Page 4-Saturday, July 26, 1980-The Michigan Daily On cigaret-smoking in women's dorms 0 Limiting q imports no NOT SINCE THE depressio Motors suffered losses as gr million figure announced by the a pany on Wednesday. American Motors, the country' company, also reported a record and Chrysler have suffered more s and leaders of all three are profitability this year. The setback in the auto industry not only on the current recession, b more importantly, on the increas from fuel-efficient Japanese auton in the auto industry and auto unio the Carter administration to help 1 of Japanese products sold in the Un It is certainly true that the enti the brunt of the auto industry'sr The human toll of the failingi ticularly tragic. Every American f the economy spurred by the automotive manufacturers. For tf the lifeblood of the industry the1 ployment makes this time particuli But, as Carter has wisely realize restrictions on Japanese autos is. problems of the American auto in the competition is, in fact, one of1 that could happen to the industry. The only way the automakers ar of their current slump is by prodi fuel efficient cars Americans ne it is cruelly painful at times, true c natural market mechanism that result far more efficiently than go ference. tuto cure n has General eat as the $412 ling auto com- s smallest auto loss. Both Ford everely than GM predicting no can be blamed ut also. perhaps Vernon J. Brown, Republican State Representative, thinks that the names of the women's dor- mitories on the campus should be changed because the girls may smoke in them. Writing in the Ingham County News, Mason,. Representative Brown recom- mends the coed here take up snuff and pipes. His article follows: "Betsy Barbour has finally capitulated and now the girls domiciled at the University of Michigan dormitories may smoke in peace. Girls housed within the cloistered walls of Martha Cook and Helen Newberry dormitories have been allowed to smoke for several years. "Well, let 'em smoke. There's nothing we can do about it. But the names of the dormitories should be changed. Such simple and forthright names as Betsy Barbour, Martha Cook, and Helen Newberry seem out of place above the entrances to smoking dens of cigaret-sucking. coeds at our state-supported university. Betsy Barbour should give way to Boxcar Annie. The name of Martha Cook should be changed to Black Meg. Some such name as the Blue Front should grace the building now known as Helen Newberry. We dislike to see a girl or a woman puffing a cigaret. There are so many other and better ways by which they can assert and use their emancipation. But we realize we are living in a new day and that if a woman wants to worship Lady Nicotine, that's her privilege. However, we should expect a little more of those who are being given an education at so great a cost to the state. To us, and we confess to being old-fashioned, the names of Martha Cook, Helen Newberry, and Betsy Barbour have too honest a ring to be used in con- nection with such nonessentials as smoking cigarets. If the coeds would turn to snuff or would light up pipes the names of the dor- mitories might well remain as they are, but feeble efforts at naughtiness as smoking cigarets seem just a little dishonesti beneath such stalwart English names as Martha Cook, Helen Newberry and Betsy Barbour." This editorial appeared on the editorial page of The Daily on April 18, 1933. It reflects a time when attitudes on female emancipation were, to say the least, in Rep. Brown's words, "old-fashioned." a R , a j._ j. ing competition nobiles. Leaders LETTERS TO THE DAILY: )ns have begged imit the number ited States. Freedo m r re country feels misfortunes. industry is par- To The Daily: freedom feels the blow to Your editorial of July 22 to make losses of the ("Resist Registration" is right in A mar identifying the issue of draft not to th hose who supply registration as a moral issue, but truthm threat of unem- it fails in its explanation of that Declara arly grim. issue. The argument that embodi d so far, placing military conscription leads to which f no answer to the war is dubious at best. Much wor- of limit se, your argument impliedly con- protect ndustry. Stifling cedes the justness of conscription dividual the worst things if we assume (as many intelligent "rights( persons have argued) that that a m e going to get out military preparedness guaran- is not ar ucing the smalltees peace. nment. The real moral issue facing 19- p ul s o r ed. And though and 20-year old men is this: to military ompetition is the what extent may a free gover- tradicts will bring this nment compel its citizens to spirit of )vernment inter- make sacrifices? At stake is tions ma something much more important ds of dis than peace, for it is something the dan without which even peaceful Courtr human life would be argumer meaningless; namely, the stitution freedom of the individual to the Sele determine his own life in accord World W with his values. In compelling a fundame young man to register for the jection:t draft, our government is in effect serviveN telling him that his own life is ' dment t nothing when weighed in the was de balance against political ex- dividual pediency. Thanks to the blun- the first dering foreign policy of the Car- of Righ ter Administration, he must discussii spend the crucial formative Griswol years of his adult life with the passing knowledge that those years are cases, ti not his own. The young man who forgotten registers for the draft today may, Yet in a at anytime in the near future, be most in forced to give up all plans of his Constitu own and to risk his very life in Constitu defense of a cause he may neither Declarat support nor understand. Only the it protec most naive or short-sighted of us life, thet can honestly say that he is is the sou merely filling out yet another A volu government form. Is it ap- proper p propriate for a society which to defen claims to cherish individual tically, it om conscription to compel any individual such a sacrifice? n's life belongs to himself, e state. This fundamental was identified in the tion of Independence and ed in the Constitution, ormulated a government ed powers in order to the rights of the in- . Those who say that entail obligations" forget an's right to his own life right given him by gover- Any program of com- y service-whether y or otherwise-con- both the letter and the our Constitution. Objec- .y be raised on the groun- crimination, but there is ger that the Supreme may disregard these nts as it did other con- al objections raised in ctive Draft Law Cases of ar I. At no time has the ental constitutional ob- that compulsory military violates the Ninth Amen- o the Constitution, which signed to protect in- rights not enumerated in eight articles of the Bill hts. Except for some on in the 1965 case of d v. Connecticut and references in a few other hat amendment has been n by the Supreme Court. very real sense it is the uportant clause in the tion, for it puts into the tion the principles of the. tion of Independence and ts the right to one's own fundamental right which urce of all others. unteer army is the only ractical and moral way d a free country. Prac-a t is one of the best protec- tors of peace, not only against foreign aggression but also against the irresponsibility of our own government. As the President's Commission on an All-Volunteer Armed Force discovered in 1970, an army com- posed of volunteers-of persons who know what they are fighting for and why-is the best, most ef- fective army. And because such an army depends for its strength upon individual choice rather than governmental compulsion, it serves as an additional check upon the dangerous exercise of powers by the President and Congress. Not many men would volunteer to risk their lives for such stupid ventures as Korea or Vietnam. Morally, a volunteer army is a recognition of a per- son's fundamental right to choose his own destiny. Should a man or woman volunteer to fight if the country is attacked? Yes-if the person values his own rights and freedom. If draft registration is compelled by a real need for military preparedness (and not merely by the current President's need for respect), let any adult citizen,of whatever age and of either sex, volunteer now to serve in whatever capacity each individual feels best able to perform in an emergency. A free country should never lack volun- teers in the face of genuine foreign aggression. As Thomas Jefferson observed in 1801, ours is the strongest nation on earth because each citizen meets in- vasions of the public order "as his own personal concern." If that observation is no longer true today, perhaps it is because a government designed to protect our rights has been asking us to sacrifice too much. -David Mayer e... July 24