4 } OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, October 29, 1980 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Higgins qlroC0ICI Vol. XCI. No. 48 . 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Frisk 'em and 'cuff 'em YOU WONDER whether it would have been easier to have just opened the meeting. But no, Athletic Director Don Canham would have nothing of that idea. He decided that the October meeting of the Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics-just like all previous meetings-should be closed to the public, and by gum that meeting stayed closed. So outside the Crisler Arena meeting room last night, two Daily editors were arrested for allegedly trespassing and several other staff members were roughed up by police. Not exactly good press for the athletic department. ' The Daily maintains that the board meetings should be open to the public under the state's Open Meetings Act. That act requires meetings of policy- making public bodies to be open to the public., The Board in Control makes finan- cial decisions for the athletic depar- tment and formulates many depar- tment policies relating to eligibility rules and athlete conduct. Those fun- ctions would seem to define a policy- making body. The Daily staff members at Crisler Arena last night were attempting to cover a meeting that should have been open. Among the items discussed at last night's closed meeting were the "Hockey situation"-that is almost certainly agenda lingo for the recent hazing incident-and the Title IX in- vestigation. -Both are items of vital concern to the University community, yet that community will never know what the board said about them. Perhaps last night's fracas will spell the end of secrecy in the athletic department. That two students should have to be arrested trying to get into a public meeting of a University body is intolerable. Wouldn't you agree, Mr. Canham- now? 0 Is. there a Christiai Corruption everywhere ORRUPTION, WASTE, and chi- c anery in government are favored topics of conversation among politicians and private citizens alike-particularly in election season. Liberals point with pleasure to days of Republican shame, including the milk fund scandal of the, early '70s, President Fqgrd's pardon of his. predecessor, and of course, Watergate, the grand old daddy of them all. The Republicans reply with lists of welfare cheaters and other hallmarks -of big government abuse that amount, they think, to a clear indictment of all government welfare programs and services. Both sides can tend to forget that a corruption and embezzlement are not problems exclusive to the public sec- tor. This point was brought home with delicious irony this week when officials of Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, a private acoustics concern, pleaded guilty to charges of cheating the government out of thousands of dollars. Bolt happens to be the firm of techinical experts that investigated the 17% minute gap in Nixon's Watergate tapes. Tapes of the assassination of President Kennedy and the killing of four students at Kent State University in 1970 were also examined by the Bolt company for the courts. A small but growing contingent of Americans is becoming convinced that HE15 ANVL9 LIMTE RAD(ALI owl. I tt /r "tu .. /r corruption is a natural disease of any public bureaucracy. Since the various government agencies get tax monies whether or not they are effective, some believe that there is no motivation for the government to go about its work ef- ficiently and honestly. The Libertarian Party is only the most outspoken and extreme of the individuals and organizations that argue this way. The Bolt acoustics firm, like any other corporation, wants to maximize its profits. The Libertarians might argue that dishonest methods of doing so will generally lead to an explosion of wrongdoing somewhere down the line that will drive the public's business elsewhere. But government, though it certainly has its bureaucratic difficulties, can interfere on behalf of consumers long before a problem becomes severe. Furthermore, government agencies can afford to hire specialists and lawyers who can spot criminal behavior more easily than the general public. Admittedly, dishonesty exists in any large organization whether it is funded publicly or not. The fact that corrup- tion in government circles makes bet- ter, flashier headlines should not be construed to indicate that government is unworthy of the public's continued support. "ffil The loud pre-election hoopla over the spec- tre of a politicized new "Christian Right" taking over Washington will die hard. Even if it has not materialized, the idea is too attractive to too many people to just fade away: 30 to 60 million Born Again Christians, thinking with a single mind and intent on im- posing an ultra-conservative program on America. For the advocates of such a movement, the myth is more important than the reality. For the detractors, the spectre will remain a useful object of fear. Few will profit from the realization that the "evangelical bloc" is fraught with fractures. CONSIDER LARRY Jones. Here is a bellowing, Bible-thumping Born Againy preacher if there ever was one. An Oklahoma, evangelist, he opens his Sunday morning sermon on the Christian Broadcasting Net- work with a tirade against the evils of the ERA, asserting the amendment has a rider which would give homosexuals equal rights and allow them to teach in the public schools. But then he goes on to other issues: "Rich Christians are literally raping Third World countries," he declares. "They go into poor countries and pay workers a dollar a day because they can get away with it, and that's wrong. There's got to be some more equal distribution." On foreign policy: "Our foreign policy depends on how much American money is in- vested in a country and not on any humanitarian or Christian principles. All the aid does is buy off the rights to invest in a country. It's a business deal. It's not Christian." On domestic morality: "This country is spending $35 million a year on advertising to say that Jesus was wrong. They're telling you what kind of this or that you've got to have. Every day 14,000 people starve to death. I don't have to have Calvin Klein blue jeans so everybody can look at the label and say 'Hey, he's cool.' I can spend $15 on a pair of jeans and send the other $15 to help feed a hungry child." ON THE ENVIRONMENT, Jones opposes strip mining because, he says, Christians must serve as "stewards" to protect God's creations. Or consider this 39-year-old