Tuesday, June 24, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Laro: Regents' new wunderkind (Continued from Page1) still an all male hall during his stint there. "The food wasn't so great, and you couldn't bring girls up to your room," he said. But South Quad's visitation restrictions didn't seem to put a damper on his social life at the University. "I had a good time," he admitted, break- ing out into a boyish grin. Laro rushed Zeta Beta Tau soon after- wards, becoming president by his senior year. He said he did his best to elimi- nate he traditional hazing and "ra-ra stuff" that then marked Greek life on campus. He was disappointed the frat folded in 1967, but felt the reasons were clear enough. "I THINK IT could be attributed to a maturation in student values. With the advent of the war, there was not as much of the joie de vivre attitude." Larm's years at the University were the dawn of the activist movement, and he felt the first rumblings of discontent. "There were no demonstrations, but there was the beginning of a feeling of dissent." LARO'S OWN political development in those years was more subtle and in- direct. Although he will admit to "an inherent political desire" as a college student, his interest in politics was con- fined to a more theoretical plane, pur- suing a B.A. in political science. "I remember sitting in the basement of South Quad watching the Kennedy- Nixon debates. I was sympathetic to Nixon only because I thought he was the more experienced candidate." Laro's feelings about both men reflect tellingly upon his own political thinking. He can vividly recall the early morn- ing of October 14, 1960 when Kennedy, then in this midst of his presidential campaign, made a brief stopover in the city. On the steps of the Michigan Union, Kennedy first expressed the idea of what was to become the Peace Corps. The Kennedy charisma, he felt, was quite contagious. "I REMEMBER he said' something like 'I didn't come here to campaign, I came here to get some sleep.' " To Laro, however, Kennedy's Camelot merely obscured what he felt was JFK's "ineffectiveness and errors in judgment" and she was totally dazed. She came up to me and said 'You know, the President was shot today.' She just wanted some- body to talk to." Laro recalled that the University had no such plans to cancel the Wolverines' football game with Ohio State, scheduled for the next day. Although they subse quently postponed the contest, Laro said, "I think what they were going to do was still play the game, but change the half- time show to a tribute to Kennedy." "Okay, politics plays a part in every appointment, but I like to think I'm modest. I didn't get the appointment because, hey, I'm David Laro, and I'm a great guy, and I deserve to be on the Regents." ALTHOUGH HIS fondest Cream as a young man was to become a trial law- yer, he became disillusioned after a couple of years of private practice in Flint and drifted into tax law. His clients at the law firm of Wine- garden, Booth, Shedd, and Laro include several large corporations and promi- nent businesspeople. Laro declined to name them, but sufficed said that "some of the names you would be familiar with." Laro's corporate orientation speaks di- rectly to his attitude toward the Regents, which he likens to a board of directors framing policy for a large company. "THE UNIVERSITY is more than just classrooms, it is a $350 million a year institution-a corporation, and there has to be at least some structure." Laro was aware of a familiar criti- cism leveled against the Regents-that they cannot acquire a feel for the Uni- versity's problems with their monthly meetings, and that they place too much of a reliance on the recommendations of the University's executive officers. "YES, IT'S TRUE, we come up here once a month, and it appears to be rubber stamping. But I don't think I'm here to rubber stamp. So far, no effort has been made on the part of the officers to push something by or treat my pres- ence lightly." Asked if he plans for public office beyond the Regents, Laro just smiled and said, "I have an active interest that I have not yet defined in any par- ticular direction." Whether the Regents will be merely a way station for Laro's higher ambitions, only time will tell. "At this point in time," he concluded, "I just want to put my energies