age 4-Saturday, October 22, 1977--The Michigan Daily Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 39 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan It's tie togv e Panama e cy r Creg. 1 eser ves SHCHARANSKY AND OTHERS Some tales of Soviet terror By JACK HERZIG OLLING FASTER and faster for- ward on great clouds of right-wing ietoric, the issue of the Panama anal treaty seems destined to draw ie nation in its wake toward an explo- ye national debate of colossal pr6por- ons. And all because of an angry strain American jingoism trying to shake f approaching death. Ignorant emo- analism has not seen such a heyday in years. That is not to say that the Panama anal treaty is a non-issue. On the con- ary, it symbolizes an emerging doc- 'ince of American foreign policy, one hich recognizes fairness above ex- ediency. Jimmy Carter is no model of ltruistic statesmanship, but his step z this direction is commendable, and ie canal issue is his first test. The eaty, completed in recent weeks by a urge of negotiation and compromise, eserves the nation's firm support. But before Carter can claim a -iumph on the issue, he must defeat a ill-headed pack of senators who sense ie recalcitrance of an equally bull- Baded majority of the American peo- le. In a time in which the values of a entury seem to be crumbling, in hich a generation's morals and iores seem to come under siege from l1 sides, that generation is groping for ecurity in the form of a strip of land rid water that is the vestige of a lost ra. Carter's task is formidable. At the center of the furor is the right ing of the Republican party, elighting in its chance to pounce on ie nation's confusion. The, faction fin- s its hero in former California gov- 'nor Ronald Reagan, whose efforts to in the issue into a blaze during his rimary battle with Gerald Ford last ear lacked only proper timing to suc- Bed. The timing is with Reagan now, rd he and his followers are making ie most of it. Chagrined over Ford's omination and loss, the GOP's hard- ore right is making the Canal a litmus st for its candidates in next Novem- er's off-year elections, and they are etermined not to let the issue slip way again. Their argument is capsulized in ,eagan's war-cry: "We bought it, we ilt it, we paid for it, and we are going >keep it." But we didn't exactly buy ; Theodgre Roosevelt's administra- on bullied and manipulated the gov- rnments of Colombia and Panama in- > signing the rights to the canal zone way in a treaty, then made a repara- on to make the affair seem legiti- Hate. In the succinct phrase of Cali- >rnia's Senator S. I. Hayakawa, who recently declared his support of the new treaty, "We stole it fair and square." INDEED WE DID, and nothing will change the fact that the U.S. gained hegemony over the Panama Canal by nothing less than imperial means. The notion of "manifest destiny" has grown no less absurd with age. What is more, the injustice rankles more now than it did then. The canal no longer merely bisects the jungle isthmus of a fledgling nation in need of help; it lies like a gash between the halves of a developing nation which has come to resent its little-brother status. The fears that the canal will sud- denly be vulnerable to military force if the U.S. pulls out are ill-conceived. In the first place, military experts agree that the canal is indefensible even now. A well-placed grenade or two can shut the whole thing down. Moreover, one must understand that the treaty recognizes political reality: Panama- nians are unwilling to live with the U.S. as an intruder any longer, and the canal is extremely vulnerable to guer- rilla tactics. Says General George Brown, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "There'll be trouble" if the Senate rejects the treaty: "You'd be fighting men you can't identify at a time and place of their choosing. That's not the way, in my judgment, to assure continued operation of the canal." In any case, the treaty clearly provides that the U.S. may assist the Panamanians in defending the canal, .,whenever necessary, forever. Carter needs a win on the treaty if his efforts in the Mideast and in the SALT talks are tb be taken seriously. Without doubt, he is right on the issue of the canal. With this g sture, the U.S. can prove it cares fol international justice, and may proceed to the greater work that lies ahead. For the sake of fairness to Panama, for the sake of the administration's efforts elsewhere, and for the sake of the nation's conception of its role in the world, the treaty should be approved. , ItI 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 Shifran and Jamie Turner. He is 29 years old, balding, short and stout, warm and brilliant. 