C fiitrchianmelt 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author, This must be noted in all reprints. Tuesday, June 15, 1971 News Phone: 764-0552 NIGHT EDITOR: ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Little murders TWENTY PERSONS were murdered in the city of De- troit between Friday evening and dawn yesterday. That yields the incredible average of five a day. So far this year, 314 murders have taken place in the motor city, and 1971 is not even half over. The number of murders is up by over a hundred from last year. How has the administration of Mayor Roman Gribbs responded to these unbelievable statistics? Mayor and police claim they are trying to do something, and point to their destruction of confiscated handguns. But they have produced no real results - just more murders. Meanwhile, city and police are claiming praise for their major battle against the major crimes of "smoking marijuana, drinking wine, and making love in a public park," according to an enthusiastic local television sta- tion. Balduck Park was the scene of violent clashes be- tween police and members of the city's youth com- munity last summer. And this summer the young people, many without jobs, have come back to the park. Over 1,000 people gathered there every night last week. The city reacted with a tough 8:30-p.m. closing time for the park in an attempt to stop these dangerous crim- inals armed with cigarette papers, guitars, contraceptives and other deadly weapons. During the weekend, police warned parkgoers of the new closing time. Last night, extra police were there to enforce it. DETROIT should take a lesson not only from last year's battle of Balduck Park but also from what is hap- pening in Albuquerque, where the National Guard has been mobilized to protect the parks from the people. Albuquerque already has suffered two million dol- lars damage in a night of fighting, looting, and burning on Sunday, and there was more trouble yesterday. Four- teen people have been shot. The potential danger of riot, however, is only part of the problem. And so is the persecution of youth, bad as it is. The city must stop glorying over police chasing freaks and start thinking about the heavy locks on every door and the guns kept to protect increasing numbers of homes. The grim world of Jules Feiffer's Little Murders is not very far away from Detroit, and will keep coming closer unless the city restores sanity to its law enforce- ment priorities. -MARCIA ABRAMSON Summer Editorial Staff STEVE KOPPMAN LARRY LEMPERT Cox-Editor Ca-Editor ROBERT CONROW ........................... . .......... Books Editor JIM JUDKIS ..... .... .... . ... ......... .... . . .... Photography Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Rose Sue Berstein, Mark DOilen, Jonathan Miller, Robert Schreiner, Geri Sprung ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Patricia E. Bauer, Anita Crone, Jim Irwin, Alan Lenhoff, Chris Parks Summer Sports Staff RICK CORNFELD .................Sports Editor Letters to The Daily Clark case To The Daily: YOUR EDITORIAL on Tuesday, June 8, comment on the Cheryl Clark case contained some inac- curacies. The review procedure used in the Clark case is the stand- ard internal complaint procedure. A woman member was present to hear the Clark complaint follow- ing the model used for cases in- volving race discrimination. The review procedure . is a third-step administrative (Personnel Office) review of a management (operat- ing unit) decision, and there is no decision-making responsibility as- sogned to the review committee as such. No vote of the members was sought or taken. The Women's Commission representative stated her criticism of the answer to the complaint in writing for the re- cord. Because this procedure does not provide a hearing by an impartial body nor for the complainant to know the entire range of facts reld- vant to the review and to argue her case in- the light of all infor- mation, the Women's Commission has worked hard to design and recommend objective grievance procedures for the cases of po- tential salary inequity which may be turned up in the forthcoming review of job classifications em- ploying both men and women. These procedures have not yet been adopted by the Executive Officers. Thoughethey have been developed for the file review un- dertaken by the University in com- pliance with its affirmative ac- tion agreement with HEW, it is presumed that in their final form they will be available for the use of complaints, like Miss Clark's, initiated independently of the file review. -Commission on Women June 10 just an orgy To The Daily: THANK YOU for the amusing letter of Friday, June 11 concern- ing the supposedly objectionable Bach Club poster. It is not every morning that one might sit down to read the paper at breakfast and find one's self denounced as a "re- actionary sexploiter". We found it quite astounding that such a hack- neyed Roman orgy depiction could be construed as appressive to- wards womankind. Actually the girls in said "affaires joyeuses" appeared to be rather enjoying themselves. To be frank, our last "Hulk" poster was far more ques- tionable-observe the erotic trous- ers, suggestively torn at the knee- note carefully the lack of equal female representation, perinitting but one interpretation: Sexist Male Dominance ! In short, your conclu- sion towards our poster verges on the ridiculous. Turning aside from the obvious levity indigenous to Miss Kleiner's proposition, we can not help but take exception to the methods em- ployed by her shallow-minded sym- pathizers; the malicious removal or defacement of our publicity. In an open-minded community with free exchange/statement of speech and ideas, such impropriety will serve only to misrepresent your cause. Be you right or wrong, you do NOT tear down the other per- son's right to speak. So, Miss Kleiner, while employing a pseudo- platform as a desperate vehicle to console your personal sexual mal- adjustments, please concentrate on other, more suitable targets. Poor old Joe Marcus ... In one hundred and -fifty posters for the Bach Club in which he deliberately attempted to rally politically against national and university evils, he surely didn't receive the controversy attracted by our fifth harmless poster. -Allan Hendry, '72 Elaine Gugula, '72 Poster Artists'of the Bach Club June 14 Pedit reply To The Daily: I THINK that the Daily has done a fairly good job of misrepresent- ing the facts involved in my efforts to gain a fair wage and decent working environment fromthe Board for Student Publications. A number of statements made by the Daily either need clarificatiOn or correction; others have been tak- en out of context. Two weeks ago I faced a dilem- ma. A special conference (attended by various