Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, November 23, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 ;W- M FORk OJ HCTOAYSj9. f,, a T TO ) M* T~Hl kfI tO26AE. I TW O 3 "' RH12A* %ca . C?- HO'-TVh>3 )(TBM HkI2 5%UCIA & C6T9TAR ON 23-oAS (CSJO IG 5EW am t *RPA" I5 DULIC& I6A&Y / _ a/ ) S9 O ie p" 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 'U' reveals its priorities ONE OF THE MOST Orwellian quali- ties of the University's adminis- tration is its ability to switch from paternalistic warmth to hard-line business realism Without breaking stride. In quotes that read like former Treasury Secretary Maurice Stans' "I can't recall" Watergate testimony, Opportunity Program dir;' tor George Goodman last week told the Board of Regents that by some quirk of the national economy, the University had been forced to let black enrollment slip this year. Meanwhile, at Rackham Aud., the same idealistic University that says it makes every effort to recruit and accommodate black students told ne- gotiators for the Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) their economic demands were unfeasible-even de- mands relating to class size and cur- riculum quality. Under the Stans mask, with those watery old eyes, that lovely flannel suit, and that warm concern for stu- dents' welfare, lurks a collective ad- ministratorinterested mostly in cost- effectiveness. NATURALLY the University wants to increase black enrollment - without lowering admission stand- ards, of course. It's just that things haven't turned out that way. Or may- be it's that when the Regents agreed to the Black Action Movement de- mands, thousands of students had actively indicated that they thought it would be a good idea for the Re- gents to come to terms. The BAM strike made it expensive to continue a racist admissions sys- tem which arbitrarily excluded 10 per cent of the state's, population from one of its universities. The di- rect cost of the strike was augmented by public relations setbacks, which Business Staff MARC SANCRAINTE Business Manager Sue DeSmet ....................Finance Manager Ay arnise.. .....Advertin Maae Jack Mazzara ...................ales manager Linda Ross .... ......Operations Manager DEPT. MGRS. Laurie Gross, Ellen Jones, Lisa Kannengiser, Steve Leire, Debby Novess, Cassie St. Clair ASSOC. MGRS. Rob Cerra, Kathy Keller ASST. 'MGRS. Dave Schwartz STAFF John Ataman, Dan Brinza, Peter Caplan, Nina Edwards, Debbie Gerridh Amy Hart- man, Jayne Higo, Karl Jennings, Carolyn Kathstein, Jackie Krammer, Sue Lessino, Becky Meyers, Dave Piontkowsky, Amy Quirk, Ann Rizzo, Susan Shultz, Judith Ungar, Au- drey Well, Ruth Wolmn. SALES PEOPLE Mike Bingen, Cher Bledsoe, Syl- via Calhoun, Rich Flaherty, Beth Friedman, Linda Jefferson, Ellen Meichinger, Amy Piper, Steve Wright, Dalva Yarrington TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Mary Harris, Cindy Hill, Judy Ruskin, Tim Schick, Curt Smith Editorial Page: Peter Blaisdell, Tony Duenas, Sue Wilhelm Arts Page: David Blomquist, David Weinberg, Photo Technician: Pauline Lubens threatened the University's funding through gifts and grants. Presently, GEO poses a similar, if less dramatic, threat to business as usual at the University. Sufficient- ly mobilized teaching fellows would certainly have the power to shut down the teaching and grading pro- cess. RUT IF THE TFs win their demands, labor groups not previously re- cognized by the University will have a foot in the door. TFs, like clerical workers, have traditionally been among the unlucky thousands whose low wages, lack of overtime pay, and unrewarded devotion to duty have formed a cheap-labor base for cor- porations masquerading as service organizations. The University dragged out its heavy artillery to oppose both GEO and the unionizing clericals. Last year President Robben Fleming warned in a University Record state- ment that if GEO succeeded in or- ganizing graduate employes, there would be fewer but better TFs. Simi- lar persuasive techniques were used to no avail before the clericals' un- ionizing vote. So when the administration bar- gaining team goes to the table with a flat refusal to negotiate on econom- ic points, the administration is at a moment of truth. If the University is to continue concerning itself purely with drawing in revenue, rather than with providing education, administra- tors must take a hard line on any educational or labor demands that cost money. Neither increased minor- ity enrollment nor improved wages and working conditions for employes can come