Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Saturday, February 28, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Preserve student court Sino-Soviet border tensions mount IT IS QUITE LIKELY that the ad- ministration will make a decision this week on the question of whether or not there is a legitimate court on this campus. But at the present time it is not even clear that the adminis- tration has the authority to make that decision. Earlier this month, the Michigan Sudent Assembly (MSA) recalled all ten justices of the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) at a series of special meetings. MSA claimed that the move was not political but rather an at- tempt to start off with a clean slate. This claim is hardly credible because MSA includes most of the former SGC members, in an expanded, restruc- tured body. MSA sees the situation as a fight for survival. It claims the recall of the CSJ justices was its only viable defense against a small group bent on disrupting student government. It doesn't want to destroy the court, but merely slow it dowry long enough to establish MSA. On the other hand LSA students Irving Freeman, David Schaper, and their a $ s o c i a t e s, whose lawsuits brought about the recall of the court, claim that they are trying to force the government to obey its own laws.' Purporting to d e f e n d the student body against MSA members allegedly cut from the same political cloth as Richard N i x o n and Indira Ghandi, they say they are fighting for student rights and for equal protection under the law. Their claims are dubious. IN THE MIDDLE is the court, which is supposed to be above politics. The justices feel that the court cannot be made an object of political conven- ience and still retain credibility or effectiveness. It is this position that seems the least suspect. While its intentions may not have been malicious, MSA's ac- tion was certainly unwise. A govern- ment can't wipe out a court and hand pick a set of replacements and then expect anyone to believe that the new court's subsequent decisions are impartial. By RUSSELL SPURR HONGKONG (PNS) - The renewed prospects for a U.S.- Sovietarms accord - under- lined by the ouster of anti-de- tente Defense Secretary James Schlesinger - have fueled Chi- nese worries that Soviet hands will be freer for a move against them. A look at how Soviet divisions are positioned on the border of China's northeast industrial heartland, Manchuria. tells why. Forty-five Soviet divisions - 90,000 men - are deployed in a wide arc from China's far west Sinkiang province to the. Pacific coast, with the bulk pois- ed just as they were in August 1945 when they took Japanese- held Manchuria in a ten-day blitzkrieg. Twenty divisions are on Man- churia's easternmost borders, ready to strike westward to- wards the key industrial city of Kirin. These divisions also shield Vladivostok, the Soviet Pacific naval base and com- mand headquarters for the So- viet Maritime provinces, and the airfield complex around Khabarovsk: both uncomfortably close to the Chinese frontier. ANOTHER 11 DIVISIONS are massed in the Trans Baikal Mil- itary District further to the west that overlaps into the Mon- golian Republic. Four more are stationed in this Soviet-al- lied republic. As in 1945, both are positioned to mount simul- taneous attacks against Man- churia's central plain - one moving eastward through the Khingan mountains, and the second striking southward from Khabarovsk towards Harbin. The rest of the Soviet divisions are grouped along the Sinkiang border with Soviet Central Asia where they could launch a strike against the Chinese nu- clear testing ground at Lop Nor. The Soviet ground forces are backed by 1,200 tactical air- craft. New airfield construction throughout Siberia now allows for rapid air reinforcement from European Russia. A quar- ter of the Soviet long range bomber force is also stationed there, along with Russian ICBMs targeted on Peking and military sites throughout north- east China. Finally. Soviet forces are equipped, and have been since 1969, with tactical nuclear weap- ons such as the formidable Frog 7 missile. Helicopters and full mechanization give the So- viets a mobility they did not possess in 1945. THE CHINESE have counter- deployed their forces in obvious anticipation that if the Soviets attack, they will follow the 1945 blitzkrieg strategy. China's main defense forces- 20 armies, with 800,000 men - are concentrated far from the borders, around its industrial .southeast and along the ap- proaches to Peking to the south- west. The frontier itself is guarded by token units which would be swiftly swept aside. Bigger but