-lw- -V 4i Soturdov June0 1970 #a a: *"' THE MICHGAN DAILY V 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials orinted in The Michiaon Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reorints. U.S. aid is not humanitarian, but it's poltcally profitable For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 74 12 NonDeadline -Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 J SATURDAY, JUNE 20, 1970 News Phone: 764-0552 Its time haseo me SEN. EVERETT DIRKSEN once said of the 1964 Civil Rights act that "nothing is so powerful as an idea whose time had come." It is evident that this was the same force that last Wednesday produced congressional action on the 18 year old vote. A measure that would have lowered the voting age in Oregon there was defeated overwhelmingly last month; in other primaries around the country, candidates with strong student support have faired poorly; and yet, poli- ticians from the President on down continued to voice their support for a drop in the minimum voting age. From a politician's point of view. a lower minimum voting age is attractive because it allows youth an oppor- tunity to work directly within the system, hereby remov- ing some of the causes of their deep resentment. TE TRADITIONAL argument in defense of such a measure has been the proverbial "old enough to fight, old enough to vote." But a more important reason is that like the blacks, students have felt the "system" unresponsive and com- pletely separated from themselves. In retaliation, they have .taken to the streets. With the coming of black may- ors, the black minority has found a new hope in America. Though their problems are still present, a feeling of participation is gradually overtaking them. Whether their sense of belonging can continue remains to be seen. A voting bloc of students could likewise produce a sense of democracy in an individual. Just how the young and the black take to joining the "establishment" is irrelevant. Whether or not they are pleased with their newly found power is not the point. What matters is that these citizens are given what other citizens have had for years. It is not an issue to be de- bated. It is a vital brace in an ethical code that has re- mained unfastened for far too long. IF THIS COUNTRY truly intends to be a democracy it must allow all groups to vote. What is unfortunate is the need for this action to be taken in Congress. Voting laws are the constitutional rights of the states, and the probability that the Supreme Court will strike down this measure are good. In order to insure an 18-year-old vote, passage of laws lowering voting age should be of prime importance in the state -legislatures. Not because it would be to their advantage, but because the concepts of democracy leave them no other choice. Up until now political pressure, and apathy has kept them from acting, but the time has come for enfranchising youth. -BILL ALTERMAN N!GHT EDITOR: ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ By STEVE WEISSMAN (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is reprinted with permission of Ramparts Magazine.) lN JUNE 1952, John D. Rockefel- ler III, chairman of the -Rocke- feller Foundation, hosted a highly select conference of some 30 of the nation's most eminent conserva- tionists, public health experts, Planned Parenthood leaders, agri- culturalists, demographers and so- cial scientists. After two and a half days of intensive discussion, they agreed to form a new group which could act as "a coordinat- ing and catalytic agent in the broad field of population." The following fall, John D. publicly christened The Population Coun- cil. In the decades previous, birth control had been largely small po- tatoes. The Rockefeller Founda- tion, otgether with the Milbank Memorial Fund, had, in 1936, lyo- vided Princeton with an Office of Population Research. Mississip- pi, Louisiana, Georgia, Florida and the Carolinas pioneered programs for the (sometimes voluntary) sterilization of the poor. ONCE THE Rockefellers became interested, however, family