4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, September 27, 1985 The Michigan Daily 48 arrested at Pursell's office sit-in One University professor and 23 students, p ,A Academic Affairs to become dean of Emory cording to available figures, tops the list Cole is a former LSA representative to the including a Daily photographer, were University's graduate school and vice with $132,000 a year. University of Min- Assembly and served on the University's trespassing at USRep Carl Pursell's local president of research. nesota President Kenneth Keller also tops Budget Priorities Committee As vice office during a protest of his voting record Frye disclosed last Friday that he is Shapiro, bringing home $120,000 a year. president of MSA he will act as chairman of on Central America. taking the post following Emory's Board of Northwestern University will not disclose MSA's Steering Committee and the Board of The protest was specifically aimed at a t Trustees approval of his appointment last how much its president, Arnold Webber, Directors of Student Legal Services, which foreign assistance bill pending in Congress Thursday- earns. But University of Michigan Regent absorbs the majority of MSA's funds. which would send $483 million to Central Frye said his leaving had nothing to do Thomas Roach (D-Saline) estimates he is America. Some of that money would with any negative experience at the Univer- paid over $150,000 a year. probably be sent to El Salvador and sity. "That's the hardest part," he said, Shapiro's pay hike came as no surprise Nicaraguan rebels. The demonstrators "I've been in here for 25 years." Shapiro said, since the regents usually vote sang peace songs and brought 50 loaves of With Frye's departure, the University on some type of pay increase at its Septem- bread bearing the message: "Send bread Cynthia Hudgins, a Pursell aide, faces the loses a key member of its budget planning ber or October meeting. The amount of the rotest forces. Frye is the architect of the Univer- increase, Shapiro said, however, was a sur- sity's five year plan, which has been prise. Shapiro last received a raise last Oc- LSA senior Chris Faber said the media at- redistributing $20 million from low priority tober when his salary was upped by $11,500. ry y1 tention the arrests received made it worth- areas - such as the art school - to such Roach said that Shapiro, a renowned while. "The reason we all got arrested is to high priority fields as business and economist, could make "what he gets here publicize the bombing of El Salvador, he engineering. At present the fourth year of several times over" in the private market. + T^ w. v&veefj +~z said.sid sOne person who was not happy to be the plan has redistributed $16.5 million so "He's obviously not doing it for money," he arrested was Dan Habib, the Daily's chief far, Frye said. photographer, who was on assignment when the incident occured. Dankert said he would Search 1s over not press'charges against Habib although In the money not bombs. Stop U.S.-sponsored war on the the other demonstrators face up to a $50 fine people of El Salvador." and 30 days in jail. Pittsfield Township police arrested the All 48 demonstrators were released on University President Harold Shapiro is a Following weeks of speculation and protestors at the request of Ron Dankert, an their own recognizance. richer man this week, but still not quite as discussion, the Michigan Student Assem- agent for the owners of Pursell's office. rich as some other presidents in the Big bly's vice presidency has been filled by LSA Cole: MSA's new vice-president The protestors seemed anything but Ten. junior Phillip Cole. disappointed with being arrested. Peter Bye, bye, bow tie The University's Board of Regents voted Tuesday night MSA voted to endorse Cole, Rosset, a biology teaching assistant who last Friday to give Shapiro a $10,000 raise, in confirmation of a nomination made by lived in Nicaraugua from 1982 to 1984, said, hiking his salary up to $117,000 a year. MSA President Paul Josephson last Friday. Week in Review was compiled by "I'm upset that I had to be arrested for Pur- The halls of the Fleming Administration However, a survey made by the Daily this Josephson has been under significant Daily editors Jody Becker and Joseph sell to hear what we're saying, but given Building will be shy one familiar bow-tie week shows Shapiro trailing at least two pressure from campus minority groups to Kraus, and Daily staffers Eric Mattson that he wouldn't listen otherwise, then I'm next May, when Billy Frye leaves his post other Big Ten presidents in salary. Purdue replace Mickey Feusse, who resigned the and Kery Murakami. glad I was arrested." as the University's Vice President for University President Steven Beering, ac- post Sept. 8, with a minority candidate. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 10 Vol. XCVI, No. 17 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board I Uninvited guests R EP. CARL Pursell's failure to respond to community con- cerns over his voting record in Congress on Latin American issues seems to have served as an "in- vitation" to uninvited guests in his Pittsfield office. This time there were 48 of them. With Congress taking up a $483 million Foreign Assistance bill next week, 48 members of the Latin American Solidarity Committee staged a sit-in at Pursell's Ann Ar- bor office on Monday, and were arrested. Pursell has a record of strong support for the Reagan Ad- ministrations policies for the region which calls for continued U.S. support of Nicaraguan "Con- tras" and the beseiged El Salvadoran government. Part of the aid to the El Salvadoran gover- nment