still nominal military forces are stationed in lightly populated central Manchuria. where units could be quickly cut off and destroyed by bet- ter - equipped Soviet troops. Along with guerrillas operating in the countryside, these forces would fight holding operations on the central plain before fall- ing back southwards towards Korea and the coast. In fact, these forces would play a key role in China's stra- tegy of bogging down the Soviet forces in protracted war. The 1945 Soviet blitzkrieg was predicated on -three factors - surprise, assurance of supplies to rapidly advancing units and absolute air control. The Chi- nese aim to check the Russians on all three grounds. MILITARY ANALISTS esti- mate any Soviet invasion de- ployment would require a mini- mum of three weeks. That alone eliminates the element of sur- prise. While terrain favors the So- viets as it did 30 years ago, the supply of food and fuel remains a chronic Soviet logistical bot- tleneck. With its central Man- churian forces, China is deter- mined to bog down the advanc- ing Soviet troops, and launch heavy counter-attacks with its powerful troop concentrations further south just as the Soviets become exhausted, equipment shows signs of wear, and supply lines are stretched to break- ing point. Now, too, China, with one of the largest air forces in the world, can seriously challenge the Soviets in the air. Unlike the Japanese in 1945, China has avoidedtcommitting its main fighter strength to forward air- fields. It also deploys a limited number of intermediate range missiles with nuclear warheads within target range of Soviet airfields. These problems have already prompted somevU.S. military experts to believe that the mo- ment for a successful Soviet attack has passed. In fact, the Soviet build-up along the border against China over the past two years has levelled off, and while some units continue a slow ex- pansion, most divisions remain between 60 to 70 per cent of combat strength. NONETHELESS, hostility and fear remain acute, as evidenced not only by the sharper verbal polemics but by the continuing military confrontation along the border - the most intense be- tween neighbors anywhere in the world. Russell Spurr is regional edi- tor of the Far Eastern Econom- ic Review. i Letters to The Daily Bernice Freeman and his friends are cor- rect in saying that the Court should not have been abolished, even though their motives for filing suit in the first place may have been self-serv- ing. The removal of a court, any court, for political reasons cannot be con- doned. If a court can be removed for political reasons, one can be installed for political reasons. And once that happens, there's not much point in having any court at all. Editorial Staff ROB MEACHUM BILL TURQUE Co-Editors-in-Chief JEFF RISTINE ................ Managing Editor TIM SCHICK .................. xecutive Editor STEPHEN HERSH . Editorial Director JEFF SORENSEN ................... Arts Editor CHERYL PILATE .............. Magazine Editor 'STAFF WRITERS: Susan Ades, Tom Allen, Glen Allerhand, Marc Basson, Dana Bauman, David Blomquist, James Burns, Kevin Counihan, Jodi Dimick, Mitch Dunitz, Elaine Fletcher, Phil Foley, Mark Friedlander, David Garfinkel, Tom Godell, Kurt Harju, Charlotte Heeg, Richard James, Lois Josimovich, Tom Kettler, Chris Kochmanski,,Jay Levin, Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lu- bens, Teri Maneau, Angelique Matney. Jim Nicoll, Maureen Nolan, Mike Norton, Ken Par- sigian, Kim Potter, Cathy Reutter, Anne Marie Schiavi, Karen Schulkins, Jeff Selbst, Rick Sobel, Tom Stevens, Steve Stojic, Cathi Suyak, Jim Tobin, Jim Valk, Margaret Yao, Andrew' Zerman, David Whiting, Michael Beck- man and Jon Pansius. sports Staff BRIAN DEMING Sports Editor MARCIA MERKER ......... .. Executive Editor LEBA HERTZ ... ... Managing Editor JEFF SCHILLER ............... Associate Editor CONTRIBUTING EDITORS: Al Hrapsky, Jeff Liebster, Ray O'Hara, Michael Wilson NIGHT EDITORS: Rick Bonino. Tom Cameron, Tom Duranceau, Andy Glazer, Kathy Henne- ghan, Ed Lange, Rich Lerner, Scott Lewis, Bill Stieg ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Enid Goldman, Marcia Katz, John Niemeyer, Dave Wihak DESK ASSISTANTS: Paul Campbell, Marybeth Dillon, Larry Engle, Aaron Gerstman, Jerome Gilbert, Andy Lebet, Rick Maddock, Bob Miller, Joyce Moy, Patrick Rode, Arthur Wightman CDU der to defeat Japan - Japan To The Daily: was already beaten - but in order to terrorize the Soviet Ron Jones' second attempt to Union and the independence' demolish CDU through the pow- movements active around the er of his pen (letter to THE world. The Truman / Acheson DAILY, February 18, 