Page 4-Thursday, September 13, 1979-The Michigan Daily Whe Micigan al Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 7 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan U.S. : Stay out of Angola E WEEKS and months following the death of an important inter- national leader lead all political strategists to ponder the inevitable question: Who is next in line? Those observers are suddenly busy in Angola due to the death Monday of the country's first and only president, Dr. Agostinho Neto. Neto died after a long bout with chronic hepatitis and cancer of the pancreas. And the country's future is further complicated by the fact that Neto's departure leaves a vacuum in Angola's leadership at the same time that Neto's party, the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola, faces another struggle with rival guerilla factions in the countryside. Those other groups - mainly the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola - have been opponents of Neto's movement since the revolutionary days of 1975, and the new .gap in leadership may serve as a :catalyst to further fighting. It may also serve as a catalyst for a new attempt by the United States to put its favorites in the higher echelons ,of power in Angola, an attempt that has met failure in the past. As the struggle for leadership in Angola was brewing in 1975, the United States - forgetting the lessons of Viet- nam - began sending covert economic and military aid to pro-Western fac- tions in the civil war in Angola. The Popular Movement took from the other side, receiving considerable equip- ment from Eastern Europe. The battle Slines were drawn. But with the assistance of Cuban :ctroops, the Popular Movement and : Neto were thrust into power and have -held it ever since. It has been that presence of Cuban troops which has kept the United States from recognizing Angola, and it has been the main stumbling block in the efforts to restore diplomatic ties between the U.S. and Cuba. Yet, since taking power the Popular Movement has not had an easy time. Confront1 with the persistent efforts of rival guerilla factions, Angola has 'not been able to become the "economic Brazil of Africa" that businessmen there have long predicted. Instead, it has been plagued by economic har- dship which can only get worse in the anticipated battle for leadership. The grand opportunity for influence must be clear to the United States. By aiding pro-Western guerilla groups, the U.S. can establish a stronghold in the heart of Africa at a time of growing African disillusionment toward American foreign policy. And, as the arms limitation treaty appears in serious trouble on the Senate floor, a forceful plan of intervention in Angola could sway the important bloc of .un- decided senators that the Carter ad- ministration refuses to sit idly by while the Soviets continue their presence in Africa. Moreover, in the aftermath of the discovery of Russian troops in Cuba, a U.S. active role in Angola may attract more sympathy. Since the Soviets can station troops in Cuba, why can't the U.S. try to exert influence in Angola? Amidst these temptations, the Car- ter administration must resist any in- tervention in Angola, either through financial or military assistance. Neto was a strong and determined leader who devoted his entire life to his country. He even spent several terms in jail for the sake of gaining indepen- dence for his land. At the time of his death, he was working to gain acceptance from the United States, and not wooing the Soviets as most Western politicians expected. It would be in the U.S. interest if his successor continues in that direction. But he must not be pushed. Daily Photo CYRENA CMANi Inside The Institute for Social research, pollsters devote themselves to question, though, is: Have you ever been polled? Wouldn't you like to expanding the public's awareness of its own atitudes. The key be? Power there for the asking i 1 .and El Salvador S 0 Some of us never tire of polls. We search out political and sexy surveys in. newspapers and oc- casionally delight in more ob- scurejournal samplings; written'. by experts for evperts. Part of the fascination is voyeuristic. I rarely speak with elder Hispanic women, par- ticularly about Mideast politics. But look, there it is, a whole block on the bar graph showing how many of these people approve of Begin and how many don't - making me feel like I understand an otherwise strange group. THOUGH SOME OF us can't get enough however, there's, something mildly insulting about polls. We're reminded, with each description of some part of the contemporary American psyche, that no matter how free spirited and independently minded we might feel as individuals, as a group we're predictable. That's not the half of it. Few of us have been tapped to represent hundreds of thousands of others. Who that you know has even been polled on interracial marriage or space exploration or Jerry Brown? OF COURSE the population is too large and the samples are too small for anyone to expect to be polled. That doesn't stop me, though, from contemplating the day when my call will cofne. N THE WAKE of the July revolution in Nicaragua, the ripple effect has spread northwest to another dictatorial regime, in a tidal wave of protest and violence that is threatening the military government of El Salvador President Carlos Humberto Romero. And once again, the United States is caught in the precarious position of backing an oppressive and repulsive regime against a popular uprising. If there is one thing the administration should have learned from the Nicaraguan situation, it is that in order for the United States to win influence with any future revolutionary gover- nment, the time to board the ban- dwagon is early on in the struggle, not after the victory is assured. One cannot help but wonder whether our. relations with Nicaragua's provisional junta would be better now if the administration had not backed the Somoza regime to the disasterous end, and then - once Sandinista vic- tory was assured - worked to under- mine the revolution by unsuccessfully trying to move Somoza'a national guard into key positions in the provisional government. Now there is concern in the state department about a domino effect, hit- ting El Salvador, and the ad- ministration has already forgotten the lesson of Nicaragua, responding to the uprising by urging the current . El Salvadorian officials to now liberalize By Brian Blanchard the repressive military regime have most recently launched a vigorous new campaign of insurrection. Eleven people were