Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 I Grass roots entangle nuke Friday, September 17, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ford's sickening speech PRESIDENT G E R A L D FORD'S speech Wednesday night in Cris- ler Arena was typical of what the ma- jor presidential candiates have been doing during this campaign year: clearly identifying the issues, but failing miserably in proposing con- crete and progressive solutions. Ford's image is that close to a big corpora- tion's chairman of the board: stick to a, well-proven formula, exercise moderation, sacrifice creativity for stability and take action only in self interest. It isn't really that the Presi- dent is dishonest - in fact he is pro- bably a decent sort, a person that will stand up for what he believes - but that is not a reason in itself to lead the most powerful nation in the world. Ford spoke of all the things that appeal to the common citizen: infla- tion, crime and unemployment. He spoke vaguely of what had to be done on the gut level to combat those evils and offered no suggestions for curing the underlying causes for such Amer- ican maladies. Perhaps this is over- analyzing, however, for what he said amidst the Rah! Rah! atmosphere of the spectacle amounts only to that familiar hot air. We know right now for a fact that the only national goal Gerald Ford is certainly interested in is that of getting elected to the presidency for the first time in his life. His chatter Editorial Staff Rob Meachum......... . ........... Bill Turque Co-Editors-in-Chief Jeff Ristine ....... . ......... .. Managing Editor rlm eebl .................aEecutive Nttor Stephen Hersh................ Magazine Editor Rob Meachum...............Editorial Director Lois Josimovich......... ........ Arts Editor STAFF WRITERS: Susan Ades, Dana Bauman, Michael Beckman, Dana Bauman, James Burns, Jodi Dimick, Elaine Fletcher, Mark Friedlander, Tom Godell, Kurt Harju, Charlotte Heeg, Rich- ard James, Tom Kettler, Chris Kochmha nski Stephen Kursman, Jay Levin, Ann Marie Lip- inski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Ter Maneau, Maureen Nolan, Mike Norton, Jon Pansius, Kim Potter, Cathy Reutter, Ann Marie Schiavi, Karen Schulkins, Jeff Selbst, Rock Sobel, Tom Stevens, Steve Stoic, Cathi Suyak, Jim Tobin, Jim Valk, Margaret Yao, Andrew Zerman. Sports Staff Bill Stieg .......................... Sports Editor Rich Lerner..........Executive Sports Editor Andy Glazer......... ,. Managing Sports Editor Rick Bonino..........Associate Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Tom Cameron, Enid Goldman, Kathy Henneghan, Scott Lewis, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, John Niemeyer, Mark Whitney. STAFF WRITERS: Leslie Brown, Paul Campbell. Marybeth Dillon, Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt, Jeff Frank, Cindy Gatziolis, Don Mac- Lachlan, Rich Ovshinsky, Jim Powers, Pat Rode, John Schwartz. Business Staff Beth Friedman .... . .......... Business Manager Deborah Dreyfuss......Operations Manager Kathleen Mulhern........Advertising Manager David Harlan.................Finance Manager Dan Blugerman................Sales Manager Pete Peterson .......... Advertising Coordinator Cassie St. Clair...........Circulation Manager Beth Stratford.......Circulation Director Photography Staff PAULINE LUBENS...........Chief Photographer SCOTT ECCKER ............ Staff Photographer ALAN BILINSKY............Staff Photographer By HARVEY WASSERMAN Second of a Four-Part Series TfONY SANTASUCCI is a ma- chinist. He moved from Boston to Seabrook, New Hamp- shire five years ago. At 62 he is still working, but he's defi- nitely looking forward to retire- ment. Last year Tony stepped in a hole on his property and sprain- ed his ankle. He lost a year's work, and never got a penny from the Public Services Com- pany (PSC) of New Hampshire, which drilled the hole. He now calls the PSC a "bunch of damn liars," and has vowed to never sell them his land, which the company wants to take for a twin 2300-megawatt, $1.6 billion nuclear power plant. Tony is hardly unique in this town. A tight community . of 5,700, Seabrook is blessed with magnificent marshland and an active fishing and clamming business. It is just over the border from Salisbury, Massa- chusetts, and it boasts many families who can trace back their ancestry in Seabrook for enght generations. UNDOUBTEDLY the PSC thought it would have an easy time when it announced plans for a nuclear plant in Seabrook. With promises of jobs, tax bene- fits, and a giant influx of busi- ness, the PSC figured to swamp the small-town folk with a fi- nancial offer they couldn't re- fuse. But they failed to account for a few things. For one, Sea- brookers are fiercely independ- ent, and not particularly trust- ful of big corporations. The PSC is one of the biggest in New Hampshire, supplying the state with 90% of its electrici- ty. Furthermore, many Seabrook- ers still make their living from the sea. They found the fact that the PSC wants to dump 1 billion .gallons of 100* water daily into the Atlantic a bit hard to take. In addition, the locals were more than a little wary about the possible effects of radiation. As a result, the town voted against the plant in March, 1976, by a margin of 762 to 648. BUT THE STATEHOUSE was- n't listening. Governor Meldrim Thomson, an ardent promoter of the plant, said the defeat came due to "outsiders," and ordered the PSC to proceed as planned. Thomson was satisfied to see construction begin this summer. But