Page 4-Sunday, September 11, 1977-The Michigan Doily 1 f I E £ iEi!3UUt 10 aug LOOKING BACK Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 THE WEE Vol. LXXXVIII, No.4 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and npanaged by students at the University-of Michigan Life with a giant:The sad fate getting along at modern 'U' THERE WERE tents outside the Student Activities Building last week. Pitched under the windows of the housing office, they housed several in- dignant students who, upon arriving in Ann Arbor, found they had no where to live. Some had expected dorm space. Other freshperson$ who expected places in Bursley or West Quad or Alice Lloyd found themselves parked in dorm lounges, trying to smile through the first daya of college they had hoped would be so xciting. Instead of staying up late at night, talking to newfound friends, they worried over the coming days and won- derd why they ever came. We won't place blame on an ad- ministrator or on office. But we might take note of the tents and the crowdwd lounges, and remember that we are part of an institution that has grown so large that it is impossible to prevent such things. It would be futile to weep for a simpler time that has gone the way of Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara. It is 1977, after al, however regretful that may be. great call for education, and, we are reaping the results here at Michigan. The unpleasant truth is that it takes a while to fall in love with our university, and the romance is usually based, at best, on practicality. ANY CLASSES are big beyond any hope of establishing intellectual rapport with professors. There are so many students that one is surprised to see more than two or three familiar faces while crossing the Diag between classes. At football games, we root with a sea of strangers, not a cozy crowd of friends and classmates. HBow does the hugeness of the University touch us? In these little, day- to-day ways, yes. But it also shapes the lives we lead for four college years. It shapes the memories we will hold for four college years. Our parents remem- ber closeness and warmth in their college years, but we must look much harder for those things. For the students sleeping on cots in dorm lounges, we of- fer our sympathy. But their plight is only an exaggeration of what we all must go through. Buddy, can you spare a room? Coalition leaders counter the crisis is the sole responsi of the University. 'he twentiety century has made a - PM r'- ^ - ', * /, i- /. (I --/ / i 4 I f // I t THE MILWAUKEE DIST. FIELD NEWSPAPER SYNDI *1 I / f \1 05e MW 1 n iJ " 7 THE UNIVERSITY'S peren- As one freshman victim nial student housing shortage housing shortage put it," appears to be more acute this bad way to start four years c year than in previous years. Just lege." ask any of the dozens who've Deserting a sinking been placed temporarily in dorm g lounges, thrown in with RA's or shtp tripled into double rooms until ITH STUDENTS car housing is available. out in front of the St One group of refugees foundd Activities Building to prote momentary relief - and a ve- housing shortage, andi hicle for protest - when they pit- freshpersons forced to doul ched tents for two days just out- in dorms with RA's, John side the doors of the University's kamp would seem to have p Housing Office. The students, an opportune time to resi who were upset about off-campus University housing director as well as on-campus housing Feldkamp, who has hel conditions here, formed the new post since 1966, will leave Coalition for Better Housing. week to become general ma Housing officials contend they of services at Princeton U can do nothing more than what sity, but he will miss Ann Ar they are currently doing in the "I'm excited about the ne face of the shortage. They said but there are very mixed the University can not afford to tions. I'm sad to leave An construct additional dorms right bor," he said. now. John Feldkamp, the depart- Until a successor can b ing housing director, suggested pointed, University Vice- that the Coalition might find dent for Student Affairs more success if it directed its ry Johnson has Associate protest toward Ann Arbor City ing Director Robert Hughe Council. He said the city should ing director of the office. Jo take more responsibility for said he will appoint a new, housing students. tor within a year. NY mayo, just a two r that ibility of the It's a of col- tg rmping tudent est the many ble up Feld- picked gn as d the next nager niver- bor. w job, emo- nn Ar- be ap- Presi- Hen- Hous- es act- hnson direc- Flim-flam man THE SAGA of Bert Lance's Tshady bank dealings began to unfold into a nightmare this week when the comptroller of the cur- rency challenged Lance's claim of a clean bill of health from an August report written by the comptroller. John Heimann, who regulates the nation's banks, reported that the director of the Office of Man- agement and Budget (OMB and his family had abused their influ- ence in Georgian banks by over drawing from their accounts. The August report, sent to the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, did not clear the Car- ter appointee of charges of bad business, even though it revealed no illegality, according to Hei- mann. LANCE HAD CLAIMED that it had cleared his record after near- ly a month of informal inquiries and stories in the press about in- terest-free deposits, and mul- tiple bank deals. "Lance was a very succesful banker. His attention to detail leaves somrething to be desired," said Heimann, who took office in July. The comptroller said that the most serious problem he turned up "has to do with a pattern of borrowing and then establishing correspondent banking relation- ships with lending institutions." Meanwhile a Harris poll taken in late August revealed this week showed that Carter's positive rating by the American public has fallen steadily over the last few months. Several major news- papers, including the Washington Post and the New York Times, have called for Lance's resigna- tion. Zero ZERO MOSTEL was a rich man. His boisterous, zany, overpow- ering comic characterizations have brought a smile to even the most sour faces, and he has warmed the hearts of millions of his fans 'round the world. He was scheduled to star in a new Broad- way show, The Merchant, this fall, but those plans were held up by his recent illness,'which for- ced him to spend several days in the hospital. Then, on Thursday, he took a turn for the worst, and died from what doctors called a K IN REVIEW M , Bit, "cardiac failure," ending the ca- reer of one of the most loved comedians of our time. 