Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, April 14, 1985 'U' student rebukes Polish military rule IN BRIEF (Continued from Page 1) Because of her impeccable grammar she became a valuable asset to the Solidarity movement as a translator, especially for American journalists covering the strikes. During that time, she worked with reporters from the Wall Street Journal, Time and Newsweek magazines, and the Detroit Free Press. The Polish regime instituted martial law on Dec. 13, 1983, saying it was a necessary move in order to regain economic stability. According to Kietlinska, the government's claims' were only ane excuse to suppress the union. "The basic economic losses that Poland had at that time were from mismanagment and not from the strikes," she says. "Because people used to go on strike, but even if they didn't there would be nothing to do .because the spare parts. would not be there, the raw materials would not arrive on time. .. it was an absolute disintegration of the economy," she adds. And this was caused by mismanagement of the Communist Party, First Secretary Edward Gierek regime already starting with the mid- 70s. So blaming the people for going on strike and making them responsible for all the economic situation was ridiculous, and everybody knew that." After living a year and a half under martial law, Kietlinska and her family left Gdansk for Vienna on July 12, 1983. They applied for entry into the United States as political refugees and were granted resident alien status. Even now, Kietlinska has difficulty explaining her reasons for leaving Poland. "It seems like a very easy question," she says as she pauses from her meal once again and reflects on the events that brought her to America. "Well," she says finally, "my reac- tion when they introduced martial law was so violent, and the intensity of my hatred was so violent, that I just really did not-like the idea of thinking aobut myself in terms of this hatred. I couldn't stand it ... I felt like throwing stones, it was unbelievAble." Kietlinska describes an incident that happened in January, 1982, shortly af- ter martial law had been introduced. There had been a heavy snowfall and she was pulling a sled behind her when she came upon a break in the pavement where there was not snow, forcing her to carry the sled. "There was a patrol of policement ip uniforms,"' she continued. "What they did was kind of a very humane sort of gesture. They just wanted to help me to carry the sledge. I thought I would kill them. I can still hear my shrill voice when I was telling them to fuck off and leave the sledge alone. "All of a sudden with the 13th of December... you had all the cities full of military uniforms and police with huge clubs and with tear gas. It was like an instinctual sort of hatred toward the uniform. So I really didn't think;' I reac- ted. And I just didn't like mayself, I just didn't like the things that were hap- pening to myself in those terms." Although Kietlinska said that she was never physically harassed by police, she was detained and interrogated by them several times. She was also followed and on a couple of occassions the secret police came and searched her home. "The curfew was, I thin, at eight or nine at that time, and when you hear your doorbell ring at three in the mor- ning you really have no doubts about who the visitors are and there's this moment of panic," she said. "The reasons for decisions like that (leaving Poland) are really very com- plex," Kietlinska explained. "It wasn't really fear that made me leave, it was mostly lack of hope. It was a weird sort of reaction - like maybe if I leave I won't see it, I'd be able to pretend it doesn't exist and I won't have to cope with it." A CCORDING to Kietlinska who jokingly refers to herself as a "right-winger" - President Reagan is very popular among Eastern bloc opposition groups because of his tough foreign policy in dealing with the Soviets. "That's why Reagan is a favorite hero in Poland," she said. "The only thing they (the Soviets) can understand is power. No humane sort of thinking, no human rights ... these things simply do not affect them. They don't care a bit It's very hard to understand this for an Amercian because you've got all this culture that's really based on the rights of the individual. There a person does not count. "What they really understand is the language of power and Reagan is giving them some of it, at least. I loved the Grenada thing . . . because it showed them that Americais capable of more than just barking. Of course, we do not expect you to come there and intervene in any military way. But on the other hand, they don't either. And that's bad because they should at least have the feeling that there is some sense of retaliation." However, Kietlinska's conservatism seems limited to politics and philosophy. ("I totally identify myself with the intellectual position of T.S. Eliot. I don't like the relativity of values.") Despite this, she likes the "vitality" of the more off-beat and bizarre elements of society. "I love punks," she laughingly admitted. "The world is not so grey and boring after all if people still have the guts to dress that way."- When this rather sharp difference in tastes was pointed out to her, Kietlinska seemed stumped for a moment. "You caught me," she said. Kietlinska smiled and then laughed. "Maybe I have a split personality." F OR KIETLINSKA, the hardest of adjusting to American life was getting used to "the little things" - like self-serve gas stations, money machines and checking accounts. She English T A., Kasia Kietlinska still involves herself in her native Poland's lid it Union m vement ao lar y o . II IIY11C also misses the ethnic identity of the Polis culture. "The situation combines being an emigrant from your own country and an immigrant here. And people usually realize this part about living here but they do not realize what it means to need those things, not to have certain things. "Like, I have dreams where I.see the pavement near by house (in Gdansk) with little cracks. I remember where the cracks were. I never really thought about those cracks. It seemed I never really noticed. . . and