THE Summer Daily Saomm r Edition of 7111- M1 IIGIAN 1)AIIY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tuesday June 12, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 Ecology wins 'as the EPA lsSes T WOULD APPEAR that the Nixon Administration, not content with merely sullying the political atmosphereI of this country, now wishes to see its natural atmosphere become polluted as well. Fortunately, the Supreme Court isn't as clouded over by befuddled thinking. A 4-4 ruling yesterday will allow to stand a recent decision by U. S. District Judge John Pratt, barring the Environmental Protection Agency from allowing any supplementary state laws which would permit substantial new air pollution in regions where the air is still pure. The issue had been brought to the court by the Fed- eral government, which contended that it was permis- sible to make clean air dirty, as long as the level of pol- lution was below the EPA's maximum standards. The government's interest in the issue was primar- ily economic; "The cost, ultimately to the public, of reduc- ing pollution in polluted areas to meet the primary and secondary standards will be sqbstantially increased if no encoachment can be made on clean air areas." SUCH AN attitude befouls the mind, as well as the at- mosphere. That the air we have has been polluted to the extent it has is truly unfortunate. But now that we are finally awake to the damage caused by industrial pol- lution, automobiles, and so forth, we must curb any fu- ture pollution in an attempt to keep any remaining pure air pure. The government's argument is despicable-it, in ef- fect, places economics above the quality of human life. If the air we have isn't protected now, future genera- tions may find little or no air left to protect. AS ENVIRONMENTALISTS have contended, the EPA law's stated puroose to "protect and enhance" air quality means exactly that. Air quality must not be de- graded any further. Siinmer S/aff ROLFE TESSEM Editor MARTY STERN Editorial Page Edtor DAN BORUS , Sports Editor BILL BLACKFORD Business Manager Secretariat: A lone national hero IT HAS BEEN said that in times of confusion and disillusion- ment the people look for a man on a horse to come riding along. Perhaps it is indicative of this country's wigged-out state of mind, that it is a horse, and not a rider, that we seem to have latched onto. And what a horse ... chris parks Secretariat; Superhorse, Pegasus - a living symbol of all that is graceful and magnificent - Secre- tariat, a horse, has become our only national hero. AT FIVE THIRTY Saturday af- ternoon, an entire nation of people dropped whatever they were do- ing. Lawns were left half-mowed, dishes half-washed, meals h a I f- eaten. Attention was riveted on a television screen and a horse race triple homicide on the front lawn could have moved me to leave that room and miss what was about to happen. At five thirty, Superhorse stepped prouldly, calmly into the starting gate, disdainfully oblivious to his jittery, quarrelsome cohorts. He al- most seemed to know what was expected and he had a look of supreme confidence. He had come to deliver. THE GATE sprung open. The animals lept out, nostrils flaring and hooves flying. But by the time they reached the first turn Secre- tariat had dealt with most of the inferior plugs who had the audacity to appear on the same track with him. Down the backstretch it was just Secretariat and Sham - a paren- nial Mr. Second Best. The champ toyed with him for awhile, and then decided to run. THAT MOMENT, that drive, was almost like a dream sequence - suspended in time. The horse . .. flying down the track, the hot late- afternoon sun baking on his huge back, his magnificent auburn coat glistening . . . his powerful legs churning with a twisting, side- ways motion . .. pounding, digging . . . clods of earth flying up from under his hooves . . . powerful, graceful motion . . . . he's pulling away now . 10 lengths . . . 15 lengths. 20, 25 lengths (inside myself, Pm screaming "Go! Jesus, look at that. beautiful mother go!"). Around me in the livingroom, eyes are bugged and mouths are open in amaz:e- ment, nay, awe: Thirty one lengths? He won by 31 lengths,.to prove (as if it need to be Proved) that no other 'horse could touch him. SO WHAT IS this horse - this Secretariat - who drove the Wat- ereate off the cover of Time and Newsweek, who has captivat- ed a cvnical, disillusioned country? Secretariat is simply, a foil. He is everything that our discredited leaders (esnecially Richard Nixon) aren't and never could be. They offer Southern California crassness, he offers Virginia grace. They are craven, a self-serving and pompous; he is quiet, aloof and dignified. Secretariat is a horse - and a symbol. He stands not only for excellence, but for a magnificence