e 4-Thursday, November 10, 1977-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 55 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan I 1...' IN HE .%t(WlANMH -MERE. WAG VNO COMPWREMNSIVI. E"? ? .N, So NE SAL: AE"II~r thE.8 AN Et Rc THN E AW 'nw t T1E AIOM S WELF~ARE SN(STE WAS 1t A SA S ... VNIE.FAE.REOR!' ...CE~ttNESAW TAA-TT ~E W ,No AGREEMENT wi-M4 PA A So t4E SAVO "L~ET ISM %$E'A PANAMiA CANAI..'TREATY':.. The long arm o ti buy more cheaply and efficiently elsewhere By JERRY WOLKE were it not for his monopolies if you did, all A libertarian economist recently noted that the while spouting hokum about the "consent today's government-issued coinage looks like of the governed" while the governed try to trash and feels like trash so it's the perfect figure out how to avoid paying. Now the "star medium upon which to imprint the images of spangled mafia" is thinking about starting a heads of state. He might also have added that protection racket. I thought that was why we they are also the perfect token of protest to had the Pentagon. send to your congressman. Well, it seems that Arguments against the proposed consumer some people have already had an idea like agency can be cited on a variety of pragmatic that recently. There is an old expression, grounds but there is one overriding reason to "don't take any wooden nickels," but now condemn it and that is this: censoring congresspersons are finding the trashy metal products is the same as censoring speech. ones in their mailbox. Ironically enough, the Progress demands a free flow of products as reason for turning politicians into piggybanks well as ideas. True some of each is worthless, is to convince them to establish a consumer but competition and reason are effective ar- protection agency! biters of quality. Where fraud appears there Can you believe it? Some people want the are already penalties. same outfit that gave us the blackboard Free people do not need anyone making jungle, the U.S. Snail, the Social Insecurity their choices for them whether between system and thousands of other frauds to automobiles or arguments. What people do establish an agency to protect consumers! need is more knowledge since our experience Can you picture Jack the Ripper opening an is sometimes inadequate. We don't know, for escort service? example, who will fix our car without ripping us off because the division of labor precludes ACTUALLY, business products you can all of us from becoming mechanics. We know take or leave, it's up to you. Uncle Sam, that dishonest or incompetent businesses though, ought to change his name to Don Sam won't last long in the marketplace but we also since the godfather never had it so good. He know that they can harm some people before helps himself to your wallet whenever he likes they go under. Some way of hastening their and nails you if you resist. Then while demise is needed. pocketing the bulk of it he spends the rest on things you may or may not want and could KNEE-JERK statists will turn to their god- he State father and his protection racket. Freedom loving people will have to use their ingenuity. One possibility is what I call the market in- formation club, a sort of AAA for consumers.* Such an organization could amass infor- mation on business honesty and competence, product safety and use, job availability, and maybe even provide prepurchase inspection of used houses and cars. Its possibilities are, unlimited. Organized locally and federatedr nationally it could become a locus of market power by organizing boycotts. No one couldi be compelled to join the club or to abide by its findings. Self-sovereignty would remain a right like freedom of choice, but now a power-. ful tool will have been forged to shape business behavior. Within ten years a new product will become, as common in homes as the TV set-the per- sonal computer. It is already a reality, but when it becomes widely used the knowledge problem will be licked. A hookup to the market information club will put a world of product and business data at our fingertips. The consumer protection agency isn't worth a slug nickel much less a government one, but an agency to protect us from the state? Ah, now there's an idea! * * * Jerry Wolke is a member of the Liber- tarian Party, and a frequent contributor to the Daily's Editorial Page. .AND SAW J T 17 VtWAS CIcxOt; :; e o '' oo r AM WREJNN "E L ARW)J~ AT ALL. I AT HE. 'ID, NE~ SAW TPTIT WA5 (IMI so "t , STEo.' m- WELiFAE. 4FCi. -j TA" OF VD'OLAMIAZON Letters to The Daily 'KE11N } K ' G q M1C 1 IIY A, The energy crisis exists p RESIDENT CARTER is making what may well be a last chance effort to rescue a comprehensive en- ergy package from the House-Senate conference committee. Carter hopes the committee will salvage at least some assemblage of his original plan - the way it was before undergoing a thorough gutting last month by an in- terest group-conscious Senate. The President cancelled his whirl- wind eleven-day world tour to hand hold his energy program as it goes through committee, and last night he ,took to the television for the third time, hoping to prod both the Congress and ithe;public into an> awareness of our energy needs. By all indications, his efforts so far have been little more than futile, as Americans just don't recognize the immediacy of the problem and are not ready to fare the sacrifices of conser- vation. Last April, Carter called the energy problem "the moral equivalent of war," but he failed to rally sufficient interest among either the people or CORRECTION Yesterday's editorial on the town- ship voter incident said the voters "all thought they were voting illegally." The word should have been legally, not 'illegally,' which was a typographical error. We apologize for the error. Congress. Since the April address; our dependence on foreign oil imports has risen to $123 billion. "This energy plan is a good insur- ance policy for the future," Carter told us. "If we fail to act today, then we will surely face a greater series of crises tomorrow., Carter may have pinpointed the problem best when 'he said "the political pressures are great because the stakes are so high." Development of a comprehensive energy