ige Airesan 3eail Eighty-Six Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Inside Soviet newspaper Wednesday, March 31, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Sometimes you can't see the forest for the Ca 7 T I 'I t f 11 . s . f t 4. ' Z } , :i }5 ; r, , { Y 5 r I , t } .3 ,. 4 F .. ..,.---." t, ... By PATRICK WORSNIP MOSCOW (Reuter) - Pushkin Square, four p.m., and hot off the press it comes -Izvestia, the Soviet government news- paper, circulation eight million. In this building where Izvestia has spent most of its life, they print a mil- lion-and-a-half copies for Moscow and the surrounding area where it appears as an evening paper. %5 1Y'a""S' -% }r.v.a r,{{i. h '"Soviet construction is the main theme of our news- paper,"' Izvestia declares. Praising the heroes, scourg- ing the slackers and encour- aging others - these are the aims.' About three hours later a second edi- tion will be ready for the rest of the country where it comes out next morn- ing. Twenty-two Soviet cities get page- proofs by facsimile transmission, and another 20 have the matrices flown to them. The eight million daily copies serve a variety of ends. The party faithful. study the front - page sermon urging greater efforts in building Communism. Foreign diplomats and journalists ex- amine Izvestia for signs of shifts in Kremlin thinking. Building workers make paper hats of it. Though Izvestia looks like a news- paper, it is not precisely what most countries understand by one since de- spite its name - which means "news"- its primary function is not the simple dispensing of information. Instead it tries to live up to Lenin's dictum that a newspaper is not only a "collective agitator and collective prop- agandist, it is also a collective organiz- er." In a country where most things are done as part of some campaign the news- naver's role is clear, and it is Izvestia's boast that five million acres of unused land were brought under the plow thanks to a campaign in its pages. "SOVIET CONSTRUCTION IS the main theme of our newspaper," it de- clares. Praising the heroes, scouraing the slackers and encouraging others - these are the aims. The newspaper was founded in Febrii- arv. 1917, in Petrograd, now Leninerad. After the October revolition of the same year it was Troduced by the Bolsheviks at their headquarters in the city's In March, 1918, Izvestia followed the Soviet government to Moscow, where it came to acquire its full title of "news of the soviets of working deputies of the U.S.S.R." By contrast with Pravda, the com- munistpartysdaily. Izvestia has slightly less emphasis on party theory and or- ganization and more on practical prob- lems. However, those who look for differ- ences of opinion between Pravda and Iz- vestia look in vain. "We follow the party line, just like Pravada," editors say frankly. Do you have to be a party member to write for Izvestia? A newspaper spokes- man assumes a surprised look. Good heavens, no, and many journalists are not. But all the sectional editors belong to the party, he adds. ATOP THE HIERARCHY is editor-in- chief Lev Tolkunov, who as a candidate member of the party central committee is able to transmit ruling on controver- sial questions. Below him are four deputy chief edi- tors and a secretariat which deals with layout and arbitrate in disputes over space. Altogether, Izvestia has 110 writing journalists at head office, 56 permanent correspondents throughout the country, 100 stringers employed by provincial newspapers and foreign correspondents in 34 countries. They produce a paper that runs at most to six pages (costing three ko- pecks or about five cents). But print is small, there are no ad- vertisements and editors say there is as much reading matter as in thicker wes- tern newspapers. But they would like to see it bigger. "We've got a paper problem and we don't hide the fact," one said, noting that the total daily circulation of all Soviet newspapers is 150 million. EFFORTS WERE BEING made to step up paper output, and it was hoped that soon the pages would be increased. "That's our little secret," he smiled, as visiting Moscow correspondents looked glum at the prospect of an additional work-load. A paper with a circulation of eight million would be a colossus in most countries, but Izvestia is outstripped by Pravda (nine million) and Pionerskaya Pravda - organ of the soviet equivalent of the scouting movement, the Pioneers -which prints more than 12 million conies daily. With possibilities of increased size and circulation, Izvestia is moving ts edtor- ial offices into a new building being