Page 4-Thursday, September 27, 1979-The Michigan Daily I Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 19 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Breakthrough in London A T THE LONDON conference on Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, the Patriotic Front guerrilla leaders have now tossed the ball squarely into Bishop Muzorewa's camp. By offering a proposed constitution which allows whites 20 per cent of the seats in the Salisbury parliament, Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo have now made it incumbent upon the Bishop and his, white puppeteer, Ian Smith, to pick up that momentum and accept at least one of the two alternatives proposed. What the Patriotic Front did was of- fer separate proposals in its draft con- stitution. Both alternatives call for 96 black seats and 24 white seats in the new Parliament. Under the preferred plan, blacks would have a vote in the election of nine of the white seats. That plan is by itself a major con- cession on the part of guerrilla leaders who have heretofore held to the realization that any white represen- tation over their 3.5 per cent in the population is both top-heavy and inherently racist. However, faced with the intransigence of the illegitimate Muzorewa government and of Ian. Smith, the bastion of futile white supremacist ideals, the Patriotic Front were forced to reluctantly offer the compromise plan or be wrongly sad- dled in international opinion as the wrecker of the constitutional conferen- ce. And to show the extent of their willingness to compromise, even in the face of Muzorewa's stubbornness, the guerrillas went so far as to offer a second alternative plan, one which no doubt will be preferred by the main party of the white minority, Mr. Smith's Rhodesian Front. The second proposed constitution differs from the first in the all-important aspect of who gets to vote for the white represen- tatives. Under the second plan, there would be separate white and black elections to elect separately the white and black representatives. That plan was offered "with sad- ness" and "under protest" bysthe Patriotic Front spokesman, but it also represents a new strategy on the part of the guerrillas aimed at moving Zim- babwe from its present marionette show to a state of true black majority rule. Basically, the Patriotic Front is now concerning itself with the task of get- ting into power in Salisbury, leaving. the legalistic constitutional changes for later. The key to that strategy is making sure that the black parliamen- tary majority can, by itself, propse and pass constitutional changes, and that, unlike the present sham, the white minority is not reserved an automatic veto power over such changes. While forcing the Patriotic Front leaders to abandon, at least during these negotiations, their commitment to dissolving white over- representation, the strategy shows a soundness of mind, an awareness of the give-and-take of political bargaining, and an even greater com- mitment to a truly free Zimbabwean nation. The two sides in the dispute are still poles apart on many other key issues which must soon be addressed in the conference. The make-up of the tran- sition government, the disposition of the military forces, and the integration of the old Rhodesian army with the Patriotic Front guerrilla army are all issues that have the potential of deadlocking the conference much the same way the issue of the constitution deadlocked the meeting until now. But Mugabe and company have proven this week that in negotiations for the fate of their nation, they are willing to make more than their share of concessions, since it appears ob- vious that Bishop Muzorewa and Mr. Smith will continue to tow the racist hardline .while enunciating the groun- dless fears of Zimbabwe's minority white population. And by at least wrestling from the white block the veto power over con- stitutional changes, the guerrillas are leaving open the needed legal mechanism to, once in power, even- tually wipe away the last vestiges of the brand of legal white racism that Bishop Muzorewa and Mr. Smith represent. Regents cutting7 In a University dormitory, a ha students are enjoying some beer. Th an elevator and it begins to move elevator is a train and I'm the con says one as he reaches for an im whistle-string. With each pull of the the student rams his buttocks aga elevator door. After the second bu elevator slows to a halt between flo tilts precariously to one side. Its oc are trapped inside for an hour. In that 1973 case, the campus lega fice successfully defended somee students against the University's att have them pay for damages to the e But had the incident occurred this Sep Student Legal Services (SLS) couldr gotten involved. THE REASON FOR that is an iter passed by the University's Board of prohibiting SLS from representing st legal actions initiated by the Univer proved in July while most studentsN of town, the policy was discussed aga week's Regents meeting. And whil sity attention was focused on ti protests of the Washtenaw County( Against Apartheid, not a murmur w from the student body as the Regen another blow against its rights. The new policy-which insults stu telligence while depriving them of right-is based on the flimsy logic su in an informational report submi week by University counsel Rodekic "Since SLS is supported by a m student fee assessment, it is supp University funds," Daane wrote. "I it an inappropriate use of University finance both sides of an adversary pr once administrative resolution of th has become impossible." FEW PEOPLE can be expected to an argument so transparent. Of1 mandatory fee each student pa semester, $1.74 comprises SLS's $1 nual budget. The University's volvement in the exchange is to c money and give it to MSA, which th SLS. While Daane has semantic gr his argument-MSA and its progr SLS, exist because the Regents al to-his contention is a little like sa your accountant owns your money b pays all your bills. Jonathan Rose, director of SLS, i admit that the University-initiab against students make' up only a tin ndful of ey enter e. "This ductor," iaginary "string" ainst the imp, the oors and ccupants al aid of- of those empts to elevator. ptember, not have m quietly Regents udents in sity. Ap- were out in at last e Univer- he weak Coalition vas heard ts struck dents' in- f a basic immed up itted last ck Daane. andatory ported by I consider y