SOPINION Page4 Saturday, September 20, 1980 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan c Vol. XCI, No. 15 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of The Daily's Editorial Board A devilish lottery scam THERE ARE those who claim they'll never win, and never buy them. There are those who claim they'll never win, but buy one every day anyway, just in case. And then there are those who know they can't lose, buy hundreds of lottery tickets, and win millions. Of course, those who know they can't lose have a secret: They fix the lottery. While state lottery officials across the country claim it couldn't happen, in Pennsylvania it did. In April, at least six people allegedly conspired to inject liquid into numbered ping pong balls used to select winning lottery com- binations. A Pennsylvania grand jury recom- mended yesterday that charges be filed in the lottery-rigging case, which really was a devilish scheme. Liquid was injected into all the balls floating inside three air machines ex- cept those numbered "6" and "4." Then, heavy betting occurred on num- ber combinations involving 4 and 6, with the result a "666" winning num- ber. 666, you may know from The Omen, is a number representing satanic evil. It's kind of sad, when you think about it, that this scam was discovered. Surely everyone has dreamed at one time or another of rigging a lottery. Those unfortunates who got caught in Pennsylvania are left with only one defense, it seems: The devil made them do it. 4 @Q1980 The !News and O~eer Distributed by LA. Times Syndicate &, \r a A*O olooe57/ Halting the Indian nukes SANITY HAD ITS way on Capitol Hill Thursday when the House of Representatives voted to reject the proposed shipment of 38 tons of nuclear fuel to India. President Carter had earlier ap- proved the sale over the objections of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a prerogative which the law regarding nuclear material exports allows him. But the law also allows the Congress to block shipments if both legislative iouses issue statements of disapproval within 60 in-session days. The Senate fbw has one week- to duplicate the &'d W mber's is y The material Carter wants to send to India consists of low-enriched uranium, which is not suitable for weapons use. But even though the In- Mondale on 7 ICE PRESIDENT Walter Mon- V dale, speaking at the centennial celebration -of a Kansas City pewspaper, indicated that the Carter Administration opposes recent legal incursions on freedom of the press.; While Mondale's remarks may represent a progressive initiative on the part of the White House, they have n somewhat hollow ring in light of two offenses relating to press freedom that have gone uncorrected by the Ad- iinistration. 7 For the first time, Mondale, ex- ressed disapproval of the conditions rought about by one particularly per- picious 1978 Supreme Court decision, a judgement that gave law enforcement officials the "right" to search newsrooms for evidence in criminal proceedings. The High Court decision vas spurred by an unexpected in- a s dians plan to use the fuel as an energy source only, newly re-elected Prime Minister Indira Gandhi has been un- cooperative in coming to agreements on limiting the spread of nuclear arms. Withholding shipment makes excellent sense as a method of achieving respon- sible international nuclear policy. India could certainly show more restraint than it has been exhibiting over the past decade. According to Representative Jonathan Bingham (D- New York), who sponsored the resolution rejecting the shipment plan, India used American' and Canadian nuclear materials to explode a test Weapon six years ago, against the ex- pressed wishes of the suppliers. There's no reason to let that sort of dangerous activity go on. . press rights vasion of The Stanford Daily in Palo Alto, California. Yet, it was Carter's Justice Depar- tment that secretly subpoenaed the phone records of The New York Times Atlanta Bureau. (Bell Telephone was only too happy to comply.) Mondale had nothing specific to say about that case. Furthermore, Mondale's boast that the Central Intelligence Agency is no longer using reporters as operatives abroad left one important point un- spoken. CIA Director Stansfield Tur- ner, handpicked by Mondale's boss, has repeatedly expressed support for the practice of employing reporters-a practice that jeopardizes the safety of all foreign correspondents. We would feel a tad more comfortable if the president himself would repudiate Turner's enthusiasm for the Agency's days of glory. . - -t - -- Forget the protests-There's a big econ test next week Last spring term, a professor stood before an auditorium filled with several hundred students preparing for an introductory political science lecture. He leaned toward the microphone and asked cautiously:t"How many of you would consider yourselves 'liberal'?" A handful of us bravely raised our hands. "How many of you would consider yourselves 'moderate' or 'middle of the road'?" A growingdnumber of hands crept above the sea of students. "How many of you would consider yourselves 'conservative'?" he asked. Suddenly, the auditorium was filled with the hands of future lawyers, doctors, and corporate executives. The same Diag that was the site of the nation's first major rally in protest of the Vietnam War is now the occasional recruiting grounds of the John Birch Society. A group that 10 years ago would have been heckled off the campus is now surrounded by inquisitive students, grabbing pamphlets and scribbling their names on petitions. A "Reagan'80" bumper sticker is pasted on a dorm wall that not so long ago displayed a Eugene McCarthy campaign poster. THIS IS A new generation of college studen- ts. A generation that is as disdainful of its more politically-active predecessors as that order of "drug-crazed radicals" would have been of these new "establishment sell-outs." But, whatever the shortcomings of mem- bers of the '60s "counter-culture," one has to* concede that at least they acknowledged the failures and injustices of society and sought to correct them. At