then all of a sud- den it- just comes back in strangely visual terms." After she gets her Ph.D. in English, Kietlinska hopes to eventually move to New York, the place she said most resembles the "organic" structure of European cities. Kietlinska, a self- proclaimed "city creature," lives in Harper Woods and finds that the "rural" life in suburbia does not agree with her. "I really like a lot of things about America," she said. "I like the openess. The U.S. really is a very hospitable society." Even so, Kietlinska hopes to return to Poland some day but admits that after relinquishing her Polish citizenship the odds are against the move. Although she had many positive things to say about the United States, Kietlinska said that if she had to do it over again she would have remained in Poland. "It's (mostly because life's different there. Even if you feel threatened - and sometimes there really are moments that you can. "In, a country like Poland the fact that they are not really harassing you in any physical way does not mean anything for the future because you know they can," she says. "You're there and they let you live only because they have an arbitrary reason to. "But the moment his changes - and it can change for hundreds of reasons - yu're down there in the abyss. It took one night to have the important people (in Solidarity) in-prison. Even if you're alive and not in prison any minute can bring a change and it's very hard to live with this. "But on the other hand, having a feeling that you're doing something that has sense, that's important...that has some broader significance. I just don't have this feeling here," she adds. "I miss the general atmosphere of living the saime things, of living the same problems. If you live the way I did you really talk about the same things, you really communicate with the people. You don't hve the feeling of sort of being different, of standing aside, of being an alien.. . and here I do. Kietlinska pauses, then says almost apologetically, "I enjoy a lot of things here, I really do." As she pushes her half-eaten salad around with her fork, she adds, "but its's like it's not mine and that's what really bothers me. "It might be someday, though. You never know." Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Judge moves convicted rapist to new prison, fears for his safety CHICAGO - Gary Dotson, sent back to prison yesterday on a rape senten- ce after a judge rejected a woman's testimony that she wasn't raped, has been moved to a different prison because officials fear his fame might make him a target of violence. Meanwhile, the judge who upheld his rape conviction last week said he was sorry for Dotson and his family, but had to do what he thought was right. Dotson, 28 whose first week of freedom in six years ended Thursday in the Markham courtroom of Circuit Judge Richard Samuels, was moved Friday night from Joliet Correctional Center to a smaller prison at Dixon, 70 miles northwest, where he can have a cell to himself. Samuels had freed Dotson on $10,000 cash bond while his case was being decided. He refused Thursday to reverse the conviction on the basis of recanted testimony by Cathleen Webb. She testified she made up the story of being raped that sent Dotson to prison because she had sex with a boyfriend as a teen-ager and was afraid she might be pregnant. Warren Lupel, Dotson's attorney, cited "a tremendous outpouring from all over the continent," including attorneys offering services to help free Dot- son. Shuttle satellite fails after launch: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - A radio satellite released to the Navy failed seconds after launch from the shuttle Discovery yesterday and the astronauts were ordered to trail 40 miles back while engineers determine if the satellite could be saved. The Hughes Aircraft Co. satellite, planned to earn $16.8 million a year for five years, was left drifting in a useless orbit ranging from 192 to 286 miles high with a "live" rocket motor identical to the third stage of a Minuteman 3 ICBM. If'the satellite cannot be saved, it would strike another blow to the space insurance industry, already reeling from three losses over the past year. A Hughes spokeswoman said the satellite was insured but she declined to say for how much. "We're trying to see what we can do to the satellite from the shuttle," said Mary Mixon, a Hughes vice president in Houston. "NASA is pulling together teams to see if we can rendezvous. There are safety issues involved." U.S. mercenary killed in combat MANAGUA, Nicaragua - An American "mercenary" fighting with Nicaraguan rebels was killed in combat by government troops, Nicaragua announced yesterday. The Nicaraguan Defense Ministry identified the man as Roger Patterson, hometown unknown, who died March 27 during a battle with a Sandinista Popular Army battalion near Waslala, some 100 miles northeast of Managua. In Washington, a Pentagon spokesman said records showed that a Roger Patterson had served in the U.S. Army from July 1979 to November 1984 but the spokesman said nothing more was known about the man. The body was found after the clash "with a dogtag typically used by the United States Army, stating his name as Roger, Patterson; Blood Type:0; Religion: Baptist,' the ministry said. "Without question, the man is American," an army spokesman said. Fighting continues into eleventh year of Lebanese civil war BEIRUT, Lebanon - The 11th year of Lebanon's civil war began yester- day with artillery killing three people in Sidon, eight people dying in an at- tack on a south Lebanese village, and militias battling in the streets of Beirut.{ Be government's Beirut Radio said Israeli troops killed eight people in a "massacre" at Yohmor, a Shiite Moslem village 28 miles southeast of Beirut. But the military command in Tel Aviv, Israel, denied involvement and said its troops went into the village later only "to find out what happened." Israel Television quoted unidentified sources in the Israeli-trained South Lebanon Airamy as saying the killings were related to a feud between the Shiite Amal militia and the Syrian Social Nationalist Party over control of the village. Terrorist blast kills -18 in Spain MADRID,- A terrorist bomb "most likely" caused the explosion that destroyed a steakhouse filled with U.S. servicemen, killing18 Spaniards and injuring 82 other people, including 15 Americans, officials said yesterday. Although no Americans were reported killed, 25 U.S. citizens were among the 175 patrons of the El Descanso Restaurant nine miles north of Madrid, when the blast occurred Friday night. The dining spot is halfway between the Spanish capital and the U.S.