PAFoge 4-Sunday, October 29, 1978-The Michigan Daily OKINBAKTHE WEEK IN REVIEW Canham in the crossfire gav The state of the city College sports is a big business, and reversed himself.::M City Administrator Sylvester Murray few universities play it bigger than "I now find that my comments were gave his annual state of the city address Michigan. erroneous," Fleming said. before the Chamber of Commerce last Last week, the business side of But as one issue apparently cooled Wednesday. Murray liked what he saw Michigan sports was in the headlines as off, another remained at week's end - in the city of Ann Arobr, and told his Athletic Director Don Canham was seniors, disgruntled with the new audienceso. _cieured by President Robben Fleming basketball season ticket allocation, He marshaled some impressive of - charges that he mishandled vented their feelings. evidence to back his claim that city hall retovation contracts for the stadium. The new policy provided for a lottery, has had a good year: " t their October meeting, the rather than days of waiting in line, to gnts received an auditor's report determine priority for senior block 3 A 14.8 per cent drop in reported which charged that Canham failed to basketball tickets. ~cie centract work at the stadium. fairer, easier way to determine who entsefreorganization of city depar- However, the athletic director gets a shot at the highly-coveted seats tments for greater efficiency, with a cut disputed the charge. Canham said the near court at Crisler Arena. Opponents in total city employment as a result; ther bids had in fact been solicited. He charge that the new system is unfair to , High levels of miority and female also indicated that he had not violated those who are willing to devote their employment in city government as a U niversity policy by failing to seek time to long hours of waiting to get good result of affirmative action programs administration approval for the work. tickets, especially those who had in ciy ha; He pointed to rules exempting athletic already formed a line for this year'sficn p grsswin f n to eemptng lreay yer'sAnn Arbor's crumbling roadways; and department maintenance projects from senior seats. * Victories by the city in three poten- such approval requirements. Since top-rated center Phil Hubbard tially costly lawsuits brought against it. On Thursday, Fleming, who is back in the line up after a season on originally backed the auditor's finding the bench, Campus basketball fans that Canham had acted improperly, have something to fight over. to ray so e e s form to raise some concerns for the comng year, He warned that the Tisch and Headlee tax cutting proposals could A rnson reconsidered have a serious impact on city services e and the city budget if voters approve The judicial wing of student govern- However, Arnson and Smith said they them in November. ment rules last week that the two top would try to get the decision overtur- Murray, whose forte as city manager elected student officials were im- ned. This may be possible because of a has been conservative budgeting and properly selected and thus, not entitled recent change in the makeup of the to stay in office after November. student court. A number of- the CSJ ;concern about the reduced size of city justices who voted in favor of Chineseforeign exchange financial reserves. None the less, he ws s Freeman's suit were lame duck mem- painted a generally rosy picture of the Meanwhile, the officials in question, bers of the court. The newly constituted A delegation from Shanghai's Chiao Tung University "We must learn the advanced technologies of the world," city and its future. Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) CSJ may see things differently than its visited the University last week during a tour of U.S. college explained Shu Chu Teng, who headed the 12-member ~President Eric Arnson and Vice- peeesradrcnie h uig delegation. "Every nation has merits and demerits. We President Nancy Smith, charged that predecessor and reconsider the ruling, campuses. The goal of the trip, according to the visitors, was shugot nd ern from hadvand e eri s io Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) mem- to set up an exchange program between Chinese and should o out and learn frtbetadvanced experiences in or- ;bens ruled against them out of political TAmerican universities. bersauled against Cithemdrstsfapolitsicalfr The exchange, which could begin in Fall, 1979, would fur- malice. The present Chinese leadership, as part of its drive for ther add to the already cosmopolitan makeup of the campus Long-time student government rapid industrialization and modernization of the economy, community. It is one more step in building a normal, working g has developed. plans to send as many as 10,000 students to relationship between two nations and peoples separated by hanger-on Irving Freeman originally foreign college and universities. fa globe and ecad of utual qurrantine. brought a suit seeking to invalidate Ar- nson's and Smith's election. He charged that the constitutional amendment Presidential selection proceeds which called for a directly elected MSA c t o u e cn m president and vice-president was notcrainoauifeslctncmi- yesideft a td ie rs n s n d The result of the continuing stand-off yield on any of their requests for t cre n n of the separte yet in effect at the time of Arnson's and between student government and the greater student involvement in the tee to screen nominees of the separate Regents over selection of the next search process, members of the Wacuty, alumni, and student search Freeman ran for president in that University president appears to be a Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) groups. MSA also sought a commitment election, but lost: Last week, his efforts presidential search without student decided last Tuesday to continue their that the board uld pick ah sadiat to overturn that vote apparently suc- participation. boycott of the search.fmth, ved.ArDshsat yveRgnsairetrAhatlgnlysghtecommittees, rather than an outside W ceeded. Arnson Dissatisfied by the Regents failure to MSA had originally sought the candidate. Murray ,.