Page 4-Thursday, March 1, 1979-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine ears of Editorial Freedom. Vol. LXXXIX, No. 126 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Mideast peace doubtful New wave of suicides sweeps the industrial West . L AST WEEK, AFTER Secretary of State Cyrus Vance held talks at Camp David with Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Khalil and Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan, there was growing optimism that the three parties could finally settle the remaining obstacles to an Egyptian- Israeli peace treaty. Sources in the State Department privately predicted that another summit meeting between President Carter, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin was im- minent. But those hopes faded into despair this week when Sadat, Carter and Begin committed political blunders which have hurt the chances for peace, in the Middle East. These same three leaders - who all performed brillian- tly in the Camp David summit in Sep- tember - must quickly put aside they various political maneuvers, and finally cooperate to sign a treaty. The week's first disturbing news came from Cairo when Sadat refused to accept Carter's invitation to come to Camp David fo'r another summit meeting. The Egyptian leader did say, however, he would return Khalil for more talks, entrusting him with full power to negotiate Egypt's stance in the Arab-Israeli dispute. While Sadat gave no reason for not coming personally, -many American and Israeli diplomats concluded that he is no longer willing to make any concessions and felt another summit meeting might force him to do so. This kind of pre-summit inflexibility severely hinders the peace process. Since no peace treaty has been signed yet, it is fairly obvious that both sides must still make some concessions. For the Egyptian leader to refuse to par- ticipate inanother summit and iron out the remaining stumbling blocks in the dispute shows a lack of total commit- tment to the peace process. By sending Khalil, Sadat was clearly trying to avoid being politically humiliated by a failure to achieve progress at the summit. If he returned to Camp David and came home empty- handed, it would have deep domestic implications on his hold to power. He felt that Khalil could discuss the dif- ficult areas but would be less pressured by Carter to make any crucial concessions. Carter, who has already committed a great deal of his administration's energy to settling the dispute, should have insisted that Sadat attend the summit. At this stage, when any more stalemates may widen the gap beyond repair, it's imperative that all three leaders meet again. While Khalil is an effective negotiator, Carter should have made it clear to Sadat that a summit meeting could only be produc- tive if the three major leaders met together. By' sending Khalil, the number two negotiator, Sadat was pinning Begin into a corner. If Begin decided to at- tend the summit, he would be more likely than Khalil to be pressured into making concessions. If he refused, it would appear that the Israelis were sabotaging the peace process. The Israeli cabinet voted 14-2 not to send a representative to meet with Khalil and Carter. Instead, it agreed to send Begin to meet with the U.S. President privately. Although sending Begin would cer- tainly have put the Israelis in an un- comfortable position, the cabinet should still have' sent Dayan to keep the peace process alive. A meeting between Carter, Khalil and Dayan would have been better than no meeting at all. If peace is ever to be achieved in the Middle East, all three sides must be willing to dispense with concerns over political implications and agree on a firm and lasting solution. It is not a disease, but last year it claimed the lives of some 5,000 young people in the U.S. and thousands more throughout the Western industrialized world. It strikes females at a dispropriationately greater rate than males. It strikes principally those without occupations, and without-hopes of any occupation. IT IS SUICIDE, and in today's economically troubled world, it is growing into an "epidemic of youthful violent death," says Dr. Richard Seiden, a suicidologist at the University of California's School of Public Health. For every one of the 5,000 suicides among Americans aged 15 to 24 in 1977, another 20 young people tried but failed. The num- ber of successes today is three times the figure for 20 years ago. Of the 100,000 or more young Americans who attempted suicide in 1977, 90 per cent were female. FOLLOWING ACCIDENTS and murders, suicides are now the leading cause of death among American youth. The tragedy is repeated throughout the developed world. West Germany's suicide rate has almost doubled in the last ten years: 1,468 West Germans bet- ween 10 and 25 killed themselves in 1976. France's suicide rate is steadily growing. In Japan, a recent survey showed that one of four students periodically con- templates suicide. Some 900 Japanese under 19 killed them- selves in 1978, an increase of 15 per cent over 1977. While there are many causes of suicide, more and more experts are singling out the economy as