0 OPINION . ; Page 4 edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. XCI, No. 41 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Tuesday, October 21, 1980 The Michigan Daily 6 On the humanity of athletes There is a long conveyor belt in the West Quad cafeteria that juts out into the dining room. The belt-upon which trays of dirty dishes are placed-passes through a small opening in a wall and into the dishroom, where student workers remove the trays from the belt and wash their contents. Looking down the conveyor belt through the wall and into the dishroom, you can just barely see the hands of the first dishwasher. I chanced to be sitting near the conveyor belt at lunch a few weeks ago when a large Neanderthal brute decided to amuse himself. He loped up to the belt, a glass clutched in his paw. Leering, he hurled the glass down t a Some vestiges of petty politics sur UST AS THE new Michigan Stu- dent Assembly is struggling to shake off the petty politics of past Assemblies and to embark on a new course of real student activism, one vestige of years past is forcing MSA to grapple with several issues that could hider its remarkable recent progress. That vestige is former MSA financial officer Brad Canale, and the bad habit has taken the form of a student lawsuit fi d with the Central Student J ,ciary charging the new MSA with a olation of its constitutional appoin- tInent procedure. $bme MSA members say the suit is noliing more than a political ploy; an at1empt to disrupt the functioning of an - Asembly dominated by the political pa.ty that opposes Canale's. They see Cnale's constitutional wrangling as * Carter and I foreign poli A T LONG LAST, the major party presidential candidates settled d wn Sunday to go on the record with su stantive comments about theanost i portant part of their campaign plat- i : foreign policy. That comes as a r after the jast months of petty s ing and misstatement of fact. onald Reagan raised at least one reasonable attack on a problem that has plagued his opponent's ad- ministration when he observed that "ae present administration has been unable to speak with one voice in foieign policy." He was not as specific aslie might have been, but any foreign leader could have expanded on the fiiistrating lack of control, unity, and direction among Carter's foreign plicy spokesmen. Former Secretary of State Cyrus Vince, .his successor Ed lyluskie, for- nr4r U.N: ambassador Andrew Young, hts successor Donald McHenry, and N4tional Security Advisor Zbigniew Bipzezinski have all at various times swoken for Carter on foreign policy tters, often at odds with each other. T president would have done well to can up that messy problem long ago. heSALT II issue was the other in area of controversy in the can- d ates' speeches Sunday, with Carter c ing out strongly in its favor, and gan attacking it. arter called SALT a "secret face in MSA an attempt to meddle in the affairs of the Assembly that excluded him. Petty politics surfaced again last week when some MSA members and students charged the MSA Permanent Interviewing Committee with doling out nominations to the Acting Union Executive Committee on the basis of politics, not qualifications. It is unfortunate that now, when MSA is making a real effort to address student concerns, its accomplishments should begin to be obscured by the political squabbling forced upon it by a minority of disgruntled members of a defeated political party. . It would be truly sad if MSA were forced to waste its time and effort waging political battle against these opponents rather than continuing to devote itself to solving student problems. Reagan swap cy proposals weapon" that would limit the number of . Soviet long-range missiles, eliminate thousands of extant nuclear bombs, and boost U.S. intelligence- gathering capabilities to monitor Soviet defense system activities. He termed the treaty the first step in a process of "gradually reducing the possibility of nuclear war." In the past, Reagan has repeatedly called for U.S. nuclear superiority over the Soviets. Sunday, he did not refer specifically to those comments, but he did suggest that he could only support an arms limitation treaty if the current arms balance changes. From the Soviet point of view, Moscow has fulfilled its obligation to negotiate for peace in signing SALT II. Reagan, however, sees himself scrap- ping it, embarking on a vast arms buildup, and then negotiating a new treaty with the newly-compliant Soviets. We'll say one thing for the Republican candidate: He has a rich fantasy life. Unsigned editorials ap- pearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily s Editorial Board. Witticisms By Howard Witt one of them, made him sick with alcohol, shaved his genital hair, and left him outside, naked, in freezing weather for ,almost an hour. In the name of brotherhood, they brought the victim back to his dorm and nobly decided not to put him on display in a lounge. A CUT DISHWASHER. A doused bar patron. A hazed freshman. Three isolated vic- tims of athlete violence-and athletic men- tality. Ever since junior high school, when humanity was first divided into those skilled in athletics and those not, I have struggled with myself to resist a general, unreasoning hatred of athletes. It has been a losing struggle. I really want to believe hockey players and football players are sensitive human beings. I really want to believe they have feelings and consciences and sensibilities. Then