~ 41, 31d161an 1aiI 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 46 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tahiti. No longer Gauguin's paradis1 The University gideie T1,1 e e HIS WEEK the Senate Advisory University. A recruiter must not give Committee on University Affairs the name of another member of the (SACUA) reviewed a set of proposed University community without the ,guidelines concerning relationships prior consent of that individual. ,between members of the University Members of the University community eommunity and U.S. intelligence whose advise is sought on a one-time or agencies. The proposed guidelines occasional basis should follow the were not well received. same procedure. Some SACUA members said the " Members of the. University guidelines restricted academic community must not undertake freedom; others said they were not intelligence operations for intelligence broad enough. The issues of personal agencies. They must not participate in and academic freedom raise many propaganda activities if the activities questions when discussed in the involve lending their names and context of covert CIA and FBI positions to gain public acceptance for activities. The questions are equally materials they know to be misleading difficult when discussing corporate or untrue. Before undertaking any scrounging of universities for potential other propaganda activities, an employees. Guidelines which check the individual should consider whether the activities of intelligence agencies and task is consistent with her or his ecorporations in the University scholarly and professional obligations. community are sorely needed to " No member of the University protect both - the academic and community should assist an personal freedom of everyone. intelligence agency or a corporation in Therefore we endorse the following obtaining the unwitting service of an- guidelines based largely on a set other member of the University adopted last year by Harvard community. Intelligence agencies or University. corporations should not employ " Individual members of the members of the University community University community may enter into in an unwitting manner. direct or indirect consulting We were chagrined to learn last arrangements for intelligence week that CIA Director Stansfield agenices and corporations to provide Turner will continue to refuse to obey research and analytical services. The the Harvard guidelines. The director's individual must report in writing the refusal, however, should not deter the existence of such an arrangement to faculty Senate Assembly from the dean of her or his faculty, who then adopting these guidelines. In fact, it By Steven Smith TAHITI-The image of this island as a Polynesian paradise has been stained with bloody violence in a fight by local terrorists against French domination. Six members of the Te Toto Tupuna-"Blood of our An- cestors"-movement and its alleged mastermind, Charlie Ching, 43, await trial in a killing that shocked the island. The former French officer turned businessman was shot to death in his bed little more than a year ago. On a wall was posted a note signed Te Toto Tupuna: "We do not want any more French- men in our country." It was the grimmest of several incidents linked to the group headed by Ching, who has been in and out of jail since 1972, when he was convicted of stealing dynamite from a military munitions depot here. That theft was viewed as a symbolic gesture to protest Fren- ch nuclear testing. But the group was to show itself as deadly serious. IN AUGUST 1977, a bungled attempt was made to sabotage the telephone exchange. Only the first of four charges exploded, producing structural damage to the building but none to the equipment. In the debris police found a message: "Take your flag, your people and your statute, Stirn, and go home." Olivier Stirn is the French minister of Over- seas Territories, which include Tahiti. Ching and his youthful followers also are being blamed for instigating a bloody prison riot last January, during which reporters heard shouts of "Vive l'Independence" and "French go home." The two-day melee ended when, on orders from Paris, gendarmes with tear gas assaulted the jail. Two were left dead-a Tahitian warden who had been beaten to death with table legs and a prisoner felled by a sharpshooter. Although most Tahitians deplore the bloody tactics of the Te Toto Tupuna, the anti-French sentiments they preach are generally shared here. For over 20 years Polynesians have fought, mostly in vain, for more control of local government affairs. With the railroading through of a nuclear testing program in French Polynesia against the wishes of the local leaders, resentment grew. INSTEAD OF GETTING more autonomy Tahitians were confronted with a security buildup in the form of thousands of new Fren- ch troops, legionnaires and police. In ad- dition, at least 15,000 civilians have settled here since the testing began. They have brought jobs and economic growth. However, . . r, '. , s .,. -. .. _ . r;, , , , ^ a J'M. 5 :P' r EQa .a.... __. ___. _ -_. _.. _ .,....__:_ ._.:. ._ _ I :s. r;. , _ . \ ~ ° i . . y- _ . . .._ ., ,, . r. i -- _r .; t.. :_ ,. , ._ ; ,. . . ' - Sy ,_ ... _. stand. There are youth gangs here that have adopted Ching's political message. In the last election, jailbound Ching still received 5 per- cent of the vote in a bid for the highest office in the land. Perhaps the greatest impediment to Tahitian autonomy is the island's economic dependency on France. It has become a sort of economic "junkie," feeding on the gover- nmental bureaucracy that has grown steadily in the last 15 years. TOURISM AND EXPORTS of copra and other commodities account for only a fraction of the revenues needed to support the economy. France has pumped in billions of francs in the form of military spending and social services, such as education, medicine, child support and other programs. This is un- doutedly one of the brighter aspects of the French administration. Said one resident American journalist: "You can say all the nasty things you want to about the way the French govern (French) Polynesia, but compared to the rest of the colonial powers in the South Pacific, they have done more for their subjects than anyone else. And that includes the U.S. (in Although France has recently granted the local governing body-the Territorial Assem- bly-more say over Polynesian affairs, signs point toward continued French domination. Mineral deposits have recently been discovered in French Polynesia territorial waters. The Paris government might like to be around to see the potential wealth realized. Also, military officials have announced the stepping up of nuclear testing on Muroroa to perfect a MIRV warhead, and have indicated a desire to increase French naval might in the South Pacific. Whatever the future holds, reports of dynamite being stolen continue to be in the news here on the Isle of Love, and in view of the past, it is a good hunch that it may be used. The romantic image of travel posters depic- ting bare-breasted, ,langorous beauties beneath swaying coconut trees is part of the mythology. But this paradise will never be the same. Steven Smith is a pseudonym for a free- lance journalist traveling in Tahiti. This article was written for Pacific News