'If you are going to use my name, 'he said, 'spell it correctly, S-h-c-h, not S-h as you had it. 'He added, 'It won't become a household name.' - Shcharansky in conversation with Rob- ert C. Toth, (Los Angeles Times, June 27, 1977) Perhaps. But, as Toth adds, Shcharansky has become an international cause celebre - the focus of Soviet efforts to crush the Jewish emigration movement by branding its leaders spies for the United States - A fact vehe- mently denied by both the President and the State Department. Shcharansky could be- come the first national Jewish martyr since tle time of Stalin. His plight paints a bleak picture of the Soviet refusednik - forced by authorities, on one hand, to remain in Russia, yet having life made intolerable for him even when permission to emigrate has been de- nied. Most important, Shcharansky's case shows us that labels like "human rights" or "Soviet persecution of minorities'' are not just empty political slogans - they involve people..People who must keep on fighting to survive even after the slogans have dis- appeared. ANATOLY SHCHARANSKY was born in 1948. A brilliant student as well as a superb chess player, he graduated from the prestigious Moscow Institute of Physics in 1972. Not wishing to jeopardize his chances for emigration to Israel, he never practiced his profession, working, instead, as an engineer. He applied for an emigration visa in 1973 and received his reply a year later - refusal because of supposedly possessing "State secrets'' - a charge refuted by Sh- charansky. Hoping to get international at- tention, Shcharansky then took part in a brief public demonstration - one that cost him 15 days behind bars. Later that year, after hard- ly any success with the authorities, Shcharan- sky's wife received her visa and left a day af- ter their wedding. They expected to see each other in a few months. A favorite tactic used by Soviet authorities against those wanting to emigrate is the breaking up of families, as with Shcharansky. Instead of receiving a visa, what happened af- terwards was an intensification of the cam- paign against him. He.was harassed daily by the KGB (Soviet Secret Police), dismissed from his job, was frequently arrested and re- leased only to be brought back to prison again. During this time, he served a total of 12 terms. Finally, he was forced to live with friends, changing places almost everyday. Instead of breaking under pressure, Sh- charansky actually grew in prominence, be- coming the chief spokesman for both Jewish activists and dissidents. He became a notable member in the group monitoring Soviet com- pliance with the Helsinki accord. (Included in the Helsinki agreement, signed by the Soviet Union, are a number of broad humanitarian declarations including the right to leave and enter countries on family visits and access to foreign publications. The Belgrade Confer- ence meeting presently is charged with the task of seeing how well the provisions of the accord have been implemented.) IN MID-MARCH of this year, Shcharansky was arrested once again. He has not been re- leased, even though, seven months later, charges have never been formally laid again- st him. Authorities have hinted that he wild be tried for espionage - a crime that carries with it a maximum penalty of death. " The arrest of Shcharansky is only one of the many crises confronting Soviet Jewry. Even before Jimmy Carter's stand on human rights, the situation of the Jews in Russia had reached a point of no return. Jewish schools are extinct in the U.S.S.R. There are no sem- inaries for the training of Rabbis. In 1956, three years after the death of Stalin, there were 460 functioning synagogues - twenty- two years later, fewer than 45 exist to serve the needs of 2.5 million Jews! Even so, most of them are unoperationable. There are, moreover, only two Rabbis in Moscow to ser- ve the Jews in the entire Western Soviet Union. Jews, unlike other religious groups, are prohibited from publishing religious lit- erature, prayerbooks, periodicals or journals. Books and periodicals, hardly differing in their treatment of Judaism and Zionism, have become prevalent since the Arab-Israeli war of 1967. Titles include such works as: The Creeping Counter-Revolution, by V. Y. Begun (Minsk: Belarus Publishing House); The. Black Webs of Zionism, by V. Y. Savstov and N.Y. Rosenblum (Kiev: Political Literature of the Ukraine) and Judaism without Embel- lishment, by T. K. Kichko (n.p.). However, what is most shocking is the beginnings of overt actions by the government itself: Dis- ruption of synagogue services by policemen, desecration of cemetaries