Page 4-Wednesday, October 12, 1977--:The Michigan Daily rI iemtcgan 3D UiI -V .1* Carter's human rights plan: Rhetoric or policy Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. .XXXVtIt, No.M News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan .AL/-i I "--4-, 'Works like a charm!' '4 #g' eta dtoN SANz LOT ..GEI -2T1 Don' forget Kent State!r "HERE ARE SOME events you just war movement which forced an about- don't forget, events which stand face in American policy and ended an markers for great movements unjust foreign intervention. ich shape the course of history. A coalition has declared today "na- One of these is the death of the Kent tional arm band day" and is asking us te four, seven years ago. Brought to show our support for preserving the wn by rifle fire from Ohio National site of the Kent State killings as a me- ardsmen, these students are the morial to the dead students. st known symbol of the student anti- The group will be passing out arm bands on the Diag from 9 a.m. to noon P M10d Jan t 1 today, asking passers by to wear the bands as a token of their support. EDITORIAL STAFF The Daily hopes its readers will NMARIE LIPINSKI JIM TOBIN participate in this symbolic demon- Editors-in-Chief stration. Wearing an arm band re- S OSIOBVICH....... .............Managing Editor quires little effort but expresses U McCONNELL.. Managing Editor solidarity with four students who made NNIFER MILLER .... .............Managing Editor TRICIA MONTEMURRI .......Managing Editor the ultimate personal sacrifice of our N PARSIGIAN........ .............. . Managing Editor highest B ROSENBAUM ...............Managing Editor country'shi es principles. By HOWARD BRICK Less than five years after ac- tive U.S. involvement ended in Vietnam, four years after U.S. aid and encouragement helped topple the Allende regime in a bloody coup, three years after Nixon resigned and the govern- ment admitted infiltrating and harrassing domestic dissident groups for decades, the U.S. gov- ernment has suddenly taken upon itself the role of global guardian of human rights. Shall we believe the protesta- tions of the new administration? That's the question that exiled Peruvian peasant leader Hugo Blanco will address in his lecture tomorrow night in the Michigan Union's Pendleton Room. ACTUALLY, expressions of high-minded idealism are not new in the rhetoric of American presidents. John Kennedy opened his administration with the proc- lamation of a "New Frontier"; we are still told today that his presidency brought a new spirit, one of humanism and change, to the country. But the administra- tion's idea of humanism and change found expression in trying to suppress revolutionary movements in Vietnam and else- where. After the Bay of Pigs in- vasion Kennedy told a crowd of invasion veterans that their flag would one day fly over Havana. And his brother Robert led a CIA campaign of daily commando raids sabotaging Cuban factories and cane fields. When informed of attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro, Robert Kennedy angrily told a CIA official that if such ac- tions need be taken, he didn't want to hear about them. Such a response did not call a halt to as- sassination attempts; it merely established a "cover" for public figures. If there wasany ex- posure of CIA exploits, Robert and John Kennedy could easily claim ignorance of their under- lings' activities. In fact, John Kennedy's talk of peace, freedom, and democracy was part of the intensification of cold war rhetoric and the cam- paign for increasing armaments. His election campaign, after all, was founded to a large extent on stirring public hysteria over a supposed "missile gap." LIKEWISE, CARTER'S rhe- toric on human rights has been used to support an aggressive posture toward the Soviet Union and the countries of Eastern Eu- rope, which in turn justifies an- other round of arms escalation. In rejecting the B-1, Carter only laid new emphasis on the de- ployment of the cruise missile, a weapon that can - due to its mobility and resistance to detec- tion - easily frustrate attempts to control nuclear arms. Another weapon the Carter administra- tion has tentatively approved, the neutron bomb, further endangers world peace; its supposed pin- point accuracy and limited spread of all-out enhances the possibility of the tactical use of nuclear weapons, controlled by military rather than civilian of- ficials. But the similarity of rhetoric and arms policy between the Car- ter and Kennedy administrations does not in itself challenge the in- tegrity of Carter's human rights stand. In relation to Latin Amer- ica, for instance, how has the campaign for human rights been 'carried out? Despite much talk of opposition to the dictatorial practices of Latin American military re- gimes, little has changed in ter- ms of U.S. alliances with these governments. Just last month, in fact, Carter hosted Gen. Augusto Pinochet of Chile, Paraguayan ruler Alfredo Stroessner, Lt. Gen. Jorge Rafael Videla of Argen- tina, and others at a White House dinner celebrating the signing of the new Panama Canal treaties. PINOCHET HAS made a great show of dissolving the notorious DINA (National Directorate of Intelligence), the secret police responsible for the abduction, torture, and murder of political