age 4-Sunday, March 26,1978-The Michigan Daily LOOKING ACK THE WEEK IN REVIEW Mideast on the Diag The crisis over Israel's invasion of southern Lebanon came closer to resolution last week, but the conflict. briefly spilled over onto the University campus. On Monday, Palestinian sym- pathizers scheduled a demonstration on the 'U' Diagonal to protest the Israeli military incursion. The rally also drew an angry crowd of Jewish students who objected to the attacks on Israel's policies. Scuffles broke out, and each side ac- cused the other of instigating the violence. Fortunately, no serious in- juries occurred and Ann Arbor Police kept the two groups in check. Events on campus were only a microcosm of the broader conflict in the Mideast. United Nations troops gradually moved into the Israeli-held portion of Lebanon south of the Litani River. At week's end, however, it was still unclear whether Israel would with- draw its forces from the area without strong guarantee against return of Palestinian commandos to the region. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin paid a visit to Washington for a no-holds-barred con- frontation over Begin's intransigence on such issues as Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands. At week's end, peace seemed distant indeed. Teach-in urges action The Vietnam War, an issue which electrified this University community and campuses across the country, in the '60s and early '70s, again entered the limelight as a week-long teach-in entitled "What War? What Now?" came to town. Participants included prominent an- ti-war leaders, 'U' faculty members and many people still active in various political movements. David Dellinger, defendant in the 1969 Chicago Seven conspiracy trial said there is still a need for the kind of movement that the anti-war forces represented. "Nothing has changed," he said of the society and government which spawned Vietnam. "The institutions, are still intact." Dellinger's remarks were echoed throughout the week-long forum, as speaker after speaker called for a renewal of the spirit of activism which characterized the anti-war effort. The teach-in climaxed with a gathering Friday at Guild House where present and former activists discussed strategy for the future. Al Haber, one of the founders of Students for a Democratic Society, one of the groups which spearheaded the anti-war movement, called for creation of a broad-based leftist organization to promote basic change in this country. Haber pointed to the problems created when various small activist groups work for narrow goals, each lacking the power to effect them alone. Pay-off by lawyers charged The Detroit Edison bulb exchange system was in the spotlight at week's end as a result of evidence showing questionable practices by lawyers suing to end the utility's program. A Daily investigation uncovered evidence that lawyers representing the drug store owner who sued Edison over the bulb exchange program solicited him as a client and paid him with a ski vacation for lending his name to the suit. As a result of the suit, the drug store owner will get next to nothing, Edison customers lose the 92-year-old bulb service and the lawyers stand to gain up to $1.5 million in legal fees. If Federal District Judge John Feikens grants the lawyer's fee request, the cost would also be passed, on to Detroit Edison customers. According to Nancy Cantor, daughter of Southfield drug store owner Lawren- ce Cantor, her father received part- payment for an Aspen, Colorado ski vacation from lawyers representing him in court. This payment was in ex- change for lending his name to the suit. Paying a client for suing in his or her name is a violation of lawyers' codes of professional conduct and grounds for disciplinary action or disbarment. Both Cantor and his lawyers later denied any pay-off. Other sources close to the Cantor family, however, confir- med Nancy Cantor's account. What happens next will be -up to Judge Feikens and state Bar officials in Illinois, where the lawyers practice. Dellinger Other participants spoke of the need for creation of a campus political group to work through student government for change on campus. The Michigan Student Assembly "should be more vocal and take an ac- tive stand against University policy" on such issues as South African invest- ments and affirmative action, said LSA undergraduate Rachel Rosenthal, part of a party which plans to make that happen. i Doily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN AN ANN ARBOR police officer responds to the melee created when pro-Palestin- ian demonstrators and pro-Israeli onlookers clashed on the Diag Monday. The con- frontation mirrored developments in the Mideast. L Ifr Mit4b Wa n :43ai1 Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 139N News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Lebanon calls for help Training while By Julie Rovner It was still pitch black outside parents and high school when the alarm went off at 5:30 cheerleaders. Sunday morning. Dressing in the He smiled as I added my name dark so as not to wake my to his yellow legal pad (number sleeping roommate (who thought 54) and told me I would have to I was crazy anyway) I managed check in with him at three that af- to be out the door by 5:45. ternoon, at nine that night, and As I drove through the outskirts then would have to be there at of the campus-downtown area I seven the next morning and stay marvelled at the fact that it was on through to keep my place in the first time in my two years line.' here I had ever seen this town SO BACK I went at three, and asleep. I really felt like I was the the nametaker smiled again and only person awake at this reminded me not to be late for the ungodly hour on this very cold nine o'clock roll call. That was morning as I parked my car, the last time I saw him'smile. Then I turned the corner and saw At nine he grimly informed me that I was not alone. and the person I was with that we V THERE, UNDER a just- would have to show up at six Sun- Waiting in line for everything, from concert tickets to a hamburger at McDonald's, says something about the psyche of the average student. you wait WJHILE GOVERNMENT leaders, armies and other groups concern themselves with the occupation and eventual withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon, the people of northern Lebanon are suffering. News reports tell of overcrowding in Beirut, shortages of food and supplies -'troubles which are attributed to the number of displaced