Fog 4-Sunday, February 26, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighty- Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 540? ITr, Jr H II 5ICK TO HMV C 5A (tX) LXL4 H AU 51~~4ACN ii*e1er Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 123 Edited and mo 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M1 48109 News Phone: 764-0552 onaged by students at the University of Michigan Jj 7 ? 1LJ l Two very flawed laws WU WNJT' 5aQ T9 N17L0? *Ad rNiw ir er zz'-r -rKK P~AL.nu14J1Aw ASWv Pt AStIJlMS! naJT TAU(1 TOCME fl: ovet 6XCwa27 lT'S A PtAu MIN emu. YOU t - TO M ' A NN ARBOR had a chance to finaly come up with a workable solution - the problem 'of por- augraphy. City Council had such a solution within their grasp, but they then went a step too far. The, new anti-smut law, passed just last week, will limit the spread of 'adult" businesses into residential districts, and it will do so by rezoning process without any attempt to define wht is obscene. Specifically, the law would permit adult businesses from opening within 700 feet Qf a neigh- borhood. The Supreme Court has upheld the constitutionality of such zoning laws, and Detroit is the model case for a Zoning law that effectively keeps porn shops out of neighborhoods and puts them into the. designated commercial districts. That portion of the final pornography bill was realistic and fair, but the bill went on to prohibit the establishment Of adult businesses within 700 feet of each other. This was an unnecessary step and reeks of discrimination. No other commercial enterprise in Ann Arbor is subject to such an arbitrary restriction. And the 700 foot requirement is not the only source of discrimination in the new bill. Another clf ase prohibits the owners of adult businesses from allowing "known prostitutes and their customers" to frequent their premises. A "known prostitute" is defined in the law as one who has been convicted of prostitution within the last two years. Councilman Farl Green, who voted' against the entire ordinance because of that one clause, summed up the objec- tions of critics when he said "I can do better than that at church. I can walk in as a sinner and walk out saved. Why does a prostitute have to wait two years?" That the clause displays a scrimination against women who choose to be prostitutes is obvious. What is not so obvious are these questions: -Why prohibit only those restitutes who have been convicted - who couldn't afford lawyers to beat the rap? How will a shop owner know how long it has been since the hooker in front of his store has been convicted? These questions are facetious and will probably never come up, but they point to a major deficiency in Ann Ar- bor's new anti-smut attempt. City Council's use of rezoning to remedy the pornography problem was certainly constructive, however, the new law's venture into other unchar- tered areas moves us right back onto that- familiar collision course with the First Amendment. T HERE IS YET another porno- graphy-related bill which Council has yet to vote on. A second proposal in part seeks to limit the display of porn books and magazines on newsstands to at least four feet off the floor, unless provisions have been made to display only the top three inches of the front covers of such material. Mayor Pro Tem Louis Belcher was clever to put these provisions into a separate ordinance. Even he expects to have trouble getting such ridiculous requirements passed without a fight. Hasn't Councilman Belcher ever seen children over four feet tall? Cai- not children less than four feet tall still look up to see the wonders of Genesis or Hustler? And what happens when the publishers of these sex books start putting their most explicit sexual material in the top three inches? One new pornography bill has, unfor-. .tunately, already passed - flaws in- cluded. This second bill is not only un- workable, it is unnecessary, and should not be passed. Rarely does Council have a chance to prove that it has learned from past mstakes. Let's see if they take advan- tage of the chance when bill number two comes up for a vote. SPORTS STAFF BOB MILLER. ............... .............. Sports Editor PAUL CAMPBELL.................Executive Sports Editor ERNIE DUNBAR......................Executive Sports Editor HENRY ENGELHARDT...............Executive Sports Editor RICK MADDOCK Executive Sports Editor CUB SCHWARTZ ........... Executive Sports Editor L 72.'ofirre-. IIIJ ll MIT *71 Pay o9iwMs~ftW 1U In 219 A.D., amidst the decay of the Roman Empire, the Emperor ,Elagalabus led a festive and gaudy parade through the Eter- nal City in honor of the Sun uod. This was the heyday of the primitive cult of sun-worship. With the collapse of the Empire, this pagan rite wqs buried along with it. Or so it seemed until recently. Our contemporary worshippers of all things primitive, the 'en- vironmentalists, have attempted to resurrect this cult - last week one of their high-priests, Barry Commoner, outlined some of the issues involved. DR. COMMONER'S talk was notable for its