-4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, January 10, 1982 The Micl higan Daily 4 1 tedbtna nv Michig an Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman Vol. XCII, No. 82 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 481'09 - Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Autoworkers agree to hesitant renegotiation y' 1 1 %we LJ A 46r wolr 1 vU1 1 HE UAW'S FORD and General Motors councils agreed yesterday to open exploratory talks with the car :companies on possible concessions on' salaries and benefits in future contract negotiations, a turn of events that was sorely needed to bolster the ailing auto industry. Though it may be immediately detrimental to their position, the UAW must seriously consider accepting a. salary cutback for its workers, and beyond that, a series of important cut- backs on fringe and health benefits for all its members. If the UAW does not :consider these fundamental con- cessions, even more of the 211,000 em- ployees currently on indefinite layoff may lose their jobs.. UAW chief Douglas Fraser said the bunion's agreement to hold exploratory talks does not imply that any specific concessions will be made. Fraser is justified in his hesitancy. The auto workers must be careful to realize that the auto companies are going to try to take full advantage of the situation, and will certainly try to make the auto workers absorb more than their fair share of the burden of .reviving the industry. In that context, while it is realistic to accept these ex- ploratory negotiations,-union officials must continue to protect those contract provisions which are rightfully their's. Labor unions often receive a. disproportionate amount of the blame for the decline of the American auto industry, and they are frequently criticized for not attempting to solve the crisis of productivity now plaguing American car manufacturers. Yester- day's move, however, may help the lion to solve many of their publicity problems and thereby ultimately strengthen their bargaining position. The unions will now be able to assert without question that they are making a realistic attempt to assist the American auto industry in its fight to become competitive. There can be no question that the in- dustry has lost its competitive edge. Automobile sales for last year were the worst since 1961, as yesterday's UAW statement issued in Chicago reported. The combined auto industry losses for the 1981-82 year will total more than $5 billion dollars, a figure that cries out for drastic help. While ultimately the workers must be prepared to contribute to the revitalization of the industry, the dif- ficulties are not entirely the making of the union. A lack of investment forethought and an inability to under- stand the nation's growing need for smaller cars have led to the decline of the auto industry. The lure of im- mediate profits and large dividends caused the car companies to neglect the long-range capital improvement programs that might have permitted the industry to avoid its current crisis situation. Car manufacturers have threatened to move increasing amounts of their production overseas to cheaper labor markets if the UAW did not agree on wage concessions. Against this type of blackmail there was little else the labor union could do to secure the maximum number of jobs for its members. It is thus not surprising that Fraser and company agreed to the ex- ploratory talks. It is only unfortunate that such force had to be used to gain such necessary concessions that may eventually sustain the vitality of the industry. 7EWA&c- MOMhR4? AEUSED To DiSPENSE CONTR~OL BK.A5Y -E NW WIMOVALrtY CDNX4 e1AANWTAL 4! NO NoNW i pa5c1~ooL$ 50OI'AD V TVPENT5 WN'fIT" cx I 6 1T'15 THIS (5 OUNTRY WowE UP To R ALurY- CONI(tZA(X1'TI0N CAU55 PR~bN~NGY I VK~&tAN CY mr The new East-West confron- tation over Poland has revived Cold War bickering over the 1945 Yalta agreements that were sup- posed to assure peace and freedom in Eastern Europe after World War II. With Poland still under martial law that President Reagan blames on the Soviet Union, there are calls for Western rejection of the Yalta accords. DESPITE PLEDGES at Yalta of free elections, the nations of Eastern Europe one by one became Soviet puppets. Poland, a major concern at the conference, came under Communist Party control in 1947. Former national security ad- viser Zbigniew Brzezinski raised the idea of renouncing the accor- ds in a television interview last week, and the Wall Street Journal said in an editorial that renoun- cing Yalta "would send a clear message to Eastern Europe's peoples that we have not written off their aspirations for a better future." But freedom for Eastern Europe was exactly what the Yalta accords were intended to guarantee. Since the agreements were reached in February 1945, Yalta has become a codeword for Soviet domination of its eastern European neighbors. And in the Cold War rhetoric of the 1950s it was painted as a betrayal of the people of Eastern Europe. PRESIDENT FRANKLIN Roosevelt of the United States. Prime Minister Winston Chur- chill of Great Britain, and Premier Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union met at Yalta, a Soviet seaport on the baltic Sea, as World War II was concluding in Europe. One of the chief objectives was to bring Russia into the war against Japan once Germany was subdued. Agreement to form the United nations was also reached as the conference. Of current interest is the