OPINION Page 4 Edited andmanoged by students at The University of Michigan -Sunday,.September 13, 1981 The Michigan Daily Feiffer Vol. XCII, No. 4 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 -TVe CM~&OMCP rTAx5,!, I'VE Cok)(nZ XEt7 TUC BOV6ET! 1 cRt&VMWe T FWLAU Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A Ufer sabbatical I'U~g~tU~e '(IEC0J6ESs! IIl HIIi T WAS bad enough that Michigan lost to Wisconsin 21-14, shattering a lot of hopes for a perfect season. But there was something else missing from yesterday's game. Bob Ufer. It just didn't seem right not listening to a Michigan game on the radio as a man honked a horn, cried, and screamed until he was hoarse. But that's what yesterday's game was like. There were a scant few features about it. For instance, it was refreshing listening to the description of exciting plays as they happened rather than trying to decipher garbled strains of Michiganeese to get an ida of what was going on. And Frank Beck- man did do a good job of keeping score-even if the score was disappoin- ting. But still, there was something missing without Ufer. Earlier this week the Voice of Michigan Football announced that, because of his health, he would not be broadcasting Michigan games. For -more than 35 years, Ufer has maize- and-blued the hell out of Michigan football listeners. And while, at times, he may even get the most ardent Michigan fans nauseous with his tirades on the glory of Michigan, his presence at yesterday's game was missed. Ufer had the ability to make a mun- dane Michigan victory exciting. And when Michigan lost, Ufer could find something good in it. There certainly was something missing yesterday. Who knows, if Ufer had announced* maybe Meechigan would have won? A~PNOW I'VE Co0iJUFI( III tbly p i [IV 50 Ii" [ - 6 S o sr WiMCWV mms VACKA-M to # LaRouche' s complex network - ; spreads its icy tentacles 0 'Guernica' goes home ICASSO'S "Guernica' left the United States last week. It was, for security purposes, a quiet Eparture. There was no fanfare and Rant ceremony; the crate in which the OPge mural was flown to Spain was iharked simply "use no hooks." Inconspicuous as the event was, however, it was filled with significan- O. The fact that finally, after over 40 years abroad, "Guernica" is on panish soil testifies to the amazing 1anrges which have taken place in that tion in the years since Generalisimo Franco's death. E It was Franco who, during the spanish Civil War in 1937, ordered the erman Luftwaffe to bomb the Basque own of Guernica. The savage raid was tter admitted to be the first ex- eriment in blanket bombing. Picasso painted "Guernica" in Paris shortly after the raid, and later requested that the painting be returned to his native Spain only after "public liberties" had been restored. But the mural is more than just a protest of war; it is a protest of inhumanity. It seeks to teach a lesson that goes well beyond the events of one night during the Spanish Civil War. It seeks to explain that oppression is neither just nor wise, and that pruden- ce never lies in inhumanity. Some critics have suggested that Spain has not changed sufficiently sin- ce the days of Franco to warrant the transport of "Guernica." Yet the progress in Spain has been very en- couraging, and the utter failure of the recent coup attempt seems to indicate that lasting and significant changes have occurred. Despite the criticism, the point remains. Spain, at the very least, is moving in the right direction. I, SINKS F RALL THESE GENTLMNm AI-YBOYWSAYS MES NO FRIENOF RUSSIA 1$ 600D PR(Ew OP MINE" Y HirilA Y Iww ~~ .t7 -;. nN,/a''e"!1t 1"' I,'t A "9"" - { i w..