opponents; but it is generally acknowledged that the powers formerly exercised by DINA have merely been transferred to a new agency, the Center for Na- tional Information. Likewise, at the end of last year, the Chilean junta, in an at- tempt to blunt international criti- cism, announced it would re- lease "all" political prisoners held without charges. Yet the government admitted at the same time that about 1,000 other .political prisoners were in jail or being tried for charges relating to violations of "national security." Non-government reports estimate the number of political prisoners between 4,000 and 6,000. licized cuts in military aid to Chile and other repressive Latin American regimes. Despite the fact that Congress supposedly ended all military assistance to Chile in June 1976, special credits for previously negotiated arms sales have remained in effect. In May, according to a reporter from the newspaper, In These Times, Chile still has "$100 mil- lion in equipment being delivered or available for purchase with FMS (Foreign Military Sales) credits." The reporter continued: "The Department of Defense has used the aid tied up in this so- called 'pipeline' to justify the placement of advisors in the American embassy in Chile. Publicly the department claims that the group of advisors - which it calls an Office of Defense Cooperation - is necessary to provide technical advice on the use of American military hard- ware. It maintains that the ODC is different from a military ad- visory group and will not partici- pate in military planning and guidance. "However, privately the de- partment is telling the Congress a different story. One congression- al aide reported that a high De- fense department spokesman said 'the administration wants the Chileans to realize that they are close friends and allies of the United States. The administra- tion wants to preclude a Peruvian situation, where countries buy - Almanaque Latino Americano,1977 arms from the Russians.' " Hugo Blanco is one who has sufe fered from political repression in his native Peru, as well as in Argentina and Chile. And his two- year battle to gain entry to this country for a speaking tour says something about "human rights" in the United States. IN THE EARLY 1960's, Blanco helped organize thousands of poor Indian tenant farmers in the Cuzco region of Peru. The peas- ant union he led seized the prop- erty of rich landowners and es- tablished its own courts, schools and militias. The Peruvian police launched a campaign against the movement and captured Blanco in May of 1963. As Blanco de- scribed it in his book Land or Death, his life was saved by a conflict between two different po- lice agencies: the Civil Guard had orders to shoot to kill, while the Intelligence Police were in- structed to take Blanco alive. On May 30, 1963, the Intelligence Po- lice reached him first. Blanco had escaped capture several times in gun battles with the police, and in 1966 he was tried by a military tribunal for the murder of two policemen. He claimed he had only fired in self- defense, acting in light of the or- ders he knew had been issued for his summary execution. A world-wide protest campaign in 1966 saved Blanco from the "le- gal" death penalty, and in 1970 he was released from jail in a gen- eral amnesty of political prison- ers. He refused to support the new military government of Peru, however, and was exiled in September 1971. He traveled to Argentina, where he was impri- soned for three months, and then to Chile, where he witnessed the overthrow of Salvador Allende in September 1973. He barely escaped the country after taking refuge in the Swedish Embassy. After a brief return to Peru in 1975, Blanco was exiled once again. Now living in Sweden, he works to defend political prison- ers in Latin American countries. BLANCO TRIED to enter the United States for a speaking tour in 1975 but was denied a visa. The State Department cited a section of the !McCarran Act which allows the government to exclude from the country members of communist, socialist, or anar- chist organizations. Last March, Blanco's publisher, Pathfinder Press, re-applied for the visa, since President Carter had prom- ised a relaxation of restrictive government travel policies. But still, the State Departmentsruled Blanco ineligible for a visa, not only under the section of the Mc- Carran Act which denies entry to subversives but also under another section whichsexcludes people convicted of crimes in- volving "moral turpitude." This presumably referred to his 1966 trial, despite the extraordinary circumstances surrounding the supposed crime and the trial it- self. Finally, on September 30, three weeks after he was originally scheduled to have arrived in New York, the State Department and the Immigration and Naturalization Service gave in and granted Blanco a travel permit. In August, as the administra- tion prepared to host the leaders of Latin American dictatorships, Hugo Blanco, and his interpreter, were interrogated by U.S. repre- sentatives in Sweden on their po- litical views. And as Pinochet, Videla, Stroessner, and the rest ate Maine lobster at the White House on September 7, Blanco received word of the initial rejec- tion of his visa request. So, when Jimmy Carter talks about "hu- man