A OPINION P~age 4 Tuesday, October 5, 1982- Smiling American The Michigan Dailyf faces, Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan far away from home Vol. XCIPI, No. 23 420 Maynara St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 6 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board By T.D. Allman i Justice Department takes a wrong turn T HE JUSTICE Department pro- claimed the other day that it might, when asked, enter school busing cases on the side of those op- posing integration. The department insisted that the an- houncement was not a change in policy, and the announcement itself received scant attention in the press. But despite the claim to the contrary, the announcement does indeed represent something new and dangerous, in the administration's ap- proach to integration. The administration says that the very people who are supposed to be benefiting from desegregation- minorities-are often the people who are filing suits to end busing. "The black community is the one that is protesting," said the president at his news conference. That's a very strange perception of reality. It might be worth considering if the president's new approach to "helping" blacks fight integration hadn't met with condemnation from civil rights groups-or if his own record on race relations weren't so abysmal. The president, along with his con- servative allies in the Senate, has already made a number of attempts to gut affirmative action and desegregation programs. Most of those have failed, so it appears that the president's new tack will be to lend the legal resources of the government to those who wish to undo progressive legislation through the courts. No one claims that the nation's programs to right discrimination are perfect. They're not. They do cause difficulties for both white and minorities, and, despite the years which have passed since the beginning of the civil rights movement, the programs remain inadequate. But the president's approach to the problem is perhaps the worst possible under the circumstances. Motivated (at best) by a frustration with the problems in the current programs, the president seeks to dismantle all those portions of the civil rights policy which trouble him. He seeks to leave in their place not any new, brilliant plan for solving the nation's racial difficulties, but the empty shell of well-intentioned programs. Given the president's record, the Justice Department's claim that the policy is the same as before rings hollow. It smacks of another attempt to undermine civil rights and the hope of a more just society. HO CHI MINH CITY- Nearly seven years after the end of the Vietnam War, the streets of this city still are full of American faces. Once they belonged to young GIs, but today the American faces one sees in Vietnam are even more youthful. In a new kind of postwar baby boom, thousands of sons and daughters of U.S. citizens are growing up in Vietnam- abandoned by their American fathers, their needs and rightsmuntil now totally ignored by the U.S. government. No one knows for sure how many births the conflict generated. But estimates range in the tens of thousands. AS AN AMERICAN visitor strolls through downtown Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), it seems that at least half those American children of the Vietnam War are following him down the street. Typical is the young boy who shines shoes in front of the Continental Palace Hotel. He has blond hair, blue eyes and his light brown skin seems no more than a tropical suntan. "Russki?" he inquires as he is paid for the shine. When he learns his customer is an American, his face lights up with the gleaming optimism of some American suburb. "Me too!" he exclaims. "Someday I go stateside, see my papa." A whole world has been scattered to the wind since these children were conceived. And now that the storm has abated they cover the streets here-selling cigarettes, polishing shoes, running errands-like fallen leaves. They are living momentos of a time most of us would like to forget ever existed at all. "THE VIET Cong gave us exit visas years ago," says a woman with four teen-aged sons who calls herself Rosie. "What I cannot u'n- derstand is why theAU.S. government refuses to let my boys go to America." Another woman, whose daughter is now 13, shows copies of the dozens of letters she has written. "They say my daughter is ineligible to goto America," she comments. "Yet every month thousands of 100 percent Vietnamese go to America. Why can't the child of an American go?" Rosie looks at her four sons-named Gary, Lee, Jack and John, and ranging in age from 11 to 16-with concern. "We came to Ho Chi Minh City in hopes we could go to America soon," she says. "But since we have no residence permit for the city we receive no ration cards, the boys can't attend school, and I cannot find work." To survive the boys run errands downtown. "WE WAIT," Rosie continues, "and my sons are growing up as street children, without proper education." Meeting these American children and their mothers dispels a number of myths about this living legacy of the Vietnam War. Amerasian children may be orphans of the storm, but most of them, in the strict sense of the word, are not orphans at all. "I wrote to my children's grandmother," another woman said. "She wrote back, en- closing $50, and said nothing could be done." OTHERS HAVE stacks of letters returned from the United States stamped "Moved, Left No Address." Some keep up sporadic contact with the fathers even now. .Nor are most of the children the offspring of prostitutes, who often used American birth control devices. Instead, most of the children one meets were the products of long-term, stable liaisons. But the more than three million Americans a 0 Eager, American faces on the streets of old Saigon: "Someday I go stateside, see my papa." Happy Millken Week who came to Vietnam between 1965 and 1975 all went home long ago-some in body bags, but very many more alive and eager to put the trauma of Vietnam behind them forever. AS ROSIE sums up her family's plight, she might also be delivering a summation of America's desire to forget: "The Vietnamese don't want us here, and the Americans don't want us there," she says. "It is as though we don't exist." But no amount of forgetting can change the fact that thousands of children of U.S. citizens do exist in Vietnam-and that, in the most literal sense of the word, they are our cousins, nieces and nephews, grandchildren and, in the case of tens of thousands of Americans, our children. For years U.S. officials have made U.S. Missing in Action in Indochina a major issue in U.S.