into being a good Regent." which led to a deepening involvement in Indochina, the Bay of Pigs, and near tragedy with the Cuban missile crisis. "Khruschev thought he was dealing with some kind of kid at Vienna," he explained. KENNEDY'S spectre will always haunt Laro's years at the University. On Fri- day evening, November 22, 1963, Zeta Beta Tau was to have held a splashy, formal affair at Detroit's Sheraton Cadil- lac Hotel. When Laro received word of the events in Dallas, he had to decide whether or not the party was still on. After discussing the matter with an ad- visor, Laro called it off. He says he will never forget those first frightening, disorienting hours after the shooting. "I remember a woman coming to my window. I had never seen her before, Laro's experience with Richard Nixon, as with President Ford, is a more per sonal one. He is a not infrequent guest at the White House, most recently hav- ing been briefed on the Mayaguez inci- dent last month. He said his impressions :f Nixon were "very disappointing." "HE TRIED to be humorous and he wasn't, and he tried to be relaxed and he wasn't. He just wasn't what one would expect to be President." Of Watergate, Laro said only that Nixon's campaign suffered from "too much money." "They had too much money and they didn't know how to spend it. I think that I lost respect for Nixon in March of 1974 when he refused to honor the subpoena. I think he undermined the entire legal system when he did that." CHAMBER SOCIETY psichord. Violinist Jaime La- Pentagon reports on Mayaguez rescue INVITED TO ENGLAND edo ndpellsr esle P a NEW YORE ( }l.- The will perform a Ravel sonata. Chamber Music Society of Lin- Using an authentic 18th-century W A S H I N G T O N ( ) - released by the Cambodians to taken to the mainland. coln Center has accepted an in- fortepiano, Richard Goode will The Pentagon told Congress ensure the safe withdrawal of vitation to give its first concert join clarinetist Gervase De Pe- yesterday it did not know where the Marines that had been sent "THE OPERATION was con- outside the United States at yer and violist Walter Tram- the civilian crew was when it into Koh Tang, an island off the ducted under the assumption England's Edinburgh Festival. pler in a Mozart clarinet trio. launched the air and Marine Cambodian coast, to recover that members of the crew may F 1 u t i s t Paula Robinson, Guest artists violinist Ani Ka- assault to recover the freight- the ship and crew, according have been in all three loca- obist Leonard Arner and bas- vafian and violist Scott Nick- er Mayaguez last month but to the Pentagon statement, tions," the formal Pentagon re- soonist Loren Glickman will be renz will joi the socsety assumed crew members might These details were provided ply said. heard in a Vivaldi sonata, with string players ofr the Men- be in three different places. to the House Armed Services Charles Wadsworth at the har- delssohn "B Flat Quintet." Committee in response to a re- The third location presum- It also said U. S. planes con- solution of inquiry introduced ably was the Mayaguez itself HURRY! Bonus Chip Proqrom ducted 1R bombing sorties by Rep. Michael Harrigton (D- which had been taken to Koh ze S Ends Monday, June 30, 1975 agaings e a vyAifilities Mass. ), and 37 other IHouse Tagafter capture by the Cam- S0 Eompong Som, Navy facilities mbodians. on the Cambodian mainland. Aked what information U. S. The Pentagon said three of o THE BOMBING continued af- intelligence had on the crew the eight helicopters carrying "i before the assault was launch- the first assault wave of Ma- ter the 39-member crew was ed, the Pentagon replied that rines on to the island crashed air reconnaissance indicated on the beach and under Cambo- Save even more at Steak & 4! ihere's thru END OF THE TERM SPECIAL Wed., June 25 Billiards & Bowling Reduced Rates MICHIGAN UNION some crew members were on the island and some had been than fire and two others were disabled. Texas Instruments New SR-51 SuperSlide-Rule Calculator SR-51 .....,.$132.95 SR-50 . .. .. 85.975 SR-16 ....... 59.95 SR-11 ....... 33.95 TI-5050. 169.95 Plus $2.00 Shipping By Air Mail SEND MONEY ORDER OR CASHIERS CHECK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ALL MODELS AVAILABLE WRITE FOR DISCOUNT PRICE LIST DISCOUNT CALCULATOR S ALES P. O. BOX 30392 DALLAS, TEXAS 75230