plan- ning became a very different kind of business. The Ford Foundation, Carnegie, the Commonwealth and Community Funds, the Mott Trust and the Mellons pumped fresh blood and money into the Popula- tion Council, some of which even trickled over into the Reference Bureau and Planned Parenthood. The World Bank put its money behind Princeton's pioneer study on population and e c o n o m i c growth in India. Where birth con- trollers once went begging, now guest lists at Planned Parenthood banquets and signatures on unbi- quitous New York Times ads read like a cross between the Social Register and Standard and Poor's Directory of Corporation Execu- tives. THIS SUDDEN interest of the world's rich in the world's poor, whatever the humanitarian im- pulse, made good dollars and cents. World War II had exhaust- ed the older colonial empires, and everywhere the cry of nationalism sounded: from Communists in China and Southeast Asia, from neutralists in Indonesia and India, from independence movements in Africa and from economic nation- alists in Latin America.. But the doughty old buzzards of empire were determined to save the species. They would pay defer- ence to the new feelings by en- couraging a bit of light industry here, and perhaps even a steel mill there. To give the underde- veloped areas what Nelson Rocke- feller termed "a community of in- terest with us," and to extend control, they would give public loans and foreign aid for roads, dams, and schools. Their founda- tions and universities would train a new class of native managers who, freed from outmoded ideolo- gies, would clearly see' that there was more than enough for both rich and poor. But there wasn't enough, espe- cially not when the post-war ex- port of death-control technology created so many more of the poor. The poor nations r a r e 1 y came close to providing even the limited economic security which w o u l d encourage people to give up the traditional peasant security of a large family anti permit the popu- lation curve to level off. In fact, for much of the popula- tion, the newly-expanded money economy actually increased inse- curity. Faced with this distortion between fertility and development, developed country elites could see no natural way of stopping popu- lation growth. All they could see. was people, people, people, each one threatening the hard-won stability which guaranteed access to the world's ores and oil, each' one an additional competitor for the use of limited resources. - More people, moreover, meant younger people, gunpowder for more than a mere population ex- plosion. And as reported in the Rockefeller Fund's overpowering Prospect for America, "In a com- pletely youthful population, impa- tience to realize rising expecta- tions is likely to be pronounced. Extreme nationalism has often been the result." FOR ALL THEIR domestic con- cern, however, population plan- ners were primarily absorbed in "the international dilemma" and the problems of "economic devel- opment." They .emphasized top- down national planning, Western- influenced elites, foreign aid pene- tration, and the use of economic growth, rather than distribution and welfare, to measure develop- ment. The New look in intervention got a good test in the Indian famine of 1965 and 1966. In 1958, India faced a devastat- ing foreign exchange crisis. In re- sponse, the World Bank and the "Aid India Club" promised one billion dollars a year in aid, and international- i n v e s t o r s found themselves with golden opportuni- ties. The Ford Foundation quickly stepped in with a "food crisis' team of experts, which pushed India's planners into increased agricultural spending, ultimately at the expense of planned invest- ments in housing and other-social services. B U T WESTERN PRESSURE was of little avail until the failure of the summer monsoons in 1965. Then, in the words of the World Bank's Pearso. Report, "Instead of signing annual or multiyear (food) sales agreements, as with other countries and with India itself, in earlier years, the United States doled