least they were engaged by the challenges of society. At least they cared. Not so anymore. Perhaps in reaction to the excesses of the '60s-the Haight-Ashbury's and LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Somoza headline By David Meyer the campus bombings-this new generation has rejected the political concern and ac- tivism right along with the communes and the love-ins. THIS -NEW GENERATION of students looks at society and does not see the oppor- tunity to shape it-to make lasting changes for the better. Instead they see only the oppor- tunity to conform-to shape themselves into the successful mold of doctor, attorney, or business executive. No longer is it common for. college fresh- persons to speak of joining the Peace Corps or VISTA. For these new Bill Buckley apostles, it's strictly law, medicine, or business-maybe architecture for the real non-conformists. (Or, worse yet, there are ones like the freshwomen in my introductory history discussion group who two weeks ago announced that she already knew she was going into corporate tax law.) These are the people who think that poverty ended in the U.S. after the Depression. These are the people who think that My Lai is a new citrus soft drink. These are the people who can't understand why those silly tenant far- mers in the South, if they really exist, don't just "go to law.or med school and get good jobs like the rest of us." These are the people who think historians have been unfair to the memory of Joe McCarthy. MENTION KENT STATE University to these students and they think only of its poor record last football season in the Mid- American conference. This new generation, which seems commit- ted to little else than replicating the affluence of its parents, is surely out of touch with the harsh, non-suburban realities of the "real world. The only glimpse of real activism in the past several years has arisen over opposition W to the recently reinstated draft registration; But even this outcry was nothing of the sort that characterized the political spirit of a decade ago. These young pre-professionals didn't join the ranks of the last remaining ac-" tivists because they opposed the injustices of war. They protested because nothing ap' pealed to them less than interrupting their ascent up the professional ladder for a jaunt off to the Persian Gulf. THE DOMINO THEORY they previously adopted as proper conservative political dogma was suddenly forgotten with the looming threat of their own conscription. It is this new generation that produced the student in my political science discussion group who, last week, explained that he couldn't understand why all this clatter was being raised about South African apartheid. After all, he argued, the blacks of South Africa have the highest standard of living of all of black Africa. Why should they worry about political and social repression?! Maybe it isn't that these young country- clubbers can't perceive the world beyond their hedges. Maybe they are fully aware of the failures of society, but theywjust don't care. I mean, who's got time to worry about social injustice when you've got an econ exam coming up next week? David Meyer covers the Michigan Student Assembly for The Daily. blasted 4.. H a t* d 4. r o9 k To The Daily: It seems that The Daily is trying to teach us something by labeling Somoza 's assassins "terrorists" in a headline in the September 18 issue, but con- siderable ambiguity clouds the message. One possibility is that The Daily is, in a muddleheaded, obfuscating fashion, trying to identify with a perjorative term those who killed a man who, by the accounts of hundreds of sour- ces representing a wide range of the political spectrum, ruthlessly explited the Nicaraguan people and killed tens of thousands seeking to maintain his power. The other possibility, unfor- tunately rather slim, is that The Daily is wisely calling our atten- tion to the frequent misusage of "terrorist," startling us with such a blatant misnomer that we become more aware of other in- stances in which we are asked to reflexively repudiate acts of violence. I would appreciate some clarification of The Daily's intention. -Randy Earnest September 18 Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of The Daily's Editorial Board. Letters and columns of the individual author(s) do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of The Daily. MEO ticket policy hit Football booing unfair To The Daily: The Office of Major Events and its ticket policy must once again be called out on the carpet. The office showed just how incom- petent it is in its method of ticket distribution for the upcoming Bob Marley and the Wailers concert. My friend and I were eightieth in line and felt we had a chance to get good seats in Hill Auditorium. To our, surprise, there were no main floor or decent balcony seats left. My friend promptly drove out to Briarwood and got seats in the front row of the first Springsteen To The Daily: You'd think that any people as balcony, far better than what was offered at the Union ticket office. This hardly seems fair. What do we get for the time we waited in line? After four years in Ann Arbor, I've learned I should ex- pect no better from this organization. If ticket distribution is to proceed in this manner, it should be made clear to the public. Major Events has shown itself to be stupid and shortsighted. This is just a case in point. -Barry Rudofsky September 17 line praised numbers the morning tickets went on ale. We stand behind our i To The Daily: Certainly few people expected the confrontation Michigan en- countered from a highly energized Northwestern team last Saturday. The difficulties inherent in playing in such wet conditions are not conducive to exceptional football. However, the booing and cat calls shouted Regardless of some students' ex- pectations, the Michigan football team is not run by ignorant in- sults screamed from the stands. Let's show some respect. As good fans, we should help our team continue to grow in its win- ning tradition by maturing a little ourselves. -Bob Ames Peter Kinley E' m