Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June t 9, g Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAWY Soturda~', June 19, 1976 SEMCOG: Helping cities cope Anally claims "we've seen very little evidence of it." Instead, the airport consumes one third of Romulus' land and contdib- wtes a meager three per cent to the tax base. BUT COMMUNITIES such as Romulus can see their problems dissipate if the efforts of SEM- COG are successful. SEMCOG is a regional plan- ning organization "similar to a county planning agency because it plans for more than one area," according to communi- cations representative Kathy Harris. But unlike the county p l a n n i n g agency, SRMCOG wields no power and only makes suggestions as a third party to aid member groups. Those members include seven counties and 110 cities - en- compassing more than half'of Michigan's population. MEMBERSIIP on SEMCOG is voluntary and decisions and recommendations are passed by a 140 delegate General Assem- fly. In addition, an Executive Committee and three other bodies examine the develop- mental plans, which encompass the areas of land use, recrea- tion, housing, criminal justice, sewer drainage, water quality management and transportation. SEMCOG was devised in 1968 after the passage of a federal law requiring all applications for federal loans and grants for local projects be submitted to "an area-wide agency which is designated to perform metro- politan or regional planning for the area." In other words, one a( SEMCOG's vital functions is deciding whether or not one group's plans are in accord with other plans and developments in the region. SEMCOG, funded by federal and state grants and partially by membership fees, operates from downtown Detroit, where a group of technicians, aided by computer, compiles the informa- tion which shapes the plans pro- posed for the future. For ex- ample, SEMCOG's staff of 117 keeps track of population move- ment patterns in order to fore- see what transportation prepara- tions will be needed for those who relay on mass transit. THOUGH it was created in the late sixties, SEMCOG's out- look tends to reflect the sober- ing realities of this decade. "In the 1460's, planners thought that growth would continue ad in- finitum, but now we realize that many of the astronomical en- deavors will never be realized," says Executive Director Michael Glusac. "We now have to ask our- selves just how much can we realistically expect growth to occur," he adds, "and still we find that many officials tend to look to the future with rosy expectations." According to Glusac, SEM- COG tries to educate local of- ficials about the possibility of their growth policies " so they don't plan projects that won't pay for themselves because the right considerations were not made in terms of future growth." Since any further growth of Metropolitan Airport would pro- bably require federal funds, a port authorities would have t deal through SEMCOG to re ceive approval from Washing ton. And it is in SEMCOG where the view of the small town can be considered from a technical standpoint, as its representative pushes for the town's story to be heard by the General Assembly or Executive Commitee. IN THE CASE of Romulus which joined SEMCOG ltst year, concern might be ex. pressed if the airport plans to build facilities that would allow it to double the amount of its air traffic. Metro last expanded ten years ago when it built a run- way that required a flight tst- tern to cut directly over Ptimi- lus, mich to the chagrin tofhe residents. "SEMCOG could have be an objective third party wite self interest that could bw helped ten years g tends McAnally, Mgabe: Fighting for black majority rule.- (Ccilioiin o mism srtia" back to the city. That was the kind of movement we had until 1970. "But once you start carrying guns and ammunition through the bush, and you ask people to hide you in the villages-asking people to put their lives in dan- ger, because if the police come they'll be shot -well, then you I e a r n tI care about the masses." What will ZANU's policy be toward foreign investment in * D t essscc : eThere 1S a ;e differeneses MCA of experienc*e ! ! LSf andsuccess h " Small classes e ! Voluminous home, i GRE studymaterials : AITCSD m ! a ! Tapie taciities for0 * S O resewssof class : CPAT lsos-frueo .u~m eafy: * C T materials 0 : aLEX!Makeups for " C M missed lessens 0 :ECFMG Is-'-'- : NAT'L MED BDS:0 NATL DENT BOS * wrltse orca: 0 ! 1945 Paulina Blvd. ' anm AIos "s * 4S2-3143 U ! S EDUCATioNAL cENTER * TisT PR{ PARArCN! sevac sI: . 19 0 !. ll19 !!Be s m Mao US-s i a new Republic of Zimbab- we? 