out food aid a few months at a time as policy con- ditions were agreed upon." India, faced with a short leash on food supplies, acceded to the foreign pressures. : "Call them 'strings,' call them 'conditions,' or whatever one likes," boasted the New York Times, "India has lit- tle choice now but to agree to many of the terms that the United States, through the World Bank, is putting on its aid. For India simply has nowhere e 1 s e to turn." ' Ramparts Magazine FOR RENT The Ann Arbpr Fair Housing Ordi- nance and the University of Mich- igan Regents' bylaws prohibit dis- crimination in housing. Questions should be directed to Off-Campus Housing, 764-7400. ON CAMPUS, singles for male grad students or teaching fellows, clean, very quiet, linens, no cooking. 723 packard near State. 5C35 AIR-CONDITIONED 1 BDRM. APTS. Avail. Now. 761-2680 UNIVERSITY TOWERS 536 . Forest 7035 Letters to the Editor Oh mercy me To the Editor: RE: Use of the term FRISBEE in "Rites of Spring in Ann Arbor" (Daily, April 9). If this had happened years agd, we'd have taken an 'Aspirin, dried our tears with a Kleenex and paced the Linoleum floor. But because people kept on put- ting a slash bar through those registered trademarks, the manu- facturers were stripped of their rights. The words were lower cased and exploited by competitors and imitators. We didn't want that to happen to us. We thought of emulating Rosten's Hyman Kaplan, and. sektding out releases about our H*U*L*A H*O*O*P F*R*I*S- B*E*E.I However, we were afraid if we did that, the poor linotype opera- tors would wind up with a bad case of Frisbee Finger, reaching so frequently for the asterick key. Seriously, Frisbee is a Wham-O Manufacturing Company register- ed trademark (Registration No. 679-186). The proper reference to our product is Frisbee (R). To paraphrase Mr. Franklin P. Adams' famous poem: "These are the saddest of pos- sible words - aspirin, cellophane and linoleum." Please don't add us to that list. Thank you from the bottom of our registered trademark. -Robert G. Payne Sales vice-president 1 BDRM, turn. apt. $135 and $145 in- cludes utilities, parking, 1 yr. or 8 mor lease. 761-2939. 8Ctc GARAGE, 723 Packard. 6C35 PHI ALPHA KAPPA, located one block from the central campus, has rooms for the summer and offers room and board for the fall. For further infor- matlon contact, Ronald Dirkse, 1010 -E. Ann,: Ann Arbor. Phone 761-5491. 7CRF 2 BDRM. furn, apt. $210 for 3 persons, includes utilities, parking. 761-2939. 9Ctc 1 AND 2 BDRM., furn, units on campus, avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. SOCtc EAST University at Hill St.-1 BDRM. Apt., $100. July 1. 769-7346. 2035 EDINBURGH APTS., 912Brown St. The Royal Dutch Apts., 715 Church. The King's Inn Apts., 1939 Dewey. Taking applications for fall rental for all 3 locations. For rental information call 761-6156 or 761-3466. 4C41 2 AND 3 BDRM. TOWNHOUSES, $130- 150 per month, initial deposit $390, chilren and pets welcome. Arbor Park, located off Ellsworth Rd., west of Platt. Taking applications for near future occupancy. Management office 2990 S. State, 761-9026. 20035 JULY-AUG. SUBLET-Modern furnish- ed 2-bdrm. apt. Air-conditioning. (Also available for fall). Call 769- 5903 after 5:00. 47033, 2 BDRM. TOWNHOUSES, $139 per mo., initial deposit $400, Children and pets welcome. Arbor Manor, located on 2nd Ave., south of Michigan Ave., near Monroe, in Ypsi. Taking applica- tions for near future occupancy. Management office 2990 S. State, 761- 9026. _19C35 AVAIL. FOR SUMMEit & FALL ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom, bi-level apartments. Stop in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.), 10 am. to 21 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. - .11tc 711 ARCH-Near State and Packard- Modern 2-bdrm, apts. for Fall. Dish- washer, balcony, air-cond., and much more Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867. 26Ctc Summit Assoc i ates CHOICE APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE FOR FALL 761-8055I 49Ctec BARGAIN CORNER Sam's _Store NEED LEVIS?; VISIT- US FOR BLUE DENIM: Super Slims.......6.50 Button-Fly.6.50 Traditional.6.98 Bells ... .. . . 