built next door. Thailand teeters Smolny Institute. Its initial circulation was about 35,000. It also plans a vast new printing plant on the city's outskirts and will then con- sider whether to print by web-offset. The conventional linotype machines now in use are operated almost exclu- sively by women, who get a 10 per cent Sex ruling regressive THE SUPREME COURT'S decision Monday upholding a lower court ruling that states may try and sen- tence adult consenting homosexuals is a shocking and dangerous move. By a vote of 6-3, the Court has re- versed a trend toward the constitu- tional right to individual priv- acy and opened the floodgates to pos- sible new infringements. This ruling is firmly in keeping with previous judgements of the Bur- ger Court. In the Burger era, the Court has been restrictive on issues of personal privacy and has relegat- ed the power to define obscenity to the states. So it was a logical step for the Court to concede to states the right to determine whether homo- sexuality is legal. The ruling supposes that there is a standard of universal morality that may be applied, and that various states may pass judgement on such a thing. This is nonsense. There are such things as legalities, true - but to assign a concept of lawfulness to various sexual acts and not to others is at best arbitrary and at worst hypocritical. THE SECOND ISSUE is that Amer- ican citizens, supposedly guaran- teed a right to privacy in the Consti- tution, are denied this right as the TODAY'S STAFF: News: Phil Bokovoy, Lani Jordan, Pauline Lubens, Mike Norton, Rob Meachum, Tim Schick Editorial Page: Stephen Hersh, Tom Stevens Arts Poge: Kevin Counihan, Jeffrey Selbst Photo Technician: Steve Kagan on briniy By LYNNE WATSON and MICHAEL CHINOY BANGKOK, (PNS) - Thailand, the last U.S. ally on the Indochinese penin- sula, is teetering on the brink of an un- certain and possibly explosive future. With U.S.-Thai relations serving as the focal point for confrontations between left and right, some observers here fear a military coup before or soon after the April 4 elections. Prime Minister Kukrit Pramoj an- nounced the end of all U. S. military op- erations in Thailand Mar. 20, although final withdrawal of U. S. troops--except for 270 advisers-was postponed to July 20. A Mar. 20 deadline had been set last summer after Thai-based U.S. planes bombed Cambodia in the Mayaguez af- fair. Mounting violence here, including 20 assassinations in the last year and four new deaths when a bomb was thrown at a student march, has fueled specula- tion that rightwing military factions might now step in. Anger over continued leftist agitaion and Kukrit's decision to remove U. S. bases runs deep in the Thai military. (A MILITARY GOVERNMENT ruled Thailand until Octdber 1973 when mass demonstrations brought it down). Rumors of a pending takeover have been fanned by two military alerts in the last six weeks ,one reportedly to fore- stall a coup by disaffected officers. Bangkok is now tense and uncertain. Even candidates for the April 4 elections are hardly visible, apparently fearing for their safety. Dr. Boonsanong Pun- yodyana, the leader of the small Social- ist Party, was gunned down in front of a Bangkok hotel several weeks ago. One newspaper recently noted that the atmosphere of turmoil, bombings, alleg- ed killings by rightists and military al- legations of communist infiltration re- sembles that in the Philippines in 1972, just before martial law was declared there. While the explosive issue of the U.S. presence in Thailand remains in the spotlight; the Thai government also faces labor unrest and rural insurgents. AFTER TWO YEARS of unprecedented strikes, a general strike in January by Bangkok's labor unions triggered Pre- mier Kukrit's decision to dissolve the National Assembly and call for new elec- tions. In the south, a separatist Moslem movement has clashed with Buddhists and Thai government security forces. In January several thousand Moslems dem- onstrated against security forces whom thev accused of throwing a grenade into a Moslem crowd, killing 13. And in the northeast, the Thai army is fighting a jungle war against an esti- mated 10,000 communist insurgents. With such tension on the domestic scene, military leaders are wary of Thai- land's communist neighbors. If the com- ing elections strengthen the military, they could invite the U. S. to retain its Thai bases - a possibility which has sparked student demands that the bases be dismantled immediately. But if the left makes gains, the mili- tary may decide parliamentary govern- ment must go. Supreme