Page 4-Wednesday, December 6, 1978-The Michigan Daily Gie MUdtr4 n iaiI 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom. Vol. LXXXIX, No. 74 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The proposed guidelInes A ticket to Bolivia - one way Alas! The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs has cleared the way for the faculty Senate Assembly to discuss and vote on a set of guidelines which would restrict activities of intelligence agencies on this campus. Unfortunately, the long- awaited guidelines are still too weak and their effect - for better or worse depending on who is analyzing the situation - is questionable. . The document on which the Senate Assembly will debate and vote resolves that members of .the University should not: * "Lend their names and positions to gain public acceptance for material they know to be misleading or untrue; "Use their academic role as a ruse for obtaining information for intelligen ce agencies; ""Give the name of another member of the University community to any intelligence agency without the express prior consent of that individual unless required to do so by law or subpoena; " "Assist any person or organization, including intelligence agencies, in obtaining the involuntary services of another member of the, University community." The proposed guidelines render a fair picture of what kind of covert activities are being conducted on this campus. There is no question that these kinds of shenanigans are detrimental to the principles of academic freedom and ought to be prevented. But many on campus have asked what effect these guidelines will have on stopping these pernicious activities. There are several answers to that question. First, the discussion prompted by proposal of the guidelines and their ultimate adoption is basically a consciousness-raising experience for the whole community. It has made persons here aware of what agencies such as the CIA are doing at the University. Second, adopting guidelines is a clear and strong statement that the University community condemns such actions. If the United States is truly a democratic-republic, then those agencies involved would be hard- pressed to blatantly ignore the wishes of those people whose pleasure they serve. Director of Central Intelligence Stansfield Turner seems to have some problems with that concept. He has refused to abide by similar guidelines adopted by Harvard University. One of Director Turner's major objections to the Michigan and Harvard Guidelines is that other entities, such as corporations are exempt. On this point we have agreed with Admiral Turner. The University guidelines did make some concession to that idea. But not enough and this is where the guidelines fail. We strongly urge the Senate Assembly to take this into consideration when it votes on the proposed guidelines later this month. The assembly has the power to alter the guidelines in this direction and should. Some 500 Laotian tribespeople, remnants of the cia's secret army of guerrilla fighters during the Indochina War, will soon be heading for new homes in the mountain forests of Bolivia if plans worked pout by a U.S. missionary group are successful. The Laotians, Hmong tribesmen and their families, have been living in refugee camps in Thailand since the end of the war in1975. The plan to move them to Bolivia was put in motion a year and a half ago by Food for the Hungry, a group active in Indochina during the war. According to an agreement signed by the Thai and Bolivian governments last August, title to a 37,000 acre site rising from 1,000 to 4,000 feet in the heavily- forested Beni Provincehregion will be handed over to the Hmong when they arrive. Already, sources involved in the project say, housing and roads have been built, and $30,000 worth of food stocks are on the site. Tools and machinery are being hauled in from La Paz, about 200 miles to the north. In all, the sources say, the project will cost Food for the Hungry roughly $500,000, including air transportation. Virtually all of the money comes from church groups. No U.S. government funds are involved. The Hmong (also known by a term they consider derogatory, "Meo," or "savage"), were scheduled to arrive in Bolivia in mid-December. The uncertain tenure of an immigration director in a new Bolivia government, which came into office last July, has delayed the project until perhaps mid- January or longer, according to Food for the Hungry president Dr. Larry Ward. There are other problems as well. On the Bolivian end of the project are two special advisors who run a missionary group that has become entangled in charges that it is linked to the CIA. In addition, native Bolivian Indian groups, supported by oth the Catholic Church and the Bolivian Communist party, are already upset about a government immigration policy which has encouraged the immigration of white South Africans and Rhodesians to the resource-rich interior. Laying out a red carpet to the Hmong may exacerbate the already-troubled situation. After learning of a Bolivian minister's invitation to the white Africans last year, the Tupac Catari Indian Movement warned that "Our hackneyed socio- economic situation would be immeasurably worsened by throwing into our midst these racists, the most recalcitrant in the world." The Indianhmovementnhas circulated a Johannesberg news paper interview with whote South Africans who visited Bolivia last year to assess it as an escape hatch from the worsening strife in their own country. examined by Ward were. Nicaragua and Guatemala. According to one source connected with the project, the Guatemala idea fell through "after it blew up . in the newspapers there." Nicaragua, Ward aid, was rejected aftei