mother of three children, a former school bus. driver and bakery manager in Chappaqua, New York, who now devotes her working life to fulfilling her "mission" as a "born again, charismatic, evangelical Christian." Her name is Lorraine Wolfson. "This business of mixing politics and religion is very dangerous. It almost reminds me of what happened in Nazi Germany. I don't like being lumped as a Charismatic politically with this group trying to tell people how to vote. I think a lot of people feel the same way. "The press has got it mixed up. They haven't taken the time to talk to ordinary By Vicki Monks evangelicals and see how many ones have dif- ferent opinions. "CHRISTIANITY IS AN individual thing with each person. No two people have the same experence with it. Each has their own and each ministers in his own way. "I think it's important to vote-I believe all that-but I cast my vote and see who wins and I don't care about it after that. I don't think much about who's in Washington. I'm too busy doing my ministry." Wolfson and Jones are just two evangelicals out of many who have tried in vain to shatter the image of an enormous "Christian right" that is monolithic in its thinking;passive in its acceptance of .a few self-proclaimed. spokesmen, and threatening in both its size and unanimity. IOWA EVANGELIST Harold Hughes, the former governor and U.S. senator, is among them. "To say you've got to believe this or that in the political arena or you are not a Christian is absolute blasphemy," he declares. "There are strong evangelicals across the nation who are totally opposed to what the New Right is doing." Indeed, Hughes believes that most of the stellar lights of the New Right have strayed far from Jesus' teachings on the issues of peace and concern for the poor. Even evangelist Billy Graham is now preaching against the "insanity and mad- ness" of the arms race, and calling upon the faithful to actively oppose all nuclear arms. That is hardly the message issuing from TV evangelist Jerry Falwell's much celebrated Moral Majority organization, which calls for a massive buildup of arms. But then, the Falwell message doesn't square well with that of the powerful, evangelical Southern Baptist Convention, either. It recently passed a resolution urging ' curbs on the nuclear arms race and a shift of funds from weapons to basic human needs. OTHER EVANGELICALS have organized political action groups to fight for human and civil rights, an end to world hunger, assistan- ce for the poor, controls on pollution and other measures they believe are consistent with the teachings of Christ. And many evangelicals are simply going about their political and religious work with no attention to the machinations in Washington. Tom Hess, director of the, Maryland based Christian Restoration Ministries, an active charismatic movement, says he probably won't vote for anyone because "no candidate represents what Jesus stood for," even though all three presidential contenders are self-avowed Born Again Christans. "A lot of Christians see no hope in the political system at all,"; Hess contends. "Their only hope is in the Kingdom of God." The evident diversity in the ranks of this Christian army is borne out by the pollsters * who have studied them. NATIONALLY, THE Gallup Poll concluded that, nearly one-fifth of the U.S. population (about 30 million) , may be described as "evangelicals," meaning they have had a "born again" experience, they evangelize others, and they believe in a literal inter- pretation of the Bible. But apart from those similarities, Gallup found few signs of political unanimity. "Evangelicals are by no means monolithic in their views, as indicated by their opinions on nine voter issues," he wrote. Indeed, 54 per cent favored "government social programs as a way to deal with social problems," while 53 per cent supported the ERA. Only 41 per- cent favored a ban on all abortions, meaning the majority would, approve at least some types of abortion. California pollster Mervin Field found that nearly one-quarter of all Californians call themselves Born Again Christians. But while. half of them favored Ronald Reagan, a5, majority disagreed with Reagan's opposition' to the ERA. And they divided almost equally on a constitutional amendment banning abor- tions. Field asserts that the size and uniformity of the "New Christian Right" is "grossly over- stated." "I think a lot of people who are sim- ply deeply religious-and some who are not-are getting classified as people in this movement," he said. AS FOR THE monolithic nature of the movement, Field contends it "flies in theface of existing data which shows that this movement is made up of a lot of segments or factions, which have a common base perhaps in deep or fervent religiosity, but which, in a number of other ways, are highly disparate." Field ,also believes that evangelicals probably "represent a high proportion of the non-voting public. For them organized political activity;is an unnatural act," he said. The notion of millions, of evangelical voters following a few self-proclaimed leaders like Jerry Falwell is also off the mark, he said.4 "The larger the group in our society, the less able are their 'leaders' to motivate them. There is a greater likelihood they will fragment." That would be just fine as far as Walt Mc- Cuiston is concerned. McCuiston tends to a flock of some 3,000 torn Again Christians at the Peninsula Bible Church in Palq Alto, California. "It is the variations that are the genius of making the body of Christ work," he says. "That means a single political view should never override the individuality of each Christian." Vicki Monks is a Bay Area journalist who recently completed a fellowship at Stanford University. She wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Defeat Proposal D, but we need A a6 To the Daily: We seriously need tax reform. The extreme position taken in the Tisch proposition is an indication both of the need and of the frustration of taxpayers op- rebating a fixed amount to each property owner, and (2) in- creasing the Michigan sales tax by a whopping 37.5 percent of its present rate. These are both bad moves: The first because if a The modifications in the proposal move toward fairness and tolerability. In this regard the ability to pay is a crucial issue that Smith-Bullard addresses constructively. Although press, the principal real issue is .the burden distribution on the taxpayer, NOT the continued funding of certain special interest groups. If education is worth anything, it should enable and ghW-4