " r : "} " ia{i f ,, . ff . I.. i.***.**.:.******* ~ .******.******.*:**.**f ;... r.;. ., : ::{'., ;:;,".""+.r:: +' Submissions to the Daily 's Editorial page should be typed and triple spaced. They will be returned to the author only if a request is made to do so. Publication is based on con- ciseness, clarity of thought and writing and overall appeal. :::{:t...?%'?i:..::?+::4":...?:::?: '..'"'i.:4.: . ii.<'.. i".p... .i...."f.;, DECISION! .. tI YQ6 "I had to prove to people that U.S. citizenship is not the be-all and end-all. It is not the highest form of political allegiance." If you've been following inter- national politics at all in the 30 years since our hero declared his 'world citizenship," you may have already guessed that his life has not been a bed of roses. In addition to his 27 jail terms, Davis was sentenced by a French court to two years in prison and a $1,000 fine last Friday for selling his unofficial "world passport." HE IS ALSO embroiled in a battle with the U.S. Immigration Service, which contends that his "world passport" does not permit him to reside legally in this coun- try. Presently he is free, pending the appeal of his U.S. case. For all the notoriety of the World Service Authority, Garry Davis might as well be carrying a passport from Venus. In more reactionary times he would, be called a "fuzzy thinking one- worlder." "We're bringing politics in line with everything else that's hap- pened in the Twentieth Century," Davis says emphatically. "We're living under a dualistic framework. We've got the Twen- tieth Century implosion of time and distance which literally made everybody a de facto world citizen . . . and yet the political framework is horse and buggy. citizen, between you and the Russian citizen, you and the Chinese citizen.. ." "Every world leader," he con- cludes firmly, "is dualistic. He represents law and order, and at the same time he represents anarchy." TALKING TO Davis is mad- dening, but somehow pleasant. After a long day of jaded professors, bored administra- tors, and students whose personal standards of ethics are so hazily defined that they find it easy to snicker at almost anything, it _is refreshing to talk to a man with an almost total lack of cynicism. From any "media" point of view, Davis deserves to be lum- ped with nudists, vegetarians, and other amusing oddballs of American culture. World gover- nment, indeed. He has about as much chance of constituting a viable world government as I have of building an intercontinen- tal missile. He is a Quixote almost as pure as that of Cervantes; he refuses to be brought down to earth. Questions of nationality strike him as irrelevant, as un- necessary, "NATIONALITY doesn't exist," he says breathlessly, as one revealing a great truth to a blind man, "Nationality is an illulsion." Th.1 mnridpninothing about laws between you and the French I I Israel To The Daily: One has grown used to, and learned to ignore, the incessant half-truths and distortions that regularly emanate out of the hal- lowed halls of the United Nations regarding Israel's supposed "in- transigence" toward negotiation and compromise. It is rather dis- concerting and surprising, though, to read similar such reh- toric in the Michigan Daily. To begin with, it is simply not true that Israel is unwilling "to compromise on borders or Pal- estinian self-determination." (Editorial, January 20, 1978) She has indicated a readiness to withdraw from much of the Sinai and the Golan Heights and to grant civil autonomy to the Arabs living in the West Bank. The fact that the Arab countries have not been willing to accept these con- cessions, particularly in light of their past aggression, seems :to me to be the real "intransigent" attitude among the parties to negotiation. Beyond this, though, I think it4s quite presumptuous for non-Ib- raelis (particularly those living within extremely secure bor ders), to piously demand that Israel make security concessionis that would result in the existence of a garrison state within a shdrt distance of her main population centers. Let us not be so quick.to ask a country that has endured four wars in the past thirty years against insurmountable odds ito give away at the negotiating table what her antagonists could not gain on the battlefield. - Bob Wander Letters to The Daily' xw N ____ KSK v A Contact your reps Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washington .. '+ I _ .. --a.'- _ r rr I FT ftv l - Z/ -