........... At , U IW t * w A e iian DBatt 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The MichiaonsDailv express the individual opinions at the author. This must be noted in all reorints. TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1970 News Phone: 764-0552 One day,-rhetoric won't be enough EARLY LAST WEEK President Nixon vetoed two meas- ures -- one concerned with education, the other with housing -- because the bills appropriated one billion dol- lars more than the nation's- budget asked for. A short time later, the Senate, bowing to pressure from the White House, voted to extend the Safeguard Antiballistic Sys- tem (ABM), and spokesmen for the administration indi- cated that the President was pleased by the bill's passage. These two actions reveal the difference between Pres- ident Nixon's stated positions and his actual actions. Re- peatedly during his nineteen months in office, the Presi- dent has emphasized his desire to achieve peace in the world so that additional funds may be directed at the country's pressing domestic needs; however, continually during his term, members of, the administration as well as the President himself have elected to concentrate on war expenditures rather than domestic expenditures - pleading inflation - as he has vetoed bills that would have improved housing, hospitals and education. If the President is so concerned about stopping the rampant inflation, he could just as easily reduce expen- ditures for defense - the $20 billion planned for ABM would be a good start. As things stand now the hopes of many citizens are continually being raised and then dashed to the ground simply because Mr. Nixon feels we can not afford the funds to begin working on many of the domestic ills. The President apparently feels that if he continues to say he favors domestic reform, the nation will ignore the fact that he is continuing to emphasize defense and maximize the influence of the military-industrial com- plex. So far these policies have worked, but the power of rhetoric eventually failed Lyndon Johnson. It may yet fail Richard Nixon. -PHILIP HERTZ NIGHT EDITOR: ERIKA HOFF Tuesday, August 18, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .JAMES WECHSLER- Straddling the fence: Goldberg vs Rockefeller For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 76 12 Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 ARTHUR GOLDBERG has won the first psychological round in the gubernatorial battle. The bookmakers have pronounced him the underdog - with the odds running nearly 2-1 in Gov. Rock- efeller's favor. According to near- ly every modern school of political strategy, the posture of early fav- orite is, to put it simply, unfavor- able, and the Governor was quick to disparage the appraisal of the gambling fraternity. But apart from all other con- siderations, there is one very tan- gible reason for the advance es- timates. The word is around that Goldberg is facing an acute short- age of campaign funds with no prospect of any miracle relief. In part the problem is not uni- que to his campaign. In fact the diminution in available campaign resources, reflecting the stock market decline and general finan- cial uncertainity, is being felt by candidates in m a n y areas and m a y prove a critical factor in close races. But the impact of the develop- ment may be pecularily heavy in contests where one candidate - in this instance Gov. Rockefeller - confronts no threat of finan- cial deprivation. It is assumed that he will conduct his campaign in the style to which he has been accustomed. In 1966, Rockefeller recorded expenditures of $5.2 mil- lion; Goldberg's suporters see no possibility of raising half t h a t amount and, by present indica- tions, may fall significantly below $2 million while Rockefeller ex- ceeds all h i s previous budgets. Dick Ottinger's Senate campaign will be well-financed, as was his primary, but it will produce no necessarily large dividends for the head of the ticket. THE FISCAL DISPLAY may partially explain why the book- makers have been unimpressed by private polls that still show Gold- berg in the lead (although by con- siderably less than when his can- didacy was first projected). On the other hand it is con- ceivable that the heavy thinkers in Las Vegas may be underesti- mating the ideological dilemmas