and incor- ruiptability we all hunger for these days. Somehow, althongh I can imag- ine Secretariat talking, I cannot conceive of him ever saying, "I'm the Triple Crown winner, and make no mistake about that." WE'RE ALT, SO tired of that man who seems never quite big enoigh for his job - who always tires too hard, gets caught, and has the disturbing habit of grab- bing our collective sleeve and slob- bering "God bless America" all over it. We are, as a nation, ready for some class for a change. A n d , Secretariat's got class. It seems ironic that the only dig- nified, incorruptable hero we can produce is - a horse. But times be- ing what they are, I guess we're not in a position to be too choosy. SECRETARIAT; Superhorse, Pegasus-a living symbol of all that is graceful and magnificent-Secretariat, a horse, has become our only national hero. in New York. And there I was, eyes glued to the tube, along with six other geeks in my livingroom and scores of geeks in their living rooms from coast to coast. A few months ago I would have been hard pressed to tell you which three races make up the Triple Crown or even the name of the horse which won last year's Ken- tucky Derby. I've lived 21 years in blissful ignorance of the fine points of horse racing - a sport which has never exactly fired my imagination. And yet, there I was - eyes on the tube - and nothing short of a HE decided to run - not jockey Ron Tuircotte. With Secretariat the jockey was almost superfluous - there for no better reason than that a horse had to have some- one on his back (rules, you know). Turcotte never used his whip - to do so would have been almost a sacrilege. A mere man does not strike Superhorse with a stick. Secretariat was running the race, and Secretaariat decided it was time to run - to show the 80,000 people at Belmont Park and the millions at home like me - who was the champion. It was time, he decided, to take it, and take it with style and class. GORDON ATCHESON LAURA BERMAN ... KATHY RICKE. SUE SOMMER. PAVE MARGOLICSK TERRY McCARTHY. DAR BIDDLE ,..,... DAVE BURHENN CHRISTOPHER PARKS CHUCK BLOOM ...... MARC FELDMAN ...... SHERRY CASTLE PATTI wILKINSON .. PAULA SCHWACH ..... L'TANYA HArI..T ELLIOTT LEGOW .... Ass't. Night Editor Ass't. Night Editor Ass't. Night Editor Ass't. Night Editor Staff Photographer Start Photographer Night Editor .Night Editor .,. Night Editor Managing Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Display Manager Classified Manager Circulation Manager ... Circulation Assistoit .Assistat Letters to The Daily AL. LMY PAST STATEMET S PRE5 SETARY ARE IsOPERATIVEAND 'ATS -ilE:Wtgi..PN14.T/* YFE rtEtyT 0 I m6ued Iby!"oas a el lincsSYNDICATE Pool protest To The Daily: DURING RECENT years, the city's excellent swimming pool on Fuller Road has been well used in the mornings by children and at noon by adults who work near- by. The excellence of the swim- ming program had led us to be- lieve that Ann Arbor's Depart- ment of Parks and Recreation re- cognized the value of individual sports in which ordinary citizens could develop their own abilities and strength, whether starting in good physical condition or not. Thus we were disappointed and angered to read the announcement of a plan to close the Fuller Pool to the general public b o t h for the entire morning and for the noon hour, reserving it for a small group of competitive swimmers. Swimming is one of the few sports within the reach of every- one, without regard for age or athletic ability. The city's proposal to make this sport inaccessible to the adults and to the noncompeti- tive swimmers who made good use of the facilities in past years seems a serious step backward. Public parks should be available for ac- tive use by all citizens, not re- stricted to an athletic elite. It is a measure of the Ann Ar- bor Recreation Department's prior- ities that it allocates six hours per day to competitive swimming and no time whatever to independent adult swimming for physical fitness at Fuller Pool. The adults of Ann Arbor ask only one hour for their exercise. It seems incredible that the Recreation Department is so unresponsive to community needs that it can not reschedule a por- tion of the competitive swimming program to allow one hour at noon for adults. -Margaret Nielsen Stephen Marston June 6 Suickered ' To The Daily: YOU THINK YOU'VE been slickeredt! How about me? Mr. Smooth Shuffle, now Ann Arbor's Mayor, slickered me into f marrying him and he has been slicker- ing me ever since. But, believe me, 7 it's been, and still is, a wonderful ex- perience. Take my advice, sit back and enjoy being slickered by one of the best, stop tieing critical, and help me make him "Ann Arbor's Most Loved Mayor." A better picture of your Mayor and mine is enclosed. -Mrs. James (Barbara) Stephenson June 7