Page 4A-Friday, September 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom. Vol. LIX, No. 2 News Phone: 764-0552 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 8, 1978 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The elusive goal of educatio By Robert Hagelshaw The issues: what's in store for the 'U' this fall A S THE NEW SCHOOL year begins we find the University as a whole faced with a variety of serious and complex issues. Most of these issues have been around for awhile - University investments in South Africa, CIA covert activities on cam- pus, Graduate Employee Organization (GEO), an ever tightening University budget. We note with great dismay that they are topics as perennial as registration lines on campus. Our stands on these issues are clear and have been frequently reiterated. The University must sell all invest- ments in corporations which do business in South Africa and must cut all other ties to that country. A Univer- sity that displays a motto which in- cludes veritas should have no connec- tion with the only country in the world - with the possible exception of Rhodesia - whose entire society is based on racism. After a series of revelations concer- ning Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) activities on this campus and others there should be no doubt the University could not move fast enough to restrict government intelligence agency activities here. The Graduate Employees Organization (GEO) - involved in a. court case over its right to represent teaching fellows - must survive. Should the GEO lost its right to bargain collectively, University ad- ministrators would only strengthen their control over campus labor. These are but a few of the problems which must be considered and resolved this school year. The task is not simple and will take a concerted effort by the Regents, administrators, faculty, and students. The Regents have a particularly dif- ficult challenge. They must, for a change, listen to the students and faculty, face the truth and come to the realization that the only moral choice they have with respect to South Africa is to sell all investments in cor- porations operating there. The decision to sell must be made regar- dless of the loss in profits on the in- vestment portfolio or in grants or gifts from these corporations. Money, of course, is a delicate sub- ject to the Regents in light of the ever- shrinking state appropriation for higher education - another problem the Regents must recognize and struggle with. We expect ad- ministrators and the eight Regents to make an effective effort to both slow down the rate of what is now a yearly tuition increase and yet maintain the high quality education students at this University enjoy. But the Regents cannot resolve any of the issues alone. Although a moderate set of guidelines to restrict relationships between University faculty, administrators, students and intelligence agencies were presented to the faculty last spring, the professorsand researchers have con- sistently postponed discussion of the issue. And despite statements by University President Robben Fleming to the contrary, this is not strictly a faculty matter. The administration must actively seek and participate in developing guidelines. But in the end the most important role must be played by the students. Because the student is most directly affected by these issues, students must communicate their wishes to the Senate Assembly, the administration and especially to the Regents. The students on this campus play lit- tle or no role in the official decision- making process. The Regents even turned down a recent proposal to allow a non-voting student member on the Board. Therefore the students must take every opportunity to make their opinions known. Whether it be through a rally, a petition or student government, students must participate in order to effect change. In fact, student gover- nment, despite its problems and weaknesses, may yet be the most ef- fective means for students to speak in a clear and unified voice to the Regents and administration. Whatever the issue, whatever the method, there must be more com- munication between the Regents, ad- ministration, faculty and students. Without all members of the University community actively working for solutions to our problems in an at- mosphere of free and open com- munication we are doomed to face these same problems yet another, dismal year. A return to campus this fall means more hard work for the lot of us. As if settling into yet another cheerless hovel weren't burden enough, we also face several months of academic tedium. Perhaps we can console ourselves with the observation that things are tough all over. Or maybe we can go a step further and look