4 OPINION Friday, April 4, 1986 Page 4 The Michigan Daily I Edite ma bs ant Mic Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan INS censors critical writer Vol. XCVI, No. 126 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board Council elections MONDAY'S Ann Arbor city election results will deter- mine the action the city takes at a crucial time in its history. The questions of how to deal with development and fixing the roads could well be decided by the results. The Daily endorses the following candidates: Ward One: Larry Hunter, the in- cumbent Democrat, for reelection. Hunter's accomplishments on council have been significant. When the Department of Housing and Urban Development wanted to foreclose on the Arrowhead housing project, whose mortgage it held, Hunter arranged for the city to loan money to the project and pleaded with HUD officials in Detroit to save the project. Hunter is also responsible for golden cab service, which provideds one dollar cab service for the elderly. Hunter arranged for the city to hire a human services consultant to coordinate ways in which the city can aid its lower income population. Hunter's opponent Debra Shan- non, does have some innovative ideas about changing the housing code to incease the number of saleable units. She also feels that essential items in the city budget, such as roads, shoult be funded directly by the city with less "essential" items such as human services being placed on referen- da. Her campaign suffers from an emphasis on denigrating Hunter's accomplishments and a vagueness regarding which programs should be on the ballot. Ward Two: In this election, which pits two term incumbent Republican Jim Blow against challenger Seth Hirshorn, the Daily endorses the candidacy of Seth Hirshorn. Hirshorn, a U-M professor of public administration, has run an energetic campaign in which he, unlike most of his fellow can- didates, has attempted to reach out to the student voter. He believes that safety at night is an important issue which the city needs to ad- dress for those students living in off-campus housing. Hirshorn feels that it is essential that the city in- crease the manpower level of its police force, something which has not been done since 1973. Hirshorn takes a creative, idea oriented appraoch to the issues. He opposed the Huron Plaza develop- ment and offered an alternative. Megastructures are simply inap- propriate for Ann Arbor, he argues. Instead he emphasizes "diversity" on a "human scale." Hirshorn has taken the initiative in supporting a long overdue cleanup of the Huron Riven and with his background in public ad- ministrationis well equipped to in- sure that the city bureaucracy performs efficiently. His opponent, Jim Blow, has not been known as a particularly ac- tive councilman in terms of proposing legislation. Though he does do a good job of getting input fr.nm hie nnneti.-an eati i crimd o Ward Three: In this race the Daily endorese Democratic challenger Susan Contratto over incumbent Jeanette Middleton. Contratto's background with the assault crisis center makes her well equipped to deal with the problem of sexual assault. She proposed ways to make parking structures, bus stops and parking lots safer places to be at night and would redirect police priorities toward a greater emphasis on sexual assault. Middleton has exercised in- dependence as a member of city council and has supported city in- volvement in human services. But like Jim Blow, she has been excessively eager to support de- velopment. Ward Four: The Daily endor- ses Democratic challenger David DeVarti over incumbent Gerald Jernigan. This race is very close in that it features two strong candidates. DeVarti is the better choice however because of his strong grasp of the issues, his knowledge of the city gained from living here his entire life, and his involvement with students and concern about the issues which affect them. DeVarti plans to make police behavior during protests an issue when it comes time to review their -funding if necessary. DeVarti is strongly in favor of Proposal A which would oppose U.S. Interven- tion in Central America. He sup- ports the extension of Nite Owl Service to students living in off- campus housing as a way to insure safety at night. DeVarti supports residence parking permits which would help alleviate the congested parking situation around off- campus student housing. Jernigan has in many ways been a strong asset to the Republican caucus on city council through his intelligence and ability, to work with Democrats. His investment expertise is also very beneficial on council. Jernigan joins his fellow Republicans, however, in arguing unconvincingly that Proposal B is not needed to fund the roads and ignores the opinions of the people in neighborhoods around the Huron Plaza proposed development. Ward Five: In this ward incum- bent Democrat Doris Preston is a better choice than challenger Phil Spear. Preston responded to the feelings of the residents of her ward by decisively opposing the Huron Plaza project which would have had a disruptive impact on fifth ward neighborhoods. She poushed through the Downtown Develop- ment task force to provide a criterion for supporting future projects. She strongly supports the creation of low-income housing in Ann Arbor and new apartment buildings in the campus area, through new zoning or building codes if necessary. Phil Spear, a long-time Ann Ar- bor realtor, seems somewhat out of touch with much of what is going on. He says that he believes 99 per cent of landlords in Ann Arbor do an excellent job of responding to th eir tena nts' compnlaints. By SholeyArgani For many progressive writers at the PEN congress in January, the tyrannical spirit of the American 1950s seems once again to be afoot. Uneasy, these people signed a letter addressed to the opening speaker, Secretary of State George Shultz: "As you are probably aware, a number of writers and editors here feel that it is inappropriate for you to open the 48th International PEN congress... the Administration you represent has done nothing to further freedom of ex- pression, either here or abroad." Many of us are aware of our troubling role of suppor- ter of regimes, whichviolate individual liber- ties of expression and association. But what of repression here, in the land of the free? A better kept secret than our international in- terventions is the profound hostility to dissent frequently evidenced by the Reagan Administration. More and more boldly, the President and his men have taken steps towards defining and punishing objectionable ideas. A particularly disheartening instance has been the use of the "ideological exclusion clause" of the McCarran-Walter Act to prevent the entry into this country of public figures at odds with U.S. policy. This law, which was