iIe SfrJCi$an Dait Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Su ppo to L-ai rt class boycott, go Thursday, October 7, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan U.S. tantrum on Cambodia BECAUSE OF brilliant military "intelligence" or a definite lack thereof, some 41 American troops were needlessly killed as they took part in the rescue of the merchant ship Mayaguez from the waters off Cambodia two summers ago. Presi- dent Ford gave the order for the mission, and an official report by Photography Staff Pauline Lubens..............Chief Photographer Scott Eccker...............Staff Photographer Alan Bilinsky..............Staff Photographer Editorial Staff Rob Meachum........... ... Bill Turque Co-Editors-in-Chief Jeff Ristilne................. Managing Editor Tim Schick ................... Executive Editor Stephen Hersh........Magazine Editor Rob Meachum...............Editorial Director Lois Josimovich.................Arts Editor STAFF WRITERS: Susan Ades, Susan Barry, Dana Baumann, Michael Beckman, Philip Bo- kovoy, Jodi Dinick, Chris Dyhdale, Elaine Fletcher, Larry Friske, Debra Gale, Tom Go- dell, Eric Gressman, Kurt Harjm, Char Heeg. James Hynes, Michael Jones, Lani Jordan, Lois Josimovich, Joanne Kaufman, David Keeps, Steve Kursman, Jay Levin, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Stu CcConnell, Jennifer Miller, Michael Norton, Jon' Pansius, Ken Parsigian, Karen Paul, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Don Rose, Lucy Saunders, Annemarie Schiavi, Kar- en Schulkins, Jeffrey Selbst, Jim Shahin, Rick Sable, Toni Stevens, Jim Stimson, David :Strauss, Mike Taylor, Jim Tobin, Loran Walker, Laurie Young, Barbara Zahs. Sports Staff Bill Stleg........................ Sports Editor Rich Lerner...........ExecutiveSports 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 Mulher ... Assistant Adv. Coordinator Don Simpson............. Display Manager David Harlon........Finance Manager Dan Blugerma................. Sales Manager Pete Petierson ......... Advertising Coordinator Cassie St. Clair............ Circulation Manager Beth Stratford...........Circulation Director the House International Political and Military Affairs Subcommittee called the performance of U.S. forces in the effort "inspiring." Death and in- spiration seem to go together like bedmates in the business of defense, or offense. We now know that the attack was or the most part totally unnec- essary because the Cambodians plan- ned to release the ship and its crew on their own accord. Even without such knowledge, we should have just played it cool and made a rational determination of the situation in- stead of rushing in like a baby who just had hs lollipop confiscated. Those who participated in the res- cue raid were no doubt compelled to do their duties. They are, and were, highly conditioned fighters: Marines, tough and ready for any orders that come down the pike. They also had little to say in the matter, for the decisions are always made by level-headed leaders close to the action in their oak-paneled offices, playing Battleship and mak- ing sacrifices of human beings; it's only names and numbers to them. War is a dirty business, but some- times an inevitable consequence in dealings between nations. The sad fact is that this incident appears to have been a case where a sup- posed "great" power bullied Cambo- dia because it blew out "the light at the end of the tunnel." Let us hope that in this election year the people of this country will make those responsible for this child- ish tantrum account for their actions and then boot them out of office. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Tim Schick, Jeff Ristine, Ken Parsigian, Lani Jordan, Eileen Daley, Deb Lacusts Editorial Page: Rob Meachum, Tom Stevens, Keith Richburg, Mark Wagner, Scotty Reston Arts Page: Lois Josimovich, Kurt Harju Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens 0 By CALVIN LUKER The Michigan Students Associated for Lower Tuition (SALT) and the Michi- gan Higher Education Student Associa- tion (MHESA) are co-sponsoring a statewide one day class boycott with an afternoon rally in Lansing. The Michigan Student Assembly Steering Committee, at its meeting of Tuesday night, voted to endorse the statewide action. MSA will participate as much as possible in making that action a success. Let me explain what is plan- ned and how the students at the Uni- versity fit into the plan. As most of you know by now, the tuition costs at the University have been soaring for several years. The reasons for this are many and var- ied. There is one reason for it which the University shares with all the other state supported two- and four-year in- stitutions. That is, that in the last five years the State of Michigan has gone from being the 7th highest state in the nation in terms of returning dol- lars received through taxes back to the people in the form of grants to ising 0. higher education, to being number 34 in the nation. The Michigan Legisla- ture has not followed through on fund- ing higher education institutions ade- quately enough to allow access to stu- dents from all economic classes. Be- cause of the Legislature's unwillingness to support higher education, higher edu- cation is being