program for the future is a step away from the method of incremental problem-solving that has dogged us through both foreign policy and domestic affairs. We have grown so accustomed to warding off dangers only when they become immediate crises that we have lost a sense of avoiding distant but potentially more dangerous threats in the future. We urge the House-Senate con- ference committee to shake off politi- cal pressure and special interest lobby- ing, and exercise the kind of long- range vision this country has been lacking. The Carter energy package is far from the cure-all for our energy prob- lems. It emphasizes conservation as opposed to expansion and exploration into alternative energy sources. The point is -for all its faults - the Carter energy bill is a step toward solving the energy problem if only because it recognizes the problem before it has reached crisis proportions. affirmative action To The Daily: The comments of Julie Rovner presented in her November 6 editorial "Student ideals go the way of job" are really deserving of some comment. First, there, was never any "spontaneous standing ovation" given to ex-president Ford at his November 3 lecture in direct re- action to his statements on the Bakke case. There was a loud 'round of applause given immedi- atelyafter Ford's statement that he was "strongly opposed to arbi- trary numerical quotas." It was, however, given from a seated po- sition by the audience if my recol- lection is correct. A standing ova- tion was given to Ford at the end of the question and answer period following his lecture. Whether this ovation occurred as a result of ex-president Ford's responses to the question he was asked is uncertain, as the audience also gave him a standing ovation be- fore he had said even a single word at the beginning of the lec- ture. Perhaps the audience sim- ply desired to express its appre- ciation of Mr. Ford having taken the time to come and speak that day. In any case, the only conclu- sion that can be properly drawn is that Rovner purposely misrep- resented the events of the Ford lecture in her editorial to help fortify her point. If this is the sort of "journalistic excellence" common to Daily staff writers, at least we can be sure that the staff members will have no problem finding jobs upon graduation from the University of Michigan. The Rupert Murdoch-owned New York Post undoubtedly has posi- tions available forreportersrwho show such great talent in crea- tively warping the news. Second, I would like to take issue with Rovner's remark that the ovation given to Ford during his discussion of the Bakke case "smacked of self-interest and ra- cism." It did smack of self-inter- est, that is for certain. Whether it smacked of racism is question- able. Perhaps it was simply an expression of the prevailing atti- tude that what should matter when one applies for admission to graduate school, or for a job, is not the color of one's skin or the size of one's bank account, but the quality of one's abilities. There are problems with such an attitude, of course. It assumes that ability is something which can be developed regardless of one's early environment. This is clearly absurd. A child locked in a dark closet all its life will surly not develop the abilities of a child who grows up in a stimulating environment of light and airy spaces. And what the supporters of pure meritocracy fail to realize is that life for some children in this country - lacking in proper food, proper shelter, or proper education - is really no better than growing up in a figurative dark closet. On the other hand, there are the people like Julie Rovner, who feel that the inequities between dif- ferent socio-economic groups in this country can be evened out by affirmative action programs. What Rovner and her fellow lib- erals fail to realize is that affirm- .. ..- ...... n . .41 .i - m m {h housing, and inadequate eau- cation, but now in our infinite mercy we are going to give you an opportunity to advance your- selves by permitting you to at- tend our fine universities." Af- firmative action is, in short, not so much a sign of idealism in ac- tion as it is a sign of abrogation of social duties by the American people. And it is the true favorite of the pragmatic "radical" who feels that although the elimina- tion of poverty and all its con- comitant evils is not possible in this country (or at least is not possible unless the pragmatic radical and his more conserva- tive friends are willing to give up their thoughts of new stereos, sports cars, and swimming pools), we should still make some effort to help the disadvantaged. In other words, on principle we, should help the poor, but let's not strain ourselves. Even Jerry Ford could agree with that. I am not saying that I am against affirmative action programs. What I am saying is that they are a pitifully inade- quate means of righting the eco- nomic injustices which permeate this country. Also, I think that the damage done to the mind of a bright student forced to live his early years under conditions which continually suppress his intellectual development can never be completely reversed. Thus, what is needed is not only more affirmative action pro- grams, but more affirmative ac- tion. We need to raise the quality of life and of education found in America's economically de- pressed areas up to the levels of the general society. To be sure, this will take money, billions upon billions of dollars for jobs, for housing, for new schools, and for high quality teachers. But un- til we are willing to make this total effort to help the poor, we can never claim to have their in- terest at heart when we initiate affirmative action programs, whether they contain quotas or not. That is what the real radicals in this country are saying right now, as they have been saying for- a long time. What bothers them most at the present time is not the wide-spread support of Alan Bakke, but the widespread sup- port of political leaders who, for all their prating about helping the poor, have no real interest in doing so either now or in the future. - Barry Peterson " paper towels per ought to amuse and anger its readers. I expect that the