0 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, February 6, 1983 The Michigan Daily 4 Divestment, registration: HE DEBATE over whether the University fshould sell off its investments in South Africa heated up this past week. Longtime foe of divestment, Thomas Roach declared he and his fellow Regents are not "subservient" to the state legislature, which is trying to force the university to divest. Meanwhile, in a relatively obscure faculty comrmittee charged with recommending Resisting law and industry and the future of the Pentagon's presence on campus. Looking the other way University policy on the subject, at least two Mnembers were worried about another kind of Wdbservience - that of blacks to the South kArican government that practices apartheid. -.These critics ask where the University's s&6ial conscience is when it invests companies sikh as Ford Motor Company and Inter- hational Telephone and Telegraph. These com- panies provide implicit support for South Africa's racist policies by operating there, they charge. The legislature has agreed and enacted a law under its civil rights and police powers equiring state supported colleges to divest. :ut Roach claimed American companies can lea positive force in the racist nation by prac- t4ing progressive employment practices. 0 "mmittee chairman Thomas Gies went even ther,arguing the Regents' responsibility is ther to the legislature nor even its social science, but to- uphold the value of the Americans, not to comply with the gover- nment's draft registration efforts. Friday, he became one of only 14 violators to face federal prosecution since the registration guidelines were enacted. Rutt's attorneys entered a "not guilty" plea in the Detroit court case, arguing that their client had been unlawfully singled out. "It is clear that the decision to prosecute was made at the highest level," said Rutt's attorney, Dennis James of the American Civil Liberties Union. "It was a political decision." James and his fellow attorney Jim Lafferty plan to follow the line of defense used by David Wayte, a California non-registrant. Wayte's case was thrown out when federal officials refused to hand over documents Wayte's attor- neys said would prove the justice department was pursuing selective prosecution. There were no card-burning demonstrations this time around, and only 50 supporters rallied outside the courtroom in Rutt's defense. Said the Hope College senior, "I'm guilty in the sense I disobeyed a law written on a little piece of paper, but in the eyes of God I'm in- nocent." Another piece of paper set bail at $1000; resistance isn't cheap these days. Veep calls it quits THE ANNOUNCEMENT had been antici- pated for more than a year by many ad- ministration insiders, but it wasn't until last Tuesday that Charles Overberger, 62, resigned as the University's vice president for research. The 11-year veteran of the administration called it quits so he could spend more time on F,.:;' 4 Roach: No yielding to the state. University's almighty investment dollar. So far, the University divestment debate has remained in forums and committees, but it will probably end up in court if the University decides to forget its conscience and flout state law. Singling out a resister O N THE HOME front, the resistance con- tinues. Dearborn resident Dan Rutt, 21, decided, along with 500,000 other young Overberger: Back to chemistry his work as a macromolecular chemist, he said. The vacancy left by Overberger will be the third vice presidental position to be filled during Harold Shapiro's three-year tenure as University president. Michael Radock, the former vice president for University relations and development, resigned in January, 1981 and Shapiro's own former position of vice president for academic affairs was filled by Billy Frye in 1980. A search committee will soon be formed to find Overberger's successor, who is sure to play a key role in defining the future of resear- ch at the University. Among the issues that lie ahead for the new veep are the mysterious and growing relationships between the University TRYING TO AVOID picking on specific research projects, the Research Policies Committee ignored pleas to investigate several projects allegedly violating the University military research guidelines. The committee, which is approaching a March deadline for submitting a proposal to the faculty Senate Assembly for solving the dispute over research guidelines, voted not to look into the projects listed in a military research report compiled for the Michigan 4 Student Assembly. Committee members said they objected to student committee member Tom Marx's proposal because they didn't want to single out specific projects and because there isn't enough time to properly investigate the suspect projects. A number of committee members would have favored a random selection of projects had there been enough time to do a thorough investigation. Marx said he proposed setting up a subcom- mittee to study the projects because "we need to look at questionable research before we decide whether or not we need a mechanism for enforcing the guidelines." Meanwhile the committee, which has been working on research guidelines for a year, is still deeply divided over what to recommend for non-classified military research. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily editors George Adams, Kent Red- ding, Ben Ticho, and Barry Witt. 4w 461A 1 __ Wasserman Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIII, No. 105 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board 'Good' nev D ON'T BE FOOLED by January's drop in the unemnlovment rate: The picture isn't as bright as President Reagan would like everyone to believe. There is a danger that Reagan might use the latest unemployment statistics to stifle the costly, but necessary jobs program being developed by Democrats in Congress. When the .4 percent drop in unem- ployment was announced Friday, even labor department officials acknowledged that the figures were misleading. These officials noted that while the number of people unem- ployed did drop by nearly 600,000, the number of employed people actually stayed the same. Much of the drop in the jobless rate resulted from a seasonal decline in the work force. The figures also leave out the estimated 1,850,000 "discouraged" workers who have given up trying to find work-an increase of 300,000 from December estimates. Although this was the first drop in the unemployment rate in 17 months, the president is