I OPINION Page 4 Thursday, February 10, 1983 The Michigan Daily Resisting the draft registration system By Tahree Lane The swirl of controversy around draft registration swept into Michigan last week when a 21 year-old Hope College student was arraigned on charges of failing to register for the draft. Daniel Rutt is one of 14 men singled out by the federal government for not registering because of his outspoken opposition to draft registration. Rutt's trial brings to Michigan many questions about the draft registration, including how the justice department has chosen to prosecute non-registrants and whether the process is needed at all. Rutt believes draft registration "works contrary to God's purpose.'' His attorney charges that because Rutt and the 13 men indicted in other states were outspoken opponents Hof registration, they were targeted for prosecution. THE government is sending a message to draft-age men: There will be only a few "sacrificial lambs" who will be punished primarily for being outspoken about their refusal to register. But the government is run- ning a risk of creating broad public support for these "crusaders." Church congregations, many of which have already gone on record opposing draft registration, may take tougher stands against registration. Federal judges around the country are unsure about how to deal with these protestors. Thus far, some of the 14 men have been sentenced to prison; some to two years' alternative service work. In one case, a federal judge altered an indictment against an Iowa man, saying he did not have a con- tinuous duty to register after a one- week sign-up period expired in 1980. The government is appealing this ruling. Rutt's attorneys say they will follow the arguments that, were presented in defense of a California non-registrant. That case was dismissed when the government refused to surrender documents that defense attorneys said would prove the Department of Justice was pursuing selective prosecution of non-registrants. ANOTHER MORE fundamental problem is present for those like Rutt. A built-in Catch-22 exists for the in- '(Rutt's) attorney charges that because Rutt and the 13 men indicted in other states were outspoken opponents of registration, they were targeted for prosecution.' dividual who believes any war-related activity is wrong. If he registers, he has violated the very foundation of his beliefs. If he follows his conscience, he risks punishment that he may have likely avoided completely if there ac- tually was a draft and subsequently, an appeals board. There is also reason to abolish the registration system altogether. The Selective Service draft registration process had been in "deep stand-by" status since 1975 when President Ford suspended , peacetime draft registration, largely because of the Vietnam anti-war backlash, but also to save money. Also, the all-volunteer, army had been in existence for two years and was thought capable of meeting current American defense needs. Between 1975 and 1980, the National Selective Service System atrophied. Its staff had shrunk from 7,000 employees to 250. Registration was re-established by President Carter in 1980, in part as a show of strength to the Russians on the heels of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Also, by that time, military experts were concerned that the caliber of volunteer recruits had dropped. BUT TIMES have changed. The conditions which precipitated the re- establishment of draft registration are no longer cause for alarm. Relations with the SovietAUnionare not as chilled as in 1980. And hard times and a paucity of jobs have created a situation where recruits are more intelligent and more highly motivated than in the previous decade. In 1979, for instance, more than 50 percent of new enlistees scored below average in reading and arithmetic comprehension and aptitude on Army entrance exams. In 1982, less than 19 percent of the scores were below average. A few years ago, only about one in three Army recruits was making it through training to become a soldier, according to Pentagon officials. Now, four out of five make it. And, far fewer but more technically trained military personnel are needed to fight modern wars, including the "sustained, winnable nuclear war" which the Reagan administration is said to regard as feasible. Selective Service officials claim that a registration process in operation could save four to five weeks of induc- tion lag time in the event of a national emergency. That point is reasonable the United States were to become ii%-' volved in a traditionally fought conflic; But the very idea of large numbersZf young men going off to fight the war 1n the nuclear-computer age seems al tiquated, at least technologically if n~, unfortunately, philosophically. A formal process of registration fet the draft is not the only way infoi- mation could be gathered on dra . eligible men. Perhaps the Selectile Service could be granted authority, 4s the justice department has been, :o have access to Social Security Ad- ministration or Internal Revenue Ser- vice records, and compile com- puterized lists of draft registration-age men. These lists could then be available to the armed services in the event of a national emergency. This arrangement would enable the government to eliminate a draft registration system that functions un- fairly and ineffectively. In any event, Congress would be wise to eliminate funding for registration. Lane is a graduate student ©f journalism. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIII, No. 108 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Answers for a massacre Wasserman &00tTo s "YOU 1N F ~ow -TE ~c Avh MR P SD T tAIeS DI&Ie "The main purpose of the inquiry was to bring to light all the important facts relating to thet perpetration of the atrocities; it therefore has importance from the perspective of Israel's moral fortitude and its functioning as a democratic state that scrupulous- ly maintains the fundament- al principles of the civilized world." So read the report of the Israeli commission that investigated the country's role in the massacre at the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps in Beirut last September. After an exhaustive study - which included hearing testimony from 49 witnesses, questioning 160 others, and examining nearly 12,000 documents - the com- mittee made some solid recomme4- dations for those whom they found to be "indirectly responsible" for the massacre. If implemented, these recommendations would be the small step toward easing tensions in Lebanon. As the panel suggested, Defense Minister Ariel Sharon should resign or be fired. He should have foreseen that the slaughter would occur if Christian Phalangists were allowed into the two refugee camps. the committee placed the blame for Israel's role in the massacre largely on Sharon's shoulders. Sharon's resignation or ouster could only serve to make the world know that the Israelis do in fact see their culpability in the senseless carnage of Sabra and Chatilla. But more impor- tantly, it would knock off the razor's edge of Israel's hardline policies in Lebanon. Prime Minister Menachem Begin would be less apt and less able to thwart the essential compromise necessary to bring a more lasting peace to Lebanon. Although the committee recommen- ded little action against most of the other main figures in the controversy, among them Begin, Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir, and General Rafael Eytan, it also blamed them. they were responsible for stopping the massacre immediately after they found out about it. The 108-page report is a thorough, painful examination of the events surrounding the massacre. It goes a long way toward healing Israel's wounds. The panel has made a com- mendable appraisal of the country's role in the massacre. Israel's leaders should now show the rest of the world that they, too, are capable of maintaining the fundamen- tal principles of the civilized world by acting on the panel's recommen- dations. X Y i t i } I A A i } r d f i i i 1 I i A 1 ' 1 t i t 'r i iM t y f S I i i ;} 3 f V $ CAt N C W (3, \%OLUIT~W 'ASLI N MNC7...r °{- 11 WEST BERLIN-Last year some 30,000 of this city's 120,000 Turkish residents were eligible for West German citizenship. Exactly 50 applied. "Ask the Turks here if they want to go home, and 90 percent of us will say, 'Yes,' " says Gazi Kilic, who emigrated to Berlin from a small Anatolian village 14 years ago. Embraced in these figures and sentiments is a growing hostility toward German life among this country's 4.7 million immigran- ts-a hostility that many Ger- mans cannot understand. "What puzzles me about' their unhap- piness is that our guest workers have some of the best wages and benefits in the world," remarked on Berlin official. AT THE BOTTOM of Europe's "crisis of the immigrant," however, lies something more than economic issues. Its im- plications should be closely read by Americans debating our own national policy toward im- migrants. In effect, immigrants here are being asked to accept the ultimate terms of the classic American "melting pot"-total assimilation. But they often are deprived of the traditional old- world supports that helped generations of American im- migrants survive the assimilation ordeal. Instead of accelerating integration, say immigration experts, this aproach almost certainly is im- peding it. "Germans seem ready to ac- cept foreigners as neighbors only Europe 's struggling melting pot By Frank Viviano unlike guest workers they are not allowed to bring their familiesin to Germany. "Business is very good," said Ekven. "But how; long can I stay alone in Berlin; when my wife and sons are: Kin, Istanbul?" The dilemmas evident -ins Kreutzberg are by no means- limited to Germany. While France has had much longer ex- perience with immigration, a massive influx of North Africans in the past two decades has led to a hardening of French attitudes, even in tolerant Paris. And French law, like German law, prohibits most recent newcomeers from entering private business. Berlin Wall near Checkpoint Charlie. With 40,000 Turkish and Yugoslav residents, it houses Germany's most dense concen- tration for foreigners, but Kreut- zberg offers few of the exotic street scenes that were once synonymous with immigrant life. Indeed, it seems less an im- migrant ghetto than a cultural desert-neither German nor Turk nor Yugoslav. While dozens of stores which once served a predominantly German clientele have been moved out with their old customers, virtually no im- migrant enterprises have moved in. The vast majority of im- migrants, in fact, are prohibited from doing so. Their passports specifically exclude the legal "right of establishment" necessary to open a private business. "THE GENERAL OPINION among Germans is that we asked for and needed workers, not en- trepreneurs," explained Barbara S United States today-the ideal of diversity is under severe attack. "The German population is not well-prepared for a mujlti- cultural society," John said. The victims of this clash bet- ween official German support for cultural pluralism, and a bias against it in law and mass opinion, are clearly the im- migrants themselves. Yet despite their deep resentment, most cannot afford to return to Turkey or Yugoslavia, where current economic conditions make West Germany's 8.6 unem- ployment rate seem in- significant. Kreutzberg's empty streets and shuttered stores thus reflect a cultural limbo in which foreign residents are effectively trapped. WHILE THE German gover- nment has slowly grown more sensitive to these cultural sour- ces of immigrant hostility, the few steps taken to improve mat- ters have been contradictory half measures. A case in point is that of Selami .N.£f nn~n tr PARADOXICALLY, im- migrants who arrived in Europe under the worst of circumstances are in some instances experien- cing the smoothest cultural tran- sition: Those admitted under refugee status are normally guaranteed the same privileges as citizens, including the "right of establishment." "The final irony may be that these people are assimilated far more readily in the end," accor- ding to the OECD's Aveling. That test already is a dismal failure, in the opinion of Recep Kayaalp, 21, who plans to leave Berlin for Turkey soon despite the economic hazards. ' "Ten years ago our different ways didn't bother people here. They greeted us at the airports with bands and 'Welcome to Ger- manv cianc hprntlp thpv nppnO~n*I pti ~~AAda] . ' i