without pressure from a powerful bloc of students or work- ers. THE UNIVERSITY argues that it is an under-funded public Institu- tion, struggling to make ends meet even without the added burden of fair pay for essential work or full ex- tension of educational privileges to minorities. But an institution with a general fund budget of well over $100 mil- lion is hardly poverty-stricken, what- ever its cost requirements. Financial priorities set by the University's top officials preclude new educational spending but continue to fund fat research programs and provide aux- iliary services for government and military agencies. Most observers agree that the chance of a new BAM strike is ex- tremely slim, but perhaps the Uni- versity of the '70s has moved into a new phase, one of labor confronta- tions. Dealings with organized em- ployes have forced the administra- tion to show its hand on a number of educational issues. Once more, conflict reveals the business-oriented bias of the Big 'U'. People's rights are not the spe- cialty of the Research Center of the Midwest. -REBECCA WARNER IOR XW ~ "' -A)FRP , X rnacWfk *SOv)* TWX-6 E(FHWup. Ail WO&T$. box ev~Jkk, HEW Is ?ME0661 C' M AK UJCH " t r a - 1 Kf~ ~/ / 0 Dis. ubi~hers-Ha)l!Syndicate / t' ' ''' j 7 t At / -VI , Ethnicity among farmworkers By LINDA SISKIND N 1932, Harry Kubo lived on his father's farm in north central Cali- fornia. In 1942, Harry, his father - and over 110,000 people of Japanese descent-- were taken from the West Coast homes to War Relocation Authority "intern- ment camps." In 1952, the seven members of the Kubo family had saved enough money working on other people's farms to buy 40 acres of land in Fresno county. In 1972, Harry Kubo, joint owner of 230 acres, was installed president of the Nisei (second generation) Farmer's League in Fresno. Today, the League is actively work- *ing to keep organizers of the largely Chicano United Farmworkers (UFW) AFL-CIO, out of California fields. Overcoming almost a century of rac- ial and economic discrimination to help make California the richest agricultural region in the world, Japanese farmers now find themselves taking the same po- sition towards the industry's major new minority group - Chicano farmworkers - as any other grower. THE JAPANESE started arriving on the West Coast some 90 years ago. Many came from Hawaii, where sugar cane planters had imported them as contract labor. In California, they quickly filled a void left by the Chinese, who had been doing farm work until Congress suspend- ed Chinese immigration in 1882. By sheer numbers and by underbidding their competitors for contract work, the Japanese very quickly monopolized the labor force. Like the Chinese, they work- ed under bosses or labor contractors of their own nationality, who made arrange- ments with the farmer employers. But unlike the Chinese (or the Filipinos or Mexican-Americans after them) t h e Japanese contractors increased their bargaining power by cooperating among themselves - formally agreeing on wage rates and territory. Because of their success as organized farmworkers, the Japanese were able to begin buying property - cheap proper- ty. They reclaimed wilderness, desert and delta - much of it "marginal" or "waste" land - and developed profit- able fields of rice, potatoes, onions and cantaloupes where nothing had grown before. Soon the Japanese, like the Chinese before them, became the subject of rac- ial attacks from politicians, newspapers and labor unions in the cities, and in the countryside from farmers who resented their success (or wanted them back as laborers). The state legislature responded to this se:atimdnt, starting in 1913, by passing Land Acts making it illegal for aliens ineligible for citizenship (like the Japanese) to own or lease land. Later, the U.S. Congress changed the immigra- tion laws to bar Japanese from enter- ing the country. THE LAWS had some effect. The percentage of California farmland oper- ated by Japanese fell by two-thirds - from a peak of 1.5 per cent in 1920 to .4 per cent in 1940. Yet on this limit- ed acreage the Japanese grew more than ceived $98,000. Nash DeCamp set up Northern Farms, Inc., which negotiated 'dual Japanese fruit farm- q to pay the evacuees 50 per cent of the net profits from the sale of their crops. The following year, Northern Farms" Nash DeCamp reported income of $70,- 250 from the sale of the Japanese fruit. Only $2,000 of this was allotted to the farmers - a figure the company claim- ed represented 50 per cent of the profits of the five farms which had earned money. 