paucity of scien- tific argument (understandably, since it would only further weaken his position). Instead, he stressed the political economy of the matter. This, after all, is the critical issue. Everyone knows it is technologically feasible to generate solar electricity. Likewise, most of the population realizes it is quite possible to safely generate nuclear power. The real question is one of economics in the broadest sense. At the heart of Dr. Commoner's argument lies the "small is beautiful" mentality. His intent is to convince us that human labor is preferable because itis simple and more direct. And therein lies the rub. Since man appeared on the 'planet, he has struggled to invent technologies and concentrate energy. In doing so he frees himself from relatively menial and repetitive tasks and can work on solving higher-order problems. THE KEY parameter in all this is energy density - the rate at which energy flows through a given surface. Energy-dense technologies are low cost technologies because they in- volve less material, less capital investment, and less labor for the The sun is not a solution ByR.L.Marsh production of a given amount of energy. Such sources have a high inherent rate of social profit. That is, for every dollar invested in such an energy souce, a much larger amount of wealth is made available for the growth of the economy as a whole. For every job required to increase energy production, four or five jobs are so does consumption per capita, that is, real wages. Such technologies - solar, biomass, etc. - have a negative rate of social profit, . because they require more of society's total wealth then they produce. Therefore their implementation does not create growth but promotes the overall collapse of On the other side are the forces of the anti-technology, anti-industry crowd - the environmental movement, numbers of muddle- headed liberals, large segments of the press and portions of the finan- cial world. politics behind them. He is quite right in noticing President Car- ter's uneasy shifting from one side to the other on the energy question, but the lines are quite different than what Dr. Cort- moner would have us believe. ON ONE side 'are represen- tatives of those institutions that have generally been associated with American progress - most of industry, leaders of the trade- union movement and members of the scientific community. The U.S. Labor Party is presently pulling together such a group to fight for a program of increased industrial production and the Alexander Hamilton-type banking reform needed to promote this kind of economic growth. The recent NAACP call for energy development and the formationof the Michigan Coalition for Jobs and Energy may be taken as indication that there is tremendous potential for such an alliance. On the other side are the forces of the anti-technology, anti industry crowd - the environ- mental movement, numbers of muddle-headed liberals,,large segments of the press and por- tions of the financial world. They would opt for labor intensive public works projects (alone the lines of the Humphrey-Hawkins proposal), energy reductions that would further constrict industry' and employment, and fiscal measures that would generate hyper-inflation. The decision is thus: shall the nation take the path proposed by the Labor Party - one leading toward economic and.scientific 'development -or shall we take the path of the environmental movement and its political allies with the concomitant depression, social chaos and, ultimately, war? All our choices should be so simple. R. L. Marsh is a member of the U.S. Labor Party. created by the availability of the energy produced. Thus even greater wealth is available for further investment in more energy growth and more general growth of the economy. With energy-wise technologies, the cost of energy drops and the profitability of industry and levels of real wages in the economy as a whole rise. Conversely, with low-energy- technologies (such as solar) the opposite is the case. Ene gy must then cost more because more labor, more capital, and more material is required for its production. As labor productivity declines (production per capita), the economy. THIS PRECISELY locates the contrast between nuclear and solar technologies. In terms of fundamental economics, nuclear energy is preferable to all other options - but the combination of general monetary inflation of the past 10 years and environmen- talist obstruction has tended to muddy the issue. Nonetheless (despite the statistics bandied about by Dr. Commoner and others), the crucial fact remains that the utilities prefer nuclear plants on the grounds of economy. The real danger in Dr. Com- moner's solar semantics is the LOOKING BACK THE WEEK IN REVIEW don 't divest NHE SENATE Advisory Com- mittee of Financial Affairs has decided not to recommend that the University divest itself of stock holdings with companies that operate in South Africa. The decision, which has not been officially released yet, comes one week after the