for a meaningful ex- planation for why we subject our- selves to this preverse ritual known as University Life. In other words: what are we doing here? FOR SOME, the answer is easy. A University sheepskin and accompanying skills are a passport to thw world of work; a letter of introduction to the almighty Job. Certainly, advance ment of individual career plans is a legitimate goal. Indeed, we might question the sanity of one who would incur such expense without anticipating some future return on his investment. But we are't completely materialistic - we expect more from our work here, don't we? Aren't we looking for something in the way of intellectual development and stimulation, exposure to a broad range of ideas, the great search for Truth? Of course we are. That is what a university is all about, or so it says in various course guides and other literature distributed by the 'U'. Although they're less tangible than the promise of a future paycheck, these ideas are also reasonable expectations we might have as we pursue our studies this fall. The next question is obvious: does the University enable us to achieve our objectives? Do we get our money's worth? As to the first goal, that of aiding us with our career plans, the answer may be a surprising yes. The 'U' stands willing and able to move us toward the jobs that await us in the working world. Any young person with a college degree in his or her hand can get a job, providing the graduate doesn't spend a lifetime waiting fot just the "right job" to come along. This orderly progression from student to worker (or to manager, or professional) is a socialization function of our higher educational system. It is the raison d'etre of this or any other university. UNFORTUNATELY, fulfill- ment of this socialization function may well hinder our attempts to achieve the other noble goals mentioned above. The range of ideas presented on campus tends to become restricted, and the fir- st ideas to go are those that present fundamental challenges to our economic and educational structures. This restriction is not necessarily due to ideological or political opposition from educators to these ideas. But it may simply reflect the fact that a genuinely objective educational experience is a luxury. Such narrowing of intellectual pursuits can exist only when it doesn't jeopardize the socialization fun- ction. The pity is that upon graduation we are expected to at- tack the problems facing ous society without the benefit of the broadest possible range of alter- native approaches to, these problems. we are only cheating ourselves by tolerating this deficiency. Many students and faculty here at the University recognize the need to present more alternative ideas in the classroom and elsewhere on campus. Thel People's Action Coalition (P.A.C. ), a group of students interested in educational reform, will be working this fall with progressive faculty members on a number of projects intended to provide to Michigan students a more com- plete educational experience. A teach-in scheduled for October will focus on the role of education in society andrwill analyze specifically some of the shor- tcomings of the University. If you'd like to work on the teach-in or talk to P.A.C. members about other projects, we would cer- tainly welcome your support. Great power chauvanism? PARIS - Support for human rights violations in Latin America, aid to CIA proteges in Africa,arrogant ultimatims to a Southeast Asian neighbor - China today is demonstrating an almost masochistic zeal for isolating itself from its most loyal freinds and for abandoning the ideals is once espoused in international relations. Only a few years after promising cheering. U.N. delegates that it would never resort to the coercive tactics used by Russia and America, China is practicing the same super- power tactics it once condemned in others. WHENEVER PEKING has found allies, no matter how brutal, unpopular and reac- tionary, against the common enemy of the Soviet Union, progressive forces have suf- fered - in Chile, in Angola and now even in Asia. Following a strident propaganda campaign against Vietnam, China dispatched ships to Vietnamese ports to pick up what Peking claimed were "persecuted Chinese citizens", and in short order closed the border and ter- minated all aid to Vietnam. The Vietnemese say China's action violates longstanding agreements between the two nations and amounts to arrogant interference in the in- ternal affairs of a smaller neighbor. They add that the Chinese government refused all at- tempts at amicable negotiation over problems affecting "oversea Chinese" in Vietnam. As a result, China has alienated not just a close Asian neighbor, but also one with an ideologically kindred communist