1976) falls attempt to "police the world" as flat as his first attempt. The led inevitably to their futile and "Unity" Caucus is sorely in criminal war in Korea; just as need of a new knight-errant, the same policy a dozen years preferably one who is a bit less later led to the equally futile wordy and tilts at issues rath- and criminal Kennedy / John- er than windmills, son war in Indochina. It was the Truman government which In his one attempt to come to conducted the Smith Act trials grips with an issue, Jones and initiated the judicial mur- writes: "As a social psycho- der of the Rosenburgs. Compar- logical phenomenon, McCarthy- ed with this record of "ration- ism is an expression of an in- al" liberals, the "excesses" of secure and paranoid view of the "paranoid" Joe McCarthy were world in which one must'isolate mild. As with Watergate, the and persecute an alleged ene- cold war liberals began to Iny for totally irrational rea- squawk about civil liberties on- sons." Jones is wrong. McCar- ly when the rightwing repres- thyism is not a "social psycho- sion began to, touch them., logical phenomenon" but rather a specific historical form of cold McCarthyism was and is an war ideology. extension of the cold war liberal American policy during the ideology needed to gain support immediate post-war period was for the "containment" (i. e., formulated by liberals. It was destruction) of political move- the liberal Truman who order- ments at home and abroad and ed the atomic massacre of Hiro- for the expansion of the power shima and Nagasaki, not in or- and wealth of American corpor- ations. Jones' formula should be revised: "As an historical phenomenon, McCarthyism is an expression of an insecure and expansionist view of the world in which the privileged class of a nation must isolate and destroy its enemies for to- tally self-interested reasons." McCartyism is not new to the UAW bureaucrats who di- rect and control the "Unity" Caucus. The late Walter Reu- ther rose to power in the UAW bureaucracy, along with the en- tire present UAW leadership, in a vicious smear campaign of rightwing McCarthyism. Once the likes of Walter Reuther had managed to confuse union mem- bers and terrorize or isolate union militants, the likes of Joe McCarthy had an easy time terrorizing liberal academics with the same tactic. This is an historical lesson we must not forget. Chrisell Ames for Clericals for a Democratic Union Feb. 26, 1976 , H~EE COMES HE NAY WAGONJ A to Z B By TOMI STEVENS Arts & Entertainment Joni Mitchell relaxed, Editorial positions represent consensus of the Daily staff. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Phil Foley, Rob Meachum, Maureen Nolan, Ken Parsigion, Jeff Ristine, Tim Schick Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Michael Beckman, Stephen Hersh, Stephen Kursman, Jon Pansius, Tom Stevens Arts Page: Jeff Selbst Photo Technician: Ken Fink iOIZ>SI11IUeLLI64 mature at Hill Aud. By KURT HARJU By abandoning her usual con- cert format of mixing old hits with current favorites and ex- perimenting with the largely new material she did present, Joni Mitchell delighted, confused and finally exhausted a sell-out crowd at Hill Auditorium Thurs- day night. After a generally-enjoyable hour-long set by the L. A. Ex- press, Mitchell came on for a marathon session that lasted over two hours during which she freely made use of every pos- sible band combination--from full group backing to various one-man accompaniments and solo spots. Concentrating on acoustic guitar, Mitchell played only two songs on the piano and none whatever on the dul- cimer-a development that lim- ited her.musical scope and dis- appointed some fans-though she compensated greatly by introdu- cing five new songs that were definitely among the best and most upbeat selections of the evening. The final result was contrasted markedly with her last two con- cert tours with the L. A. Ex- press (appearing this time with- out founder and former leader Tom Scott), and her live record- ings on Miles Of Aisles. Instead of employing the band-soloiband format she has in the past, she changed her backup every couple of tunes in haphazard sequence. The situation gave her the free- dom to try out novel and in- teresting arrangements, which though not always achieving the intended effect, were surprising- ly assertive and refreshing ver- sions of tracks from her last two studio albums. f4NCE CONIOL PLAN *fs p~~ idJ in the FIRST TEN AMEND3MEN THl rrd Tise cnntentimugg: aolme an Ste exprssed a dtee, ti order to ent and resticive chaises shoo dde Government, rill best a the 6 Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS JONI MITCHELL