-leased Torrejon Air Base, and is frequented by Americans from the base. Two separate groups - the Basque separatist group and the pro-Iranian "Islamic Jihad - Islamic Resistance" - claimed responsibility for the blast, but neither claim could be confirmed. The Spanish Interior Ministry said in a statement that initial results of its investigation into the Friday night blast, near the U.S. Air Force base "per- mits us to suppose (it) may have been caused by an explosive device made up of chloratite." Chloratite is a chlorate-based explosive. P- P 1^ I.d J Protester looks to educate (Continued from Page 1)" INDIAN LAW DAY April 18, 3p.m. -6 p.m. Hutchins Hall, Rm. 150, U of M Law School SPEAKERS, Film, Reception. Sponsored by: M.S.A., L.S.S.S., N.L.G., N.A.S.A, Student Services, Rackham Graduate Students, A..L.S.A. Weknow that as aCPA Candidate, vrtime Your Future is Protessional- is limited, but your anxiety isn't! That's why Shouldn't Your Preparation Be?" every student enrolled in our CPA Review Course, has 24-hour access to our toll- free CPA RESPONSE-LINE'. So, whether' you're studying for one or all four test sec- tions, individual counseling from an experi- enced Accounting Professor, is only a EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. phone call away.*CPA -Flexible TEST-N-TAPEI S hedulin REVIEW SReviefPst Exams . Up-DatesStanmardssadPrsenucements " TeambtVlPienMa s25% . FuepMalfy 6 2 31 " Iumsgaen w E xp ts 203 E. Hoover .StdyGuidesm Al FearSeStions Ann Arbor, MI 48104 A TTENTION KRESGE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION LIBRARY PATRONS ACCESS to the Kresge Business Administration Library will be LIMITED from April 1 4 through May 1, 1985 during the following hours: MONDAY-THURSDAY 5 P.M. - 11 P.M. SATURDAY 11 A.M. - 5 P.M. SUNDAY 11 A.M. - 11 P.M. The Library will limit access to the following patrons: Business Students Non-Business Students who are currently enrolled in a Ritcinac Scoolnnouenr undergrad years at Columbia where students are extering the eleventh day of anti-apartheid protest. "I would like to see a lot more done here," Ransby said. "I would like to see a lot of educational events like speeches and films," she said. Ransby, who pushed for divestment of stocks from companies doing business in South Africa, while working on Columbia's university senate, said she thinks the protest at her old school has been a success. SHE visited the school last week in a show of support for protesters. "I think the protest was effective in terms of galvanizing support for the an- ti-apartheid issue. It remains to be seen whether it's effective enough to force Columbia to divest," she said. The school has about $39 million in- vested in the companies. She added that the cumulative effect of protests at colleges across the nation will have an embarassing effect on the Reagan administration's policy toward the government of South Africa. "IT SHOULD be pretty embarassing when college students say the policy is indefensible and immoral to have." But while she said these protests will be effective, she added that she doesn't know what the most appropriate action for anti-apartheid groups at the University would be. The University's regents voted to divest 90% of its interests in companies operating in South Africa, keeping in- vestments only in corporations deemed vital to the state's economy. "The start is educational events,'' she said speaking from her experience at Columbia where she found that many students were uninformed about the issue of apartheid. RANSBY LAST WEEK organized a speech by David Ndaba, a South African exile and member of the African National Congress Delegation to the United Nations' Observer Mission to educate students on the issue. Ran s by is currently circulating a petition among faculty stating that desciplinary action should not be taken against the student protesters at Columbia because "it was a non-violent act of civil disobedience for a moral, admirable objective." It will be sent, along with petitions circulated at other universities, to Columbia administrators. Ransby said she hopes to have a meeting for students interested in the anti-apartheid movement in the next couple of weeks. P1 Vol. XVC - No. 155 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the: Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub-' scription rates: through April - $4.00 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 outside the city. x Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to: United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi-t cate, and College Press Service. P T -. E65., THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS at WHITE MARKET ..- . - . - - . = U - - a m * m Editor inChief . .......... . .NEpL CHASE Opinion Page Editors..... ..... JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors............GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor...............THOMASMILLER Features Editor .............. LAURIE DELATER City Editor................ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor.....,.......TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Jody Becker, Laura Bischoff, Dov Cohen, Nancy Driscoll, Lily Eng, Carla Folz, Rita Gir- ardi, MarIa Gold, Ruth Goldman, Amy Goldstein, Ra-, chel Gottlieb, Jim Grant, Bill Hahn, Thomas Hrach, Sean Jackson, Elyse Kimmelman, David Klapman, Debbie Ladestro, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Levine, Jerry Markon, Jennifer Matuja, Eric Mattson, Amy M-i dell, Kery Murakami, Joel Ombry, Arona Pearlstein, Christy Reidel, Charlie Sewell, Stacey Shonk, Katie Wilcox, Andrea Williams. 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