I ,4 OPINION z Page 4 Wednesday, November 11, 1981 The Michigan Daily Is smaller better? Is less more? things hire other people to remove hucksters' days called "the management team"-get We have to return toour purpose as a Univer- Bert Hornback crowded classrooms and fewer classes.advertisements from doors and Wi back to work professing something: teaching, sity where, living ,by what we know, we can If we didn't know how much the president dows and walls, We - as a com- in the classroom. strive-as a community-to learn more. gets paid and how much his assorted vice munity-should stop cluttering up the doors Knowing that junior clerical personnel in the Things would be easier for those who are "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing." presidents get paid-and how much their raises and windows and walls with such junk. University earn as little as $8,300 a year, and running things-for our "managers"-if we There are some people around, even a place were in this year of serious economic Then those people who we pay to perform the that four 'of our executive officers are paid didn't know as much as we already do., like this one, who will tell you that. And there crisis-we wouldn't be upset at them, and want demeaning job of cleaning up after us could go more than $70,000 a year-a good nine times THEY WOULD PREFER our ignorance, and are some who will tell you, too, that "ignorance to use nasty words,like "greedy" when we talk to work in the library, or do something else of what those junior clerical employees our docile acceptance of whatever they do or is bliss." And if you will believe that nonsense, about them. real value and serious use to the community. make!-we should protest strongly against don't do. But since we know what's going on, they will tell you that "Smaller is better," and If we didn't know that, etymologically, (KNOWING THAT we deaden our sen- those grossly overpaid managers receiving and know what it means, we must choose bet- "Less means more." "economics" has to do with how things work sibilities by learning not to pay attention to further raises this year of some $4,000 each. ' ween being the administration's accom- In a sense thse people are right, of course. If here at home, we wouldn't be so upset at how what we see, we should quit putting up ten KNOWING AS WE do that these are hard plices-their suicidal accomplices, I would we didn't know that there are more than thirty things aren't working well for us at all. If we posters saying the same thing, instead of one, times here at home-economically-we should argue-and their adversaries. deans and'associate deans in the University, didn't know what "economics" is about, we so that we can protect and hone our sen- learn how to live here together: as a com- I would urge that we oppose them, and use and that selective cutbacks haven't shrunk could blame out troubles on somebody else sibilities by paying attention to the one. 'But munity. In a community we must share the what we know to save the University, both as a that number by a single deanly desk's worth, besides our well-paid leaders and ourselves. that's another argument-about human wealth, not starve the poor. commodity and as a University. It is impor- we would be better off. We would be happier BUT THE PROBLEMS are all our own, civilization-and it will have to wait.) Given what we know, we have to insist again- tant-for the idea of community and for the with our lot. really, at every level and in every sense. To Knowing that classes are too large-that they st the absurd and self-serving Newspeak of idea of a university-that we insist that what AND IF WE didn't know that the faculty is solve the problems we will have to change the are crowded, and more than crowded-because "Smaller but better" and "Less means more." we know won't hurt us, and that we act, then, shrinking while the student body renains the way things work around here-and to do that there aren't enough faculty teaching them, and We have to look seriously at the problems we upon our knowledge. same size-and if we could forget that the we will have to make serious use of what we recognizing that this place we call a University face as a University, and try to deal with them Someday, if we all learn to act upon what we faculty who remain are urged by all the Various know, is an educational institution, we should insist intelligently. We have to identify waste as know, we might even save the Universe! deans toward research and not toward the Let's start with something small, but serious, that the non-teaching faculty-administrators waste, and cut it out. We have to call greed by classroom-then we could blindly accept more Knowing that the people who pretend to run of various kinds, members of what is these its dirty, shameful name, and refuse its claims. Horn back is a professor of English. r r1 A Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 4f 0 Wasserman 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. XCII, No. 54 THE I ME 1 GAME. Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board 'Adenial of freedoms T"5"Y S1FET CONST'AN1T I -j ON MULTIPLE. fif 9 ( J THIS I5'A P'OL ICY RIE~iN& WILL COt'.&RES GoS ALON& WITH THE Mx? , 1 J ,' -r _ 0 T HE ISRAELIS- the supposed defenders of democracy in the Middle East-have shown, once again, how undemocratic they really can be. Yesterday, in the occupied West Bank, military officials jailed three influen- tial Palestinians and confined several others to their towns in order to abate a planned strike by the town's merchan- ts. During the past week, several demonstrations have occurred in the area protesting Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Defense Minister Ariel Sharon's policy of replacing military authorities with civilian ad- ministrators. And Israel's very democratic response to these activities? Jail the most vocal protesters.t Israel, once again, has refused to allow the Palestinian people a very basic civil liberty-that of free speech. Of course, it's not surprising. Israel's continuous refusal to allow Palestinian self-rule has demonstrated the coun- try's lack of concern for the rights of the Palestinian people. This is not unlike the late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's and current President Hosni Mubarak's purges of fundamentalist Moslems and political dissidents. In both instances, in- dividuals have been oppressed because of their beliefs and backgrounds. And in both instances, the regimes respon- sible for blatant oppression have received vigorous-'almost unequivocal-support from the United §tates. As the United States' strongest ally in the Middle East, one would assume Israel could display some rudimentary traits of democracy. By refusing to allow the Palestinian people basic civil liberties, however, Israel has destroyed any chance of setting such an example and has implicated the United States in its oppression. A.. _,- " 71 tb 01 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Daily unfair to Unification Church .. . . "04 THIS IS JUST AN OLP.ARAB USTOM A~ i4..