facing t h e Rockefeller camp. These could become steadily more acute. They could conceivably matter more than money. A recent report of private ne- gotiations for an entente cordiale between the Rockefeller forces and the Conservative Party spon- sors of the Senate candidacy of James Buckley evoked swift de- nial from the Governor and even provided the widely - advertised Rockefeller harmony meeting with Sen. Goodell. Yet, as the cam- p a i g n progresses, Rockefeller- Buckley promoters are likely to become increasingly visible. For Rockefeller must regard the possibility of a major Conserva- tive Party defection- - spreading from the Senate to the guberna- torial 1 i n e "- as the potential nightmare of 1970. Presumably the dominant pressures on him are to appease that flank. In that sector the litmus test will be his attitude toward t h e Nixon Ad- ministration. IN APPARENT anticipation of that awkwardness, the Governor has suggested that the contestants concentrate on "state issues." But can he effectively maintain that posture if the Vietnam war drags on, the economy lags a n d this state - like all other states - re- mains a victim of federal under- nourishment in large measure attributable to those conditions? When the debate is forced into those realms - as it will be - the Governor is likely to find Gold- berg a far more articulate, ani- mated campaigner than he was in a primary in which he detected no great fighting issues. He will also be tormented by harsh decisions as to how he can placate and sedate the right with- out fatally losing the liberal sup- port that gave him the margin of victory in h i s previous battles. How difficult this task can be he has already been illustrated by his labored comments on Cambodia. IN SHORT, barring_ some ex- traordinary changes in the world and the nation between now and autumn, Rockefeller will be haunt- ed by the shadow of Richard Nix- on and Spiro Agnew. Whateer his other troubles, Goldberg has no equivalent political crises on his own side. There are no con- flicts of serious substance between the Democratic and Liberal plat- forms, nor is Goldberg's endorse- ment of Ottinger destined to cause him any embarassment with Lib- eral Party voters because of their party's support of Goodell. In 1968, despite all the Demo- cratic agonies of that year, Hu- bert Humphrey was able to carry New York State by nearly 400,000 votes. Certainly Mr. Nixon's ap- peal - or lack of it to New York voters can hardly be equaled with Gov. Rockefeller'sbdemonstrated vote-getting prowess in New York. But can the Governor successfully differentiate himself from Mr. Nixon without inviting a head-on collision with the Conservatives? Or must he in fact give asteadily higher priority to the wooing of the Buckley-bent bloc? Is there any tightrope strong enough to sustain him or will he be caught in midair, his convictions, o n e might say, blurred by suspended sentences? There is at least a chance that the bookies may be revisingtheir form charts as the campaign gets underway. @New York Post Letters to the Editor should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan Daily building. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit all letters submitted. FOR RENT BASEME1,r in 4-man house, use of upstairs. $45/mo. and utilities. Phone 665-8047 after 6 p.m. 31071 ROOMS FOR FALL Girls-Commute from Ypsi and save. Double rooms, kitchens, TV room, date room, co-op living, near bus to AA. $55/mo. 482-0407. 23071 2 BDRM. APTS. avail, for fall--For 2 from $210; for 3 from $225; for 4 from $240. New bldgs., units furnish- ed, some with dishwasher. 663-1761. 26071 FURN ISHED APARTMENTS Campus-hospital area, 2 bdrms., park- ing, laundry' facilities, A/C, disposal. 769-2982. 27071 STATE STREET MANOR 1111 S. State Street 2, 3, or 4 man large apts. air-conditioned tremendous closets loads of parking laundry facilities 761-3576 1-864-3852 Cte 4-MAN ON CAMPUS 711 ARCH Modern 2-bedroom furnished apart- ments for fall. Ideal for 3 or 4. $260/ mo. Featuring: Dishwasher Balcony Air conditioning Laundry Parking Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867 36071 FOR RENT REMODELED 2 BDRM. house for 2-4. Aug. 31 occupancy. $13,000. 916 Brooks, AA. 764-7557, 8-3:30. 