a primary factor in the recent wave. A combination of rising expectations and shrinking, career opportunitiessis squeezing the young from all social strata into a dark and fearful corner. For many, the only visible way out is by the end of a rope, a bottle of pills or a leap from a window. "JOBLESSNESS is no bargain at any age," says Seiden. "But its effect on young people is most severe. It has a great deal of meajpng in terms of your iden- tity. It is one of the ways society expresses its values." And while the tragedy spreads, the future looks grim. Em- ployment prospects for those on the bottom of the ladder, urban ghetto youth, are bleak at best, at worst non-existent. Even the ar- my, in the past the employer of last resort, is turning down record numbers of applicants, from 35-45 per cent, according to one recent estimate. If you can't pass the tests, Uncle Sam doesn't want you any more. And for college graduates, the situation is far from promising;. and it's changing for the worse. The U.S. Labor Department's Occupational Outlook Handbook sees millions of college graduates forced to take blue-collar jobs as craftsmen, technicians and mechanics by 1985, when more than 10 million new holders of B.A. and B.S. degrees will com- pete for only 8 million openings in jobs traditionally filled by college graduates. DR. MARV MILLER, a con- sultant in suicidology who teaches at the University of California, Irvine, links depression among young people with the pressures of the job market: "There is a whole generation of disillusioned young people who are coming out of college all dressed up with no place to go because, in many cities, the economy cannot provide the specialized jobs they are trained for." In Western Europe as well, where access to universities has been broadened from the middle and upper classes to include sizable numbers of working class students, university degrees have failed to become passports to economic success. In fact, notes a report issued by the Geneva- based International Labor Organization, "A , university degree is fast becoming a ticket to nowhere." The report, issued in 1978, warned that "under-em- ployment, job dissatisfaction and long periods of unemployment now await too many university gradautes." The ILO put the total number of unemployed under 25 years of age in 24 industrialized nations at By Eve Pell 7 million in 1977. The study showed that while those under 25 made up only 22 per cent of the work force, they comprised 40 per cent of the unemployed, "vir- tually a nation." And an Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report published the same year grimly predicted a "longer-term imbalance between the growingdemand forem- ployment and the absorptive capacity of the economy." An ' earlier OECD study projected higher rates of inflation and unemployment for Western economies from 1975 to 1985, along with lower rates of economic growth than any since the end of World War II. DR. LUF OTTO, a Swedish suicidologist, warned the 9th In- ternational Conference on Suicide Prevention in Helsinki in 1977 that mass unemployment could cause an increasing num- ber of young people to take their lives. He called the mass unem- ployment among youth today "extremely dangerous." Dr. Seymour Perlin, professor of psychiatry at George Washington University Medical School, links the rising suicide rate among young people to the decreasing opportunities availble to them. He thinks society in the U.S. is growing more like Japan's, where there has long been intense competition for en- try into good schools and a high suicide rate among the young. In Japan, he says, "the student who doesn't get on the ladder at a cer- tain point, won't." He believes that young people here are saying by their suicides either "There's no way on" or "I'm falling off" the ladder. Some evidence indicates that the suicide rate for those under 19 is about the same in the U.S. as in Japan, even though the educational pressure in this coun- try is not nearly so intense. UNFORTUNATELY, prospec- ts for improvements in the job market in the advanced nations are not good. Peter Melvyn, a researcher for the ILO, says that about 800,000 jobs Were lost and not replaced in West Germany alone between 1973 and 1976; for every 10 jobs that disappeared, he said, only 8 new ones were created. And young people, who are inexperienced, are less likely to be hired. Dr. Seiden of UC's School of Public Health, criticizes "the move in this country to make things more cost-effective and less labor-intensive." He points to the Bay Area Rapid Transit system, which was designed to be operated with no employees on the trains or in the stations. "It's a sp'ace age nightmare," he complains. "There's no one to sell you tickets or to make change.uTo get intora restroom you have to talk into a remote control televised screen. "BUT PART OF the capitalist system is to maximize profits," he continues, "and one of theun- fortunate consequences is that in a matter between profit and people, people come in second." In addition to the rise in young suicides,' Seiden notes, is a sur- prising, even steeper rise in the number of young homicide