an evaluation of the country's shaky political climate. Bolivia, which has widely encouraged immigration, was soon selected. "Thailand's population surplus can be utilized to solve South america's populations deficiency," Ward wrote in his proposal. In May of this year, two Hmong By Jeff Stein Cleo Shook, a retired Agency for International Development official and Food For 'the Hungry Consultant, says the charges of CIA connections had been "trumped up from the opposition... (by) anthropological scholars who say 'don 't disturb the natives." Halterman, another Food for the Hungry advisor, are officials. Ward and two other Food for the Hungry officials stoutly maintain that the two men only offered advice and "opened doors" for them. "Knowing these two men (For several years), says Ward, "I would find it hard to believe they are connected to the CIA." Cleo _shook, a retired Agency for International Development official and Food for the Hungry Consultant, says the charges of CIA connections had been "trumped up from the opposition. . . (by) anthropol- ogical scholars who say 'Don't disturb the natives." There is a professional quarrel among those circles." Food for the Hungry appears to be moving into the final stages of its Hmongresettlement program at .a time when there is an upsurge of interest aroundathe world in the plight of native Indians of South america. According to the Anti-Slavery Society, which investigated Indian conditions in the area where the Hmong are scheduled to settle, "feudal forms of serfdom and peonage are common." Upwards of 65 per cent of the Bolivian population is non-white, most of them Indians. Each year, several thousand seek seasonal work across the frontier in neighboring Argentine, or emigrate permanently. Only 550 Hmong are now scheduled to be brought to Bolivia by Food for the Hungry, although the original project called for these families to "demonstrate. . . the feasibility of the larger movement of several thousand refugees to Latin America." Ward, meanwhile, says he is not iblivious to potential problems to Indian resistance. Interview by telephone from his Miami office only a day after his bus had been stoned in Bolivia by anti-American rioters, Wars said, "we're certainly ready to move on and help the Indians." Ward added that ."if there's a place on the face of the earth better than Bolivia, then we'll go there." 0 Jeff Stein, Washington correspondent for the Boston Phoenix, is a frequent contributor to Pacific News Service. "Like us, they practice discrimination," said one man, Jan Foley. "The whole country is ruled by a small minority of "white immigrants from Europe who keep the Spaniards and local Indians well and truly in their place .. . White Africans will feel very much at home there." Dubbed "Proyecto Nueva Vida," ot "New Life Project," the plan to take the Hmongs to Bolivia is the brainchild of Dr. Ward, who first visited Indochina in 1958, and who is the founder of Food for the Hungry, a Phoenix, Arizona-based organization. Following the collapse of the Saigon regime in April 1975, Ward turned his attention to the refugee resettlement problem in Thailand, where some 40,000 tribespeople from Laos had gathered in overcrowded, dirty camps. "What started us on this,' Ward said in an interview, "was one of the nefugees. He knew our concern, and hoped we could find a place with peace, security and freedom." Two possible relocation sites representatives were sent otBeni Province to check out the conditions and report back to Thailand. Should the project go through, the Hmong will fit in well with the native Indians, thinks Food for the Hungry", special advisor, David Farah, who is both a Bolivian Ministry of Education official and director of the summer Institute of Linguistics, a fundamentalist Christian missionary group there. The Institute has been linked to the CIA by a British newspaper. "Their facial characteristics would fit in very well with the American Indian of the Amazon' basin," Farah contends The selection of Farah and one other Summer Institute for Linguistics official has also prompted questions by critics of the project. The Institute's operations, through 13 outposts served by airlifts in the Bolivian hinterland, are carried out under the direct auspices of the Bolivian Ministry of Culture and Education, of which Farah and Victor The Soweto 11 on trial N SOUTH AFRICA the 'court system is simply a tool used by the government to oppress blacks. Thgis week, the government is also trying to use the courts to change history in the case of Soweto 11. The 11 - 10 men and one woman - are all student leaders who the government claims incited the riots in the blavk township of Soweto in 1976. Prosecutor Klaus Van Lieres contends that the 1.5 million blacks who live in Soweto .were not actually displeased with the government, and that the year-long upheaval was the fault of a few extremists. This is nonsense. The Soweto uprising was a protest against the institutional racism practiced by South Africa, particularly in the school system. Because black schools are vastly inferior to white schools, blacks are all but doomed to continued ignorance and poverty. This is essential to maintaining white minority control, and is used to oppress all blacks, not just a group of radicals, but it was clearly representative of the anti-government feelings of the oppressed masses. Over 700 blacks were killed furing the Soweto demonstrations, primarily by police gunfire. This trial, and the government's contention that the upheaval was not indicative of the mood of the masses is simply a jejune attempt to justify the brutal retaliatory efforts of the white regime. The government's story is that the Soweto 11 duped