already hailing a new x 1-1 s gone oaci trend. "America is on the mend," he said with a big grin. But a one month dip in the jobless rate does not make a trend and solutions still are needed to solve the chronic unemployment problem. Such a solution is the $5 to $7 billion jobs program Democrats are preparing to introduce in Congress. It would create approximately 3 million jobs, which in turn could have a significant impact on the effort to turn the nation's economy around. This proposal is in danger because the president can now seize on the good" news and call the plan un- necessary. But the jobs program is just as necessary today as it was before the January unemployment figures were announced. The president has read too much good news into what really amounts to a tragic story. The labor department said just two weeks ago that double digit unemployment rates would plague the nation through 1983, which makes any sunny optimism a cruel joke on the unemployed. T}}U FMIC T1NKS TiAT OIL, SXE4uTIVes 1uy C-t,1TIN& COMFAN\5 INSTEAD OF eXPLORIN& FOZNEW CAIRO, EGYPT - As the night train to Aswan rumbles past darkened fields and villages along the Nile, conductor Ahmed Mansour dreams of attending the University of California at Davis. Mansour holds an Egyptian bachelor's degree in agricultural science, though railroad work now supports him. He has heard that the Davis campus teaches the latest in farming techniques-lessons of critical value to this hungry nation of 45 million. But if a twist of fate did take Ahmed Mansour to California, chances are he would not return to the Nile Valley. "I'd probably go to Yemen," he says, "because - the Saudis are funding many agricultural experiments there. - In Egypt I'm not sure I would have an opportunity to use what I have learned." SOME 2,000 miles north, Atef Tarafa has schosen emigration over frustrating underem- ployment at home. After years of study toward a prestigious doc- torate in city planning from the University of Paris, he found that his hard-won skills would earn no more than a clerical post in Cairo. "It was better to stay in France, where I can at least make a decent living," says Tarafa, who now arranges Mid- dle East tours for a travel agen- cy. The problems of these Egyp- tians illustrate one consequence of the emigration wave which has swept through this part of the world in the past 15 years: a ' disastrous loss of educated and skilled people. Egypt in some ways is an exception among Nor- th African countries because it has not also experienced a vast movement of unskilled workers to European factories, as have Algeria, Tunisia, and Morocco. But it is by far the region's major victim of the brain drain at a time when the need for imaginative solutions to Egyp- ~ThM 'we 5pNv' OUR TIME COMB 1& nF S TOX REF'ORT5 LOOKIN& FGFJ 15AR&Aa N5 TNEY THNK RAL EASY Egypt loses in the Thivrd World brain drain By Frank Viviano WELL, HAVE YOu eVEK -RIE TO PEAD PAI.TtiISTINY PRINT2 -a more than a decade, outgrowing a sluggish bureaucracy and its dated visions in the process. To enter that bureaucracy, accor- ding to Tarafa, is to encounter "a thousand obstacles based on resentment and jealousy. It isn't possible to get things done, even relatively simple things like planning a second railway station." FOR AHMED Mansour, whose ambitions have not so fully soured, the administration of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak still holds promise: "He is a man with experience is economics and administration, and not just a politician. Under him, who knows? Maybe something will be done about the Delta after all." What Ahmed Mansour and Stef Tarafa want for their country sounds muck like a government of technocrats, a kind of gover- nment the Western world has come to disparage. But Cairo and the Nile are not the Western world, and their citizens live perilously close to chaos. Therein lies the real tragedy of Tarafa's bitterness and Man- sour's'talk of Yemen, imprinted in the loss of the Third World's most valuable human assets. It is a tragedy that especially afflicts countries like Egypt, India and Pakistan, where a traditional high regard for education produces bumper crops of talen- ted young people for export. Most of these young people are merely competent. But some are potentially visionaries, with the capacity to halt what seems a hopeless downward spiral for the world's poorer half. Viviano wrote this article for Pacific News Service. "PAMNMEPIA! YOU SHOULP KNOW ETTE T TO REPORT ALL THE DOPEY ThINGS HE SAYS" b I , t'' J . - _ _ J - V441\ i 4 e 4oU5Ed 1 4 by with a stoicism and good nature that contrast sharply with the scenes around them. COPTIC CAIRO, the ancient heart of the city, has crumbled into a mountain of smoking refuse inhabited by resourceful garbage-pickers. To its im- mediate north in El Fustat, the intellectual capital of the Islamic world, the same fate seems dangerously imminent. Entire buildings regularly collapse because of faulty maintenance or badly designed drainage systems. One catastrophe in early December leveled a six- story apartment structure, killing 47 of its inhabitants. The situation is only slightly better around Tahrir Square, the administrative nerve center of the Egyptian government. For three hours or more daily, thousands of civil servants are frozen in a paralyzing traffic snarl inching in and out of the area,, reducing bureaucratic productivity nearly to zero. Similar monumental challenges face the Egyptian countryside. While the High Dam at Aswan has made the Nile's flow more predictable, it also has YET THE terrible irony is that Egypt has become one of the world's great exporters of educated professionals, sending scores of its brightest doctors, engineers, agronomists and teachers to the Persian Gulf nations, Europe and North America. This irony is far from lost on young people like Atef Tarafa who entered universities here and abroad full of ambition to bring their country into the 20th century, or at least to confront its. most pressing crisis. "From the standpoint of planning, Cairo doesn't have to be a disaster," maintains Tarafa. "Right now, for example, a single train station handles all traffic into the city. If a second one was built on the opposite end of Cairo, a lot of the congestion would evaporate." Cairo has not spread with the benefit of planners' charts and dreams, however. Like so many other Third World cities, it has doubled and redoubled in little F T...,-.,,,.,,A nrnly m o r ,-r i n tho loft cido ocf J