priced out of reach of the common student. This cannot be allowed to continue. SALT and MHESA have planned to protest this calloused attitude of the Legislature and to pub- licize the tuition information they have uncovered over the past few months. Each state supported institution of higher education student government is being asked to persuade its stu- dents to not attend classes this com- ing Wednesday, October 15th, 1976. In addition they are asking that as many people as possible show up at the Cap- ital Building in Lansing at 1:00 p.m. on Wednesday to talk to legislators about the funding problem. There will be a news conference tomorrow to an- nounce the Wednesday action. After much discussion, the MSA Steer- ing Committee decided much for the class bo to direct its efforts tow versity students to L to accomplish that ob need volunteers to dri Lansing, leaving Annt a.m. and returning in noon. There are two reas support the statewide 1) The State Legislatu pie of Michigan, need we cannot fulfill their ment of having to ea obtain a good job with Legislative support. T understand that then education cannot be as students, need to ourselves as stand upt tent and capable of pa processes which gover In the event you've here is an examplec we're faced with. As Michigan. has fallen fro to 34th place in fundin n W ednesday d not to work so tion. They legitimize their budget-cut- ycott, but rather ting actions by stating that more fi- iard getting Uni- nancial aid is available now than was ansing. In order in the past. This is not true. Here at bjective we will Michigan the financial aid fcnds avail- ive to and from able are going to go down, because Arbor around 10 the Administration is going to use part the late after- of those funds to cover an expected faculty pay raise. ons we need to It is my hope that you will take tuition action: a few hours off next Wednesday to re, and the peo- go with us to Lansing. If you can d to know that drive or are interested in going along, social require- please call MSA at 763-3241, between irn a degree to 8-4:30, Monday through Friday. If you out having more aren't able to spare the afternoon, take he State has to a few minutes and drop a line to your needs of higher representative, speaking out about the ignored. 2) We, funding situation. publicly assert I hope the day proves to be reward- citizens, compe- ing, and that the lines to more student rticipating in the input can be opened. Please help if you n our lives. can. This is your issue, too. Watch The read this far, Daily for the assembly time and place. of the problem stated above, mn seventh place g higher educa- Calvin Lubker is president Michigan Student Assembly LSA senior. of the and an Health Service Handbook By SYLVIA HACKER and NANCY PALCHIK Question: I'm really not kid- ding but whenever I call home about being sick, my mother seriously suggests chicken soup. Is there any truth in this or is it one of those old wive's tales? Answer: For years people have been joking about the cur- ative power of chicken soup and some doctors have even said they would consider giving it by injection but were afraid that the noodles would get stuck in the veins. At any rate, at a 5 day conference of the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics last year at Michigan State Univer- sity, two scientists stated that they believe that the positive ef- fects of chicken soup and other fat derivatives have been ignor- ed too long. They detailed their tests on the germ - killing quali- ties of various substances ob- tained from laboratories all ov- er the world, finding that the derivatives with the strongest anti-bacterial action were those middle - sized chains of fatty acid derivatives. One of the best fighters against bacteria was lauric acid found in cocoa- nut oil and, as a matter of fact, visitors to various islands where the diet was high in cocoanut oil have remarked about certain disease resistance among the natives. The earliest work on the germ - killing qualities of fatty substances was done in 1895 but further investigation lost out to the wonder drugs. Thus, the practice of giving chicken soup for a cold may be more than a common folk remedy. Although colds are caused by viruses, many of the complications that set in are bacterial in origin. Question: Is it safe to have sexual intervourse while a wo- man is menstruating? Answer: The safety of sexual intercourse during menstruation seems to be of concern to a great many people. This may possibly be due to a fallacious notion that menstruation in some way rids a woman's body of "bad blood" and consequent- ly, one should try to minimize contact with menstrual flow. In actuality, menstruation is not a cleansing process in the above sense. It is the process whereby the inner lining of the uterus (endometrium), which develops during each menstrual cycle in anticipation of the im- plantation of a fertilized egg, is shed when implantation fails to occur. Another possible reason for the concern about sex dur- ing menstruation may be relat- ed to the notion that the geni- tals are in some way "dirty" and hence blood in contact with this area is also "unclean". In fact, bacteriologically speak- ing, the mouth is far "dirtier" than the vagina, clitoris