passed over Truman's veto in the McCarthy era, has done service in the past to exclude from American soil such un- desirable characters as Pablo Neruda, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Graham Greene, and Hortensia Allenda, widow of Chile's slain President. But this is not all of its history. The exclusion of Margaret Randall has provided a dramatic recent example of the INS' attempts to keep America ideologically pure. For Randall, an author, photographer, and political activist, what began as an attempt to regain her American citizenship has turned into a nightmare. Using the laws and tactics of Red-baiting, the government has launched a vendetta against a woman who, as the author of over forty books, "participated in developing a literary genre which seems particularly threatening to the current interpreters and enforcers of immigration law in this coun- try." When Reagan aspires to the privileges of dictatorship, our fundamental freedoms are in danger. Argani is an Iranian American and feminist. At first sight, Randall's claims to return to the state of New Mexico are impressive. Born in America in 1936, Randall moved to Mexico with her son in 1961. Not long after- wards, married to a Mexican poet and sup- porting three small children, she took out Mexican citizenship. As she explains, "It was a way of enlarging my job possibilities in a time of financial need, an economic move - not, as some have tried to claim, a political statement. Given bad advice by her lawyer and mistakenly believing she had no other option, she also signed her American citizenship away. Writing has been an integral part of Ran- dall's unusual and rewarding life. As a young woman, co-founder and editor of the bilingual quarterly The Plumed Horn, she helped to bring to the American reader the powerful literature of Octavio Paz, Ernesto Cardenal, Vallejo and Cortazar. An artist in her own right, she provides valuable infor- mation about men and women in the Third World. Most notably, in Sandino's Daughters (1983) she intersperses inter- views with commentary, photographs and poetry to create moving images of lives and ideals in revolutionary Nicaragua. In early 1984 Randall returned to New Mexico to be near her elderly parents, married an American, and filed for a green card, a first step toward American citizen- ship. Randall's parents, husband, sibling, and oldest son are all American citizens; therefore, by INS rules regarding unification of families, she is entitled to top priority. In this case, however, the INS refused to grant her citizenship, because, "her writings go far beyond mere dissent, disagreement with, or criticism of the United States or its policies..." Who can say where "mere dissent" ends and dangerous sedition begins? The INS has appointed it- self the national watchdog. Randall has been forthright about her support of radical ideas, In the wake of the Attica prison rebellion of 1971, she called the police "pigs." More than ten years ago, she attacked U.S. policy in Southeast Asia. During the sixties, she admits that she sometimes spelled "America" with a "k." Such statements must have been common amongst the young people of the period. For the INS clearly, the real threat is not Ran- dall's radical style or personal history but her substance, a different kind of "history." The brand of information Randall offers is not palatable to those who wish to conduct a covert war on Central America. "For more than fifteen ye4rs," she recalls, "I have done oral history with the ordinary people of countries about which the American public is fed information geared to produce an image of childlike incapacity, racial in- feriority , and uniform yearning for the American Way of Life." The notion that Cubans, or Nicaraguans, are members of another species, not entitled to struggle for self-determination, is a mainstay of im- perialist foreign policy. But since when is citizenship to be a priz- e for views acceptable to the INS? Is Margaret Randall to be victimized for having once, as the working mother of three, signed away American citizenship? Is her case to deter other writers who may wish to travel abroad, to range broadly, to question prevailing misconceptions of other peoples? With the McCarran-Walter Act - which Truman correctly predicted in his veto message would stifle both native Americans and foreigners - Reagan now seeks a dangerous power to silence artists. The first steps toward a police state may seem small and even reasonable. That does not detract form their repressive and arbitrary nature. Alice Walker and other writers have filed suit against the INS, charging that their constitutional right to associate with and receive information from Randall is being violated. Meanwhile, Randall, teaching women's studies in New Mexico, faces deportation with quiet courage. "I feel I am involved in a- struggle for many besides myself" she declares. "If I win, we all win. And if I lose, I lose only in a personal sense." The story of Margaret Randall, an artist against the state, unfortunately begs comparison with that of the outspoken, brilliant Black singer Paul Robeson, exiled in the fifties. Do we in America want an- other era of unthinking partisanship? If Randall suffers uprooting for written ideas that the Reagan administration believes go "far beyond mere dissent," we will all be diminished. To those who believe, with Randall, that a "critical view is con- sistent with love, not hate," she has done America a service. Her persecution will cause many other writers to walk in fear. Margaret Randall will speak on "Cuban and Nicaraguan " women at 8:00p.m. tonight at the Michigan Union ballroom. Chassy KuRTKUr.NOWTHE LEGAOY JU$TSE P'6E OAX. COT INUES.... SO TTYU FORRED-W §AITNG AND $ONt SLEAY CAMPAIGN PCTIOES? HEY- TE PEOPUfDECIDE WhO - QST! MICHf GAS DAI~r cc LETTERS: Code will preserve freedom of speeche To the Daily: The University environment is a special one because it is meant to guarantee freedom of ex- pression. To encourage all points of view allows interested in- dividuals all information available on a subject to ensure an educated formation of Since any abridgment of these is less a matter of criminal than ethical consideration, a code of non-academic conduct would be very appropriate. Many instan- ces in the- past year tend to show an intolerance on behalf of a vocal minority in this regard. Also, through the student government, what a university exists for. Herein lies the real value of a code, that students be allowed access to information unobstruc- ted by an intolerant minority, or even a repressive majority. Also those individuals espousing a cer- tain viewpoint must be given a hearing and not dismissed out-of- hand. Otherwise through their exclusion we remain that much more ignorant. - Dan Sladich March 6 a