761-9598 week- ends. 32071 ROOM, private bath, for mature or grad student girl who likes a pleasant home, all year swimming privileges, meals if desired - on co-op basis. Phone 662-5855. 2807-1 ROOMMATE NEEDED, $90/mo. 2 bdrm. furnished. 663-0760. 25071 1 AND 2 BDRM. furn., ideal for 2-3 women, A/C, parking, near State and Packard. 769-7455 or 761-2423. 18C71 ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Several beautifully decorated, fur- nished, 2-bedroom, bi-level apts. still available for fall semester, Dishwashers * Vacuum cleaners 1, Baths * Air-Cond. 9 Balconies Parking 0 Laundry and Storage facilities * Excellent sound con- ditioning. Call the Resident Manager at 761-1717 or 665-8825 or stop in at the lobby office 12 noon to 6 p.m. daily, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. 761-1717 llctc HAR ITON HOUSE APARTMENTS 721-723 E. Kingsley Fall rentals 2 bedroom Hospital-campus location Sound conditioned Recreation room Washing and drying facilities Air conditioned Off street parking Largetdesk and shelves Carpet and vinyl floors Many other goodies $248/month SANS SOUCI APTS. You still can go under the big top Luxury Apartments Near Stadium Air conditioned Adequate Parking Dishwasher Near Campus Bus Stop 4-Men Apt. $240 5-Men Apt. $280 Some 2-men apt. left also Call 662-2952 31Ct NEED AN APARTMENT AND/OR ROOMMATES? MEET YOUR MATCHMAKERS Chris & Nancy . Who will help you select your modern, bi-level apt. Several furnished 2 & 3 bedroom apartments still available at con- venient campus locations. Dishwashers, vacuum cleaners, bal- conies, 1% baths, air cond., park- ing, laundry & storage facilities. 24 hour maintenance service." CHARTER REALTY 665-8825 1335 S. University LOOKING? Why not tell people what you are look- ing for? Tell them cheaply, yet effec- tively in Daily classifieds, 764-0557, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 764-0557. CD68 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. 50Ctc GARAGES-May be locked, lease, 723 Packard near State. 15071 TENTS--TENTS-TENTS We need many tents for the first week in Sept.-Have a Tent? Want some ex- citement? Call us 10-5 763-3102. This is as important as your apt. itself. CD71 663-9373, 663-1002, evenings, 665-0063 Roommates needed 22C71 FOR RENT 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail, for fall. McKinley Assoc, 663- 6448. 15Ctc DELUXE FURNISHED 4-man, 2 bdrm., close to campus, parking. 8 and 12 mo. lease. McDonnald, after 5, 662- 6156. 24071 TWO BEDROOM, furnished unit, near law and business schools. Please call Professional Management Assoc., 769- 4227. 4Ctc TV RENTALS-Students only. $10.40/ mo. Includes prompt delivery service, and pick-up. Call Neja, 662-5671. Cte NEAR MEDICAL CENTER 1035 WallSt.-Furnished, new, modern 1 and 2 bedrooms available. 1-864- 3852. 11ct CHOICE APTS. For Fall. 2, 3, and 4 man, close to campus. 769-2800. Ann Arbor Trust Co., Property Management Dept., 100 S. Main. 30tc OBSERVATORY CAMPUS NEAR HOSPITALS Air-conditioned Two-bedroom furnished Wall-to-wall carpeting Covered parking $240.00 for 3... $26000 for 4 Includes heat and water. Campus Management, Inc. Open 'til 9 p.m. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 9ctc ARBOR FOREST 721 S. FOREST 3 OR 4 MAN-2 BEDROOM DELUXE UNITS August 24 occupancy. Look at these large, large, furnished units before you rent. Deluxe furnishings with air conditioning, large storage .and park- ing areas and resident manager. Many extras. Inquire at 721 S. Forest, Apt. 102 for viewing. (Need roommates? Inquire). 29C71 APARTMENTS CLOSE TO CAMPUS N. Ingalls at Huron Modern, 2 bdrm. units, furnished: $240- $260 mo.; unfurnished: $200 mo. Oakland-Hill Area Modern, 2 bdrm $230 mo. Large 1 bdrm. suitable for 2-3 persons, un- furnished: $185 mo.; furnished: $205 mo. Call Middle Management, 663- 5883, 9 to 5. 20071 TRANSPORTATION WANTED - RIDE to Washington, D.C. Would like to leave Ann Arbor around August 20th. Will share ex- penses. Call Bill Alterman at the Daily, 764-0552. GD70 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS CHIARMING OLD PIANO-TUNED Great shape, will negotiate. 761-2743. 18X71 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Unavailable instruments, repairs and instructions-209 S. State, 665-8001. X GIBSON CLASSIC (unfinished) guitar. $140/ best offer. Call 769-0024. XD7O we V p" Ic s A ' o ti l W b11o\ \V Ghec be UC BIKES AND SCOOTERS FOR SALE-1968 Harley Sportster-Best offer. Call 761-4983. 