for purposes of "urban renewal," "and the employment of the media (television, newspaper, radio) as a tool against both those who want to dissent and those who want to leave. IF THE SOVIET UNION is a tough place to live, it is a tougher place to leave. Exit visas are given arbitrarily, with more appli- cations denied than approved. Persons desir- ing to emigrate to Israel must pay an exit fee of 940 rubles - approximately $1,300. Appli- cants risk being fired from their jobs, and, ironically, finding themselves now considered "parasites of the society" - a charge that can lead to imprisonment. There is no indi- cation of when a visa will be granted, nor any certainly of receipt. Persistent applicants have been subjected to arbitrary arrest, assault, forced conscription (this includes those in their 30's and 40's), jail terms and regional exile. By 1974, emigration had been cut by 40 per cent, the number is still dimin- ishing due to government actions. "A matter of State security," is a common reason for visa refusal, but this has been used in the case pf football players, dentists and elderly pen- 'ioners! So, while we hear of Shcharansky and his battle to leave the Soviet Union, those who suffer most and. are the. most powerless. are those without contacts to the outside, those we never hear about. There are those who have voiced their fear that a trial of Shcharansky might bring an up- surge of anti-semitism; they are wrong. It is a sad fact that anti-semitism has already become a fait acompli within Russia and within its governmental hierarchy. The only question now is how the West will respond; whether by voicing a protest, making the Bel- grade conference a forum for the struggle against Soviet repression and the denial of human liberty, or, whether we will remain silent and uninvolved - leaving the Soviet Jew, the dissident, and Anatoly Shcharansky alone under a pitiful, indifferent silence. Are we our brother's keepers? Jack Herzig is a member of Aktsia, an organization concerned with Soviet Jewry and human rights. Letters to The Daily REMEMBiTR P6AL. . J idRBO --_. U *,ms~w4u~d..a.e4swS64SW on 'hypocrisies' To The Daily: The article "Hypocrisies on Human Rights" a yourreditorial page October 19 by Mr. Rod Ko- sann (Sales Manager of the Daily's Business Staff) did much to unjustifiably muddle the area of African politics about which little is generally known. In that article much ado is made about the undulating for- tunes of a Nigerian pop musician, Mr. Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, who by his own choice lived in a com- mune which he deliberately grav- itated into conflict with the larger society and with the law. His eventual accounting before the law was forseeable andl Mr. Kuti knew all along what was coming his way. It is indeed a pity that when his day of reckoning came, it did not rain, it poured! The author of your Wednesday column based his whole article on the February 18 arrest of Mr. Kuti and went on to make false and sweeping generalizations on human rights in Nigeria. Mr. Ko- sann would have done well to fol- low up the February 20th report with a very balanced article on this incident by the same New York Times correspondent, Mr. John Darnton, in its magazine section of July 24. Of more serious consequence, however, is the attempt in the Daily article to downplay the world-wide pressure being brought to bear on the illegiti- mate White Minority regime of South Africa. I want to make it quite clear that the Nigerian Head of State, Mr. Olusegan Oba- sanjo, was "on the mark" when he reminded President Carter about America's role in buttress- ing that notorious government. At a time when Nigeria's oil wealth and important stature in African affairs were being cour- ted, Mr. Obasanjo took the occa- sion to point out the serious con- tradiction of this courtship with the mere lip-service and hollow sympathy being displayed on the issue of that important southern part of our continent. At the present time there is a rampant plundering of South Africa' s wealth with considerable "help" t.......A ..n..i nn n nn rnn c +; no.rn "To a person the nations' (South Africa's) Black leaders were firm in their conviction that these firms should not withdraw" has to my knowledge only been published in one business jaur- nal! As a Civil Rights leader of some note, Mr. Jordan owes an explanation on the underlying motives for his South African trip to his Black constituency here in the U.S. to whom he is publicly accountable.