The Michigan Daily Edited ond managed by Students of the University of Michigan Thursday June 16, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 oyott the Krugerrand, ONE YEAR AGO TODAY, on a small hill eight miles outside Johannesburg, South Africa's bloodiest race riots began. In the course of four days in tle Soweto Township, nearly 150 persons died and thousands more were injured in the protests against white oppression of blacks in that country. The world's eyes remain focused on South Africa, In pregnant expectation of change from the system of apartheid, towards majority rule. Students and religious groups have keyed in on the issue of apartheid, and, one year after the Soweto riots, Americans will mark the anniversary by starting a boy- cott against the krugerrand - a South African gold coin. The krugerrand, named after one of the leaders in the Boer Wars, is the only solid gold coin still in pro- E duction, is a collectors' item. In Ann Arbor, the coin ticets could only be purchased through the National Bank EDITOR'S NOTE: The infor- and Trust. mation for the editorial in ques- The bank has not sold any tion was provided by Don Can- krugerrand, currently val- ham, athletic director. We apolo- ued at $154 each, for a gize for the errors. month. Students, meeting on the To The Daily: Diag this afternoon, plan to picket the bank, calling for Your Editorial "U Keeps Stu- an end to any possible sales dents in Line" (June 15) con- of the krugerrand through tained some inaccuracies which I believe should be cleared up. the bank. The referendum on football tik- After the demonstration, ets last December listed five al- the students plan to remind ternatives for ticket distribution the Regents of the Univer- for athletic events; students sity of the need to sell all voted overwhelmingly in favor University owned stock in of a random allocation system, as the Daily reported. But the c-orporations with financial Daily went on to say that had ties to South Africa. this system been adopted, stu- These events which com- dents wouldn't have been able memorate the Soweto riots, to sit with friends. This is sim- are not for the day only, ply not the case. Apartheid is an ongoing im- The MSA proposal, introduced moral policy which must be to the Board in Control of Inter- protested at every turn, un- collegiate Athletics in their foot- til the change is made. ballcoupons together at a cen- tatistics projections confusion cloud energy policy proposals By WALTER R. MEARS Congress and the country are wading toward decisions on en- ergy policy through waves of proiections and statistics, some conflicting, most confusing, none conclusive. It turns out that there are numbers to support almost any position on the issue. All it takes to play is a pocket calculator and any of the batch of reports that have rolled off presses and mimeograph machines all. spring. President Carter warns of an impending national catastrope unless the government acts. Re- publicans contend the govern- ment is the catastrophe, and argue that the cure is in the market place. So the consumer can take his choice. Either way, he is going to pay his money, since there is solid agreement on one fact: the price of fuel is going to keep going up, sharply. Now the Congressional Budget Office has weighed in with a 140-page analysis of Carter's en- ergy program, seeking to help focus the debate. For openers, it points out there are more than 100 interdepend- ent proposals in the energy plan Carter has sent to Congress. If nothing else, that dramatizes the complexity of the problem and. of the proposed solution. The congressional analysts say the major reason for mounting imports are the controls that have kept U.S. oil and gas pric- es "artificially below world lev- els." "Over the past four years, this regulatory system has served to cushion Americans from the dramatic shifts in consumption, and in turn in lifestyles s the budget office reports says. "Artificially low prices also have tended to encourage en- ergy consumption and discour- age the search for and produc- tion of new domestic resourc- es." Carter's solution is a system of taxes and rebates, together with an easing of controls on the price of newly produced oil, 3rs to The D tral collection point. Every group, regardless of size, would have a fair chance at a good seat - and students would be sitting with whomever they chose. In fairness, I believe it should also be pointed out that Univer- sity Athletic Director Don Can- ham did not single-handedly re- ject the MSA proposal. Consider- ing a number of factors, (the need for further feasibility stud- ies, time constraints, etc.) the Board in Control refused to im- plement the proposal in time for pre-registration, last April. The Michigan Student Assembly still advocates the randohnized sys- tem of distribution proposed in March and further attempts to implement the policy will be made. Copies of the proposal are available for inspection by in- terested students at the MSA office. Chris Bachelder MSA Executive Vice President - i anita To The Daily: As a regular reader of The Daily, I want to express my real appreciation for your force- ful editorial of June 10, "Squeeze a fruit for Anita: An unfunny joke is over." The Daily editor was in tune with the best of the dream of a living Ameri- can democracy when he wrote: "Discrimination against persons whose sexual preferences differ from those of the status quo, however 'legal' such discrimina- tion may be, is not in the true spirit of the law. All persons- whether homosexuals, women or members of minorities-should be viewed as equals in the eyes of the law ... Ours is not a coun- try predicated upon the propa- gation of the status quo, but rather, ours is a country found- ed on individualism and dis- sent." Thanks again for speaking out for the dignity of individual free- dom, which applies equally to the rights of heterosexuals as well as to homosexuals. Craig Wilder so as to increase gradually U.S. prices to the levels of the world market place. While his answers are differ- ent, Republican Melvin R. Laird, former congressman and secre- tary of defense, sounds a similar complaint about government price regulations. Laird, in a report sponsored by the American Enterprise In- stitute for Public Policy Re- seargh, contends the United States "leads the world in self- deception" because of fuel price controls and the lowest energy tax rates in the industrialized world. He argues the crisis is not in energy but in policy, and the more the government has done, the worse the problem has be- come. Laird said an unregulated market place could correct the situation, with' a windfall profits tax to prevent an industry bo- nanza, and with its revenues to be used to ease the impact of higher prices on low-income citi- zens. Among the other figures and projections produced by the con- gressional analysts: *Carter's proposed standby gasoline tax, a nickel a gallon to take effect if consumption exceeds government targets, probably would not be triggered until 1982 - if Congress approv- es the system. That is a big if, for the gas tax faces stiff oppo- sition and is rated one of the Carter measures least likely to succeed. * Under the Carter plan, the budget office estimates fuel prices would go up by approxi- mately 74 per cent over the four years ending in 1980. But in any event, inflation and develop- ments in the market place are expected to raise fuel prices by 49.5 per cent during the same period. * Even with the Carter pro- gram, the average American family probably will do more driving in 1985 than it does now. The current' average is 15,000 miles a year, and it probably will go up to 17,000 miles, with higher gas prices offset by im- proved automobile mileage. While the numbers are com- plicated, the political problem is not. The congressional analysts say the benefits of a new en- ergy program will not be evident for a decade, and then they will be national, not individual, bene- fits. F~9M 1MT S~Y 1ixou 1 4PWCH 25AS A60O ZflIRO(.GS(4 H ww.oet aR- l5solu M L' 00 Ilk GEkMUS- II HAS 1AKM# : D t &tA HkNO R~l4Wr&6At'JI2 0N4DEV 6 4?-hd M)P WW-ST,- L ~c-vR'4- 41 AS A SUEpt AR~T FORM. +qt N wr MMM