it wasn't all as smooth as that. Last January 4, Ron Rieck, a 22-year-old apple pick- er from Weare, New Hampshire, staged a one-man occupation by climbing the 175-foot PSC weath- er tower at the site. He took two sheets of plywood, a sleep- ing bag and some food, and lasted 36 hours up there be- fore the cold forced him down. When he returned to earth, he found Seabrook police chief Louis Promise waiting for him with a thermos of hot tea. On August 1, Rieck joined 17 other New Hampshirites to stage a more pedestrian occu- pation of the site. Marching down a mile of abandoned Bos- ton & Maine railroad track, the occupiers carried with them pine and maple saplings, plus baby corn and sunflower plants. They were accompanied by 40 representatives of the media, and they weredmet by the Sea- brook police department, and officials of the PSC. The PSC ordered the 18 to leave, but they began gardening instead. The Seabrook police were then ordered to make ar- rests, and the 18 sat down and President Ford on "the issues" in light of that fact becomes both secondary and super- ficial. A CHEAP SHOT, Mr. Ford, coming to your alma mater - glowing as a finely sharpened Madison Avenue ad person does at having realized that you can sell manure as gold by word- ing the copy properly. Using an aca- demic institution as a blatant po- litical springboard for your political aspirations was highly out of or- der. And certain University personali- ties using the spectacle for a political whoopla speech, i.e. radio announc- er Bob Ufer exclaiming "Marvin Esch, the next senator from the state of Michigan" and presenting Ford with a warmup jacket with the best wishes "from the great Michigan family," was equally out of order. But, and we can be proud of this, it didn't entirely go over in Ann Arbor town; unfortunately, it was accept- ed a bit more freely than it should have been. He also talked about the realiza- tion of the American dream and the duty of the United States to be the leader of the free world, as epitomized by Ford when he spoke of Henry Kis- singer sticking our fingers into south- ern Africa when perhaps they don't belong there. He spoke of "earning trust" as opposed to asking for it like Jimmy Carter does, but he ne- glected the fact that when it comes down to basics, he's just as untrust- worthy as the Democratic candidate. Untrustworthy through pure ambig- uity, and that's enough. TODAY'S STAFF: News: George Lobsenz, Jeff Ristine, Tim Schick, Karen Schulkns, Bill Turque. EDIT PAGE: Rob Meachum, Jon Pon- sius, Tom Stevens. ARTS PAGE: Lois Josimovich. PHOTO TECHNICIAN: Allen Bilinski.' Tanzania big By ROGER MANN Pacific News Service C. rI- 4 t HERE IN THE central high- lands of Tanzania, a coun- try where self-reliance is the national theme and democratic socialism the goal, plans are being laid to build what could be Africa's - if not the world's - most innovative city. If all goes according to plan, Tanzania by 1990 will sport a true "people's capital" - a city of 350,000 where small com- munities of 7,000 lie tucked amidst neighborhood parks, farmlands and wildlife reserves; where each family, living among a small cluster of 10 homes, has its own garden plot; and where an extensive public bus system shuttle people wherever they cannot go by foot or bi- cycle. The city, called Dodoma, lies in a temperate climate almost a mile above sea level. Unlike the hot and muggy current cap- ital of Dar es Salaam - a teem- ing old Arab port far removed from Tanzania's largely rural population - Dodoma will be built with both rural African lifestyles and Tanzania's "peo- ple's democracy" in mind. NO LONGER will villagers and local political leaders face a foreign maze of streets, con- fusing bus routes and fast-paced urban sprawl when they visit their capital. Even President Julius Nyerere and other government officials spend a month or more each fly Our year in their home districts cul- tivating their plots with hoes and draught animals. And in the most interesting experiment of all, Tanzanians are moving into cooperative self-help vil- lages known as "ujamaa," in- tended to be the backbone of this poor agricultural nation's socialist program. Clement George Kahama, the director of the Capital Develop- ment Authority, the agency building Dodoma, says the basic principle of his master plan is complete integration of man- made structures with the land on which they stand. "Agricul- ture will always be an integral part of the capital's life," he promises. Through some government of- fices have already moved to Dodoma, the real building has yet to begin. The main govern- ment buildings - to be visible from almost every part of the city-will be situated on a slop- ing ridge that gives a command- ing view of the city and the s'irrounding ,countryside. BESIDES THE President's of- fice and the headquarters of TANU (Tanganyika African Na- tional Union), Tanzania's ruling and democratically run party, the National Assembly will rise above the residential and com- mercial areas below. Other gov- ernment offices, a university campus, a convention hall and parks will round out the city center. To keep to the theme of a human-centered capital, the city center won't have towering buildings or mammoth express- ways. Most Tanzanians can nev- er hope to own a car or sleep in a Hilton hotel. Public housing will be no' more than three stories high. "High rise residential develop- ment," Mr. Kahama explains, "apart from being totally un- necessary in this case and so- ciologically unsound