vic- tims. He considers the job market a major factor, though not the only one, in these tragic deaths. What the experts -are saying from statistics, others speak from bitter experience. "Blacks folks, there's no need for you any more," a black woman wailed to acrowd mour- ning, the 913 people who died in Jonestown, Guyana. "There's machines can take your place!" No one appears to have an- swers. Few have found rewar-' ding jobs through all the gover- nment subsidies for training workers and public works em- ployment in Western Europe and in the U.S. The tide of-youthful self-destruction continues despite a widespread network of suicide prevention center. Says Dr. Seiden, "The way you deal with suicide is to change the world, to change society, so people feel that life is worth living and they have purpose and a place." '* * * Eve Pet! writes for the Pacific News Service. Letters House should oust Diggs Peace essential in Vietnam NOW THAT U.S. Rep. Charles Diggs (D-Mich.), Chas once more spurred controversy in the House of Representatives by* voting while his appeal is pending, it appears that his colleagues may do what they should have done last fall: expel him. The Detroit legislator, convicted last October of payroll padding and mail fraud, voted earlier this week for the first time in Congress' new session and has told Rep. Newt Gingrich (R- Georgia) that he intends to exercise all his rights as a congressman. Though convicted felons are not perrmitted to serve in the legislature, this law is not applicable to Diggs because he hasn't yet exhausted the appellate process. Several of his peers, however, are calling for his expulsion, which is permitted if passed by a two- thirds majority. Diggs deserves to be booted from his office. Though he has been given a three-year sentence for his crimes, he probably won't begin serving for several years even if he eventually loses his appeal. While Diggs was re-elected by a lan- dslide a month following his convic- tion, the policy he will be formulating in Congress will affect those outside of his district. Many legislators have indicated that they would tolerate Diggs' presence in the lawmaking body if he simply didn't vote. But this would only be a violation of the principles upon which our legislative system is based - that of fair representation. What type of representation is this for Diggs' district? Though he was certainly "the people's choice" last November, Diggs' constituency didn't know their congressman wouldn't have a vote. Diggsdistrict deservesa fair voice in Congress, and it is apparent that its present representative is unfit to serve at his post. Hopefully, the House will expel Diggs immediately and call for a replacement to give his district responsible representation. debt Nitchigan Oafgid EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner ............................... EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard Berke........... ..........MANAGING EDITOR Michael Arkush, Julie Rovner...EDITORIAL DIRECTORS Brian Blanchard ...................... UNIVERSITY EDITOR Keith Richburg............................. CITY EDITOR Shelley Wolson.................... PEist!\\l. Elt:I)lI'(l Elizabeth Slowik ........................ FEATURES EDITOR Dennis Sabo.............................SPECIAL PROJECTS R.J. Smith, Eric Zorn ......................... ARTS EDITORS .htd liaksk?,. 0 e~n Gleisemal..... s.( to .e : V'I')Is STAFF WRITERS: Sara Anspach, Ronald Benschoter, Leonard Bernstein, Tony Bloenck, Mitch Cantor, Marianne Egri, Julie Engebrecht, Mary Faranski, Ron Gifford, Marion Halberg, Vicki Henderson, Steve Hook, Elisa Isaacson, Tom Kettler, Carol Koletsky, Paula Lashinsky, Adrienne Lyons, C.J. Maleski, Tom Mirga, Mark ParrentKevin Roseborough, Beth Rosenberg, Amy Saltzman, Steve Shaer, John Sinkevics, Bill Thompson, Jon Vogle, Joe vargo, Howard Witt, Jeffrey Wolff, Timothy Yagle PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF tn ' Freeberg-........................... P-r--- -- 1 H )R Birad Benjain .............----------SAFF'V PlI0TO(HAI'llEI:l ('\ 11 m1-t-11. Cl11ev---------------.... TAFF l'I I( )'0( I'II It Pa .i.a I(larks ........... ............- l'.X1 I-i 1 )'I'( )( tp11 I 1IF 1 \lau eeo N~ale.N ........... .. S AFF 1111 1, |6A ||II | Lia1esn...........SAFF 1110OGH.\ w":E" To the Daily: Lately I've been reflecting upon the current events hap- pening in Vietnam, Cambodia, Rhodesia, and other countries on this planet Earth where war is taking place. I am angry! I am outraged! For what is going on is killing. What is going on is murder. People who once had dreams and who once were an integral part of family life now lie dead in the jungles. Their families, moving from one village to another, are numb with fear and helplessness. Daily we read reports of dif- ferent countries participating in the destruction of each other. We see it on television and hear it on the radio. Have we as individuals become immune to the world's cry of pain? Only when we break down the statistics informing us of how many people were killed in battle will be become shocked and realize that these statistics of death are the breakdown of humanity