gover- nment. By picking a quarrel with Vietnam, refusing to negotiate and threatening to emulate the "gunboat diplomacy" of the 19th century, China risks losing its last support within the progressive world - all for the sake of its battle for influence against Russia. The problem of the overseas Chinese - the immediate cause of the current tension bet- ween Hanoi and Peking - is an old and com- plicated one in Southeast Asia. The term it- self, which originated in China, reflects an arrogance that has troubled many of China's neighbors for centuries. The implication of overseas Chinese is that whereven they settle, the first loyalty of those with Chinese an- cestry must be to their ancestral homeland, not the country in which they live. Successive imperial dynasties supported this approach and insisted that such settlers should cling to their Chinese citizenship and avoid integration into the societies where they settled. Later, the Kuomintang government went further. Not only were those of Chinese origin urged to avoid citizenship in the coun- tries where they lived, but Chiang Kai-shek attempted to organize them into a highly disciplined organization loyal to his gover- nment rather than to the governments of the countries where they lived. It seemed that a great step forward had been taken in 1955 when Chou En-lai and the Indonesian foreign minister, Dr. Sunarjo, signed a four-point agreement to settle the status of 2.5 million Indonesian residents of Chinese origins. Under the agreement, those holding both Indonesian and Chinese citizen- ship were required to choose between them within two years. The rights of their children and spouses were protected. While China recognized Indonesians over those who opted for Indonesian citizenship, it retained the right to protect thjose who chose to retain their Chinese citizenship. I was present when that agreement was signed and clearly recall a brief statement Chou En-lai made that day in Jakarta that deeply impressed the Indonesians and many By Wilfred Burchett' others. The Chinese prime minister noted that many other countries - newly independent and trying to build national un- ity - faced a similar problem of assimilating a Chinese minority. Chou urged his fellow Chinese in such countries to "in- crease their sense of responsibility towards the country whose nationality they have chosen." It was a statesmanlike act in keeping with the foreign policy China pursued at that time, and it won China great esteem among Third World nations. 'Wherever Peking has found allies, no mat- ter how brutal, un- popular and reaction- ary against the com- mon enemy Of the pro- Soviet Union, gressive forces have suffered-in Chile, in Angola and now even in Asia.' i - ... 0O . { The same year, China signed a similar agreement with Vietnem that - as befitted governments with similar ideologies - went even further toward assuring the rights of overseas Chinese while helping a Third World country solve its social problems. Under the agreement, China officially encouraged those of Chinese origin to adopt full Vietnamese citizenship. In turn Vietnam accorded its residents of Chinese ancestry - called Hoa in Vietnamese - full citizenship rights, in- cluding the rights to be elected to pariliament and hold government offices. Meanwhile in South Vietnam, almost all Chinese residents had to change their status to that of Vietnamese "of Chinese origin" un- der the overtly anti-Chinese policies of Ngo Dinh Diem. Only a few rich Chinese in the south were ably to pay the bribes needed to retain both their Saigon residence cards and their Taiwan-Chinese passports. For both communists and anti-communists, the Chinese in South Vietnam always have constituted a special problem. First arriving in the Saigon area as refugees from the Man- chu Dynasty at the end of the 18th sentury, South Vietnam's ethnic Chinese population concentrated in Saigon's sister city of Cholon,_ where a high proportion of them became merchants. By the beginning of this century they com- pletely dominated the market economy of South Vietnam, including its vital wholesale trade, transport and distribution sectors. Following the American defeat on 1975, state control of these vital ecomonic activities was necessary not just as a matter of longstan- ding Vietnamese communist policy repeatedly supported by Peking: it was.also crucial to avoid ecomonic breakdown and starvation after the war. I was in Saigon - by then renamedHo Chi Minh City - on September 10, 1975, when ,a law was decreed and immediately enforced to crack down on hoarders, black marketeers, currency speculators and other such crooks. Even though most of those affected were Chinese - not because of their race, but because of the nature of the trade