the masses into a protest they did not actually support. Thus, the police were only protecting the masses from themselves by bringing a bloody end to the demonstrations - sure. The regime has never acted for the good on any one black. The police murdered 700 protesters because they demanded equality and thus represented a threat to whote minority rule, and no' kangeroo trial is going to change that fact. Letters to the Daily t EAIwec The Daily does good To the Daily: Probably one of the strongest compliments that can be given to Michigan students when they are compared to the mainstream of American public opinion is that we care. The recent debate over CIA recruitment on campus is an excellent example. I congratulate the Daily for being very fair in printing CIA Director Turner's recent letter in its entirety and without comment, especially since it represents views differing from the Daily's. There is always a danger of any such debate turning into a forum for the views of one side only, and I believe you have taken a large step in conbatting th)is trend. Along this line, I would like to add a few points to those of Director Turner. There is a school of thought which believes we must end completely CIA recruitment of students and faculty on college campuses. I must disagree. A nation the size of the United States does the world an immeasurable disservice by becoming isolationistic. Therefore, we must be able to conduct an active and well- thought out foreign policy. To do this, it is necessary that we have intelligent information of impeccible accuracy available to our policy-makers. In the recent debate over what the U.S. policy towards the Iranian government should be, mich of the case for any side in the argument rests on whether the current government of Iran will be (in any sense of the word) better than the government that would result from the Shah's demise. If we are to formulate the best policy on foreign policy errors are among that group that is currently trying to end CIA recruitment on campus. I say paradoxically because it is on University campuses that the CIA is most apt to find those promising students and teachers whose expertise can help our country aviod a repetition of the policy errors of the past. I believe that a more sensible approach would be an examination of how the Agency conducts its recruitment. Our objections should not be with the fact that the CIA recruits students, but rather with any abuses of that recruitment process that unfairly influence a student's decision on whether or not to join the agency. There is nothing wrong with asking a student to join the CIA anymore than there is something wronh with honoring a professor with an appointment to the National Security Council. It is forcing the student to join that must be guarded against. We must also aviod the conclusion that there is something basically wrong with intelligence gathering. To deny the U.S. its CIA qould be to deny our leaders the same infomation about world affairs that The People's Republic of China, the Soviet Union, the Republic of South Africa and Israel all get from their well developed intelligence agencies. This would serve no one. The analogy to medical research seems sppropriate. There is nothing wrong with having the information, it's what you do with that information once you get it that counts. information crucial to the process of bringing peace to the Middle East. It is rather a trite saying; byt knowledge is power. It is what you do with that power that makes the difference. And I don't believe that we should injure our ability to get that information. Because to do so noy only takes away our ability to do something wrong. I also takes away our ability to do something right. -Murray Scott Tanner LSA Sophomore * Me generation To the Daily: Today's university students put social life ahead of social conscience. This is displayed by the current trend of looking within ourselves, and a striving to be accepted on the social scene. When comparing today's students to those of ten years ago, there is a broad difference in activities pursued. In place of campus rallies and social aware ness groups are capricious trends which induce a smug, apathetic attitude. An attitude of indifference. Students are getting carried away with catharsis. The priorities of the University of Michigan students should be questioned. The current student lifestyles blinds and desensitizes the person to pain and suffering going on around them. This reveals an affluence among students that would have been ridiculed ten years ago. Students now base their identity on what they have materially and not who they are already. Has materialism won out over extend concern and a helping hand to one another. This basic caring can instill the hope and desire to truly touch one another in a meaningful and remembered way. -Gordon Glaza, LSA -Gilbert Placencia Jr., School of Social Work No comment department Editor's note: this article appeared in the December 4, 1987 issue of Sports Illustrated. And the last shall be first For 25 years the Big Ten has sought to project a "scholar- athlete" image by choosing an All-Academic football team. To qualify, a player, whether star or lowly sub, has to have at least a B average for his most recent year or a B average for his entire college career. But this season the Big Ten had- trouble getting nominees. Out of 1,000 players on conference rosters, only 49 qualified. Moreover, the conference winners fared worse than the losers, which gives the unwanted impression that oafs make the best players. Michigan, Ohio State and Michigan State scraped up only seven nominees among them, while last-place Northwestern z)0-10-1) had 11 'fat Ill. \