families in that region as a result of almost two weeks of war in the south. Estimates say more than 350,000 Lebanese and Palestinians have aban- doneel their homes ahead of invading Israeli troops, and their unexpected presence in the north has created a temporary strain on life in cities like Beirut. Lebanese government officials are asking for aid and supplies on behalf of the new refugees. What worries the government of Lebanon more than the situation today is what the situation will be in a matter of weeks. Many of the refugees from southern Lebanon have no homes to return to; their villages have been demolished. Others say they will not return home unless Israeli forces remain in southern Lebanon to repel Palestinian guerrillas. If, in fact, sizable numbers of families remain in the north, the current temporary shelter and food problem will become a permanent one; one that the civil war-ridden government of Lebanon can not afford to deal with by itself. So officials are already assembling programs to rebuild and renovate southern Lebanon - programs which could make the area better than it was even before last week's destruction - to encourage people to return to the area and rebuild their lives there. The program is modeled after one which aided displaced people during the civil war of two years ago. To implement the program, the government will need. financial help from other countries. Certainly, the United States can afford to give such assistance to a nation such as Lebanon's. The citizens of Lebanon are now victims of an uncontrollable, devastating event - one which can only be compared to a natural disaster. Their displacement was the only way residents of southern Lebanon were to survive, and now it threatens the coun- try with overcrowding, starvation and collapse. It is the responsibility of strong and solvent countries, such as ours, to aid countries like Lebanon when catastrophic occurances threaten the nation's very existence. We hope that President Carter will see this threat and respond without haste to Lebanon's call for aid. SPORTS STAFF BOB MILLER..................... ........Sports Editor PAUL CAMPBELL... .......... ... . Executive Sports Editor ERNIE I)UNBAR................... Executive Sports Editor HENR{Y ENGEL.HARIYP.............. Executive Sports Editor RICK MAI)IOCK................... Executive Sports Editor CUB SCHWARTZ.... ............ Executive Sports Editor o, ;3 - $. g lightening sky overlooking a beautiful vista of Ann Arbor stood 183 other cold people. And I guarantee you, they weren't there to watch the sun rise. What we were doing that mor- ning at Crisler Arena has become an Ann Arbor ritual-the endless quest for tickets, in this case for the Jackson Browne concert. Sometimes people don't even want to see what they are waiting in line for, or by the time they get to the box office they have forgot- ten who the act is. But they wait anyway. The same faces can be seen in almost every line. And I confess, I wasn't there just to watch these crazies. I was one of the'm. It all started at about one o'clock the afternoon before, when I braved the crowds atten- ding a state championship basketball tournament at Crisler and found a lone person with a list who looked lost among all the day morning, not seven. I1 the guy felt that since he h, spend the night we shouldn't it so easy. Actually, I can'tr blame him. So, operating more on in than consciousness (anyon has woken me up on a weeke 11:00 or noon will attest t fact that I am not by natu early riser), I stood pat in line Sunday morning.and ched the grow of the flashli the now tattered yellow sh the nametaker called the n off. Once we were assembled h proper order, the waiterss like a herd of sheep just watt each other for a few min Finally a brave soul sat dow that very cold and slightly concrete and everyone followed suit. Despite distractions from competing radios and the (the sun had risen, but those guess lad to have really \ stinct e who end at."..*" o the re an iently lucky enough to be near the front I wat- of the line were also unlucky igt on enough to be in the shadow of the eet as Arena), I spent a good portion of .ames my five-hour wait trying to decide what the hell could prompt n the 200 people to do what we were stood doing. ching IT SEEMS to me that waiting utes. in line for everything, from con- vn on cert tickets to a hamburger at wet McDonald's, says something else about the psyche of the average University student. Competition n the has become so fierce for all cold elements of life that students are of us afraid if they are not first for everything, they will be left behind by society. For doubters of this theory, a few examples: .e Before the Administration got smart and made CRISP ap- pointment times computer- assigned, people would line up in advance to get the earliest days. For those at the beginning of the alphabet, the earliest arriving students showed up about two hqurs before the appointment cards were distributed. As word spread that people were arriving early, more people tried to get the earliest times by coming earlier than the early ones. By the time they got to the Zs, about a week later, the line had formed Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG overnight!" " Leases for off-campus housing are usually available in January or February; often a full seven months before the move-in date. IT'S HARD to say exactly why most of us feel this way. Many wouldsay that it's the tight job market that makes everyone want to get one up on everyone else. Others are convinced that it is capitalism itself which causes a compulsion for competition. I think that the University 'is doing it to us-on purpose. No, I am not paranoid, but I seriously believe they feel the most impor- tant part of a college education is learning how to strive for that elusive number one. If not, why else do officials allot only 25,000 of 100,000 football tickets for students? Why do they continue Ito refuse to build any new housing, even though enrollment is still rising? And why are they always raising their standards to make the outstan- ding students comprise a smaller and smaller partof the whole? Of course the University almost'has some logical answers to these questions, most of them having to do in some way with money. But I think the Administration d mIvlcw SAIL? LiA5 FA 1; It AT~ K/m {f 1 WAGF 1IT OFz~i '901I TEM Mq po~c-rR SAIV C GlM$ FAT f~tc\TL=s'x>- ZUI 1' A 3-I 4 7 (, ..- ww~J t t L~ovW v U ,,_ H'1 NLrN n/ - iern a o-r - r.-