along comes news of a brutal hazing incident, and my desires evaporate. The players make it so hard for the rest of us to embrace them as humans. I DON'T WISH to dwell on the hazing in- cident; far too many column inches have already been devoted to that subject. There is one point, however, that no columnist has yet examined: the claim that hazing is necessary and even desirable. There is a considerable consensus among die-hard fans and athletes alike that hazing somehow draws a team closer together; that it is some baptism of fire that all must share to be true companions. Hazing is one night of humiliation, many argue, that prefaces years of comradeship. Now I'll be the first to admit that shared experiences strengthen relationships. Those of my companions who last summer worked until 5:00 a.m. pasting bulletins onto an edition of the Daily shared a common ex- perience that brought us each closer together. BUT YOU CANNOT convince me that a shared experience must be destructive. I'll never understand why athletes must abuse one another in some test of toughness before they can feel close. Why, I ask myself, can't hockey players or football players (those are the two types we know practice ritual humiliation; there may be others) judge and respect one another on the basis of athletic achievement? Why can't the playing surface serve as the proving ground? Lacking an answer for those questions, I am compelled to create one: These athletes are in some way subhuman and sadistic. They must be so callous and stupid that they can.,,. think of no other significant common ex- perience beyond hazing. Again, my desire to resist popular stereotypes about athletes is destroyed-they act in ways that only rein- force my prejudices. To think of all the special privileges this university-and our society-grants these dinosaurs makes me cringe. We entice them with huge scholarships, we pamper them with immunity from the law (there will be no prosecution of those involved in the hazing assault), we support them with special how- to-study and how-to-write and how-to-read academic programs, and we pay millions to watch them attack their counterparts from other s 4ools. SOMETHING IS gravely wrong. We are, caught in an impossibly hypocritical situation where we boast of this university's high ,. academic quality even as we honor the Wolverines-those shining symbols of anti-in- tellectualism-with strains of "Hail to the Victors." It would riot be difficult to predict that the University community can not much longer tolerate this extreme example of negative capability. The hazing incident may well prove to be the snapping point. In my calmer moments, I do realize that all athletes are not created equally brutal. In- deed, I have known some far more sensitive and human than myself. But none of those played football. Or hockey. They were cross-country runners. And tennis players. And golfers. And none of them ever felt the need to sling glasses at innocent peers or shave their com- panions. along the length of the conveyor. The glass shattered somewhere behind the wall, cutting the hands of the first dishwasher. (You could tell because of the scream of pain and the blood.) THE NEANDERTHAL leaped with joy and ran back to several admiring girls for ap- proval. They cooed and flirted and squeezed his biceps. That mindless thug, a fellow diner told me, was-a starring player on his high school foot- ball team. About a week after the glass-flinging in- cident, I heard about another athlete-this one a member of our august football team. It seems he was in a local bar with some of his cronies and decided to amuse himself. He dumped a pitcher of beer onto a total stranger. Last week, we all heard about fifteen other athletes-members of the Michigan hockey team. They decided to amuse themselves by hazing their own freshman companions. In the name of tradition, they assaulted at least Howard Witt is the Daily's Opinion page. pears every Tuesday. co-editor of the His column ap- LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Hazing editorial totally one-sided To the Daily: Once again, you have printed an editorial opinion that ignores facts and written statements, is totally' one-sided, and borders on sensationalism. I am referring to "The Hazing Incident" editorial in the Thursday, Oct. 16 issue. In this same edition of the paper, you have published a statement by the hockey players themselves, signed by all 29, in- cluding freshmen. This statement conflicts with and con- tradicts most of the facts upon which your editorial is based. The least you could have done. before writing your damning and potentially damaging editorial is to have considered all the eviden- ce. There are two sides to every story. But it appears that those who write opinions for the Daily don't feel this way. Anyone who supports the ac- tions of the hockey players in this incident is a fool. I don't. You ob- viously don't. But your reader- ship is entitled to the straight truth, not farcical half-truths and false innuendos. The facts are a freshman player was hazed. The facts show that the veteran hockey players went overboard with this man. But whose, facts are we to believe? In your editorial, you state that "the player was left naked in freezing weather for more than an hour, dropped outside Markley Hall, and he could have died of hypothermia had he not been discovered by friends and pulled inside." That's your side of the story. What is interesting about