itself. For families are individually affected beyond imagination. What war does to an individual's psychic is appalling. Let us stop looking at war as a statistic. Let us stop being im- mune to the ugliness of war and what it does. What can we do about this ugly thing called war? We can write protest letters to our President, to our senators, and congressmembers. We can talk with our friends about the hurting of war and urge them to voice their anger and rage. We can join disarmament groups and groups that support the ending of hostilities in the world. We can join peace corps. We can choose life. For even these small steps can make a difference on the journey to peace. For the journey ETS To the Daily: I commend the Daily for publishing Ralph Nader's expose of the Educational Testing Ser- vice (ETS) and offer a footnote to his article. While I was a graduate student at Princeton University in the mid-1970'shNew York magazine published a similar article by Nader on ETS. Like the Daily's article, New York's summarized the (then preliminary) findings of a full- length investigation of ETS. And like the Daily's article, this one severely criticized ETS for the extravagance of its operations as well as for the unreliability of its tests. Those in Princeton who subscribed to New York urged non-subscribers in the com- munity to buy copies of that issue at any one of the several local newsstands which ordinarily sold the magazine.When, however, non-subscribers sought copies they discovered that all copies had already been purchased, something which had never oc- curred before despite Princeton's proximity to New York City. The mystery was solved, however, the next week, when, by coincidence, the University spon- sored a conference for gradaute students considering alternatives to academic careers. A represen- tative of ETS discussed the op- portunities offered by his organization, not least good salaries and comfortable working conditions. At the con- clusion of his talk I questioned him about the disappearance of the recent issue of New York. He readily replied that ETS had pur- chased all issues on local newsstands and had done so to prevent the (further) circulation of Nader's "lies." When I then asked him why, if Nader's growing employee salaries and plush offices is inexcusable-and when done in the name of non- profit "public service"-im- moral. Perhaps the publication of Allan Nairn's complete report will make the victims of ETS' ex- ploitation aware of their own plight. Only then can we obtain some unambiguous answers to the questions Nader raises-the kind of answers too rarely found' on ETS test. -Howard P. Segal Assistant Professor of Humanities Markley Council To the Daily: As a voting member of Markley Council, I object to the editorial in Wednesday's (Feb. 21) Daily condemning Markley Council's appropriation of $50.00 to be con- tributed to the Detroit Edison Shareholder Initiative. The Daily claims that "the contribution of dorm council money for a pur- pose as purely political as this one is improper." While the issue of halting construction of the Fermi II nuclear reactor is to some extent political, there are other aspects involved, among them the health and safety of thousands of people. The Daily's expression, "purely political," in addition to being vague and am- bigious, misrepresents the situation. The Daily also misunderstands the manner in which Markley Council operates. The Daily states that "Membership is gained by attendance at' the meetings, but many residents who cannot vote yet, or don't at- tend might feel strongly about seeing their money given to cer- tain organizations." Actually, all Markley residents are members of the Council, and may come to 6. ,, - . - - - .,, 4 .. Graffiti To the Daily: A -column devoted to the dis- semination of graffiti seems like a preposterous idea, granted, but the Daily deserves praise for "Nuke The Whales," by Roger Pensman. So far the samples Pensman has offered have been only middle-high quality, but it is , his infectiously likable prose , which makes "Nuke" the single best regular feature of your paper. He writes with a good natured cynicism and self- effacement which is singular on a college paper, and his wry ob- servations strike me as somehow more representative of the student body than the often righteous editorials which the Daily offers. What more can be said but "Nuke 'em, Roger?" -Elizabeth Powell To the Editor: Vietnam The following is an open letter to President Carter sent by a group concerned citizens in Ann Arbor. Dear President Carter, As a group of citizens concer- ned about safeguarding peace in Vietnam, we are disturbed by the possibility of United states com- plicity in connection with the recent Chinese invasion of Viet- . nam. Because we realize the great impact that U.S. foreign policy has on international relations, and because we believe that the American people are for peace in Vietnam, we demand the following of you in order to establish a safe and peaceful at- mosphere for the Vietnamese people: 1., Demand an immediate un- conditional withdrawal of Chinese troops from Vietnam; 2. Reject the theory that any -.