Page 4-Wednesday, September 13, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LIX, No. 6 Wednesday, September 13, 1978 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Where is hell on earth? South Africa's gold By Matt Franfola Be fair to the CIA and be fair to the students I Y ESTERDAY The Daily reported that Central Intelligence Agency Director Stansfield Turner harbors some objections to a set of proposed guidelines which would restrict relationships between members of the University community and intelligence agencies. The guidelines to which Turner questions were conceived by the University's Civil Liberties Board as a result of recent revelations about CIA covert activities here, and at other college campuses. Turner's concern focused on a clause 'i the guidelines requiring "intelligence agencies such as the CIA" to obtain "the express prior consent of an individual" before "his or her name may be submitted by another member of the University community to an intelligence agency as a potential employee, consultant or agent." Letters between University faculty and the CIA, made public through a Freedom of Information Act request, have shown that the CIA has used professors on this campus to "spot candidates" for possible Agency employment. The CIA, once it has a student's name, initiates an investigation of the student which sometimes lasts for several years before the Agency decides to make a job offer. The only problem with this style of recruitment is that the student doesn't know she or he is being watched. Turner was not entirely opposed to the requirement of openness but asked only that the University be fair. In a letter to Univergity'President Robben Fleming he stated: "I want you to know that this agency has no objection to the rule on personnel inquiries that is proposed, provided it is applied equally to all such inquiries. It does seem to me both inequitable and a potential disservice to the country to apply to inquiries from this agency rules of procedure that do not apply to other applicants for personnel information or recommendations." On this point we whole-heartedly agree with Director Turner. While the CIA has been under attack for its campus recruiting activities since the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activities hearings in 1975, little if any attention has been paid to recruiting or other activities of corporations on college campuses. Unfortunately, little is known about corporate connections to intelligence agencies. What we do know is this: ITT work with the CIA in Chile and helped set the stage for the military- overthrow of the freely elected government of Allende. Honeywell Corp. and the FBI cooperated to disrupt protest over the corporation's contributions to the Vietnam War effort in the sixties. There are cases now before the courts which may ultimately show that a number of large American multinational corporations have kept political files on employees which were open to intelligence agencies. The University is a place of learning, a forum for new ideas where students and faculty seek the truth. This cannot be done in an environment of suspicion and fear. Students and faculty members should not bear the burden of worry that whatever they say or do could be recorded and filed by a government agency whose clandestine activities have been morally repugnant to those who believe in truth and justice. We urge University administrators and faculty members to first, note that the Director of Central Intelligence accepts guidelines which would protect the privacy of students and second, adopt guidelines, as Turner suggests, which would prevent anyone from making an unwarranted invasion into the lives of students, faculty members, or administrators. Let's be fair to the CIA, but most of all, let's be fair to the students. i i i CARLETONVILLE, South Africa - While telephones jingle in London, Zurich and Chicago and speculators push gold to record prices, black miners crawlthrough waist-high tunnels to wrench the metal from the world's deepest mine. Their sweat-soaked bodies give some hint of why the metal is so precious. The miners' day begins in a steel cage hurtling downward at nearly 40 miles-per-hour past layers of time imbedded in rock. It is almost an hour of stop-and- go before they reach the bottom, where they crawl through a maze of tunnels little more thans a yard high to take their turns with jackhammers against the solid rock. The temperature of the rock is 135 degrees. The dust-filled air is refrigerated to a relatively cool 90 degrees, with humidity 95 per cent. The mine, called Western Deep Levels, is the world's deepest at 13,000 feet - almost 10 World Trade Center buildings on end. An army of 12,351 blacks and 978 whites daily risk their lives to scratch an ounce of gold from every two tons of rock. Western Deep Levels, 43 miles west of Johannesburg, harvests about 263 pounds a day. It and the other 34 major gold mines in South Africa produce about 700 metric tons of gold a year. South Africa has 70 percent of the free world's gold and in the year wnding June 30 earned $3,7 billion from gold sales. Uranium, once a worhtless by-product of goldmining, earned the country $1.3 billion. Mosutt Moatsdugha, a 35-year- old black miner from neighboring Botswana, is one of 378,000 black and 38,000, white miners who descend into the bowels of the earth every day in South Africa to drill and blast specks of gold to fill the country's coffers. Mosutt says he likes it here "because of the money." As a team leader, or "boss-boy", he supervises a dozen drillers and "cheezers" - men who place explosives into drilled holes. Mosutt earns $11.08 per eight- hour shift and works ii shifts in 14 days. Mosutt clambers through the jagged tunnels to make sure the drillers keep hammering. In near-total darkness, pierced only by miners' lamps, the sweat- soaked men half sit and hald- recline on a bed of crushed rock and drill with bone-jarring noise into the wall containing the unseen gold in a band an inch to a foot wide. Shirtless miners bathed in the, spray of water-cooled jackhammers lean into frills. Their helmets scrape the chiseled roof pressing own at about 14,000 pounds per square inch. In addition to their salaries, all miners, black and white, receive a monthly bonus based on how ,many yards of rock they drill and blast. Mosutt, a stocky, full-faced man, has worked for the mines for 19 years. He says he averages about $250 a month while a driller may earn $130. That is a long way from the white miner, or "stopper" who supervises several black teams led by men mines. like Mosutt. Johan Fouche, 31, a white "stoper," says he earns $800 to $1,000 a month. Taking a mid- morning tea break,rFouche fished a cigarette from his dripping white clothes and said, "I used o work for the railroad, but I left for a career in the mines. The money is better." He said, the mining was