'When the Japanese were let out of the camps, there were no special loan programs for them. Instead, they were referred to existing programs which required ap- proval by local farmers. Perhaps a quarter of those who had farmed before internment returned to the land. The California legislature welcomed the Japanese by appropriating $200,000 to investigate violations of the Alien Land Laws. Some of the defendants were allowed to "plea bargain" - in effect, pay blackmail for their land - by buying off prosecution. In one case, an Amer- ican citizen of Japanese descent agreed to pay the state $75,000 for 71 acres she had paid $89,000 for in 1938.' ".:v. . ": sama s " as uV ":.w.::+ri :i"Wa " rv : a :." ry.!!~F.:{.r.}.": necessary for this." So the farmers in the Fresno area rely on grower-shippers who can afford new "hydrocoolers" which prolong shelf-life by reducing fruit temperature from 80 .degrees to 40 degrees within minutes. One of the companies the farmers rely on is Nash DeCamp. NASH DeCAMP is also one of the "big eight" companies in the area being pick- eted by members of the UFW. Last year, 49 local companies let their union contracts expire. The union called a strike and sends its members to picket various locations six days a week, Every day the farmworkers are out picketing, the members of the Nisei Farmers League (NFL) are out "to observe", though few are involved di- rectly in the union dispute. According to Kubo, the League is com- posed of about 600 Japanese-American - equal number of others. It was formed, he says, to protect the rights of those farmworkers who wanted to work when the UF'W struck. The NFL members go out in the mornings before dawn to stand between workers and picketers to insure what Kubo calls "freedom of choice." THE UFW says the farmer's league does just the opposite and has sued that organization and one other for more than $5 million for violating workers' rights. The question of the relationship of the Japanese farmer to the Farmworkers' Union may be moot soon, however. Kubo says that more than 95 per cent of the children of the Nisei farmers are train- ing for urban professional careers, leav- ing the farms behind to be sold. Who will buy the land as the Japanese leave it? Perhaps the larger grower- shippers. Statistics show that California farms are growing bigger and bigger and fewer and fewer. While in 1950, there were about 144,000 farms averaging 260 acres, in 1971, there were 56,000 farms averaging 654 acres. The average Japanese-American farmer holds 50 acres. Indeed, the disappearance of the Jap- anese farmer may well signal the end of an era of small farm owners in California agriculture. Linda Siskind is feature editor of Pa- cific News Service. She spent the sum- mer in California's farmlands investigat- ing the role played by ethnic groups in California agribusiness. Copyright Pa- cific News Service. 90 per cent of California's celery, straw- berries, snap beans and peppers, more than half the state's artichokes, cauli- flower, cucumbers, spinach and tomat- oes. The bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941 brought new life to anti-Oriental feeling in California. Public officials, convinced the Japanese formed a sabotaging "fifth column," moved to exacuate them from all over the west coast. Evacuation to the internment camps began in the spring of 1942. Some Japan- ese had only a few days to settle their affairs. Many who owned land sold it at low prices, others made verbal or writ- ten agreements to have their interests cared for until they returned. The government, interested in harvest- ing the food then in the ground, set up machinery through the Farm Security Administration to find substitute oper- ators for the abandoned farms. The FSA was hard-pressed to find suitable candidates - despite aggressive recruit- ing - and offered loans to farmers wiling to take over the Japanese-owned land but unable to get credit through the usual channels. ONE MAJOR beneficiary of the loan program was the Nash DeCamp Com- pany, a marketing concern, which re- When the Japanese were let out of the camps, there were no special loan pro- grams for them. Instead, they were referred to existing programs which re- quired approval by local farmers. Per- haps a quarter of those who had farmed before internment returned to the land. The California legislature welcomed the Japanese by appropriating $200,000 to investigate violations of the Alien Land laws. Some of the defendants were allowed to "plea bargain" - in