or penis. Although the possibility of introducing an infection dur- ing menstruation (as the dia- meter of the cervix is some- what greater at this time) may exist in women who have a his- tory of tubal inflammation, in most women this is unlikely (unless, of course, the male partner has an active infection himself, in which case the wo- man might be in risk of de- veloping an infection regardless of whether or not she were menstruating). So in response to your ques- tion, sexual intercourse during menstruation is usually safe. In fact, some women prefer it be- cause their concerns about pregnancy are greatly reduced, and others find that they are most sexually responsive at this time. But for a large number of men and women, menstrua- tion neither augments nor di- minishes their sexual pleasure. They simply proceed as usual when they experience sexual desire, anticipating realistic inconveniences, such as the staining of sheets, by such stra- tegies as the use of a towel or diaphragm. CANINES GOT IT MADE: You' e come a long way Contact your reps Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem.), 253 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep.), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Rep. Marvin Esch (Rep.), 2353 Rayburn Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Gilbert Bursley (Rep.), Senate, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, MI 48933 Rep. Perry Bullard (Dem.), House of Representatives, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, MI 48933. . ". . " riiP~~~~v:": 'e:':%JC~~~~h : ... t:;}'"""......"" ."}?"+p-,;:.:,"; D{.'""},.Y ". " "."i."'.. ;;";.':".-.,. By STEPHEN KURSMAN DOGS GOT IT MADE. In earlier times, they received the short end of the stick be- cause for the most part they were utilities, but not anymore. Today's American pet dog en- joys a standard of living rivaled by millions of people around the world. Dogs receive food, water and shelter-all for free. Even their medical expenses are paid for by others. Every- thing is peachy provided the animal has no qualms about domestication. Life was not so easy for its ancestors. M a n y American sheepherders of the nineteenth century hailed from a canine background. They roamed the prairies just east of the Rock- ies and kept watch for anything that might enjoy eating sheep. When they were old and un- able to keep an occasional coy- ote from the flock, these poor veterans of the prairie were frequently shot. They could no longer earn their keep and the struggling frontiersman of the West could not afford to pro- vide food for a once-worker- now-retiree. Canine social se- curity was strictly to be for future generations. But even these prairie work- dogs had it better than their forefathers and foremnothers in Europe. They were incapable of feeling any pleasure or pain, according to the followers of Descartes. And the followers of Descartes were a numerous lot. These Cartesians declared ani- mats to be void of soul and therefore void of feeling. An animal shrieking from a lost limb or tail was no dif- ferent than the groan from a breaking tree branch. These "wise folks" assured all that animal shrieks and groans were strictly reflex actions. Unfortu- nately, much of Europe be- lieved. Which view of animals is the morally correct one? Is it prop- er to have a pet, or should dogs 'run free'? Perhaps we should'ask the animals. But even if they understand and decide to reply, their words will be lost on us because we don't know their language. For the time being, at least, multi- tides of dogs and cats must remain resigned to pet status. FOR THE SAKE of argument, let's grant that animals enjoy being pets. What about the in- sect world? There are millions of tiny creatures moving about in the air and the grass out- side most any window. Do they like us? Every week or so they desperately scamper for safety as we push huge, mechanized grass cutters across their ter- rain. When any of these beings be- comes adventurous enough to explore the indoors it runs the risk of extermination. Why just yesterday I killed five flies in three minutes. Three doses of 'Off' and they were on their way to insect heaven. Was it morally wrong to 'Off' them to death? I don't know. Of 1?over course they had no business bathing in my bowl of break- fast cereal and milk. That was rather immoral of them. I wonder if flies have any morals in the first place? Were they aware that I don't have wings like they do? SOMEWHERE in the universe there must be a Planet of the Apes, or a Planet of the Spi- ders or a Planet of the some- thing-or-others. Maybe there is a planet where tall trees are abundant. Giraffes would pre- dominate there. Just where humans would fit in such a world is hard to say. To survive in that kind of a world we would probably have to become expert tree-climbers. All of which brings us back to the question of a dog's life. Is it worthwhile? Is is justifiable? ' I To The Daily: ON TUESDAY evening ber 5, we witnessed wha now be the beginning of t for the Graduate Emp Organization of the Uni of Michigan. We saw a leadership, fearful of the istration, unsure of the c ment of the membershi dedicated to the perpetua oligarchical control. The union is demandin tually the "demands" more than polite reque 6.5% pay increase from t versity. The clericals at t j versity are currently re "merit" pay increases. T versity has instructed it ous units that these inc should average 7%. Al the clericals have dec their union, and are supp at the "mercy" of the L sity administration, theyg raises averaging 7% whi GEO requests a 6.5% in Do graduate student ass need this kind of a union Meanwhile, the leaders the GEO wants the Uni to pay "Union officials" full-time-equivalents -i teach, but to "run" the Do we need leadership lik Letters GEO of class size, but clearly this support was not based on con- cern for students or quality of instruction. For example, one Octo- speaker indicated that reduction at may of class size would enable him the end to spend less than the 25 hours loyee's he is now spending on teaching iversity duties per week. Not a thought union about increasing the individual admin- attention that students might re- ommit- ceive. At the end of the dis- p, and cussion on class size, one per- ation of son added as an afterthought that we should not forget that ng (ac- students might gain from a re- are no duction of class size. Clearly, sts) a concern for instruction is the he Uni- last thing on the union's mind. he Uni- Do students need such a union? ceiving 'THEUNION4 isrequesting that he Uni- students have a letter from the s vari- GEO mailed to their parents or creases guardians asking them for sup- Ithough port. The major bases of this ertified request, as stated in the letter, posedly are union demands for decreas- Univer- ed class size and the introduc- get pay tion of teacher training for ile the GSTA's. Tuesday evening the crease. membershipevoted to "move" istants on the demand for teacher train- n? ing. It was pointed out to the ship of leadership that the letter no versity longer reflected the union's po- "four sition and should be modified, not to but the request was refused by union. the leadership. Thus, the union e this? will now intentionally deceive f;t narents in an attemnt to gain fto the graduate student participation in undergraduate curriculum de- velopment and innovation. De- spite this, the leadership has refused to alter the petitions, thus intentionally attempting to daceive students, faculty, and GSA's. Do students, faculty, or GSA's need such a union? CLEARLY GSA's, students, parents, guardians, and the fac- ulty do NOT need such a un- ion. They should not want such a union. It is not in our in- terests to support such a un- ion. Who, then, does need such a union? It is tempting to con- clude that the University does, but it does not, for the Uni- versity includes all of the peo- ple associated with it. While the administration of the Univer- sity has clearly indicated through their refusel to bargain in good faith that they don't need such a union, they should reconsider. The union leadership has sold out the membership, and furthermore has now suc- ceeded in convincing the mem- bership that we are neither strong enough to strike nor strong enough to win our own regressive demands have ap- parently been successful. The word, then, to the admin- istration of the University is "stand fast." The leadership of tho itni isrnnvn ar tha th Daily and fight for a better University for students, GSA's, and, indeed, all members of the University community, then the next best outcome will have to be what is also the worst - decertifica- tion. Bernard M. O'Reilly TA, Dept. of Sociology University of Michigan October 6 record war To The Daily: A WAR RAGES in Ann Ar- bor: a record price war. For an indefinite period of time, Aura Sound and Discount Re- cords intend to sell $6.98 list price long playing albums for $3.77. I would like to urge U of M students not to patronize these establishments. In 1974, the typical $6.98 al- bum sold for $4.75 at the "non-. profit" store University Cellar. That was the lowest price in town, Discount Record's price was $5.50. Then along came Bonzo's Records. The "non- profit" price of $4.75 was under- cut $.76. Bonzo's list: $3.99. Other private business people entered the scene selling re- cords at Bonzo's price. Event- ually the Cellar and Discount Records reduced their prices if these shops are forced into extinction, you can be certain that record prices will rise; competition having been elimi- nated. All will not go well. So support small business, please. To the extent that it can, small business has supported you. Ted Trost October 6 scalping To The Daily: IT SHOULD BE obvious to all who attend Michigan foot- ball games that the practice of scalping tickets has escalated beyond all reasonable bounds. What once amounted to no more than students trying to sell friends tickets has now be- come, to a significant degree, an organized business reminis- cent of underworld operations. This deteriorating situation has been shockingly illustrated in the past two Saturdays by the incidents where groups have stolen tickets out of the hands of pedestrians on Hoover, in- citing an array of fistfights. I believe it is time for the University to take a serious look into this problem and be- 2" the consider changes in their ticket policy. At the least, the emnloyrnent of a few secur- itv giards alone Hoover might a>>' ,,