I OPINION Page 4 , Thursday, January 14, 1982 0%e d a n :3 a t4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCII, No. 85 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48},09 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board The Michigan Daily morgasn would be proud... *,. a Another policy flip-flop P RES succ from sev leaders, ft and chang exempt discrimin is comme did oppos that it to these lead make the gross ins issues. An earl Departme practiced claim a to ternal Re petuated- blatant ra The p previously those mos policy de stance un racism. Reagan .Mlegislatio Departme his ineptit uproar is a The Ju cement of restriction organizatt by the Reagan team IDENT Reagan, after by Reagan, with the special backing of umbing to political pressure South Carolina conservative, Sen. eral of the nation's black Strom Thurmond. Though Reagan ip-flopped on policy Tuesday claimed in his statement Tuesday that ged his stance on allowing tax he did not intend the earlier decision to status to racially be racist, the damage had already atory organizations. While it been done. ndable that Reagan finally The protest was immediate and har- e the racist policy, the fact sh. New York Sen. Patrick Moynihan ok extreme pressure from said the Justice Department decision ders to persuade Reagan to was "surely immoral ... and illegal as change demonstrates his well. This was a decision to give to the sensitivity in civil rights forces in Congress that want to undo the civil rights movement. One would assume that the otherwise tier decision by the Justice politically prudent Reagan ad- nt which allowed schools that ministration would handle such I racial discrimination to decisions with tact. However, the x-exempt status with the In- Reagan administration repeatedly has -venue Service clearly per- given little consideration to the -and, in fact, supported- possible reaction to its policies. cism. Reagan's earlier flip-flop on Social president, an idealogue Security is a perfect example. His plan y insensitive to the cries of to reduce Social Security benefits had t deeply hurt byphis domestic to be quickly scrapped because of the cisions, could not hold his popular protest the move stirred nder direct accusations of across the nation. The nation's activists should express I's decision to call for their discontent with administration )n reversing the Justice policy more often. Obviously, active ant's ruling is laudable, but protest can work. When the -ad- tude in forseeing the popular ministration makes a policy change atrocious. that is obviously detrimental to the stice Department's announ- nation, as its allowance of tax exempt the ending of the 11-year-old status for discriminatory n on racially discriminatory organizations was, the people must ions was personally cleared organize their opposition to it. U LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Support human rights i*n all nations Letters and columns represent the opinions of the in- dividual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the at- titudes or beliefs of the Daily. To The Daily: As George Orwell once noted, jingoists not only fail to disap- prove of atrocities committed by their own side, but display a remarkable propensity for not even hearing about them. One sometimes wonders whether the same applies to our news media. Witness the repression in Poland. From the coverage given, one might be led to believe that such levels of repression are unprecedented and unsurpassed in the free world. Compare, for example, the sparse coverage given to another recent suppression of democratization. The cry for humanitarian concern was barely audible when General Chun (who as the "butcher of Kwangju" was responsible for about one thousand deaths) wrestled power and declared martial law in South Korea last year; 38,000 were soon afterwar- Wf.asserman J10006OOGIATTFRE AT4T 95TLCMNT WA S UFFEp 10 SPUR. COMWeTMTIN "WT MY ?F"NtE S!LL fIT'S SAS VOt CP WIT K L1 ':T1T CORRECT I / Explanation and apology r- To the Daily: This letter is in response to one written by Ms. Yvonne Duffy on Dec. 7. In her letter Ms. Duffy, a physically disabled person, com- plained about her difficulties at- tending UAC Soph Show '81. Her complaint was two-fold: first, she said that she was unable to reach the theater through the Michigan League, and second, once in the theater she found the wheelchair patron area filled with a video camera. I would like to sincerely