effect, pay blackmail for their land - by buy- ing off prosecution. In one case, an American citizen of Japanese descent agreed to pay the state $75,000 for 71 acres she had paid $89,000 for in 1938. TODAY, THERE ARE around 2,400 Japanese farmers in California. Many of them returned to the land with sav- ings from the $12 to $19 a month they earned in the camps, and the 75 cents an hour they earned as farmworkers af- ter the camps. But while the Japanese may have returned to successful farming, t h e y have never regained their footing in shipping and marketing. Kubo explains: "There's been an in- dustrial revolution type thing in market- ing and agriculture, and . . . every farmer doesn't have all the equipment . * WA1 4H FogZ Letters to The PLO been held to excuse the meth- eDaily:ods by which it has been ex- To The Dal:pressed. WE HAVE very recently wit- BT A LGsede nessed a real spectacle at the BOTH ANALOGIES aresfalse. U.N. It started with the illegal There have been resistance decision of the U.N. General movements which liberated Al- Assembly to invite to its forum geria from France, Kenya irom a delegation not representing a Britain, Indonesia from t h emebrsa.Thsdlgto Ntelns.Bthyw;'dnt mebrsatTi delegation ntrpeetn Netherlands. But they did not notgtoios seek the elimination of France, represented the notorious Britain and the Netherlands P.L.O., headed by Arafat. from the map of history or a de- edOnlytwo years ago, theUnit- nial of their national personal- to combat the international ter- ity. rorism that it has now decided The PLO, on the other hand, to reward. The debate in 1972 frankly aims to liberate Israel was provoked by the Munich from Israel. It commits h e outrage. When eleven athletes heresy of denying that Israel lies who came defenseless to a fes- at the origin, the heart and cen- tival of human solidarity were ter of Middle Eastern history. bound hand and foot and shot Its aim is "politicide", the in the head one by one by or- murder of a state. der of the Palestine Liberation We did not perceive Arafv's Organization, world opinion was speech to be a "moderate ' one. still capable of shock. It is true Why moderate? Becadse he that nothing substantive c a m e no longer wants to throw all Is- Palestinians (East bank Pales- tinians and West bank Palestin- ians), save for the Royal fam- ily and the few 13eduin tribes which the British transplaned there from Mecca in 191'. The P.L.O. too has stated m a n y times that Jordan is part of Palestine. The P.L.O. has, therefore, a legiti hate place where to establish, pe Acefvl.ly or by force, a "secular, democrat- ic state of Palestine". However, what the PLO wants and says it wants now is to replace Is- rael by forming a second Pales- tinian state (the two states to be probably united later into a Greater Palestine). This second State of Pales- tine obviously has today a large Jewish majority, a fact that would still be true even if all Palestinian refugees living out- side Palestine today, would go there. This apparently does not o bDaily to be the Jewish national libera- tion movement. There is no other. Israel is the only Jewih State. STUDYING THE hebrew language in Russia today, as in several Arab countries, is re- garded as a "zionist crime" pun- ishable by severe prison terms. So the prospect of Jews living the prospect of the Jews living in their ancient Hebrew home- land is to be tolerated in one of two Palestinian states, as 'ong as they have no rights of ethnic or cultural self-expression. This, incidentally has been the situa- tion of Jews in many Arah coun- tries, before they found them- selves forced to 1:ave those countries and emigrate to Is- The fact is that over twenty Arab states totally endorsed the PLO and Arafat in their Rabbat summit meeting, a few weeks Soon the Arabs exp ;t to have hundreds of billions of oil 4o1- lars. They already have the most modern Soviet planes, mis- siles and tanks. They also have now the automatic U.L'1. "yes" votes of the hungry and poor Third World. They have vast area's and 125 million people compared with tiny Israel with 3 million people. Why should they not expect to crush it? All they need is to force Amer- ica into an "even-handed", neu- tral position. IN 1940 Britain 0to)d in "splendid isolation", outnun- bered and outgunned by Nazi Germany. Hitler had already conquered all of Europe, except for Russia with which he had a "Friendship Pact". Britain and its people were kept alive by American material and mor- al support. On the "Day of In- famy" it became obvious that