iiV £f4§n Dati1 Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Thursday, January 15, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ford's old-tne patronage EX-SECRETARY OF COMMERCE E Rogers Morton was appointed this week by president Ford to a job that carries an annual salary of $44,6,00 per year of Federal mon- ey: the post of "adviser to the Prsi- dent of domestic and economic poli- cy." It's very interesting that Morton's appointment reportedly was urged on Ford by Howard (Bo) Callaway, head of Ford's central campaign organiz- ation. It is common knowlegde in Washington political circles that Callaway has been complaining for months about his lack of input on Ford's policy decisions, and now it looks as if he finally has what he wanted, a man who will stand next to the President and advise him as to political expedience. Ford supporters may argue that such games have been played in the past. Perhaps they have. Almost in- dubitably they have. Over the years we have seen many things done in the past that should nevr be done again, and using Presidential funds to pay for a political campaign is one of them. Somehow, with all the normal ad- vantages of an incumbent, all of the big plusses in a political campaign like instant news coverage; almost 100 per cent name recognition, and the authority of the Oval Office, we find it difficult to comprehend why Ford insists on using his political pull to get the government to pay for his campaign. Isn't there enough money in the Republican war chest? If Ford wants a political advisor, that's fine with us. Frankly, after all the political blunders he has com- mitted recently, we rather think he needs one, or maybe several. How- ever, it's about time Ford started paying for his political campaign expenses himself. L76r By DAN BIDDLE Like millions of identical little spermatozoa closing in on a human egg, no less than 14 can- didates of both parties are wigg- ling their way toward the Presi- dency. As in conception only one gets to be the One. Notwithstanding the lack of a symbol for incumbency in this allegory, it is time to examine the racing form and place some Presidential bets. Part of the idea here is to pull the old Jeanne Dixon trick: make dozens of predictions early on, and you can look back later and say, "Hey! I told you so. I predicted on January 15 that Marvin Esch would be President." , THE KEY TO this shenanigan is not reminding your listeners that you also predicted the top job might go to Rabbi Baruch Korff, New York Mayor Abra- ham Beame, or Political Science Prof. Milton Heumann. With that in mind: right now, the good money seems to ride on Jimmy Carter, Hubert Hum- phrey and Ronald Reagan. Pres- ident Ford has taken a pasting in the polls of late, and even if he wins the nomination, tne wisdom goes, he can't be con- sidered a real winner since there is such a likelihood he will fall off the platform before he can be inaugurated. That raises the distant question of who the Republicans choose for vice president, but. first things first. The President's New Hamp- shire aides say they seek only a victory in that state's cruzial February 24 primary, but the assumption is that a good '2ea- gan showing-more than 40 per cent-will effectively undermine the Grand Rapids Tumbler. What with the polls, that nearly writes off Ford before he can open his mouth. NOT SO fast. Already-with more than a month before the first primary is. even held- Reagan's popular complexion has been pimpled by his poo ly planned proposal for a $90 billion transferral of federal programs to state and local control. New Hampshire's canny voters may not pronounce the R at tne end of "car," but they quickly poked at the plan, which would likely raise their taxes. President will consolidate and perhaps survive his own stupid- ity-note the Rogers Morton ap- pointmente. Reagan will also b stupid but he is not President- thus he must dope it alone. HUBERT HUMPHREY, the cagey sideline sitter, might get the nomination. The Democrats will look for something more exciting and younger. The lib- erals will have power to wield: U~dall and Harris will not win but will reach the convention with surprising strength. Henry Jackson, too, will fall just short: this leaves only the aging Hube, who might win with an ooze to the left. Or, California Gov. Jerry Brown, so young and idifferent, could emerge victorious with Carter hanging on for" veep, after a long, tough convention. BROWN could clobber Ford in November. Humphrey would edge him. Wallace, sucking in the debris of Jackson and Rea- gan, will get enough votes to put the election in the House of Representatives-if his health holds out. Where Brown or Humphrey will win again. Then again, if Reagan edges Ford in 'New Hampshire'. ace: Pots hots at hotshots Carter Humphrey Reagan Oddly, this bumbling virtually parallels Ford's habits, most recently demonstrated in- the President's waffling and veto of the important building site pic- keting bill. So the GOP may face a malaise not unlike the Demo- crats': a dearth of candidates with the vital combination of excitement and competence. Reagan may be a charmer, but can he govern? Doubtful. Ford may be President, but is he a dope? Yes. Then there are t'te Dems: Clearly unswayed by any can- didates for President, the party has logically rushed toward an unbreakable