dangerous and about every 100 days there's a rockburst in one o his shafts, average for the mine. In matter-of-fact tones, the tousle-haired miner said, "I had a rockburst three or four months ago..One kaffir black was killed. It's an act of God. There's no warning." In South Africa's gold mines, the average fatality rate is 1.4 deaths per 1,000 miners, or 82 men killed a year. At Western Deep Levels, rockbursts kill 30 men a year. Alone with the miners, plumbers, electricians, welders, riggers, mechanics and engineers work on the hundreds of miles of spaghettied waterpipes ventilation ducts, electric lines, and compressed air hoses that snake from scores of whirring, hissing machines. Each day at 5 p.m., the end of the day shift, a stacatto series of explosions from thousands of pounds of explosives in hundreds of drilled holes rattle the mine. It takes about four hours for the dust to settle and rock to stop falling before the night shift crews descend into the mine to funnel the blasted rock into ore cars. Above ground, all the miner's needs from laundry to medical care are taken care of free. The miners live in hostels and receive a fortified diet containing 4,000- 4,500 calories a day - more than twice the needs of a normal person. The blacks are migrants. They generaly leave at the end of their six-month contracts and go to their native towns and villages. They return to the mine when they need money. There is almost a 100 per cent turnover in th mineevery year. Blacks remain in the lowest jobs because the Afrikaner- .dominated miners union protect's whites' rightsaand privileges. By law, blacks can not form unions or integrate white unions. They are represented, however, by so-called "laison committees" that handle grievances but have no bargaining rights. Critics of the migrant labor system say it serves business by keeping wages low. But mining officials point out that until a few years ago, gold was officially pegged at $35 an ounce and goldmining was not particularly profitable. To keep costs down blacks were paid low wages, but their salaries have rised 300 percent in foru years. It's been ,10 years since the price of gold was freed from $35 an oonce, and it is now selling for about$210 an ounce. Matt Franfola is a reporter for The Associated Press. The photograph is by Peter Magubane and appears in his book entitled "Magubane's South Africa". It is reprinted here with permission from Alfred A. Knopf Publishing Company. There is no acceptable alternative tax proposal, T HIS NOVEMBER, THERE WILL be two tax limitation amendments to the state constitution on the Michigan ballot. Both proposals and their backers have used the tumult of California's Proposition 13 to turn this state into the newest battle front for the much talked about "tax revolt." One of these, the so-called Tisch tax plan, would slash property taxes in half, from the present 50 percent of the estimated market value of property to 25 percent of the assessed value. This plan is patterned after the original Prop 13, and is shunned by most orthodox politicians as too drastic. Opponents of Tisch, like this paper, will remind voters that, unlike California, Michigan has no huge budget surplus to fall back on should property taxes be rolled back. Also, Michigan never experienced the etwin explosions of property values and property taxes that has enraged Californians. If Tisch passes - despite what its author, Robert Tisch will tell you - there will be drastic cuts in state servies and education. Our educational system is already surviving only by the barest possible margins - one look at this University's budget will prove that. Reports from the Wayne County Bureau of Taxation show that the county's already hard-pressed school districts will lose $220 million if Tisch naca ~ personal income of Michigan residents. Headlee, which places limits on state spending, would drastically hold back funding for such worthy state-funded projects like aid to the cities, transportation, and downtown development. With Headlee, there would be no tax cutbacks, but no longer would Lansing be able to bail out financially-troubled localities and townships. There is also a line of thinking going through circles that oppose both tax plans. That is: Opponents of both headlee and Tisch say that, in the event that both proposals pass, the one with the largest vote count will take precedence over the other. Of those who see both proposals passing, many, see Headlee as the least objectionable alternative. A reasonable argument, but wrong nonetheless. Frankly, when the Daily opposed both proposals, we did not equivocate. Even though Headlee is the milder of the two, we do not support that plan as the least objectionable. The "least objectionable" argument is the same line of thinking that discourages people from voting their conscience and supporting minor party candidates in local, state and national elections. And as a result, we end up with an apathetic electorate whose voting pattern reflects not the mandate for a change but a desire for the lesser of tw oevils. m I LETTERS TO THE DAILY: 'S. To the Editor: I have devoted my rese this summer to trying to est how much impact on the African economy various kin international sanctions r have. The problem is not ea I am really appalled at statements as the Daily edi made today (Sept. 7): " foreign corporations were t out of South Africa the eco would collapse ..." "estimate" of the impa implausibly and irrespon African econ them out would mean selling ecomonyt earch (cheap) these pieces of paper to affect the c imate (rich white) South Africans and Pulling o South then watching the South African refiners st nds of government block the conversion products t might and removal of the proceeds. The that ecomo sy. So only possible impact is However, such temporary upheaval in South converti torial African (and our) financial resourcesi If all markets. relationship o pull Pulling out of direct oil produce nomy investments (essentially refineries), This factories, equipment, etc.) does two or thr ct is not mean crating up that stuff crude oil, sibly and removing it. The South such a cont complex but could not much foreign-he urrent rate of output. $4 billion ut might mean that oil source). op shipping petroleum would hu o South Africa. Oil it surely not ny's vulnerable point. years. South Africa 1) can Sanctio its abundant coal damage t into oil, 2) has direct of South ps with OPEC crude and blacl ers (andhas domestic were to , and 3) maintains a since Sou ee year stockpile of particular purchased for just imvestme ingency over the past equipment ld debt grew from $1 to over 1973-76 (sam Pulling out here, to, rt South Africa bu much for at least a fe ns probably would he economic well-being Africans (both whites ks), especially if we apply them patiently, ith African growth is ly dependent on foreign nt, technology an t. But sanctions would