many Chinese followed - tens of thousands of Cholon-Chinese demonstrated in the streets in favor of the reform measures. The situation recalled the similar one in Shanghai 25 years earlier, when the Chinese - after Chiang's defeat - introduced similar measures to deal with black marketeers, but there was one major difference. There werd no executions in Saigon under the Vietnamese communists as there had been in Shanghai when Mao's forces took charge. Since then, Vietnam has encountered similar resistance to its ecomonic reforms - and from the same kind of merchant class - as they Chinese themselves experienced after the triumph of their revolution. Having fought for national unity and for fundamental social and economic change for 30 years against the Americans and French, were the Vietnamese then expected to exempt residents of Chinese origin from nationalization, land reform and other measures - all on the grounds of friendship with China? Or did Peking, as the Vietnamese suspect, expect such treatment simply because China is a major power with 20 times Vietnai's population? Whatever China's intentions, its tactics could not help but rekindle Vietnamese memories of a thousand years of Chinese oc- cupation in the past and 50 invasion attempts in more recent centuries. Today Vietnamese officials state that propaganda broadcasts from Peking predict inevitable war between China and Vietnam, that Peking is urging Vietnamese of Chinese origin to "leave Viet- nam as soon as possible." There are other disquieting aspects of China's current hostility toward Vietnam. Tens of thousands of persons of Chinses origin have fled Cambodia to Vietnam recently, and many more are the victims of severe per- secution by the Khmer Rouge. But no word of reproach for the Khmer Rouge is heard from Peking. Instead, applying a double standard, Peking supports the Cambodians in their bor- der dispute with Vietnam. According to Vietnamese foreign ministry officials, China elevated the overseas Chin- ses problem from an internal Vietnamese af- fair into an international incident. The Viet- namese say they tried to treat the problem as one "inherited from history," not as a matter of national chauvinism, and urged Peking to negotiate the matter "in conformity with the interest of both peoples on the basis of the principles of equality and mutual respect in international relations." The most pressing question now before the two nations is whether the cold war of words will escalate through increasingly severe border clashes into a hot war of weapons. As one senior Vietnamese diplomat recently told me, "We greatly value our friendship with China, but we value our independence even more." Wilfred Burchett, an authority on In- dochina, covered both the Korean and Indochina wars from the communist sides for numerous newspapers. Now based in Paris, Burchett frequently visits the cot- munist countries of Asia, and often con- tributes to the Pacific News Service. "You GU'S Zu?, ... (U5r JoGEi&N&?G? EDITORIAL STAFF Editors-in-chief DAVID GoODMAN GREGG KRUPA Managing Editors EILEEN DALEY KEN PARSIGIAN ' BARB ZAIIS Editorial page director Rene Becker Arts Editors OWEN GLEIBERr4AN MIKE TAYLOR STAFF WRITERS: Michael Arkush, Rene Becker, Richard Berke, Lenny Bernstein, Brian Blanchard, Bruce Brumberg, Mitch Cantor, Donna Debrodt, Eleonora diLiscia, Marianne Egri, Josh Gamson, Steve Gold. Sue Hollman, Elisa Isaacson, Margaret Johnson, Carol Koletsky, Paula Lashinsky, Marty SPORTS STAFF BOB MILLER. _...,... . P'AU'LCAMPB1EL.... IENRY ENGE~LHtARDTI RI(UK .\1A11)u(lK . CUB'I St IXAI{'J' .Sports Editor Executive Sports Editor .Executive Sports Editor xecutive Sports Editor . xcutive Sports Editor ...Execut ive Spots Editor LETTERS TO THE DAILY Where did Pursell stand, when? NIGIIT EDITORS: .Jef Frank, Gary K icinski. Geoff Larcom. Brian Martin. Brian Miller. Billy Neff. Dan Perrin. Dave Renharger. Iilly Sathn. Krrol Shifman. Jamie Turner. Bob "'arrow.i ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: .Jeff Mlake. Elrsa I Fy. Pete Leiinger. Liz Mac. Eric Olson. Kevin tosetorough. Diane Silover. l'om Stephens . DESK ASSISTANTS: Ken Choliner, Cliff Douglas. Bobh Emory. To The Daily: Recently, a Diane Jacobs responded to my indictment of Republican Congressman Carl Pursell for his lack of consistency should "read the news- papers before (I) write them" smacks of the defen- sive posture which Purcell sup- porters are often forced to My letter indicting Purcell for his lack of strong support for the ERA was written and sent to the Daily after Ms. Mayer's article was published, but before news of sion on July 31. In summation, it is unfortunate that the timing of published reports in the Ann Arbor media lead to the publishing of my let-