stance on its vice presidential frontrunner: Jnmy Carter. He is cute, a former peanut farmer, reputedly honest and reputedly liberal. He is well organized for Iowa's Jan- uary 19 caucus, New Ramp- shire's kickoff, and Florida's March 9 primary. Hle can win southern votes. If this Georgia peach stuff, persists, the party will soon face, as the old saying goes, an agonizing reappraisal. Car- ter's foreign policy is oresently undefined-and you know what happened the last time a south- erner got his hands on the Com- mander-in-Chief branding iron. And the early signs on Carter are unencouraging. IT IS KNOWN, for example, that one of his acts as governor was an executive order creating "American Fighting Men Day" in April 1971 to honor Lt. Wil- liam Calley. He urged Geor- gians to mark the event by shining their headlights. This conjures up nightmarish car- toons of Vietnamese babies wearing "Carter for President" badges. As the Village Voice noted this week, Carter also demanded a 1968 court martial of Lloyd Bucher, the captain who sur- rendered the Pueblo to North. Korea. Carter said Bucher should have fought 'em to the death. The Voice also got a great quote from former Ailanta Journal Editor Reg Murphy on Carter: "I've known him since 1962 . . . and he's one of the three or four phoniest men I've ever met. There's not rmuc to choose between him and George Wallace'." Speaking of which: the two- fisted, two-wheeled Alabaman's health is clearly a big question in his candidacy, but as National Lampoon joshed recently, W&A- lace is the only candidate who' can boast of having already been assassinated. SPEAKING OF which: S;af- fers for Fred Harris and Morris Udall say the guys in their Secret Service details openly conclude that at least one of the hopefuls will be eliminated by gunfire this year. Udall,, for example, was resting in his hotel suite recently when guards sr- rested a man crawling up from ledge to ledge several floors below, gun in hand. The man claimed his actions had nothing to do with Udall. Speaking. of which: Udall got himself in a jam by ordering the state police cars on his motor- cade to turn off their flashers one day in Pennsylvania. The result was confusion. Passing motorists cut iinto the motor- cade line unawares, only to be scared off the road by tough- minded Secret Servicemen. This sort of thing won't win votes. What will? Ford will be the GOP can- didate if he does not die falling out of bed first. Reagan will batter him a bit but lose. The {:'e':';"{??ri$ }3,ttti$ :v:%:YS:n:" .".":%: :y' ' .}n ",Y{"{,:}.:Y. Y r:: r. rry." Yn 'VJ} Contact your. reps- Seafarer' Harmful defense Sen. Phillip Hart (Dem), 253 Russell Bldg., Capitol Washington, D.C. 20515. Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Washington, D.C. 20515. Rep. Marvin Esch (Rep), 2353 Rayburn Bldg., Capitol Hil, Hill, Hitt, JT'S ENOUGH THAT we have to worry about contracting angio- sarcoma from the profusion of poly- vinyl chloride (plastic) packaged foods, skin cancer induced by a pos- sibly deteriorating ozone layer, and slow death by accumulative ingestion of the myriad of chemicals in the junk-munch we put away. Now we have to think about our own Navy suppressing and even lying about in- formation pertinent to the health of thousands of people. Project Seafarer in Michigan's own upper peninsula is the enter- prise of potential hazard and du- bious worth. Designed as an under- ground network of cables which would act as a giant transmitter of extremely low frequency (ELF) ra- dio waves to send messages to missile carrying submarines, Seafarer would cover a 2,700 square mile area. Back in 1973, a team of seven civilian scientists turned over to the Navy findings that the project could well endanger human life because of the ELF radio waves' effect on the heart. In 1974, a Navy official told a Senate committee that five years of study had uncovered "no detri- mental effects" from Seafarer. At last, thankfully, a congessional' investigation of Seafarer by the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee has been ordered. Senator Gaylord Nelson (D- Wisc.) TODAY'S STAFF: News: Lois Josimovich, Jo Marcotty, Rob Meachum, Stephen Selbst Editorial Page: Marc Basson, Dan Biddle, Stephen Hersh, Ted Lam- bert, Tom Stevens Arts: Jim Volk Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens whose state was the originally pro- posed Seafarer site, commented, "We now know that the very highest lev- els of the Navy reviewed this scien- tific evaluation." Nelson said Tuesday, upon an- nouncing the start of investigation, that a main goal of the probe is to determine why the Navy has delib- erately misled the Congress" about the possible dangers of Seafarer. If a second scientific survey cor- roborates the results of the first, clearly the Navy should abandon the Seafarer project. Its value is 'dubious, the reasons for it are unclear, and its potential dangers are many. Photography Staff KEN FINK PAULINE LUBENS Chief Photographer Picture Editor Editorial Staff W. SUSAN SHEINER ........Staff Photographe' GORDON ATCHESON CHERYL PTLATE Co-Editors-in-Chief DAVID BLOMQUIST...............Arts Editor BARBARA CORNELL .. Sunday Magazine Editor' PAUL HASKINS .............. Editorial Director MARY LONG.........Sunday Magazine Editor JOSEPHINE MARCOTTY Sunday Magazine Editor SARA RIMER ......:........... Executive Editor STEPHEN SELBST................ City Editor JEFF SORENSON............. Managing Editor STAFF WRITERS: Tof Allen, Glen Allerhand, Marc Basson, Dana Baumann, Michael Beck- man, 'Ellen Breslow, Mitch Dunitz, Ted Ey- anoff, Jim Finkelstein, Elaine Fletcher, David Garfinkel, Tom GodeUl, Charlotte Heeg, Stephen Hersh, Lois Josimovich. Tom Kett- ler, Linda Kloote, Chris Kochmanski, Doe Kralik, Jay Levin, Andy Lilly, Ann Marie Lipinski, George Lobsenz, Pauline Lubens, Teri Mageau, Angelique Matney, Rob Mea- chum, Robert Miller, Jim Nicoll, Maureen Nolan, Ken Parsigian, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Ristine, Annmorte Schiavi, Tim Schick, Kar- en Schulkins, Rick Soble, Tom Stevens, Steve Stojic, Cathy Suyak, Jim Tobin, Bill Turque, Jim Valk, David Weinberg, Margaret Yao. Washington, U.C. 20515. Sen. Gilbert Bursley (Rep), Senate, Lansing, Mi. 48933. Rep. Perry Bullard (Dem), House of Capitol Bldg., Lansing, Mi. 48933. State Capitol Bldg., Representatives, State .;t: .. ........**........ ............::..:.::!.,:: ^!':"'~iA .. r 1.:::~ 'Y: '^ ~"4J Lockjaw;lipd Ltpt e s COUNCIL NOTES: Minorities in SGC QUESTION: I read in the newspaper that October was Immunization Action Month but I didn't hear anything about what shots people ought to get. What should ew be immunized against? ANSWER: The World Health Organization's world-wide cam- paign to eliminate small pox by universal vaccination has prac- tically won that battle. Small pox vaccination is no longer routinely advised for residents of the United States. But there are several other diseases ev- ery bit as devastating which can also be eliminated,.by im- munization. Poliomyelitis is a good example. If it doesn't kill, it may cripple for life, and there is still much evidence world-wide of its crippling ef- fect. If everyone were to have 2 doses of oral polio vaccine, a month apart, followed in one year by an oral booster dose, this disease could be eliminated by immunization Tetanus (lockjaw) is another unneces- sary disease. An injection of tetanus toxoid, usually given in combination with diphtheria and whooping cough immunization, could eliminate each one of these diseases. The problem is that these immunizations re- quire some repeated boosters to maintain immunity. For all adult populations who have never had such immunization and who may be susceptible, 2 doses of tetanus - diphtheria toxoid at least a month apart should be followed at 10 year intervals by boosters of this material. QUESTION: In your October 16 column you mention that Health Service has established a Hyperlipidemia Clinic to evaluate the presence of cor- onary risk factors. Could you give more information on what hyperlipidemia is? ANSWER: Hyperlipidemia lit- erally means high levels of fats (lipids) in the blood. Per- sons with increased levels of these fats, also known as chol- estrol and triglycerides, are at risk of developing atheroscler- osis. As we noted in our earlier column, atherosclerosis is a condition which develops when fat builds up on the inside of walls of the arteries, resulting in a narrowing of the arteries and a decrease in the blood sup- plied to the heart and other tissues. As a result, persons with hyperlipidemia have a greater chance of developing coronary heart disease, heart attacks and other arterial dis- orders. Hyperlipidemia may be caus- ed by several things including: hereditary and genetic factors; other diseases which secondar- ilv cause high fat levels (such as diabetes); and environmen- tal or life style factors such as diet (for example, a diet high in animal fat), high intake of alcohol, and lack of exercise. Although hvperlipidema can us- ually only be discovered by lab- oratory studies done on blood samnle. some persons with this condition may have such svmn- toms as abdominal rain or dis- comfort and yellow - orange lims or denosits found aroimd the eves or on the heels, hands, knees, elbows,' or buttocks. By DEBRA GOODMAN THE LACK OF minority par- ticipation in student government at the' University of Michigan should be an issue of great con' cern to anyone working within the student government stytem. How can we hope to make re- sponsible decisions for the stu- dent body when an important segment of our population re- mains unrepresented, a group that is traditionally ignored and underrepresented in the univer- sity system? White students must accept a large portion of the responsibili- ty for this situation. Several years ago a council was elected that had among its members a diversified representation of mi- nority students - led to the formation of an SGC minority affairs committee with a staff of hard-working volunteers. The committee formulated an SGC program to deal with the unique problems that face minority stu- dents. Almost immediately this committee drew a relentless at- tack from many white council representatives, liberals and conservatives alike. DURING THAT YEAR, pro- posals against affirmative ac- tion and against the BAM strike victories, and attacks on vari- ous minority vice - presidents were among the motions intro- duced and sometices passed by that council. Eventually motions were introduced to include among minorities represented on the committee such groups as Jews, Poles, women, etc. Although these groups are cer- tainly oppressed minorities