assesses the audience with confidence at her Thursday night concert at Hill Auditorium. Even her appearance and stage manner revealed a more confident, worldly image. She began the concert dressed in a black Spanish, '30's-fashion coat and pants complete with hat projecting a somewhat forbid- ding and severe expression. As the set progressed, she let down her hair, took off her coat, put on a long string of feathers and became visibly more open and relaxed in the process. Though she maintained a cer- tain distance and r e s e r v e throughout, Mitchell did warm up enough to relate some enter- taining stories about her songs including a rather sad footnote to her classic "For Free." She stopped playing to describe how the street musician who inspired the song had fallen into some bad habits which she felt dem- onstrated how contrary "ro- mance and reality" can be in her music. Her more recent works ("Free Man In Paris," "Shades of Scar- let Conquering," "Love 'Or' Money" and "Raised On Rob- bery") were definitely the best performed and probably the most well-received. Her very newest songs, like "Coyote" and "Don Juan's Reckless Daugh- ter," were especially captivat- ing for their vivid images and energetic vocals. But the carefully-calculated gamble of her new approach didn't pay off as well as it should have. "Edith And The Kingpin" and "Harry's House-Center- piece" were interesting though in a simpler context, but didn't match the strengths of her re- corded interpretations. , The success of the concert basically depended on an indi- vidual's taste and expectations. If one went to see the updated greatest-hits presentation she has offered before, then it might OF THE STATES PDQ Bach: Pun for the money athe time,, o inor sbsvs, ofaisp xlending the groand o, tij s/ insititaad' hd,,.mnil. the Comtskof tethew' decdov? s'C' - t6, 1 iyi I *? toFeeds, thteef; or .bridging to pttitioin the Got f ~ t It So a rep keep and ms, shat 3 i ~o in et wr 'sligioi,, 9, w ptchliti ' pe*pk s y to se alk the a.- 4 rl Seach Lana i Ssar rpeople to be mte knot be violated, and- lrly descuibw the eln Propety. fa apital OY "~nn an By NANCY COONS T1HE OBSCURE WORKS of P.D.Q. Bach were hilariously ex- posed to the public once more at Power Center Thurs- day night. Having bought out the house in September, the audi- ence was ready for a good show: what they saw was a great one. Professor Peter Schickele, who calls himself a "musicolologist from the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople," is responsible for the "unearthing" of these parodies of the late Baroque and Classical style and presides over the program with a dry narration that belies his ingenious humor, which originally prompted him to compose the works. He is aided by "bargain counter" tenor John Ferrante and keyboardist David Oei, who are as skilled in comedy as in music. Over the ten years that Schickele has been recording and touring, he has employed several means of performing the works of P.D.Q. Bach. Most familiar are his early orchestral parodies, which victimize the local orchestra and provide endless oppor- tunity for laughs through satire of form, famous themes, and named Alice Uberdeutschland) and broad word-plays (a monk chants "qui tollis peccata ra ra boom di ay") as well as some less elaborate music which served basically as a vehicle for funny lyrics. Among the standard keyboard works performed (selections from the Notebook For Betty-Sue Bach and the Toot Suite for calliope four hands), the Erotica Variations were particularly well done. Directly plagiarized from the theme of Beethoven, PDQ added several "banned instrucents" which were performed. by Schickele. These included a windbreaker, balloons, slide whis- tle, fog horn, and the "lasso d'amore," each of which was given visibly serious artistic attention by the performers. "PDQ Bach; His Life and Times," a lecture with illustra- tive slides, was a different segment of the show, using a medium naturally unsuited to Schickele's well-known recording style. IT INVOLVED A PROFESSORIAL narrative wherein Sch- ickele defined the four periods of PDQ's life: the Initial Plunge,. during which he learned all he could about music in six days, and the Soused or Brown Bag period, which involved most of ueraeo.- me spporte to be Wiw.a o peraim shall of a Gtand 3' >f W1 ri or p 1.b earn I crime o a nm t m iia,e . 11 acu ense to be twits put isn be awl le ns hmef, X rbe do. private be takn for public isae rt.i n r y f h e SN~ si axrrn1 ( . tiin, the acc"s whrin the cl Lbe anmt4 hv euedwhichdiricts .hall have bm. wit n4~eof te acusaion. to be coafronsed ~ro~ in n hi at nd to have the "q jimput Icl --Awl