Commit- tee on Communiations informed the University that a majority of the com- nmunity recommended divestment. The core of SACFA'S recommen- dations have been finalized. The com- mittee recommends that the University issue a pyblic statement revealing its position on the South African situation, propose share holder resolutions con- cerning the corporations' role in South Africa, and publicly.vote its shares on. resolutions concerning the cor- poration's role in South Africa. Up to this point, the University has only voted with the corporate positions on matters concerning South Africa at stockholders meetings. It had been the position of the University that it wou'ld either vote with the company line or sell its stocks. .SACFA will also recommend that if a corporation would continue expansion of their South African operation, or if a corporation refuses to adopt the Sullivan principles, the University should divest itself of stocks and bonds in that corporation. The Sullivasn statement is an affir- mative action policy recommended by Rev. Leon Sullivan, a member of the General Motors board of directors. The msa gets a change ' HE MICHIGAN Student Assembly . held an important campus-wide election this week and members of the assembly were discouraged by one of the government's all-time lowest elec- tion turnouts. Only 500 students voted in an election that radically altered the MSA themselves. As a result of the approval of this week's ballot proposals, the president and vice-president of the assembly will be elected by direct vote of the studen- ts, rather than by members of the MSA themselves. One advantage' of direct election in- cludes the elimination of much of the political infighting that has occured in the assembly over the election of its officers. Some members also hope that direct election of the' president and vice-president will generate some in- terest for MSA elections in the student community. The other amendment approved this week will change the method by which the representatives themselves are elected. The present system is com- posed of 18 at-large representatives and a representative from each of the 17 schools and colleges. The individual colleges within the University appoin- ted their own reps through their school governments. . Subject to approval of this week's election results by the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ), each of the schools within the University will be entitled to elect representatives in proportion to the number of students in the school. strike has provided us with a taste of what may happen when our resource supplies are no longer adequate to keep the nation operating, let alone growing. This week the University Housing Of- fice announced several energy saving recommendations for the short term crisis as well as some long range goals aimed at reducing the soaring dorm energy costs. These rising utility costs provide the major rationale for the an- nual 7.4 per cent rise in dorm rates. The goal of University Housing Main- tenance Coordinator Paul Bowyer is to reduce energy consumption by 30 per cent over the next three years. As a preliminary step, an audit of every type of dorm window will be un- dertaken this summer. Some dorms will have added insulaton as well -s new roofs. To administer the energy conservation program the University has begun to interview applicants for the new position on Energy Conser- vation Manager. the same decision THE POLITICAL Science Assistant Professor Joel Samoff was denied tenure again this week. The depar- tment's tenured faculty was ordered by Literary College Dean Billy Frye to reconsider their decision of last November denying Samoff tenure. They did, and let their earlier decision stand. "I think we've come to the end of the line," said Earl Obika, a Political Science graduate student and teaching assistant for Samoff. "This again comes as a great disappointment to all of us. The decision made it clear that the department will remain rigid in their commitment to the intellectual direction of the department." The reason given for denying Samoff tenure was that his research does not meet University standards. Critics of the decision claim that too much em- phasis is placed on research ability in the department and not enough on teaching skills. Samoff is noted for his expertise in South African affairs' and political economy. He has been called a "Marxist -political economist." Department Chairman Sam Barnes said, "The department may have made a mistake in the Samoff case, but I believe the procedures were fair. ' Barnes also admitted that Samoff's background may have played a role in the decision. Samoff said, "My position from the beginning was that my work had not been judged fairly or correctly. I'm still unsure my work has been evaluated in an unbiased and unprejudiced man- ner." The Center for Afro-American and African Studies had offered to pay half of Samoff's salary for the next year if he stays at the University, whether he is granted tenure or not. Con tact vpuir reps~ I 1