7.50 FOR RENT SUMMER SUBLET MUSIC LOVER needed for one bdrm. BI-LEVEL, modern 4-man. patio. air- 2 apt. now or in fall. $120. William St. cond., dishw., 1 block from Diag, above Bike Shop. Dbl. bed in back July-Aug. Call 769-1889. 24U35 room of new Community Record-- Collection. Lots of music and people. JULY-AUG. sublet. Need 2 girls to 761-3690 or Anita at 761-0828. DC33 complete 4-man apartment in Heri- C tage House. Terms negotiable. Call 665-3663. 25U35- WANTED--2 chicks to share apt. for fall, ideal location. 769-1647. 26U35 NEW FURNISHED APARTMENT AVAILABLE immediately - Sublet for EFRSHMERDOFALTL T two girls in 5-man apt., bi-level, air FOR SUMMER OR FALL conditioning, dishwasher, near cam- at 543 CHURCH ST. pus,4rent negotiable. Call 769-6224 orS APT. 16 769-6424 after 5 p.m. 15U35 TWO-MAN apartment for rent for F DAHL AN ummer term. Air conditioned, close DAH LMANIN __ __ "8__""28s campus. Call 761-2802. 28U35 A PA RTM E N TS CHICKS! Yourtown roomina groovy 545 CHURCH ST. now. 27-U35 7$1-7600 IDEAL for JULY-AUGUST. 2 bdrm., 2-3_ 38Ctci man, well furn., mod. apt. with sepa- 3 .. ..rate living, dining and kitchen area. AUGUST OCCUPANCY Air-cond., balcony, close to campus, 665-2605. DU35 (2 bdrm. unit-summer % term) PAD FOR CHICK-Own room, air cond., near campus. Cheap. Summer half. Campus area, cool, furnished apart- na aps ha.Sme af ments. 1 and 2 bdrm.-ample park- 662-$686. 16U33 ing, contact Resident Manager, Apt. MODERN EFFICIENCY, July and Aug- 102, 721 S. Forest St. 16Ctc ust. Furnished. 761-5382 after 5:00. 17U35 Cam pus-Hospital 1 MAN to have his own bdrm. in a 2- man apt. A/C. $60. Close to campus. July and August occupancy. Call 769-- Fa I I Occupancy _764_ s18t35 NEEDED-1 girl to sublet, July-August, Furnished Apartments modern 4-man apt., close to campus, rent is negot. Call 769-7544. DU35 Campus Management, lnc. JULY-AUG.-Your own room in a huge 662-7787 335 E. Huron 2-man, 2-bdrm. apt., whole second 47Ctc floor of house. $45/mo. 663-9905. 6U33 JULY-AUG. SUBLET in spacious two 2-BEDROOM furnished, quiet, close to bedroom two-man apt., modern, well campns, parking. Mgr. 101-202. July- furnished, with separate living, din- Aug. $150/mo.-Fall 4-man, $290. 927 ing, and kitchen area, balcony. 2 fe- S. Forest, after 5 p.m. 662-6156. C35 males-cheap. Call 665-2605 between 5-6 p.m. DU35 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, -.- avail, for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6-7 BEDROOM HOUSE, July-Aug., good 6448. 15Ctc location, parking, 3 bathrooms, freez- er, washer-dryer, big back yard, etc., etc., etc. 761-5052 or 665-5671. 7U35 THE ABBEY THE LODGE___ I CARRIAGE HOUSE SUBLET-One bdrm. apt. with double THE FORUM VISCOUNT bed available for July-August. Fully still the local favorites! Several select .$95/mo. 663-1605. 8U3 apartments available for summer and SUBLET for July and August-2-3 man, fall semesters in each of these modern ideal for couple, one minute from buildings, campus. 761-6825. 9U33 ara y SUMMER SUBLET - Large, lux~,air- Cha rter Rea Iy c 3b b6-01 Scond., 3 bdrm., bi-level. 769-5041. Fine Campus Apartments 10U35 1335 S. University 665-8825kAAA n Ctr'rr 0 SUMMER RENTALS hoice Apts. at- low rates, Ann Trust Co. Phone 769-2800. Arbor 22083 J35 THESES, PAPERS (inc. technical) typ- ed. Experienced, professional; IBM Selectric. Quick service. 663-6291. 42Jtc TASK Does It All! Typing, Printing, Transcripting Conferences and Mailings Call The Professionals 761-4146 or 47 30J5 NOW ON CAMPUS Campus MultiService TYPING PRIN'TING THESIS SERVICE Fast, Dependable, Low-Priced 214 Nickels Arcade 662-4222 Summer hours: 10-4 Mon-Fri. i SUMMER SUBLET 2-AN APART., near campus, air-cond. Garage, disposal. July-Aug. Call 662- 6126. 40U33 3J tc MULTI PLE TYPING SERVICE 'Thesis Service Papers Dissertations General Office and Secretarial Work Pic-k-U 1 and Del ivery .; j { BUSINESS SERVICES SUEDE vests, belts, etc., half the store price, tailor-made. Call' Steve, 769- 1468. 