1Z71 BSA 441cc SHOOTING STAR, 1968, new in 1969. Best offer over $700, includes tools, helmets, insurance. 769-1123. 50Z71 -69 350 HONDA SCRAMBLER-Excel lent condition, owned by Honda mechanic. 6-12 p.m., 662-9738. ZD71 1970% HONDA 450. 761-3905. 46Z71 1970 KAWASAKI, 500 Mach III, 850, 3 months old. 482-5776. 47Z69 MOTORCYCLE tune-up and service. By appointment only. Call 665-3114. 26271 ROOMMATES WANTED MALE GRAD needs 3 roommates to complete 4-man, Campus - Hospital area, Call Ben at 662-4909, 5-7 p.m. 19Y71 FEMALE GRAD roommate wanted, Magnif. 2 bdrm., A/C, furn. apt. over- looking river. Call 769-7019. 20Y71 SHARE BDRM. in mod. 2-bdrm., 3-man. close. $75/mo. 663-2537. 21Y71 FOURTH FEMALE roommate needed for fall. Modern apartment-cheap-cam- pus/hospital location. Call Nancy, 453-6095 after 3 p.m. 3Y69 GRAD NEEDS 1 male grad, shareapt. $60/mo. 715 E, Ann, NO 8-6735 or 872-2193, 9-12 p.m. 18Y69 SEEKING 2 science students with some tolerance for disorder to share a near campus apt., chem. or biol. preferred. No lease, $48/mo. each (util. includ- ed). 665-2673 1-2 p.m. 12Y71 SHARE 2 BDRM. APT, with one other. Private entrance, behind SAB. 761- 6310. 17Y70 NEED FEMALE to complete modern fall 4-man on S. State. $67.50/mo./ man plus utilities. Call Cindy, 769- 7238. 6Y71 WANTED.-2 or 3 giris to fill apart- ment. 662-9807 or 769-4344 after 3 p.m. 7Y69 ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 3 bdrm. apt. with 2 girls. $70/mo. Available Aug. 15. Write Sue Brand, 6530 Hud- son Pkwy., Cincinnati, Ohio 45213. NEED 2 GIRLS to complete 4-man apt, Mod., air-cond., parking. On Fuller Rd., near med center. Call after 6: 662-6927. 9Y71 FOURTH GIRL needed. Four blocks to campus. Modern, $60/mo. Call 769- 5412 evenings. 10Y69 2 GIRLS NEEDED to fill vacant bdrm. in new 4-man apt., 8 mo. lease. 769- 3571 or 665-3158. 11Y71 IS C 1 1 Y( l 1 F PARTY TIMJ By RICHARD L. ARKIN WHILE HUNDREDS of thous- ands of rock fans grooved at Goose Lake and 10,000 blues lov- ers filled the Huron Highlands last weekend, nearly 8,000 Ann Arbor circus freaks swarmed across town to two performances of the Clyde Beatty-Cole B r o s. Circus - the last major tented circus still touring in the U.S. This was a real old-timey cir- cus with a big top and a side- show and a steam calliope. It was not the antiseptic, air-conditioned arena show that promoters have been passing off as circus-for the past few years. It was -three rings under canvas, on grass and saw- dust and straw, with a big top bigger than a football field. It was filled with lions and tigers, aerialists and clowns, jugglers and risley artists, tightrope walkers and bally broads, dogs and ponies, teeterboard acrobats and trapeze flyers, and two dozen performing elephants. Banner - line posters with vivid illustrations of the freaks, sword-swallowers and fire eaters in the sideshow lined the midway, while hawkers and bally- hoo artists exhorted the crowd to see the wonderous sights inside the magic tents. And throughout the day and evening, the circus band blared on. ONCE THERE WERE hundreds of shows like this one - Sells- Floto, Hagenbeck-Wallace, Mills Bros., Hunt Bros., the Great Fore- paugh, and Ringling Brothers- Barnum and Bailey. But Ring- ling, now j u s t a shadow of its former -self, has exchanged tra- dition for a kind of Las Vegas slickness, and has dumped its big tent to appear in sanitized, mod- ernized, plasticized and abbre- viated form in sterile air condi- tioned arenas and halls. All the others are gone - all but this one and a handful of tiny competitors that tour under canvas, striving to keep the true circus tradition alive. Although Clyde Beatty is dead now, the show that b e a r s his name still prospers, despite $10,- 000-a-day costs and a shortage of good performers and dependable roustabouts. Every April the show moves out of Florida on a fleet of nearly a hundred trucks and trailers - no more circus trains- and in the next 40 weeks, travels more than 12,000 miles as it tours the cities and towns of the East, Midwest and South. Each day, the circus moves into a new town, sets up its tents, gives two per- formances, tears down, loads its equipment and animals, a n d drives to another stand 50 to 250 miles down the road. LATE LAST THURSDAY night, 300 showmen and tons of equip- ment