7"8 C &__ LAS WUK AI7 E3UT E3&CAU OF 0MJIo AT AUb* (Vlik'6 PAV5617 TO "fIXA$J rc 'ro i.r The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, July 21, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Dems' unsettling unity THIS NEW STYLE of the Democrats, while it inspires pleasant visions of a more progressive White House, is a touch unsettling. Jimmy Carter waltzed through last week's conven- tion looking good, a man with delegates in the bank and an excellent shot at the presidency. His smiling face made any disagreement seem an insult. Jerry Brown held out until the last moment, re- leasing his large block of California delegates from the floor rather than the podium after spending several weeks rounding up delegates around the country. And with all the harmony under Carter, one found oneself al- most angry with Brown for doing so; what an insult that he would interrupt the procession. Morris Udall gave up his delegates somewhat more gracefully, but even he seemed a thorn in Carter's side, an unruly child spoiling the picnic. But to set carried away with the unity syndrome is to encourage Jimmy Carter to conduct a campaign and presidency in his own way, without policy suggestions from other members of the narty. A party is not a party without a broad ranee of dissent and discussion. Brown and Udall and the minorities who spoke against the Car- ter steamroller had a rieht and a duty to be heard, and if the Democrats continue to souelch disagreement, they may be cutting their own throats. Mailbox: A mean meter maid To The Daily: I was walking down S. For- est towards Geddes on July 6. I was with a friend, and just as we passed S. University we observed an older, dark haired "meter maid" driving a beat up City Pinto. On a short side street there were a couple of guys, one black and one white, tossing back and forth what looked like a football. The football bounced into the front of the meter maid's car. She stuck her head out of the window and told them to stop playing ball there in the street. The black guy - maybe he didn't realize the woman was a meter maid - said, "You don't live here lady". Then the meter maid got out of her car and proceeded to write out a ticket for these two innocents. Which, all things considered, is pretty ridiculous. The two weren't ob- structing any traffic - none had come by, indeed - and they surely wouldn't have done so deliberately. It appears that the meter maid belongs to a certain percentage of society with a certain psychosis for be- ing mean through illogic. I saw the same meter maid write a ticket out to a car on Maynard by the Student Activities Build- ing. The car was in a No Park. ing zone, but it was occupied. Granted, the law is clear in this instance, but it would have done far more to further re. spect for "law and order" tad the maid politely asked the car to move on. Joe Smith tf '1 __ i F~b/tirifl Surf{-Summettr Terma TIM SCHICK KEN PARSIGIAN Co-Editors- in- Chief JAY LEvIN JIM TOBIN )EditoriaF Directors ELAINE IILETCHRt ANN MARIE LIPINSKI iupjlemenit Editors JEFF SEIL T, LOIS JOSIMOvICH GEORGE LORSENZ MIKE NORTON PHILLIP BOKOvOY LANI JORDAN STU McCONNELL JENNY MILLER . BARB ZARS BETH FRIEDMAN .. PETE PETERSEN . KATHY MULHERN CASSIE ST. CLAIR DEBBIE DREYFUS$ BETH STRATPORD NANCY BOCK . DAN BLUGERMAN OLLIE KIESEL DON SIMPSON Arts Editor Night Editor Night Editor Night Editor Assistant Night Editor Assistant Night Editor Assistant Night Editor Assistant Night Editor Assistant Night Editor Siiuier Business Staff Business Manager .... ... .... ... ....... . Advertising Coordinator . . ...... .....Display Advertising Manager ..................,...Circulation Manager .......,....... ................ .Classified M anager C........ irculation Director .... Display Advertising Ass't. Manager .. Salesperson ........ . ....,.... Salesperson .. . . ,. ,. . . . .:.=Salespersod }' Sl ir. $ ILF.NOW....) WATIONAL DIMOCRATICOWWIQN