23J33 SUPER-QUICK service, cheap. Call Candy for TYPING at 665-4830. DJ'5 FOR PAINTING, carpet, and wall clean- ing, call 769-7694. Professional Job. 21J34 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric. Call Jeanette, 971-2463. l2Jtc EXPERIENCED EDITOR Skilled in organizing and presenting special projects. Write Mich. Daily Box 68 or phone 971-6445. 1 I_ I 2 5 r f T T I 1 i I i r I I i i i f G i !s i j, I i i i f zoctc Apartments Limited ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS FOR FALL 7 8055-~ Available r01- ov). l4Utc 663-0511 761-5440 SOCtc 2-3 BDRM TOWNHOUSES, $126-154 per mo., initial deposit $360-420. Children and pets welcome. Danbury Green, located on McArthur Blvd., north of Clark Road, Ypsi. Taking applications for near future occupancy. Manage- ment office 2990 S. State, 761-9026. 18035 DYNAMITE MODERN 2-man apartment. 1 block from campus. July-Aug. Must lease-$100/mo. Call 769-6246 after 6 p.m. 49033 1 BDRM. unfurnished and furnished units, swimming pool and party room, away from campus. McKinley Assoc., 663-6448. 3035 CAMPUS-- Large 4-man, 2-bdrm., from July 1 to Aug. 25. A/C, parking, laundry. Phone 662-6252 or 761-4373. 11U35 4TH. GIRL for July-Aug., own bdrm. Call 769-0389 after 9. 12U33 MAN FOR July-Aug., modern furn. apt., balcony, dishwasher, air-cond., near Campus Corners. $40. 761-6687. 13U35 ROOMS TO RENT in large house. Neg. rates, incl use of all facilities inel. washer, dryer, freezer. 761-9880 eves. 1U33 1 BEDROOM, 1-2 Man--Liv. rm., kit., bath, large. Call 769-6459 between 6-9 p.m. only. 47U33 NEED MEN through August for 3 bdrm. house. Air-cond., parking. Call 761- 4809. 39U33 SUBLET 2-man apt. July-Aug. Air- cond., mucho parking, 911 S. Forest. Call 769-0289. 36U33j ROOMMATE for huge old apartment out Washtenaw, trees, grass. $35. 769- 4925. 31U33 Prompt Service CALL 971-2446 PERSONAL PAPERS written and typed, cheap, very fast. Esp. Eng. 662-6985. 7F35, TO AVOID the blistered noonday tripes --Student Book Service will now be open EVENINGS from 7:00 to 10:30. 40F:33 MAKE LOVE NOT WAR (It's good for our business) AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-7151 U-M MALE professional student, emo- tionally stable, rationally liberal, in- terested in many things and life in general-wants to meet mature stable girl. This ad is placed in order to meet new faces, not because I am hurting! Reply to Mich. Daily, Box 50. F33 BROWSE in drafty comfort--we'll keep the front and back doors ppen. SBS will now be open EVENINGS only- 7:00 to 10:30. 38F33 Jtc C Sa A FEWLOFUs ARC "Tt -flt1= k.MEHOR AL.. AA BFRE AJY OFOS WAS rtcrN oLT- WAN J OVrOF 7IfCPARK M~s5S UDDENLY w'APPEA2 7}t15 OL..76U< f{ LSAfl'E'AR5 !00 K~ s HEl 1c NAMD Cie: RAIN~1M MUiICU- K1{fQSHCM6EV IN JA MTCh- I AWL QO F JC2V lOift L NM OF A -W UM~FA NW 502 FARL'i o 'cLL2S Y CRY1&Y DianPubishes-}a31 yadcaf Xff Ni(N BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ........... MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's (4 Colors- Sta-Prest "White" Levi's....... vI S -*---* * 2.49 5.50 911 S. Forest Near Hill St.-Modern 2 Bdrm., 3-man 668-6906. Fall. l4Ctc SUMMER SUBLET EFFICIENCY and very large 1 bdrm directly" on campus, avail. July and August. 668-6906. 19U35 JULY AND AUGUST sublet - Furn., air-cond., effic., on campus. Call 665- 0344 before 1 p.m. 20U35 GREAT July-Aug. Sublet -- Two bed- room, well furnished, mod. apt. with living, dining and kitchen area, bal- cony, very close to campus. Females only. Can1 665-2605 5-6 p.m. DU35 SUBLET a 1-bdrm. apt., large living room, etc., near campus and down- town. Ideal for any kind of couple. Avail. 6/27. Very Cheap. 662-6985. 21U35 NEED 3RD MAN for mod. 3-man apt., July-Aug. sublet, very close to cam- pus, dishwasher, air-cond. 769-4144. 22U35 GROOVY, mod., 4-man, near hoasp., parking, disp., A/C, available now. 6.98 8.50 Nuvo's_ Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam's Store 122 E. Washington Valid through June 21, 1970 * Limit one coupen per customer 211 N. Main, 663-7758