Commander Adm. Sangad Chalawyoo told a recent Supreme Command Headquarters party that the military "will play the role if the Leftists start moving." Izvestia bonus because of the health hazards of working with hot metal. Printers' wages are by no means high. A senior operative in the block-making room admitted to 260 dollars a month. "We know printing is a privileged indus- try in your country," a production man- ager said. "But it's not here." TOP MILITARY LEADERS are al- ready identified with the two largest ultra-right organizations in Thailand, both of which are militantly anti-com- munist. The largest, Navapol, claims two mil- lion members and is directed by a group of senior army officers. "It is the re- sponsibility of Navapol to prevent a com- munist takeover in Thailand," says one leader. "But how we're going to do that remains a secret, which the world will know soon enough." A smaller paramilitary group of about 25,000 - many of them former Thai mer- cenaries in Laos - is led by the chief of one division of the Thai Internal Se- curity Operations Command (ISOC), which commands counter-insurgency ef- forts against communist guerrillas. "We believe in our king and our re- ligions and are proud of our nation," he says. "If any group creates trouble or unrest in the country, we will get rid of it." And he adds, "We make our own plastic explosives." With U.S.-Thai relations serving as the focal point for confrontations between left and right, some observ- ers here fear a military coup of fall before or soon after April 4 elections.' the Buriger The Saigon shuffle ruling allows private acts to become public record. The public at large has no business whatever passing judge- ment on someone else's private acts unless the acts actively damage someone else. Yet "moral fiber", the only possible commodity which the Court might argue could be damaged in a homosexual encounter, is a re- ligious concept, and, as such, is rele- gated to the choice of the individual. We cannot allow the reintegration of church and state. Too many people died in 1620 for its separation. And, as all these rights go down the drain, the right to remain free of governmental snooping will dis- appear also. Criminal testimony must not be garnered in bed. Sex acts must not be the subject of criminal testi- mony. Clearly the Supreme Court has made a grave error. By LINDA HIEBERT SAIGON (PNS) - As the Vietnamese near the end of their first year of peace in decades, the story of the mil- lion-plus homeless children untouched by the American babylift is becoming clear. The Provisional Revolutionary Govern- ment (PRG), starting with 138 orphan- ages left from wartime, is building a na- tionwide system of childcare centers to provide homes for all who need care. Mrs. Tran Thi My, in charge of four orphanages in Saigon, told PNS that the PRG is asking "neighborhood ad- ministrations to locate, feed and clothe" children still on the streets until enough childcare centers can be built. Thous- ands of children are already in orphan- ages. In addition, the PRG is pushing a pro- gram to help unemployed people move out of Saigon to settle in "new economic areas" in the countryside. Many fami- lies, impoverished by the war, gave up their children because they could no longer feed them. The PRG hopes the new program will enable these families to care for their children again. AT THE CHILDCARE centers now in operation, most of the pre-PRG direc- tors and staff are still at their jobs. But Mrs. My explains that they are being trained to change their attitude from one of simple care for the children to one of personal responsibility, taking the role of second mothers. Despite the new program, the effects of the war remain ever present. The government, short of funds, can supply only rice and clothing. Milk, meat, medi- cine, equipment and furniture must come from the Red Cross and other donors. At Mrs. My's Nha Tre orphanage, four-and-a-half pounds of meat has to be divided among 192 children, and there is only enough milk to give each child one glass a day. The roof leaks, and three children share two beds. Mrs. My and the Red Cross say the orphanages also face shortages of soap, antibiotics, eye and skin medicines, vita- mins, beds, chairs and clothes. Linda Hiebert is stationed in Vien- tiane, Laos and reports frequently on Indochina. THIS GROUP, THE Red Gaurs, (nam- ed after a notoriously fierce species of water buffalo), is believed to be behind many of the recent assassinations. In February one member was blown up when a bomb he was planting in a cen- trist party