rights," we have to ask not only, "What does he mean?" We also ask. "For whom?" Howard Brick, a former Daily Magazine Editor, is a member of the A2 Committee for Human Rights in Latin America. The Committee will present Hugo Blanco tomorrow night at 7:30 in the Pendleton Rm. of the Union, M ARGARET YAO...... .............Managing Editor ySUSAN ADES JAY LEVIN Sunday Magazine Editors ELAINE FLECTCHER TOM O'CONNELL Associate Magazine Editors JEFFREY SELBST Arts Editor TAFF WRITERS: Susan Barry, Richard Berke, Brian Blan- hard, Michael Beckman, Lori Carruthers, Ken Chotiner, Eileen aley, Lisa Fisher, Denise Fox, Steve Gold, David Goodman, lisa Isaacson, Michael Jones, Lani Jordan, Janet Klein, Garth riewall, Gregg Krupa, Paula Lashinsky, Marty Levine, Dobilas *atunonis, Carolyn Morgan, Dan Oberdorfer, Mark Parrent, aren Paul, Stephen Pickover, Christopher Potter, Martha etallick, Keith Richburg, Diane Robinson, Julie Rovner, Dennis abo, Annmarie Schiavi, Paul Shapiro, R. J. Smith, Elizabeth lowik, Mike Taylor, Pauline Toole, Sue Warner, Jim Warren, Iainda Willcox, Shelley Wolson, Tim Yagle, Mike Yellin, Barbara f hs Mark Andrews, Mike ilford, Richard Foltman Weather Forecasters SPORTS STAFF KATHY HENNEGHAN........................ Sports Editor TOM CAMERON Executive Sports Editor SCOTT LEWIS............ Managing Sports Editor DON MacLACHLAN................. Associate Sports Editor JOHN NIEMEYER...... ........ .... Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Paul Campbell, Ernie Dunbar, Henry Engel- hardt, Jeff Frank, Gary Kicinski, Rick Maddock, Brian Mar- tin, Bob Miller, Brian Miller, Dave Renbarger, Cub Schwartz, Errol Shifman and Jamie Turner. PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF ALAN JILINSKY ......................... Chief Photographer ANDY FREEBERG ..................... Chief Photographer BRAD BENJAMIN ...................... Staff Photographer JOHN KNOX S.... . . ..Staff Photographer CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER ................... Staff Photographer Also, according to a subcommit- tee report for the United Na- tions Commission for Human Rights,' approximately 2,000 peo- ple have disappeared since the junta took power. Of the partial release, Pinochet said, "This freedom is a magnan- imous gesture aimed only at showing the kind predisposition of the government. This does not mean the government has lost authority, since the same restric- tive measures are maintained, the measures of security and or- der." IT HAS ALSO become clear that the U.S. government has compromised its own highly pub- +CAR M~tLEA~DI*14fE eSPMUSOLM "OF 114E WILC)ES6S e'V s s9 Moc9 PMorC 'go #Ir AEE #411 -, Health Service Handbook By SYLVIA HACKER and NANCY PALCHIK QUESTION: Please would you answer the following questions as soon as possible in your health column in the Daily. I am preg- nant and would like to know what current medical opinion is on the use -of tylenol/acetaminophen tablets during pregnancy. Is it considered harmful to use the tablets occasionally for head- aches? I have always been a ten- sion headache sufferer and am afraid to take any tablets if there could be possible harmful effects for the baby. Secondly, what about tea- drinking? I drink a lot of tea and I'm aware that the caffeine might not be considered safe during occasionally in moderate doses (i.e., ten grains every four hours). Aspirin has recently be- come suspect due to reports of teratogenicity (tendency to cause malformations) in mice, although in the absence of data to the contrary it is considered to be safe for pregnant humans to use occasionally in moderate amoun- ts. (In contrast, large amounts of aspirin at the end of pregnancy are harmful because they could cause increased bleeding during delivery and in the newborn peri- od.) Many pregnant women do suffer from muscle-contraction headaches early in pregnancy, and a mild analgesic like aceta- minophen or aspirin is needed to restore that legendary sense of mw li ina - un-nl th Again, probably no harm is done by drinking moderate amounts of these beverages during pregnan- cy. Tea has approximately two- thirds the caffeine of coffee, but most herbal teas have no caffeine at all. Many are drunk world- wide for their salubrious, as well as gustatory qualities; for exam- ple, I would suggest to "Concern- ed" that she drink vervaine (ver- bena) tea (thought to prevent miscarriage and to promote milk production) and mint tea (thought to cure headaches). Whatever their medicinal merits, herbal teas are quite tasty (try "Red Zinger"), and substituting them for regular teas will reduce caffeine intake. A final exhortation: Any woman whn s. nr whn micrht h smoking cause flashbacks? ANSWER: We scoured the lit- erature and research on mariju- ana-and found nothing to suggest that such a phenomenon as "flashbacks" occurs with its use. Flashbacks only seem to be asso- ciated with the use of hallucino- gens like LSD, although even without drugs, many of us have had the experience of a present event triggering an unusually vivid past occurrence. At any rate, the only psychological ef fects associated with memor which are sometimes prevalen in marijuana use are such thing as: - loss of immediate recall - difficulty in thinking an speech due to disorganization o