killed in the most recent incident of fighting, and the authorities there are preparing for a new wave of violence expected to coincide with In- dependence Day festivities this coming weekend. The president's 56-year-old brother was murdered in his home by armed, masked gunmen. These revolutionaries represent the downtrodden of El Salvador, who com- prise most of the population of that nation. They are the poor, who have been most hurt by government policies, and by El Salvador's oppressive land control system. It is the unemployed, the landless, the peasants, who are leading this insurrection. And, once again, the Carter ad- ministration, that has shown a sincere interest in cultivating favor with the third world, is supporting the military government that has held power since 1932. In effect, the administration is again supporting the status quo, and hoping that a few, late "reforms" will placate an angry populace. But the populace has shown that, like the Sandinistas, it is too late to be satisfied with a few token attempts to liberalize the country. But it is not too late for the administration to actually get on the right horse early and sup- port a movement for simple social justice. "Excuse me, sir. Do you have 15 minutes-t1 an hour to discuss issues of national import?" Apparently, I'm not alone in looking forward to my interview. In an upcoming issue of the Public Opinion Quarterly, two researchers with the University's Institute for Social Research (ISR), That high temple of polling, say, in effect, that those who've been touched by pollsters respond with gratitude to the system. They're more likely to vote than those of us who haven't had the chance to call a poll our very own.. Michael Traugott, director of Election Studies at the Center for Political Studies and a lecturer in the Political Science Depar- tment, and John Katosh, a doc- toral student and assistant direc- tor of the studies, took the results -from election surveys from 1972, '74, and '76 and compared them with records of registration and voting for the interviewees. Some of those polled were in all the surveys, some in two, and some in just the last. THE RESULTS, the resear- chers say, aren't conclusive. "At some point, we'd like to go back and really look at it," says Katosh. They're worried that sin- ce one-time interviewees were given a choice about being polled again, there's a possibility that those who turned further inter- views down mostly continued in their non-voting ways and that those who were willing to meet with the pollsters again were ripe to vote anyway. Their hypothesis makes sense. People who read headlines year after year telling them what they think are suddenly asked to make headlines. And not just for them- selves, but for a whole chunk of the populaton. It brings the headlines home. Traugott and Katosh shouldn't spend, so much time doubting themselves - they have too much else to do. The obvious task before them is to marshal the awesome resources of ISR behind a Rapid Polling Project. EVERYONE complains that too few of us get involved in the political process, that a shrinking segment of the population is elec- ting everyone's political leaders. The obvious solution to the problem - if you think it that - is to poll every man, woman and child in America before Novem- ber, 1980. Having been given a chance to register their opinions directly with someone, to have the exact shading of their opinions reflec- ted in serious surveys, RPP would make voters overnight.' The important thing would be to call the whole country at least once with a -few questions (a la would have to be passed that no official poller could be put' on hold. If the holds weren't barred, it would add a decade to the poll). But the epic survey could also be used to find the answers to some long sought questions. RPP could determine whether or 'not housewives really prefer the sof- ter tissue and whether in fact four out of five dentists agreed on everything. THE TWO University resear- chers say the polling may have long-term effects on voting; in which case the RPP could be a once a generation project. -Bet- ween generations, RPP staffers could decide what other habits they would like to encourage in Americans. After all, if questions about elections asked before political contests prompts voting, the possibilities for polls to change are endless. If Lou Harris is influential now, consider his clout when he discovers that simply by asking Americans questions no orge's bothered to ask them, they'll follow his lead. Brian Blanchard is the Daiy's University Editor. i Letters e To the Daily: Gloria Steinem's presentation September 10 at Hill Auditorium was, as one departing observer remarked, "thoroughly delight- ful." Ms. Steinem assumed we were committed as women and men to the feminist struggle. She assumed we were familiar with the dynamics of power and elitism that underly that struggle. More exciting, she recognized and affirmed con- structive changes we have helped to implement. Ms .Stinem nseifically com- superficial analysis of the current state of feminist politics is disappointing, and a little frightening. We rightfully expect more sophisticated critical analysis from an experienced and active leader. Her in- spiration is essential; it is inef- fective and distracting, however, if it is not grounded in a pragmatic representation of the implications of. what we have achieved and the specific ob- stacles we still face. Though the academic com- munity is more responsibly ad- A..noct: I- h fo.ari. a anfnaf~,at our statistics show the entry and progress of women through traditionally male enclaves? With characteristic delicacy, Ms. Steinem said "I hesitate to use the word 'elite,"' when speaking of her audience as members of an academic com- munity. Yet it is precisely such terms we must use, not as the popular rhetoric of cult figures, but as the sophisticated analysists we should begin to be. Our educational system is, in fact, elite. We cannot hope to un- derstand the benefits and limitatins of such asvtem until ilisticV within academia. Contrary to Ms. Steinem's encouraging opinion, diplomas continue to be con- sumer products, by the natureof rampant grade inflation apd placebo quota systems. Ms. Steinem's discussion was a sophisticated movement pep rally. She affirmed her audience by delineating the "we's" and tae "they's," and thereby welcon d "us" into the fold of an acce- table "revolution." There i a great discrepancy, however, between the ease with which Ps. Steinem employed her rhetorc and the amount of work sil