of t h e Beatty-Cole circus slipped into town. By late morn- ing, nearly '20,000 square yards of canvas had been reeled off mas- sive spool trucks and had risen over a grassy field at Packard and Carpenter Roads. The 150 by 300 foot big top, which' rises 55 feet into the air, was at the center of the lot, surrounded by the cook tent, the sideshow tent, the clown alley, dressing tents, concession stands, trailers, trucks and wa- gons, and two diesel power gen- erators. The cook tent had been the first to go up and would be the first to leave that night, and early in t h e morning, delivery trucks f r o m Washtenaw county Summit Associates CHOICE LOCATIONS AVAILABLE 2-4 MAN APARTMENTS 9Ctc BARGAIN CORNER BARGAIN GOODBYES - Tables, desk lamp, port. stereo, dishware, clothes, LP records, books. CHEAP. 769-0797. 9W7c SamS' Store NEED LEVIS ? VISIT US FOR BLUE DENIM: Super Slims.......6.50 Button-Fly ........6.50 Traditional.......6.98 Bells...........7.50 grocers dropped off the massive quantities of food to be- cooked for the hundreds of circus people. Elephants in working harnesses provide the muscle to raise the tent on its four massive center poles, while 50 quarter poles in two rows around them help to bear the weight of the canvas to the 72 poles along the sidewalls. 400 stakes driven into the ground anchor the big tent, while eight miles of rope steady it and give it flexibility in wind and rain. Circus families like the Suarez troop from Mexico, who work the liberty horses, and the Ferreiras from Colombia, who do a perch balancing act, have traditionally dominated American shows. Acts were handed down from genera- tion to generation, and when a family outgrew an act, it would break up into two or more groups, sometimes doing similar turns for competing shows, or often per- fecting additional skills and doing different acts in the same show. Even marriage was dominated by the circus, with the choice of hus- band or wife being largely deter- mined by the families of the pros- pective candidates on the ability of the intended to fit into the family act, and with the kids be- ing pressed into service sometimes even before they could walk. FOR 150 YEARS; tented circus- es have toured America. O n c e there were many; now there are only a few. Perhaps someday they will exist only in memory. But for now, Clyde Beatty-Cole Bros. Circus still carries its unique magic from town to town, setting up its tent city on an open field,. casting its spell upon thousands of children, then folding up its tents, and vanishing into the night, leaving only peanut shells, pop- corn boxes, the faint odor of ele- phants and tigers, and the hollow echo of a child's laughter. 761-8055 33071 FURNISHED, spacious 1 and 2 bdrm. apts., all conveniences, air condition- ed, undercover parking. 1-864-3852. 50Ctc HOSPITAL AREA -- Two bedroom, 4- man, furnished, parking, individual storage lockers, laundry facilities. $215 per month includes heat and water. Campus Management, Inc., 662- 7787. 17Ctc CAMPUS 3 OR 4 MAN DELUXE, 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED UNITS Utilities (except electricity and phone) provided. Quiet with security lock and intercom entrance system. Ample storage and parking. Phone days 769-1258, evenings 662- 5469 or apply at 347 Maynard for appointment to see. August 24th oc- cupancy. _0C71 ANNOUNCING Eastern Highlands- Exciting living in largest campus luxury apartments. * Fully furnished 0 two bedrooms * one, and half bathrooms * swim- ming pool * air conditioning * on EMU campus (just 6 miles from Ann Arbor). While they last these luxurious four- man units are renting for only $2451' ma. Call 483-7220 or 668-7517 HALL MANAGEMENT COMPANY .16C71 !1 low .01" w r ait BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ......... MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's ... (4 Colors) Sta-Prest "White" Levi's ......... . 2.49 5.50 6.98 8.50 ALBERT TEAR Can be anytime. . . and the neighbors could cc Their quiet evening of study to excellent sound conditic Reserve your apartment fo then have a party ... anytime. Albert Terrace Apis Resident manager: 761-1717 Managed by CHARTER Nuvo's......... Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam s Store 122 E. Washington- AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 . University 663-7151 i