{(It is interesting to note that Mr. Arthur Ashe, the other traditional Black American emissary to South Africa quit this designation in public disgust ear- lier this year.) At any rate, Mr. Jordan does not name the Black leaders he met, and his statement is in sharp contradiction to that of Senator Dick Clarke of Iowa, who after a visit to South Africa this summer reported that the African leaders there supported the withdrawal of U.S. invest- ments there. Among those leaders whom the Senator met was the late Steve Biko of the now banned Black Consciousness Movement. It is a cruel coincidence that the day of your article was also the day the Vorster government chose to make it clear that it has no intention of entertaining an in- ternal dialogue on reform. That morning, it cracked down on all Black organizations and newspa- pers and detained more than fifty people. So your Sales Manager's charge that the sharing of power could "best be decided upon in Johannesburg than Washington" received a prompt and far more eloquent response from his chosen quarter than I can mus- ter! Yes, Mr. Kosann, the final solu- tion to South Africa's present di- lemma is "one person, one vote" ; it is as simply stated as that and no self-respecting freedom lover will accept anything less. It has, however, never historically come easily, and the African popula- tion of Azania has resigned it- self to a protracted struggle to gain independence. In this effort they have received effective sup- port and encouragement from many quarters, including the Michigan Student Assembly, and we are in unison with that official shadytforeign inspired clandes- tine intrigues. The Nigerian leader's intention to hand-over the reigns of govern- ment to an elected constitutional government should be judged in, its own context and does not need to be second-guessed in the ma- licious manner osyour Wednes- day article.- Finally, despite Mr. Kosann's alanderous charge, I can say with no fear of being disputed that the eventual ascendance to power in South Africa through majority rule by arleaderof Mr. Obasan- jo's statute would be the best thing to happen to democracy and human rights in recent times and would be unreservedly wel- comed the world over. - Denis David Ondeje October 21 To The Daily: The publication of a libelous ar- ticle on the Nigerian Head of State and Black Africa on your editorial page of. October 19 has not escaped the notice of the body of African students here at the University of Michigan. We particularly take cogniz- ance of the signing of that column by a senior member of the Daily's organization and of. the designa- tion of the author by title: Mr. Rod Kosann,SSales Manager of the Business Staff. While we realize that everyone has a right to his or her opinion, we object to: 1) The arbitrary use of the Daily' officer's title for the doubt- ful purposes of curtailing criti- cism of the South African regime. The use of the title in this article has had the effect of giving the impression that the author was speaking in his official capacity for the student newspaper; 2) The unsubstantiated libelous statement that the Nigerian Head of State has committed across the board violations of human rights because of the treatment of a rock performer; 3) The brash ridiculing. of a cause that the African Students' Association in conjunction with the Michigan Student Assembly is attempting to advance, i.e., the divestitute by the University of investments in corporations trad- ing with South Africa; 4) The casual unresearched character and over-generalized statements are evidence of slop- py journalism on a subject that we hold serious and very dear. Consequently, theAfricanrStu- dents' Association demands both an explanation and an apology for this unfortunate and ill-timed treatment from a senior member of the Daily's staff and request an editorial ruling on where the Daily stands on South Africa. We deplore the incident and hope that this is the last time that this subject is treated lightly. -African Students' Association cartoon To The Daily: The cartoon of the blind foot- ball player published in the Oct. 11 Daily struck me as being in ex- tremely poor taste, particularly in light of the many injustices leveled at disabled persons by our society. (The University is pretty far behind many others in righting these.) I spent a long time trying to un- derstand why this cartoon might be considered funny. The humor was totally wasted on me. Per- haps you might elucidate? - Libby Westie . . . . : . Letters should be typed and limited to 400 words. The Doily reserves the right to edit letters for length and grammar. r ..y.:, .n.. _._. 9 4 , ' M' } r , ji. .... x.. . ;. r 9 :,: .. js A , i Y _ ... _ _. ._.._.- ... l I Contact your reps Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20510