'Mostel's many stage and film credits include A Funny Thing Happened oter Wa to t was a Lady, The Producers, Ulysses, and probably his best known and certainly most loved performance as Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof, which was to win him one of his three Tony Awards for best actor in a play. Always the joker, Mostel was once asked what his thoughts were during the curtaincalls. "I just hope the beer is cold," he re- plied playfully. We shall all miss him. Editorial positions represent a consensus of The Daily Editorial Staff Editorials and cartoons that appear on the right side of the Editorial Page are the opinion of the author or artist, and not necessarily the op nion of the paper. Letters should be typed and limited to 400 word ,The Daily reserves the right to edit netpers for lengt and grammar. , a N ou rcus may open financial avenues be- tween Albany and City Hall, and, Carter willing, the two could work on tapping Washington for assistance as well. Ex-Representative Bella Ab- zug, once a front-runner, looked to be the most attractive candi- date of those who had a prayer' Her feisty style, while offensive to some, may have been the abra- sive element the city could use to jolt potential economic rescue out of complacency. But while, Bella Abzug's ad- ministration would have been livelier, Cuomo might well turn out to be a competent, level-head- ed money manager, if only New York's Democrats have the sense to ignore Koch. 0 Joshua Peck is an ex-New Yorker and staff writer for The Daily. 0 RCS 5A'(,fA -r~g 0 ~ I45Pt Ny .« jii ;, R G ~ , '8' ~ O '%, <. . , ; rs race p'TI I ring cl I ril m f 'If we lose the Panama Canal, which of our foreign possessions will be next? Taiwan? South Korea? West Germany?' Oil companies gr1 ftihtens T HE SENATE'S rejection Thursday of a rider to President Carter's energy package which would 'have prohibited major oil companies from moving into the expanding trade in nuclear and .coal fuels has serious im- plications for the future use of energy in this country. The amendment, introduced by Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), would not have divested major cor- porations such as Gulf, Standard and Occidental of their present holdings, which Kennedy said account for 38 per cent of the uranium industry's milling capacity. Rather, it attempted to allay what Kennedy called "a wholly reasonable fear that the gas and oil in- dustry will bring to bear the same tac- tics" used in conventional fuel development, which Kennedy politely termed "not competitive." - Much of the Senate debate centered on whether the amendment was a "horizontal divestiture"-a breakup of a potential monopoly by the oil com- panies on all "competing" forms of energy, namely oil, gas, coal and nuclear power-but this debate misses the point. Given the depleted petroleum reserves of this planet, the real question is not who controls forms of energy resources since the turn of the century. The disadvantage is that, assuming the oil companies are barred, no one else-including the federal govern- ment-is being pushed forward as promoter of alternative energy. HE OIL COMPANIES, sensing the future buck, want to get into the lucrative energy pie every bit as much as the Carter administration wants to decrease our dependence on fossil fuels. The federal government's efforts on behalf of coal and nuclear power, however, have been sluggish and the oil companies are understandably miffed by what they see as restraint by the government over resources which government cannot or will not develop on its own. Thus we are faced with the difficult choice of turning over coal and nuclear power to the oil companies in return for speedy developmeny, or waiting for sonleone more appealing-perhaps the government itself-to take up the slack. The energy crisis precludes waiting too long, which is why Exxon, Gulf, Get- ty, et. al. should be permitted to move into the field.-But over the long run, the companies need close supervision, with not only "horizontal" but "vertical" divestiture-the breakun of the com- By JOSHUA PECK Act I of New York's quadren- nial circus is over. The good news: incumbent Abe Beame did not place in the two-person run- off. His fate was sealed by his most recent blunder; telling lies to investors about the city's financial status, as disclosed in a recent Securities Exchange Com- mission report. Beame's media campaign, it should be noted, was certainly the most inventive of the Demo- cratic candidates. He summar- ized four utterly mediocre years in office with the slogan: "He made the tough decisions." One example of a "tough deci- sion" was cited by an obviously Jewish (bring out the ethnic vote) woman who sighed admiringly on a Beame commercial: "He had Z AM A COrC. the chutzpah to come out in favor of capital punishment." Where is the courage in voicing an opinion which 70 per cent of the public holds? And screaming bloody murder outside police headquar- ters after David Berkowitz's cap- ture? Really now. THE BAD NEWS is that Ed Koch, formerly a consistently lib- eral congressman, played on pop- ular support of the death penalty more successfully than the mayor, and thus managed to eke out a place in the runoff. In "the boroughs" (all of the city except Manhattan), Koch used such gems of street cam- paigning as approaching strangers with the proclamation, "Hi. I'm for capital punishment. Are you?" In liberal Manhattan, Koch was his old self. He ad- mitted support for state-spon- 1 AM A KART k-V I C,1 lC sored murder if pressed, but in general, the black hood stayed in the closet. Koch's distressing exhibition leaves liberals with only one op- tion: Mario Cuomo, the candidate picked and backed by. New York's good Governor Carey. Cuomo captured the Liberal Par- ty nomination some weeks ago by way of an order from the gov- ernor, so throwing the Democrat- ic nomination his way will assure his victory over Republican Goodman, an ex-Lindsayite, and Conservative extremist Barry Farber, who's camp of followers includes Bill Buckley. CUOMO IS NOT known for out- spokenness, but he still contrasts. nicely with his waffling opposi- tion, in his consistent support of liberal-moderate goals. His close association with the governor IAA I Ai mere -R AP?. 1 wC Nw UP, I 1~14-HH1 WRE 0. '" Ar THE F NI . AliJ& PA OVG TAK6S A)' M6 LOStt FHt M~LXWOFH1S H ol