apologize for the barriers en- countered by Ms. Duffy and offer her (and other disabled people) an explaniation and advice. First, with regards to the hassles within the theater-the camera was placed in one of two spaces reserved for the handicapped af- ter a prior check of our box office had shown that neither of the spaces had been sold. Upon Ms. Duffy'Is complaint to me, the camera was promptly removed without any threats from Ms. Duffy. Second, the difficulties she faced reaching the theater were not UAC Soph Show's fault, but were caused by the management and rental policies of the Michigan League. By way of advice, let me suggest that the only way to change organizational mentality toward physical barriers is to contact the organizations in- volved and complain directly. Neither the UAC Soph Show of- fice nor the Michigan League were contacted by Ms. Duffy or in any way made aware of her dif- ficulties. If such contact had been made, we could have taken action and given Ms. Duffy the personal ex- planation and apology she deser-. ved. Again, I deeply apologize for Ms. Duffy's unhappy experience and hope it did not detract from her overall enoyment of our show. -Brian Uitvlugt Producer, Soph Show '81 ds arrested, including 200 leaders of the Solidarity-styled democratic labor movement which had estoblished itself for the first time in twenty years. The response of the media then is in stark contrast to that today. For many months, the exploits and fate of Solidarity's Lech Walesa have been the subject of many reports. Compare this, however, to the seeming indif- ference which accompanied the struggles and subsequent im- prisonment last year of Brazil's internationally known, charismatic labor leader "Lula" (Luis Ignacio da Silva) or the jailing of Ernesto Arellano, the leader of the frowing independent labor movement in the Philip- pines. Also noteworthy in this regard is Secretray of State Alexander Haig's overriding concern with internationalism coupled with the sometimes unquestioning media. The civilian deaths last year in a single massacre by U.S.-backed security forces (such as La Sen- ttada in El Salvador or the Pata Island massacre in the Philip- pines) can match the total num- ber of accumulated deaths due to international terrorism in any given year. The same could be said of the number if dissidents abducted by police and never seen again (the "desaparecidos") in Argentina or in Chile or the extrajudicial executions in Guatemala. Moveover, the victims of the, ongoing Indonesian genocide in East Timor vastly exceed, by or- ders of magnitude, all deaths from international terrorism in the last few years. Presumably,. the relatively faint moral outcry, for this State-induced, sub rosa terrorism is due to its noncon- structive nature given the con- text of East-West confrontations. Between Fiscal Years 1950- to 1979; the eight above-mentioned "free" world dictatorships alone received $11.97 billion in military aid from the U.S. government, which included expenditures for the U.S.-training of 81,30' military personnel from those countries in the given period. These figures do not include tie training in the U.S. of 1,808 police officers from those eight coun- tries between Fiscal Years 1961 to 1973 at a cost to U.S. taxpayers of an additional $41.25 million. In light of this, it is rather in-. teresting that any complicity in. terror within our sphere of in- fluence and control is often con-t veniently overlooked, while the Soviet Union's role -in crushing freedom in Poland and elsewhere, - is sanctimoniously decried. Let, us instead support the Polish people. solidarity, as well as all other movemnents for freedom, and democracy, and move towards a more balanced con- cern for human rights. -Jorge Emmanuel January 11 I t COMPET ITIOV 0 4 " Ui - I.1 -1.1 .' No S M - : _ Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple-spaced, with inch margins. All submissions must be signed by the individual author(s). I. Weasel ( o u FIou~ND THE T'r'£vr? By Robert Lence MR. oWtEY,t L YOU SET FIRE. TD A TNOUISANDs OF IRREPL.ACABII.. DocUMEMVS AND' MANUSC~tPT . !s fl4EtiE AWiN(N&YoubLAKE I BOY, (il ET, So NO OE.CAN' rA1KE. oKE kNYMeRE.. PUE it THE o~jIuF_ CI)-MTANCES OF rI-S CASE.- THIS 8eipd&, YOUR rR~Sr OFF6Ei You J eb Nb M i~u(SE. UPSrANflMKo MEMgMR OF W !e COMMWri-f Ij NOT T MEN1JON THE FA~r of Ya, 56 ~wk I w- rs & ,Or MSWrwIM~PS ~A P ~t NO.'No! NAN& MEJ SEND ME TO ~Tr VCrvd StF , , I I% I I fl 1I i { 'Mi