funds to roceeding e problem o swallow the $2.92 ays each 21,000 an- only in- ,ollect the hen funds ounds for ams, like low them aying that ecause he s quick to ed cases ny portion By Leonard Bernstein deliver blow to students Legal Services' powers Rose ... heads legal aid subtle pressure on administrators to back up their employees." THERE IS ALSO some doubt about whether the Regents' action is legal. Paul Zimmer, state assistant attorney general, ex- plained that the question will require a good deal of legal research before it can be litigated. But Zimmer admitted that "there are certain legitimate questions involved. On one hand, the University does collect these- funds on a mandatory basis," he said. "On the other hand, if the fee is collected from studen- ts for the specific purpose of funding the student government and its legal service of- fice, and this has been changed by a unilateral action by the Regents, I could see no reason behind student complaints." Rose isn't going to pursue the issue in court (he couldn't if he wanted to, because SLS also lacks the privilege of suing the University), but he promises to bring the matter up before the Regents again is no one else does. He sees the controversy as a political matter, a question of student power against University power. "Maybe if there's no-hue and cry from students it's because students don't think it's that important." That is probably the most disturbing element of the entire SLS disputs. Other than speeches by MSA President Jim Alland and Rose at the public comment session of last week's Regents meeting, not a word of protest was vocied against the Regents' decision. Because of that fact, the cycle of Regental en- croachments will continue. In April, students mutely watched while the Regents authorized Henry Johnson, vice- presient for student services, to certify an MSA election the Central Student Judiciary refused to certify, and placed MSA's budget in Johnson's receivership. Last week that silence continued and another right was lost. Leonard Bernstein is the Daily's Special Projects editor. This article was resear-' ched by Daily MSA reporter Tom Mirga. of the work SLS does each year, but the fact remains that any student sued by the Univer- sity must now find a non-University lawyer-despite the fact that he or she con- tributes to SLS each semester. Rose estimates that more than half the Univer- sity's students fall outside the income brackets for free legal aid provided by such groups like Model Cities or Washtenaw Coun- ty Legal Aid Society. For those students, a University-initiated case could mean enor- mous legal costs. Rose is also worried the new policy may have an indirect effect on procedural confron- tations between students and administrators. "An administrative proceeding - no matter how good it is - is better if it isn't a court of last resort for the student. There's a natural, Letters to the Daily To the Daily: The Michigan Marching Band is a misnomer! They don't mar- ch, and they don't play band music. At the Notre Dame game they stood at midfield and shuffled a few times. They appeared to have their feet nailed to the turf. What ever happened to the fast double step and interesting formations? The music was barely audible in Section No. 17. They should get some violins and rename the out- fit the Michigan Classical Or- chestra. Why not surprise us sometime with a few rip-roaring Sousa marches? The applause would tell the story: The spectators prefer band music from a band-not classical orchestra renditions. -Bob Blandford From the drawing board . . . Judge Brown's nomination PICKED BY HIS old friend Jimmy Carter to run the Justice Depar- tment, a prominent Atlanta lawyer was confronted three years ago with a dilemma which became a national con- troversy. When the smoke had finally cleared, Griffin Bell was no longer a member of an all-white exclusive social club, opting to become the nation's most prominent law enfor- cement official. Bell's resignation abruptly ended the criticism that had surfaced from coun- tless civil rights groups and members of Congress. The broader issue, however, remained unresolved, as the nation quickly moved on to watch the first days of the Carter administration. Almost three years later, the question remains unanswered: Do nominees for cabinet positions or federal judgeships have to resign from any social groups openly or covertly discriminating against accepting members on the basis of sex, religion or race? After an often bitter struggle, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed a resolution this week designed to establish a precedent so that future cases aren't subjected to long and par- tisan debating in confirmation hearings. But in stretching for a lan- dmark policy, the committee came up far too short, and in effect, not really coming up with a precedent at all. Headed by the supposed liberal leader of the Senate, Edward Kennedy, tha enmmittee adnnted a nolicv that "it panel demonstrates its obvious lack of understanding for the process of justice in society. Any federal judge belonging to a discriminative organization may or may not hold those prejudiced beliefs, but keeping his status in such a group can only damage the credibility of his decisions. For example, if a federal judge is faced with 'a ruling affecting the con- stitutionality of a segregated or in- tegrated school district, his member- ship in an all-white club would clearly be seen by civil rights leaders as a clear conflict of interest. Such ex- clusive groups exist across the coun- try, and are condemnable, but there's very ;little to do about most of these racist cliques. What can be done, however., is for a federal judge to disassociate himself from any such group that openly discriminates. In choosing a much more lenient policy, the committee was responding to the case of Judge Bailey Brown, chief justice in the Federal District Court of Memphis. Approving his con- firmation to the United States Court of Appeals, the committee accepted the judge's decision to suspend his mem- bership in an all-white University club. Suspension is not nearly enough. The committee and the full Senate must pass a resolution prohibiting confir- mation of any judge who refuses to resign from membership in any groups known for their discriminative nolicies. Until such a resolution is ite ti MNfR6 Come -THE CemouL$a..,. /' ,' / I I U !L ; ' 1 I W . ' I' l~