these facts of yours is this: In the same Oct. 16 paper, on the front page, in a story written by Loren- zo Benet and Gary Levy, we are given some other facts to con- sider. The hockey players' own statement says, "The player One point for loutish protesters' . . . To the Daily: I'd like to comment on the "loutish protest" at the "Peace Corps celebration," because it WAS seen as merely a disruption without a clear point. The point of the demonstration was that U.S. foreign policy is on the whole directed toward the wrong ends, not just a bit off course, as Sargent Shriver's speech seemed to imply. There is a difference between disrupting a forum and exposing a spectacle of half- truths; the protesters weren't just being rude. In fact, the "celebration" disrupted the demonstration as much as the reverse, when, before any of the speeches, the band was ordered to drown out demonstrators' chants. Tracye McArdle's letter and Secretary Muskie's commen- ts on the protesters are typical non-responses of those whose unreal world is crashed by reality: questioning opponents' sincerity. Why the Peace Corps? The Peace Corps is a part of a policy that as a whole must be condem- ned. Though it is conducted in our name, U.S. foreign policy is not conducted for the benefit of the American people, but for the multinational .corporations. The effect of this is that the U.S. sup- ports repression and exploitation, not freedom and equality, throughout the world. How does the Peace Corps fit into this? The Peace Corps has in some cases served as a cover for the CIA (it was thrown out of several countries because of this), but this is not its' major role. The Peace Corps serves to co-opt energies for change, both here and in the Third World. In the Third World, people are taught that the way to improve their lives is by improving their technical skills. A poor peasant is taught how to eke out a little better living on his small plot of land, when the real problem is that all the best land is taken by large plantations that grow cash crops for export. What he really needs to know is how to organize to solve the real problems of his society. In the same way, well-meaning Americans want to help poor people in the Third World, so they go overseas to provide technical assistance. They could help those poor people infinitely more by changing U.S. foreign policy. In the same countries to which the U.S. sends Peace Corps volunteers, the U.S. supports and instigates repression when the people of a country try to take control of their own lives and become independent of the multinational corporations. My high school chemistry teacher had been a Peace Corps volunteer in Brazil during the 1960s. In 1964, the CIA instigated a military coup that overthrew the elected government of Joao Goulart. Since then, the U.S. has supported the military gover- nment in Brazil, among othey, things training the police in tor- ture and assassination techniques. The police have used this training to suppress political opposition to the government and labor's opposition to big business. The people of Brazil, and of - America, would have been better served by a person's work to turn U.S. policy away from supporting the "stability" of a "good climate for foreign investment," than by the good a person did in a rural village improving sanitation and agricultural methods. That's why the Peace Corps celebration was and should have been a target of "loutish protesters." -Dave Kadlecek October 15 was taken into the lobby . .. not dumped on the hall doorsteps, in- coherent and unable to walk." Following this comes the senten- ce, presumably gathered by your reporters, "Markley residents confirmed this statement." Responsible papers don't print editorials without considering all the evidence. They seek out the truth, research the facts, -And then, based on their findings, write opinions. There is no question that the players deserve every bit of the punishment they, get, whatever that may be. But you people at the Daily are creating an issue by altering fac ts, hoping to achieve whatever objective you want. I don't know what it is. Yet based on your sen sationalistic practices of late, I1 can only assume that you strive to be another National Enquirer. How hard was it, Daily, to fall that low? --Lee McAllister October 17 State -m ovie theatre hit To the Daily: Having been a moviegoer for over 30 years, I had an un- pleasant "first" on Monday night, Oct. 13, at the State Movie Theatre. I had difficulty parking and was 10 minutes late to see Hopscotch so I waited after the film ended to see the first ten minutes. An usher informed me that I was to leave. I explained that I had missed the beginning and had paid $3.50 for my ticket and that I would like to see the beginning of the movie. He said he would have to explain to the manager. A second usher ap- peared with a similar message. Finally the manager arrived and after telling me that I had to leave, informed me that if I did not leave, she would call the police, who would forcibly eject me. At this point I hasten to point out that I am a middle-aged woman. I was sitting quietly, merely waiting for the movie to begin. It didn't quite seem worth it to, ... and one point against them To the Daily: The mentality of activist groups on this campus never None of these groups could convince me otherwise, -nen manywhn thpv trv to shout carrying hecklers "just like to hear themselves talk." It ap- nne a aainrit o f etiidpntc