follow- ing excerpt from the October 30 issue of the Ann Arbor News will do both. Incidentally, Dethloff is the Chief of the Ypsilanti Police Force. " 'Any town that has females is bound to have some problems,' says Dethloff." - Bob Beyer; Biology Department " contradiction To The Daily: I am writing in reference to an advertisement appearing in the Daily the week of November fir- st. The ad begins: "Telephone In- terviewers. . ." and it asks for people to work on a research pro- ject. It is the last line of this ad that I take exception to. It states "Non-discriminatory affirmative action employer." My dictionary defines discrim- inatory as: "Marked by or showing prejudice; biased." If this hiring organization is non-discriminatory, then it can not also be for affirmative action. I am not against affirmative ac- tion but, according to the dic- tionary, it is discriminatory. If a group of people apply for that job, they will not all be considered equally because the ones that fall into the category of affirmative action will be given preference over those who do not. This is clearly bias and does not fit the dictionary definition of nondis- criminatory. Let me here reiterate that this has absolutely nothing to do with whether one is for or against affirmative action. I called the Daily to tell them this and they suggested calling the people that placed the ad. I called these people and talked to the supervisor who, after hearing this explanation almost ver- batim, got very defensive and told me he would inform whom- ever placed the ad that "one" reader took exception and quick- ly terminated the conversation. Many large corporations have used the phrase "non-discrimina- tory affirmative action employ- er" in the past but few use it today. I believe that the Daily has a responsibility to its readers and should not permit contradictory statements like this to appear anywhere in the Daily, not even in the advertisements. It may be just a small point, but, neverthe- less an important one to many of us. - Elliot Michael Reisman 07li anita To The Daily: It is a little difficult to take issue with a homosexual who has the personal courage to express admiration (however guarded) for Anita Bryant, as Mark Huck did in his.remarkably gentle let- ter of November 3. I concede that my language in her defense was impassioned. I deeply admire Anita. She is a fine Christian woman, a person I would dearly love to see my daughters emu- late: intelligent, energetic, mor- ally courageous, charming, chaste, beautiful, and (believe it or not) compassionate (note her reaction to the nie-throwing inci- temptation to take off the gloves and flail away is sometimes irre- sistable. Mark, I have no doubt what- ever that homosexuals are hu- man and entitled to their human rights. I also believe that pros- titutes, exhibitionists, sado- masochists, and even rapists and murderers are human and en- titled to their human rights. The real question is what these "hu- man rights" entail. It is far from "clear" to me that society must (1) force parents to entrust the education of young, impression- able children to homosexuals, (2) force employers to foist homosex- uals on others who work for them, or (3) force homeowners and lan- dlords to invite homosexuals into the neighborhoods in which they own property. Such is the effect of ordinances like that in Dade County: they severely circum- scribe freedom of association for those of us who find flaunted homosexuality as revolting as ex- hibitionism, as unnatural as pros- titution, and as clear a token of emotional impairment as sado- masochism. I am willing to circumscribe freedom of association to protect the job-seeker or tenant from be- ing rejected because of race, sex, national origin, age (sometimes), and other accidents of birth. And I agree that society should not permit such rejection because of religious persuasions: society thus protects a cultural and philo- sophical diversity essential to freedom and far more valuable than the freedom of association thereby circumscribed. But I am not willing to further circum- scribe this freedom to protect homosexuality: such is not the type of "cultural diversity" a healthy society should foster. Homosexuality is perversion, Mark, though I have no doubt that individual homosexuals have many good qualities (as do indi- vidual prostitutes, exhibitionists, sado-masochists, rapists, and murderers). The natural con- summation of love between members of the same sex is brotherhood, sisterhood, or filial devotion, not a senseless parody of procreation. Sexual inter- course is not even the "natural" consummation of love between some men and some women: it is not the "natural" consummation of my father's love for my sister or of my love for her. Look care- fully at God's word, Mark: He condemns homosexuality in no uncertain terms. And look care- fully at God's handiwork in nature: it bears witness to that condemnation. It is true that we have created for ourselves an imperfect world in which there are distorted, warped, or (to use my stronger language) perverted appetites and passions in all of us. A Chris- tian must realize this, and (as President Carter has so simply put it) see that before God he has little more to say for himself than the rapist or murderer. I would never turn away from a person struggling to overcome homosex- uality as I am struggling to over- come arrogance and insen- sitivity. But I am commanded to turn away from those who still the voice of conscience and WHOM EAR~E You, RED AM~IR, toW 1HT WT AE NE-ED YOU ? To The Daily: j In an effort to save money, the University removed paper tow els from all the student bath- rooms. I would like to express my disapproval of this policy. Paper towels are an essential asset to the bathrooms. Paper towels are important not only for health rea- sons but also they are a neces- sary convenience. Have you ever washed your hands and found that there were no paper towels to dry your hands with. It is ag- gravating and the end result is that one leaves the bathroom with wet pant legs. When the University discon- tinued paper towels they should have given the students an alter- native other than their nants The