is purportedly used to sup- port bombings in the countryside where Salvadoran peasants are supplying rebels. The sit-in culminated a three month campaign by LASC and several other community organizations to persuade Pursell to change his stance on the issue. When a series of lobbying visits, and letter-writing campaigns failed to bring Pursell to reconsider his position, the group decided that it would have to engage in civil disobediance to get the message across. It was not the first time the group has staged a sit-in at Pursell's of- fice, but it was the largest group who agreed to be arrested. Last summer, 17 people were arrested. Like any civil disobedience ac- tion, the Pursell sit-in would be ineffective if it had taken place in a vacuum. It is only because the group had exhausted all legal channels, and because other groups in town had used those same channels, that the act has any credibility and significance. It would be ludicrous to imagine that a single action such as the sit- in will change Pursell's vote. But the action in concert with the many other legal actions that have taken place might. Even if they do not sway Pur- sell's position, however, the actions remain important because they keep the issue of U.S. involvement in Latin America in the public eye. -- w ยง - - 6e g -~~~C , ----~~~ Ut__, P_ -oQ i LETT-E-RJ(S)'9; t A-TI LETTERS ----- Author should let his argument talk Lens capped To The Daily: The recent article by Mr. Peter Rosset (Salvadoran Anguish: "Why We Did It") provided a fine explanation of the motives of those who were arrested for trespassing in the offices of Rep. Carl Pursell last Tuesday. The actions of the protesters were taken in the most honorable tradition of civil disobedience by citizens in opposition to a gover- nment policy. The willingness of some U of M students to endure arrest, jail, and fines in support of their beliefs evidences a passion seldom seen on today's college campuses. However, Mr. Rosset loses many of us who might support his position and sign his Pledge of Resistance by playing fast and loose with the facts. In his article, Mr. Rosset speaks of "countless bombs and planes" supplied by the U.S. and "hundreds of thousands of college-age American men" who died in Vietnam. Both estimates are grossly exaggerated. According to Mr. Rosset, quoting "the U.S. Congress," the Salvadoran govern- ments"maintains 900,000... citizens in absolute poverty." From the context of the story, it appears as though the government has an established discern between a reasoned argument and one sprinkled with hyperbolic exaggerations. Frankly, I tend to agree with Mr. Rosset in his opposition to U.S. military involvement in Central America. His mistake is his over- statement of the argument, let- ting his passion get in the way of his facts, as so many passionate believers are wont to do. Those students who do not share either Mr. Rosset's passion or his beliefs cannot help but find his arguments tainted by the misrepresentations, delioerate or Regents wrong to take political stand To The Daily: We the undersigned members of Campus Against Weapons in Space' (C.A.W.S.) are disturbed at the regent's adoption of a resolution that endorses Star Wars research on Campus. This action is objectionable on several counts. By making such a strong public statement on just one side in the sensitive and controversial situation about the Star Wars (SDI) program, the regents have politicized the issues. Surely there ought to be opportunities for legitimate debate on campus over issues of such grave con- cern. We in C.A.W.S. strive to facilitate open debate. The regen- ts politicization works against free inquiry and thoughtful objec- tive discussion, and that is lamentable. At the same time, the regents' I(M MOINTY Star Wars resolution comprises an unprecedented break with the tradition that our university ad- ministration should remain politically neutral. It is too bad that the regents choose to ignore the very strong arguments in- support of this tradition. The adoption of regent Baker's resolution is damaging and un- fortunate. We feel that the cam- pus community also has a right to know what reasons the regents have for approving the resolution. Andwhydid the board scheme to evade the possibility of a much needed forum on Star Wars? Lastly, we would like to put to rest the notion that present con- cerns about Star Wars have som connection with questions of academic freedom. Currently members of the academic com- munity are not limited on what research they may do, except for the stipulations of the official university guidelines. Regent Baker's ludicrous misrepresen- tation of the Star Wars situation as an issue of academic freedom is a sham. -Roberta Bernhai Eric Caplan J.E. Taylor September 25 not, in his article. I urge Mr. Rosset to keep the faith, continu to protest and believe. If you have a good argument, it will stand by itself without any need for em- bellishment. -Michael M. Grover September 25 THE POLICE in Pittsfield Town- ship rarely have to deal with controversial issues or major crimes, but this week they violated this nation's most important law: The United States Constitution. As the police arrested four dozen people on trespassing charges, they also arrested Dan Habib, the Amendment to the Constitution. The people who were arrested were accused of trespassing. The Daily assigned a reporter and photographer to cover the event, and if the protesters were trespassing then the journalists may have had to trespass in order to cover the story. Letters to the Daily should by typed, triple- spaced, and signed by the individual authors. h Berke Breathed w