-Vietnamese relations. At the very end of the war, President Ford authorized Operation Babylift, which spirited away Vietnamese orphans. Hundreds of thousands of full-blooded Vietnamese have immigrated to the United States in the years after the war. BUT UNTIL now, the children of American fathers have been totally ignored. Even U.S. consular officials say the explanation lies in a combination of regulatory irrationality and political opportunism. "Under current U.S. law," one consular official said, "the children you met in Vietnam have no rights, and their fathers have no obligations toward them either." Asked why some 2,000 Vietnamese- ranging from infants to great-grand- mothers-nonetheless are permitted to leave Ho Chi Minh City for the United States each month, the official replied: "They are allowed entry under the family reunification provisions of our immigration law because they have relatives in the United States." He added: "If you discover the logic behind the laws we have to enforce, please explain it to me." Among the chief reasons the plight of the American children in Vietnam has been so ignored are that young children are in no position either to take to the sea in boats or to navigate the equally perilous morass of U.S. immigration law-and that, until now, no sizable body of public opinion inside the United States has mobilized political support on the children's behalf. ALL THAT may be changing, though it is unclear whether it is changing enough to benefit a whole generation of children who0 are rapidly coming of age in a society where they feel unwanted. "A grass-roots movement has gradually, taken shape," says the Rev. Alfred Keane, a Maryknoll priest who has worked with American children for more than 20 years., "There are literally hundreds of thousands of American families willing to take them in. The question is whether they will be let in." Among the several Amerasian proposals before Congress, one of which seems certain to pass soon, some would actually make it almost impossible for the children ever to leave Vietnam. According to one plan, the' children would have to prove they were vic- tims of political, religious, or racial per- secution, which without doubt would ensure Vietnamese hostility to their departure, or that they are orphans, which most of them are not. Others would simply put the children in: the "first preference" category of the U.S.' immigration quota for Vietnamese, limiting them to 2,000 per year. One planeload of 63 children will arrive in. the United States within the next few months. they are being accepted under current law, and all have been adopted. So far as Vietnam is concerned, the. children's plight seems more one of neglect than active persecution. Hanoi has made it clear it is willing to let the children leave. And 'unlike in Korea and Japan, where the children of American servicemen often suffer overt discrimination, racism is not a strong factor in life here. In fact, the American children's main problem inside Vietnam seems to be one that afflicts millions of Vietnamese as well-a cumbersome bureaucracy that has no place for those who don't fit into the officially prescribed niches. Allman wrote this article for Pacific News Service. OV. WILLIAM Milliken ha reached deep into the unlimite goodness of his heart, and declare Oct. 2-9 as Higher Education Week i Michigan. Isn't that nice? Declared Milliken: "The continue strength and economic vitality of thi nation and the state of Michigan are dependent upon the capacity of ou colleges and universities to develop the mindpower of our citizens." Nicely put, especially for a leade whose executive order budget cut have wreaked havoc on the Univer sity's money supply. Milliken's Sep tember proposal to cut $112 million from the state's higher education system was rejected by the state legislature because of its harshness. Said Milliken: "The goal of the cam paign is to enhance the public under " SP E AL s standing and appreciation of higher d education's value to American society d and the contributions of college- n educated citizens to all aspects of American life." Very, very nice. The parts about "American society" and "American d life" are really moving. Regardless of s Milliken's incessant hacking at the e University's already endangered fun- r ds, he writes a nice proclamation. This e man definitely understands the con- tributions of higher education to the r American way of life. s What a Governor, what a man, what - compassion. If Milliken did anything else for the n University, we'd have to build a n sewage treatment plant in his honor. e He's done such a good job with higher education, the state's just dying for - Unemployment Week. That'll come in - late November, after the elections. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Khomeini imposes more controls f- To the Daily: The Iran-Iraq war is now nearing the beginning of its third year, and although much has been said about the recent turn of events and ramifications of the Iranian advances on the geo-political state of the region, little attention has been paid to the effects of the war on the stability of the two warring governments and especially the Khomeini regime. It has indeed become a custom to brush on this subject by merely asserting that despite Iran's con- siderable losses in human and economic terms, Khomeini has retained his popularity and has in fact used it to draw hundreds of thousands of people to the war fronts. A deeper analysis, however, points to the contrary. The recent legislation passed by the Iranian Parliament entitled "The Law of CompulsoryConscription," is a clear indication of the desperate need for soldiers in the "holy war" against the "infidel Iraqis." According to this law, refusal to participate in compulsory con- scription can lead to such punishments as loss of water, gas, electrical, and telephone service as well as restrictions on receiving medical treatment or going abroad. In fact, permission to carry out transactions, to receive any loans, to receive business or work permits, to receive graduation certificates, to find any employment, or to get insurance or pension benefits all require the person to take part in compulsory conscription. In one word, refusing to go to the war fronts means becoming an out- cast in society. The fact that the Khomeini regime has resorted to forcing people - and reportedly 9 to 14 year-old children-to fight at the fronts clearly refutes the myth that the people support his regime's policies. In fact, though his fundamentalist policies and his campaign of terror against his opposition, Khomeini has managed to become as hated as the Shah, if not more. Yet, futile though it is, Khomeini hopes to prevent his regime's collapse by creating more crisis and instituting more political repression. So easily has he forgotten the fate of his predecessor, the Shah. -Nancy Keydemann September k9 Coverage inappropriate To the Daily: When I read your article on the suicide of a Stockwell resident (Daily, Oct. 1), I was at first shocked and then angry. That's wrong. All of us on her hall were stunned by what hap- pened-we had no idea. And yes, so many of us felt guilty-but l~onyc "~n ~i/~..00 ,o nA^ Bad spelling To the Daily: Some of the advice given to are not proof-read." Three paragraphs later the word in- cAitfi i s nld "insitfil " " L I~.) r i