< a n w....' J f Ire. ,1Ii YI H, " x "/ F "1 To the Daily: I am angry. On Thursday, Oc- tober 29, the Daily published two articles about the "Moonies." Together, they presented a distorted view that will only ser- ve to strengthen an already stereotyped, negative image presented thus far by the news media. Why do you participate in the continuing character assassination of Rev. Moon and the members of the Unification Church Movement? Many Americans have com-. pletely misjudged Rev. Moon. I have worked with him for six years and have seen his tremen-, dous effort on behalf of this nation. Relentlessly, he has spoken the truth about the twin threats of moral decay and atheistic communism. He has been a champion of religious and racial minorities. Left-leaning news media, threatened by Rev. Moon's anti- communist stand, are spreading false rumors and innuendo trying to undermine his efforts. At the same time, disenchanted former members have added to the controversy with strange stories and emotional appeals to avoid the "Moonies." A great deal of media attention has been focused on so-called "deprogrammers" who kidnap adult members of new religious groups and often violently pressure them to denounce their faith. What has not been brought out in the media, however, is that this network has become a multi- million dollar business, preying on fear and- instilling hatred toward the churches and their members. Organizations such as the Citizens Freedom Foundation and American Family Foun- dation were established to spread hatred and to destroy new religions. These well-funded organizations have adopted many tactics to achieve their publicly stated goals of destroying church members' faiths and the religious groups as perman's pitiful story is definitely not typical of a person who lives his life for God accor- ding to the Divine Principle. It is clearly a combination of the deprogrammer propaganda and Kemperman's own self-centered reaction to the God-centered and other-centered philosophy and life style of the Unification movement. The Daily has known of my membership in the Unification Movement since January 1980. I've been interviewed on a num- ber of occasions. Why not publish an accurate, "authoritative" ar- ticle about my life as a "Moonie?" It is particularly painful to me that the Daily would print such a hostile piece of propaganda as the Andrew Ross column entitled, "The Moonies' illegal aliens." The emphasis of the writer is to show that the Immigration. and Naturalization Service are the good guys and the "Moonies" are the badies, they're breaking the law. What about the other side of the story? In recent years many of the church's foreign members have been subject to discriminatory treatment by the INS. There has been cooperation between deprogrammers and government officials and law enforcement of- ficers to take members from the movement by force. And the press has been foremost in the crusade to create a hostile reac- tion toward the "Moonies." My wife is a citizen of West Germany. We have experienced first hand the prejudice and abuse of power being practiced by agents of the INS. The moment we met the im- migration officer she accused me of marrying my wife just so she could stay in the United, States to work for the Unification Church. The burden of proof was on me to show that our marriage was a "normal marriage" ar.d therefore acceptable to the INS. Only after a lengthy cross examination of both my wife and me, concerning the most per- sonal details of our marital To the Daily: The B-1 bomber, the MX missile, the C-17 transport plane-numbers and letters that alienate, bewilder, and frighten almost every human being who grasps their meaning. We are assaulted daily by new proposals for national defense-the RDF (rapid deployment force) and ELF (extreme low frequency an- tenae network). Business and industry are cajoled and enticed into stock- piling "strategic metals (cobalt, manganese, titanium, etc.) and researching ways to do without such commodities. We are daily confronted with paradoxical reports of military might and economic collapse-in the U.S.S.R. Yet at the same time, we are confronted by a nuclear arms race presenting the U.S.S.R. as the aggressor in this no win situation, going so far as to present scenarios for limited engagement of nuclear weaponry. The time has come to realize* the lessons learned since the beginning of this century. If we, -as a -people, are going to survive, we must tone down harshly, if not stop, the-military monster that in 1914 destroyed the beliefs and, ideals of a world, in 1939 dismayed and horrified mankind, and since thattime has done little except cause pain, suffering, and manipulation of people who would be justas happy to be sit- ting at home watching football. That i not to say,. however, that the military should be apan- doned. The military provides a focus for our perceived defense, whatever that defense may be at a given time. It must be realized that the Russians are as afraid of 1110,0 %t'a sn of[IT-. . «.-._ admitted, had come primarily from the medlia. The Daily may think that it is doing a "good" job by exsposing the "Moonies" but it may very well be maligning innocent people. I believe this is an uncon scionable way to sell newspapers, -Bill Hilbert November 4 Protest the arms race alternatives must be sought'out. Alternatives to what and from where should be the next.- questions. Alternatives to con- frontation over the limitedW resources, available pn Earth when, if industry and gover- nment were to cooperate, the un- tapped resources of space are available., This may sound ludicrous, but nonetheless, it is a viable alternative in the near future. Alternatives to confrontation'* over ideological problems are not as easily found. Palestinian autonomy, ,a free and secure Israel, the apartheid policies of the South African government, and worldwide human rights are all major concerns that require workable solutions soon. So what can be done in this world of increasing militarism and despair? Speak out! Present your ideas, no matter how sim- ple, for complex things are built from simple foundations. Join an organization that you feel will represent your viewpoint and that you can work with to convey that point to others. This campus, with minor ex- ceptions, has shown little coo- dinated conceptual effort toO organize and speak out against such things as budget cuts, program cuts, military issues, or social concerns. This lack of outward concern is certainly understandble given the need to excel here and the burdensome financial cost, but, it is, nonetheless,s appalling that a university of 30,000 students can- not organize effectively to come up with viable alternatives to i