'AHA THERE IS a major problem there. I think the United States has to be edu- cated about foreign investment in former colonial territories. Today, you know, there isn't a single black capitalist in Rhodesia: the colonial system doesn't allow Africans to ac- quire capital. There are some middlemen here and there, but very few even of them. "What I see is a kind of state capitalism like the Swed- ish - type high welfare state, where the government does most of the work of develope- ment. We'll welcome money from the United States, and anywhere else we can get it, but not to private individuals. It'll have to be done through state institutions. "What do you call that? It's not socialism Soviet-style or (Chinsese - style. I'm not so sure it's even Swedish style. Hut that's what we'd like to see." Liberate Your Head, Celebrate Lunch Don't just Eat it! S. University at Forest Dick Nixon's final days (continued from Page 7) But they decided to dispense with attributing the material to a series of unnamed sources and instead told it in straight narative form. And the critics squawked something fierce. Had the book been written by new journalists Gay Talese or Tom Wolfe, there would have been no fuss because that's the way they work. Still, as with anything else, The Final Days should be taken with a grain of salt. For example, the Kissinger- Nixon meeting was probably re- counted to the authors by sources who had heard only Kissinger's side of the incident. And throughout the book, we see examples of Kissinger's out and out loathing for the presi- dent - which undoubtedly color the way he talked about such a revealing encounter with Nixon. Although The Final Days was conceived as a portrait of Nixon, some of the most revealing mo- ments also shed great light on the character and methods of Kissinger and General Alexan- der Haig, Nixon's chief of staff. JJAIG'S ROLE is perhaps the most intriguing-he walked a tightrope trying to assuage both Nixon and the forces of impeachment in the persons of Special Prosecutor Leon Jawor- ski and the members of the H o u s e Judiciary Committee. The task of convincing Nixon to resign rather than fight Water- gate out through a trial in ihe Senate also fell to Haig. Despite the excellence of in- dividual profiles The Final Days lacks insight into the motives of the people involved. But then, Woodward and Bernstein didn't view the book as a chronicle of the reasons behind the events. They wanted to tell, as com- pletely as possible, just what went on in that limited period prior to resignation. Because of those limitations, however, The Final Days is not the definitive Watergate book. It never tries to explain the transgressions themselves in any detail, nor does it recount much (i the en ly battles to squeeze intisrmaio;, out of the unwilling administra- tion. Still The Final Days does -ut ceed in graphically portraysi one facet - that one very in portant facet of the Watergace affair implicit in its name And that's enough to ask of a i- gle book. 'Heat and Dust': India's timeless face (Continued from Page 71 consider abortions and both of them leave the plains, the heat and dust of Northern India for the cool mountains. Fortunately the parallels stop because the present is too full of contra- dictions. ALTHOUGH both are English- women in India, times have changed, the colonial empire is no more, and India affects them in not exactly the same way. Unlike Olivia who becomes a re- cluse fadinging into time, known only as the Newab's mistress, the granddaughter becomes as- similated. She sleeps on the terrace in hot weather in her sari like other Indian women and thinks, "It's amazing how still every- thing is . -. I lie awake for hours: with happiness actually. I have never known such a sense of communion. Weaving in and out of the two Englishwomen's lives are the native women-some full bodied characters,while others remain little more than mere ghosts of the imagination. There is the haunting figure of Ritu, a young Indian housewife who some- times wakes up in the middle of the night screaming. She is much cowed by her mother-is- law; a traditional Indian doctor is called in to exorsise her sid there are horrible screams heard from her room. Later sl too goes off to the mountaii with her mother-in-law, on a pilgrimage that is supposed to cure her - thus she vanishes from the novel. PERHAPS THE BOOK should have been longer. It is structurallyintricate and so people with characters that they barely have time to make individual bows before they must leave the stage. No over- whelming emotion drives this tale. But bits and pieces of it do stay in one's mind, much like sand after a dust-storm. Vig- nettes of a decaying palace. Animals run in and out of an upright, out of tune piano, as Olivia plays Bach on it: A mm- key delouses a hippie from the west. One is aware of the blind- ing sun and the enervating heat and languid fair faces, of crowded towns consistingOf royalty and commoners; the characteristic odors being ur- ine, betel spices, and of casua death visiting; the grotesquer- ies of India, timeless and still ------- ---- I Theatre Company of Ann Arbor, Inc. presents "BITCHo YOU CRAY' a kaleidoscope of women in American institutions JUNE 18, 19 and June 25, 26, 27 at SCHORLING AUDITORIUM IN THE U OF M SCHOOL OF EDUCATION BLDG. TICKETS $2.00 CURTAIN 8:00 P.M. "The Role of Religion in Liberating Oppressed Communities" JOHN POWELL Michian Proqasm Director, American Friends Service Committee 8:00 p.m. Sunday, June 20 AT THE Ecumenical Campus Center . .921 CHURCH. between Hill nd Oklond}