representatives of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes, as well as the University) was held May 10 to air the issues involved in my case. Two weeks after this special conference AFSCME was to have received a response from the University stating its position con- cerning the issues raised. No reply had been given, nor was there any indication that it would be in the near future. (A later statement made by James Thiry, manager of employe and University relations, was that "there is no way to tell how long it might take.") As I saw it, the only way to stop the Univer- sity's foot-dragging was to pres- -sure it into acting. There were several sources from which this pressure could come-the board, the community, or the staff of the Daily. Thus I be- gan my 3-day hunger strike and protest in front of the Student Pub- lications Building. If it hadn't worked, I would have had to re- sort to other tactics, such as plac- ing an ad in the Daily to explain my situation and ask for support. The University, however, gave its response to AFSCME one week ago -a response containing a number of inaccuracies. A MORE important goal was to overcome the three months of self- censorship by the "radical" Daily. Since the editors work for the same employer, they are afraid of jeopardizing their position with Archard Gamm, superintendent of the printing shop. Their stories have contained a growing number of errors, such as the statement that I am seeking full-time employ- ment-a claim which is totally false. It is my hope that the edi- tors will overcome their fears, ana- lyze the issues as presented by both sides, and take a stand on those issues. Part of this analysis should in- clude the intervention of Prof. L. Hart Wright, chairman of the board. Although he claims that he "is hemmed in by law" as to what he can say and do, his actions make a far different statement. He has given a 45-minute "of the re- cord" talk to the staff on my case. He has threatened to run a full page ad in the Daily if he finds that my statements are not "fac- tual" as he see it. He has also made statements which appeared to me to threaten the loss of my job. In a meeting last week with Wright, Gamm, Daily summer edi- ter Larry Lempert and business manager Jim Storey, I was bad- gered, intiminated, and, in general, subjected to almost three hours of bullshit. At the end I was given 30 minutes to speak. During this time I was unable to present my side of the story, due to Wright's con- tinual interruptions, wild extrapo- lations made from my comments, and the implied threat of the loss of my job. Since the only positive response was that a job description would be forthcoming, it is evident that the only course of action available to me is an unfair labor practices suit. -Bern Pedit June 14 She's a halo To The Daily: THE LIGHT show courtesy of God or the Ozone House which you reported Thursday in the caption of the picture on the front page was not a rainbow. It was a halo, caused by refraction through hexa- gonal ice crystals in the cirrus clouds in front of the sun. Rain- bows are caused by internal reflec- tion in spherical water droplets, and are seen in a direction opposite the sun. -David R. Lyzenga, Grad June 10 t JIM STOREY ...... JANET ENGL ...... FRAN HYMAN . . . BECKY VAN DYKE BILL ABBOTT ... .Assoit SprsEio How did we do without Howdy? w. Summer Business Staff . BusinessManal .... ............................,Display Advertisi . .Classified Advertist Circulation Departme .....O..Gnerol Otfie Assists. a **t - -f j * Withdrawal date ng By RICK CORNFELD ng Summer Sports Editor B UFFALOBOB sat down at the piano. "Who's our favorite clown in town?" he sang. As if by instinct, we all sang back: "Clari- bell." It was Howdy Doody time at Orchestra Hall in Detroit last weekend, but the big news was that the Howdy Doody show may be coming back on Saturday morn- ing again. "Boy, oh boy, wouldn't that be great!" Howdy might say. Buffalo Bob excited the crowd in his cowboy costume, but he was missing the one thing that Mould have made his show the greatest event since 1960-Howdy Doody. He did at least bring along a film of Howdy Doody's 10th anni- versary show in 1957. Boy, oh boy, was that a show. I missed the pea- nut gallery. All they had was a Johnny Carson-like audience, but I guess that was because of the special nature of the anniversary show. ANYWAY, Claribell appeared on screen at least, and so did Dilly Dally and Cornelius J. Cobb and Mister Bluster, who as Howdy said, was up to his old tricks again, and when Flubadub came on, it brought the house down. Un- fortunately, he did not sing, "I love my meatballs, meatballs, meatballs and spaghetti." There were also commercials for Wonder Bread and Hostess Cupcakes. Howdy told us all that Wonder Bread helps build strcng bodies 12 ways and that there were red, yellow and blue balloons printed on the wrapper, but I missed one thing. I was waiting for Buffalo Bob to tell us to go out and eat a whole loaf that day I have a friend who once did that because Buffalo Bob told him to. After the film was over, there came the time we were all waiting for. Bubbalo Bob ran down the aisle shaking hands and throwing candy at people, then ran on the stage and jumped around blowing kisses. It could have been the most thril- ling moment in all of recorded time. THAT WAS HIM, Buffalo Bob ! The next time Joe Falls tries to impress you with all the cool peo- ple he gets to meet, you just for- get it. He ain't seen nobody in person till he's seen Buffalo Bob himself. It can safely be said that Buffalo Bob is one of the most charismatic people in America today. Just think about it. He acts like a com- plete fool, yet he is making a tour around the country sending college students into fits of delirium every time they see him. How could an intelligent middle aged man take serious a silly kid- die show, especially 11 years after it went off the air? Well, why uot? It didn't seem strange to the packed crowd at Orchestra Hall. The only thing that seemed strange was the realization that for a decade kids have been growing up without Howdy Doody. But perhaps no more. Those barons at NBC seem to have seen the light and are considering put- ting Howdy Doody back on. It would be in a year probably, as soon as Buffalo Bob finishes his college tour. BUFFALO BOB said he has not decided how to make the show more relevant 'Don't!" screamed the crowd). I'm not sure how he could, without admitting that Won- der Bread doesn't build your body stronger in any more ways than any other loaf of bread, balloons or no balloons. Actually, who cares? Why do we always need something relevant? Especially, Howdy Doody of all things. Claribell squirting his seltzer bottle should be relevant enough for anybody. 4