Yalta accord on the disposition of post- Poland crisis spurs new. conflict over Yalta accords Byon MucLeod war Europe. The allies agreed to divide Germany into zones for separate administration after the surrender instead of joint oc- cupation, a decision which leaves Germany still divided. THEY ALSO shifted the boun- daries of Poland, restoring to the Soviet Union a decision it gave up in World War I and adding to Poland portions of eastern Ger- many with large Polish populations. America and Britain, concer- ned for the future of the redefined Poland living in the shadow of a hostile Soviet Union, also sought to guarantee the country's freedom. Churchill said at Yalta that britain had gone to war so that "Poland should be free and sovereign . . . We drew our swords for Poland." Both Britain and France had declared war against Germany after the blit- zkrieg of Poland in 1939. STALIN STRESSED the problem of Russian security, saying: "Throughout history, Poland has been the corridor for attack on Russia." At the time, Soviet troops oc- cupied Poland, and Moscow could have done pretty much as it pleased. But the war was not quite over, and neither side wan- ted a split at this critical point. The "Yalta Declaration on Liberated Europe" obligated the big powers to help the countries liberated from German oc- cupation, and the former Axis satellite states "to form interim governmental authorities broadly representative of all democratic elements in the population and pledged to the earliest possible establishment through free elections of gover- nments responsive to the will of the people." THE DECLARATION also con- tained this interesting, but long forgotten, provision: "When, in the opinion of the three gover- nments, conditions in any European liberated state or any former Axis satellite. . . make such action necessary, they will immediately establish ap- propriate machinery for the carrying out of the joint respon- sibilities set forth." If Yalta were still binding, the West could argue that this obligates the Big Three to inter- vene jointly in Poland. The Soviets, on the other hand, would contend that a responsive government was formed in Poland by the will of the people and this government is free to do what it wants. STALIN ALSO agreed at Yalta to include non-communists in the new governments of Eastern Europe. At the time this was con- sidered a major concession by Stalin. Coalition governments were formed according to the Yalta' pledge. Elections were held in Hungary in 1945, in which Com- munists won only one-fifth of tle vote. Early in 1948, Hungary's Communist Party, through its control of the ministry of the in- terior, arrested leading politicians, forced the resignation of Premier Ferenc Nagy, and gained full control. In Romania, a coalition gove nment headed by a non- communist was overthrown in December; 1947, and a people's republic was proclaimed. Bulgaria's coalition government was replaced in a few months by a communist republic. COMMUNISTS captured one- third of the vote , in Czechoslovakia's elections in 1946, and emerged as the dominant coalition partner. Communists consolidated their total control in 1948. The Com- munist Party gained control of Poland by January 1947., In Yugoslavia and Albania,. com- munist elements held power from the start, although maintaining more independence of Moscow. Thirty years after Yalta, 35 nations meeting in Helsinki, Finland, signed a pact on Security and Cooperation in Europe which affirmed the national borders which evolved after World War II. The Helsinki Accords pledged increased cooperation between the nations of Eastern and Western Europe to allay threei decades of tensions. They also prohibited outside interference in the internal affairs of the signatory nations. This appeared to abrogate the Yalta obligation of the Big Three to insure internal order and democracy in the former captive nations of World War II. McLeod is a writer for the Associated Press. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Creationist views mindtwisting To the Daily: I have a few words on the recent decision handed down by a U.S. District Court Judge in Arkansas. The decision struck down that state's law requiring equal time for Creationist views whenever and wherever Dar- winian evolution is taught in the public schools. Liberal, thinking minds are now in the curious controlling consciousness behind the organization of the universe is no less an assertion than to say that there is a God who ordains for All, and it looks damned tenuous when you ieflect on the distance between primordial protein globules and a human being. Of course churches should not be teaching science; they're in- comoetent to the task. Neither religion when it proposed (and it has convinved most of us, without direct statement) that what cannot be proved by obser- vation does not greatly matter, and it has proceeded to catechize us in more and more obscure mysteries, no less dishonest than any hocus-pocus put over by a Church charged with the conver- sion of idolators: To say that migratory birds find their way by You're run across the super-6 natural in some form, i.e., you are out of the realm of Natural Science. It is downright funny that the ACLU (think about what the let- ters stand for, folks) proposes to limit the teaching of public- school students to the proved. What they should do, to make the Creation-Scientists look like the mind-twisters they really are, is lat. -,