with- in our society, the nature of this committee to lead in ac- tions promoting the interests of non-whites on campus, was ef- fectively destroyed. It's not hard to understand the lack of interest that minori- students have shown in student government since that time. Blacks, Chicanos, and Asians have found they can work much more productively outside of the SGC offices. However such an understanding does not absolve white students of their irrespon- sibility in the fight against ra- cism. Since the fall, SGC has tried to involve itself in support- ing affirmative action, and fight racial discrimination (as well as sex discrimination) wherever we have found the opportunity. YET I HAVE BEEN criticiz- ed both privately and publicly for not establishing a Minority Affairs Committee. The idea of having an established commit- tee, consisting of representatives of various minority groups and their organizations, sounds nice, but in practice some serious questions arise. How does an almost entirely white council start a "Minority Affairs Com- mittee?" Write up a plan and interview minorities to fill the. seats? Call a mass meeting of minority organizations in order to plan a minority affairs com- mittee? Appoint some Black friends to decide what to do? Ask the two Minority Advocates to appoint a few .people? All these suggestions sgunded pa- tronizing and smelled of racism. What right does a small group of white students, even those elected by the student body, have to even make such deci- sion? How do we know that minority students a& interested in even having such a commit- tee? ANOTHER PROBLEM we foresaw in the initiation of such a group was the way that mi- nority committees are often used to box up certain types of problems, and let them even- tually dissolve in committee red tape. The idea of a minority af- fairs committee at this point in time was rejected. This does not mean that I, or the other members of coun- cil, have decided to do nothing about the serious underepresen- tation of minority students on student government. But it seems obvious, judging by past experience, that SGC is a waste of time to those people interest- ed in attacking the questions of racism and its outgrowths on campus. Affirmative 4ction is important to us all as an at- tempt to .build a multi-cultural educational program in our mul- ti-cultural society. It is especial- ly important as a counter bal- ance to systematic discrimina- tion that existed against racial minorities and women in this country for hundreds of years. Student Government voted last Thursday to solidify and expend upon our work on this issue by establishing an Affirmative Ac- tion committee. Debra Goodman is president of the Student Government Council. ~THE FORD, "WA M'= ITiLL PL,#%Nlt* ~ Wr N 6-ILMST 16% 4l - a 1 cutbacks To The Daily: WE ARE DISTURBED by the apparently politically selective cutbacks being made by the University as a result of budg- etary problems. The first cours- es to be effected by cutbacks are the innovative progressive courses that are the basis of the quality, well-rounded educa- tion that we expect from this University. Examples of this sort of cutback can be seen in the Geography department. (Al- though we realize this problem is campus-wide.) Recently gain- Letters tion efforts. For example, Future Worlds has had immense problems in attempting to handle the num- ber of students and the range of ideas that could be part of the course. Many students try unsuccessfully each day to add it, while lecture facilities, and interested staff abound. How- ever, political infighting at ad- ministrative levels prevents the course from being opened. Low Energy Living, a course noted for its practical and responsibili- ty-provoking nature has had its best feature, its workshops, ob- literated. Furthermore, a numm- to Th not understand why the courses being most affected' are those most vital towards creating aware and responsible individu- als. As the University stagnates in its abundance of irrelevant standard courses, the possibili- ty of a quality education as well as the possibility of cre- ating future-oriented individuals is ignored. If the University is to remain a worthwhile part of the world community its vi- tality must remain a priority item. Kim Keller, Louis S. Tenenbaum, Debby Greenspan, e praise of him: gratitude that such incredible journalism can be found in this community (and not just in the Worker's Vanguard); hope that the .revo- lutionary spirit which so obvi- ously animates the staff of the Daily might someday triumph throughout the world. The Daily staff can justly take pride in the fact that they are among a very few who perceive the greatness of Chou. The rul- ing class media will undoubted- iy emphasize Chou's role in the elimination of the ten million or so social undesirables who Washington possessed the revo- lutionary insight of comrades Mao and Chou, and extermma- ted those reactionaries who cor- rupted us with private property. and "liberty," we too might be living according to Chou's ideal. What a glorious vision! The ex- tinction of the selfish individual in the collective consciousness, days spent in hard work and blissful adoration of the su- preme leader. BUT THERE IS STILL time, if we adopt the attitude of the Daily: the triumph of the revo- lutionary will over bourgeois Daily