headquarters exploded. Despite the formal ending of U. S. military operations in Thailand, U. S. military aid continues and opponents of the U. S. presence predict the sophisti- cated U. S. electronic communications facilities will remain intact. (The Ford Administration requested $132.7 million this year in military aid to Thailand - more than the war years of 1973 and 1974.) These outposts, including a new $20 million radar station atop Thailand's highest mountain, are linked with over- head reconnaissance satellites to monitor troop movement in Vietnam, radio com- munications in China and Indochina, and Chinese atomic and missile tests. To- gether with the growing U.S. Navy base on Diego Garcia, they are part of a worldwide U. S. communications sys- tem. TIHE COMMUNTCATTONS B A S E S officially ceased operations March 20. No government observers or reporters have been allowed to visit the installations and the Thais have no plans to moni- tor the withdrawal. Prime Minister Ku- krit has stated that efforts to sunervise hp wihdrawal would damage U. S.-Thai relqtions LYnne Watson and Michael Chinov are foreign correspondents for Pacific News Service. -4 .1-4. Letters \N I to TIhe Israel houses, severe curfews and oth- To The Daily: er collective punishments have THE CURRENT CIVILIAN up- become routine procedure. All rising in Israeli-occupied Arab genuine political activity has Jerusalem and the West Bank been banned whilecontrolled are the latest in a chain of elections are the rule. acts of protest since the begin- Significant in this latest up- ning of the occupation nearly rising is the clear reminder that nine years ago. Throughout the the liberation of Palestine is not occupation, Israel has persist- merely that of those areas occu- ently attempted to alter the pied since 1967, but the libera- legal status and the political, tion of the whole of Palestine economic, cultural, demographic from Israeli colonial rule. Dis- and physical character of Jeru- tinctive is the unity displayed salem, the West Bank and Gaza. by the Palestinian Arabs occu- This has been done in total dis- pied before 1967, to whom the regard for the rights of the uprising has spread, with those Palestinian Arab people and in occupied since. The Arabs of contravention of the Geneva Galilee are protesting the latest conventions. Israeli land expropriations there, Israel's methods have been while in Haifa the protests are many. Jerusalem was unilater- the result of increasedpreven- ally and illegally annexed. Doz- tive detention and other civil .+ y ___-._.___ rh rn~ m~t of living of even the privileged Israeli has been eroded by the declining economy, despite the billions of dollars poured in by the U.S. government and the world Zionist movement. As for the Palestinian Arabs, due to the so-called absorp- tion" of their economy into the Israeli economy, they too are subjected to the oppressive Is- raeli devaluations, steep infla- tion and high taxation. In addi- tion, they are exploited as a cheap labor pool for thosejobs disdained by the Israelis which, ironically, then frees the Israelis for those military and adminis- trative tasks which make the occupation possible. Likewise, occupation has granted Israeli capitalhthe opportunity to mo- nopolize the Palestinian con- rDa unanimous vote of the ing 14 Security Coun bers deploring that si Uprisings such as t inevitable as long a colonialism remains i of Palestine. The only to this grave miscar history is the generou fered by the exploited exploiters - the esta of a democratic, secu within the whole ofF dedicated to protecting thering' the rights of citizens, Muslim, Chri Jewish. Organization of Students University of M Chapter March 30, 1976 ~ly remain- photo appears racist to me. If cil mem- the intent is to make fun of tuation. America's plantation past, then hese are why not paint the statue white? s Zionist The youths seem to be enjoying n control themselves at the expense of y solution minorities. The juxtaposition of rriage of the statue and the sign on the s one of- Dance gives the impression of to their ridiculing the black man, ("You blishment know, blacks have rhythm.") lar state The photo appears to say, Palestine' Look, we can all live like fall its- honkies if we sublet through the stian and Daily." By printing such a pho- to, the Daily editors reveal a fArab lack of sensitivity and con- sciousness. Naively, I had not Michigan expected anything this racist from the Daily, since some of the editors had in the past writ- . m ten positively on affirmative 1(ICiS~fl action. :.P , ': " -LL- - , - -