for families with children, is inconsistent with the aim of enabling every- one to be near the land to work it." The plan to build houses in clusters of 10 each will keep the city life close to the coun- try's village traditions, narrow- allowed themselves to be drag- ged through 200 yards of mud and underbrush to the police vehicles. rUHREE WEEKS LATER, the 18 became 180. On August 22, ten times the original num- ber marched to the site of the nuclear plant, again carrying pine and maple saplings, plus various vegetable seedlings. This time they were met by 100 state police, the Seabrook po- lice, several dozen sheriffs, and the PSC. After some confusion, the occupiers were allowed onto the site for orderly arrests. It was all strictly non-violent. The Clamshell Alliance, which or- ganized the demonstration, bar- red anyone from participating who had not been trained in the practice of Gandhian pas- sive resistance. Fortunately, the state police had enganged in similar train- ing, and the day's proceedings1 were remarkably calm and peaceful. Many of the state po- lice are opposed to the plant and told the demonstrators (as they were dragging them away) that they were glad the occu- pation had happened. But things weren't all that1 simple. Two days before the1 d e m o n stration, Rockingham County Superior Court Judge1 Maurice Bois handed down a blanket injunction against the occupation. The day after the arrests, 10 occupiers were sepa- rated from the rest and charged with violating the injunction. The 10 were the only repeaters from the August 1 demonstra- tion, and were the only ones named in the injunction arrest- ed on August 22. During their bail hearing, . Judge Bois announced sevenf times that he considered the1 10 to be guilty as charged. But he refused to allow them a jury opia' ing the gap between urban and rural lifestyles. Mr. Kahama hopes the clusters will encour- age good neighborliness, provid- ing intimate support and assist- ance to those who are new to urban life. "THE PEOPLES OF Africa have traditionally done many domestic village tasks together in a communal fashion and the master plan intends to promote this in the new city through the self-help approach," Mr. Kaha- ma says. He envisions commun- al activities like building class- rooms, forming adult literacy classes or simply pounding corn, a prerequisite for preparing the staple food, "ugali." The housing clusters will be grouped into neighborhoods of about 7,000 people, each with its own elementary school, park and community center. Four neighborhoods will be grouped in a residential com- munity of 25,000 to 30,000 peo- ple. Twelve such communities, all with small scale industries, are on the drawing boards Heavy industry will be con- centrated in the northwest cor- ner of the city, so the prevail- ing southern winds will blow any pollutants away. Transportation, including bicy- cling and walking, is a major consideration in Dodoma's mas- ter plan. Children will be no more than a few minutes walk from their school - and they will never have to cross a road to get there. THOSE WORKERS unable to walk to work will go by bus along a route closed to other vehicles and pedestrians, link- ing the center of each commu- nity with government buildings and commercial areas. No one will live more than 10 minutes from a bus stop. Only time will tell whether Tanzania's dream will come true. But if it does, Dodoma will likely become - on a con- tinent of ex-colonial capitals, each with its contrasting sky- scrapers and squatterycom- pounds - the model city. Roger Mann is a PNS cor- respondent specializing in Afri- can affairs. Outof sight tuition More educational bang for students By JON PANSIUS IN WHAT HAS now become time-honored tradition, the University has raised our tuition again. As if that is not enough, we now have to pay a new Health Service fee. To add to the insult, services and classes have been cut. After stating the obvious, you may expect me to lay into the Regents or some such group for exploiting the stu- dents, etc., as so many others have done, but that approach is a bit assinine, as most childish outbursts are. A search for realistic alternative policies free from overblown cure- alls makes more sense. The University can do little about cuts in state aid ex- cept beg and cajole, with unpredictable results, from our fickle state legislature. The main avenue of attack should be in cutting costs, as the University has made some feeble attempts towards. Unfortunately, administrators seem to have confused classes with costs (though classes do cost money), since their economization programs consist mainly of chopping out some of those interesting, rewarding, high- level courses that are the real reason for the standard low- level ones. Administrators should instead try to cut the costs of teaching and reduce the large overhead that has accumu- lated through the fat years. This ranges from curing inept management to stretching out the teaching staff. The Uni- versity should review programs not involving teaching or housing students to cut out non-essential elements. For instance, there is no reason why the groundskeepers need to relay the concrete walks in front of the Undergradu- ate Library umpteen times to get the alignment right (or whatever); besides wasting time and money, it is a damn nuisance. In another case, South Quad got new doors and front walks, it seems, just for fun. A macabre philosophy of make-work apparently pervades many University depart- ments. Administrators with more knowledge about particulars than myself can better suggest ways to get more education out of our dollars. Even with these measures, however, tuition may still have to increase with inflation. Providing more student jobs can soften the blow, but instead of trying to make work, the University should attempt to replace high-paying jobs filled by non-students with part-time stu- dent employment with reasonable pay. THIS PROCESS WILL be difficult. Many unions that represent University employes still regard the University as an institution of employment rather than an institution of learning, forgetting that it exists primarily for the bene- fit of students. Understandably, nobody can afford to lose his or her job for long; however, providing public jobs is a matter for the state government instead of the University. Making use of the long line of students looking for employ- ment would better the interests of the University's true con- stituency, the students. Hopefully, these humble suggestions will filter through the cerebral membranes and into the brains of some of our eminent decision makers, resulting in some sort of action to get more education from the tuition dollar. It would be tragic for our tradition of excellent yet accessible education to fall because of rampant course-cutting or sky-rocketing tuition. Jon Pansius is a Daily staff member. trial and he refused also to dis- qualify himself, announcing "I am not prejudiced in this case." Thus the judge who handed down the injunction also took the opportunity to try and sen- tence them. DURING THE COURSE of the trial he personally insulted the defendents, calling them by wrong names and refusing to call one woman "Ms." as re- quested. Finally, after five days, he surprised no one by finding them guilty and sentencing them to three months in prison. Among others, the 10 include two college students, a welder, a farmer, two shipyard work- ers, a shoe stitcher and a 45- year-old mother of six who is also a former town official in Keene, New Hampshire. Bois has also promised to serve the rest of the 180 with contempt citations. In addition, he threw an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer named Robert Gross into prison along with the 10. Gross had served as a legal go-between at the demonstration site, but did not occupy. Gross has also been conducting a campaign to re- form the Rockingham County prisons, and made a few ene- mies in the legal machinery. Bois apparently decided to take the opportunity to get Gross out of the way, and is also making motions towards arresting two other lawyers who were at the site. As of now the Seabrook defendants are in prison, as Bois denied their motion to get free on bail pending appeal. MEANWHILE, the Clamshell Alliance is continuing with plans for another occupation of the plant site on October 23. These are the first mass civil dis- plant obedience demonstrations in de- fense of the environment. As such, they mark a significant development in the mid-seven- ties American political scene. The issues of the environment are now being accepted as life and death issues. The develop- ment of the movement is very similar to that of the Vietnam campaign in the late sixties, with the exception that, as at Seabrook, the grass roots sup- port is initially much stronger. The people of Seabrook have been further alienated from the project by the fact that jobs promised by the PSC project, and now noise disruption from the site has become a wide- spread nuisance. The fact that more than 200 arrests have now taken place at a nuclear plant site in one of the most conservative states in the union is of no means significant. The anti-nuclear movement at Seabrook has been' thrown slightly off-balance by Bois' injunction, but seems to have recovered in remarkable time. Very few have illusions that the movement to stop nu- clear power will be fast or easy. Indeed, those committed to it are gearing up for a long strug- gle with many sacrifices. "The environment must be protect- ed." is the watchword of the movement. And as the Seabrook defen- dants told Judge Bois before they were carted off to prison. "We are only the first of hun- dreds of thousands who will go to prison in the necessary strug- gle against nuclear power. We are proud of the opportunity." Harvey Wasserman was edi- torial director of the Daily in 1966-7 and is the author of Harvey Wasserman's History of the United States. REC ,c°RF iN FO 'ALL 0 DUrhe oo p p ooW o 0 E O I-IAT STUo ' t. AGAIUST SS j S Rfl HEi tO, SON ... I_ WAN'fED 'f4 G E1 T11 , OPI N1 O 14 or - . A 'tY 1c ILoLLV s AUNT .SNAPMW G, 4t'1W STRA Ti4N , r lirrrrrrfi ~ ,. Y Let student housing To The Daily: WE WOULD LIKE to help clarify the distpute noted in your September 11, 1976 arti- cle, regarding the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly Housing Law Re- ters to vey only accounts for student non-university housing. It is our experience that stu- dent housing is usually in worse condition than that of the gen- eral community. This is largely due to students often needing to live within walking distance the I Thank you for your coverage, and we hope this helps to clari- fy the matter. Richard Dutka, Michigan Student Assembly Housing Law Reform Project September 13, 1976 I lly the Campus Management rent strike, also TU organized, be- gan in February of 1975 - 8 months before the Trony strike. The photos, both on page 3 and on page 1 of section 1 part B are from the Campus Management strike. Although