0 OPINION Page 4 Monday, April 14, 1986 The Michigan Daily 4 itebtna nv t Michigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Stop war against Nicaragua Vol. XCVI, No. 132 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Honorary politics T HE CONTROVERSY over whom the University of Michigan should recognize with an honorary degree at next month's commencement ceremony centers on what the purpose of an honorary degree is. Regent Thomas Roach (D- Saline) contends that the presen- tation of the degree is "more an ac- tual part of the ceremony than the University honoring someone." He believes that others on the Board of Regents agree with his stand and will block efforts to give a degree to South African activist Nelson Mandela. Mandela is currently serving a life sentence in that coun- try for leading the revolution against South Africa's apartheid -system of government. Roach upholds a regents bylaw which prohibits granting honorary degrees in absentia, saying, "it would be an exercise in futility to offer someone an honorary degree :when we knew they couldn't come." This same rule was invoked in January when the regents repor- tedly refused to honor Raoul Wallenberg at May's ceremony. Wallenberg, a University alumnus, risked his own life to save more than 100,000 Jews from Nazi death camps in World War II. He disap- peared at the war's end. Surely, honoring such men could not be "an exercise in futility." Wallenberg, an architecture major at the University in the 1930's, was an attache of the Swedish gover- nment in Hungary during the war. Realizing the impending threat to over one million Hungarian Jews, Wallenberg hopped aboard trains bound for concentration camps to .hurriedly forge documents that claimed individuals under the 'protection of the Swedish gover- nment. Because of his work, Wallenberg was made an honorary U.S. citizen. He and Winston Chur- chill are the only men to be so honored. Wallenberg cannot be honored by the University, however, because he was arrested by the Soviet Ar- my and is believed by many to be dead. Soviet officials claim that Wallenberg died in prison of heart failure. U.S. officials accuse the Soviets of his execution. Whatever the truth behind Wallenberg's disappearance, his arrest should not disqualify him as an honorary degree candidate. Heroism on such a large scale by a University graduate deserves official recognition, and his supposed death in a Soviet prison does not lessen the magnitude of his ser- vice. Similarly, the arrest of Mandela should not keep the University from honoring him. Mandela is a symbol of the struggle of South Africa's 24 million blacks, and he has devoted his life to end the apar- theid system which oppresses them. Jailed in 1962, Mandela has repeatedly denied government at- tempts to weaken his strong anti- apartheid stand in return for release. His dedication, proved by his continued imprisonment, to the blacks' freedom and dignity should be applauded by the University. In limiting honorary degree recipients to those who can attend the ceremony, University officials exclude all those imprisoned for their work. Many who are fully deserving of University recognition will not receive it u n- der this omission. The provision reveals skewed priorities in exten- ding these awards. Honorary degrees should not be issued solely to provide an entertaining ceremony, as Regent Roach en- courages. They should be awarded to those whom the University community judges most deserving, regardless of the possibility of their attendance. The University should follow the example of Mount Holyoke college and grant honorary degrees for the meaning rather than the ceremony they provide to the commencement exercise. Mount Holyoke has already granted Winnie Mandela a degree despite her inability to ac- cept it in person. The ceremony for Mandela at Mount Holyoke in- cluded an empty chair on which each senior placed a flower. In the cases of Wallenberg and Mandela, the degrees would not be futile. A degree extended to Wallen- berg could lead to pressure on Moscow by U.S. representatives to release conclusive information on Wallenberg's death or in- vestigation of the slight chance that he may still be alive. A degree extended to Mandela, as many, such as South African writer Nadine Gordimer, realize, would add to the anti-apartheid movement's efforts to gain his release. Mandela is a recognized leader of his black countrymen, and until he is released from prison, no meaningful negotiations between the minority government and the majority it oppresses can take place. In honoring such men as Wallen- berg and Mandela, who are jailed for their courage, the University itself would take an honorable stand. By Mindy Williams On Thursday, March 27, the World Hunger Education-Action Committee presented a public lecture by Frances Moore Lappe on campus. Given "The news of the day," Ms. Lappe chose to focus her talk, "Food, Politics, and Hope," on the relationship between the U.S. and Nicaragua with par- ticular attention to the conditions in our Central American neighbor and to the common desire of these countries' people for freedom and democracy. On Friday, March 28, we were shocked and disturbed, as was Ms. Lappe, to read the Michigan Daily's account of her lecture "Hunger expert says Mistrust of Nicaragua is Misinformed." We found in this article misinformation, misquotations, and overall a gross distortion of the talk's theme and in- tention. The review presented a damaging representation of a leading spokesperson on hunger and Central America, thus damning Ms. Lappe's reputation and life's work. Our object is not to crucify a reporter nor the Daily. Instead we hope to restore and clarify the complex issues introduced by Ms. Lappe's lecture which were unfor- tunately and unintentionally distorted, muddled, or obscured by the article. (The following quotations of Ms. Lappe are from a tape of the 3/27 lecture.) Let's begin with the reporter's claim that "Lappe defended the Nicaraguan gover- nment's human rights violations..."(em- phasis added) To think and write such a statement about any hunger activist, is of course, absurd. And in print it conveys a perverse meaning foreign to Ms. Lappe's beliefs and intention. It was while valuating the extent of freedom in Nicaragua, specifically the "freedom from terror," that she addressed the government's human rights record. "There have been and certainly the recent Williams is a member of the World Hunger Education Ac- tion Committee. Amnesty International report documents abuses by the Nicaraguan government that would mar this record...But what Amnesty International pointed out is that the Nicaraguan case, where military personnel carry out abuses, they are tried and im- prisoned and that there are several hundred serving sentences in Nicaragua for these abuses." (not "all" as the Daily also repor- ted.) These actual quotations express not a defense of the violations nor an explanation in the context of the Contras' pattern of un- punished abuses (as the same reporter stated in the article "Group tells about World Hunger," (Daily, 4/1/86) in an at- tempt to correct this particular goof). In- stead they convey Ms. Lappe's and Amnesty International's desire to acknowledge and to report the abuses but also to show that the Nicaraguan government is taking effective steps to punish the offenders. So human rights violations are neither encouraged nor condoned in Nicaragua but are against an enforced law. Now the article on Ms. Lappe's lecture also states that she defended press censor- ship in Nicaragua. "I want to underline that this (censorship of the press in Nicaragua) definitely limits the possibility for democracy," said Ms. Lappe in, yes, the same lecture. "But I also want to point out that it does not mean that within the Nicaraguan press today that there is not a considerable amount of debate, a con- siderable amount of attack on the gover- nment." Just weeks ago, Ms. Lappe told the audience, a friend who works with a resear- ch institute in Managua told her that a direct attack they printed on the gover- nment's provisions of the State of Emergen- cy, calling them unnecessary and calling for their repeal, has been distributed widely in Nicaragua. Another misinterpretation in the Daily's article muddles another important point. " 'The opposition press, however, doesn't choose to support freedom of the press,' Lap- pe said." What? Ms. Lappe's actual statement does make sense and it exposes a reality unknown to most Americans. "Another unfortunate part of it is the op- position press in Nicaragua doesn't believe in freedom of expression. "(emphasis ad- ded) Specifically she cited La Prensa's in- complete and misleading coverage of the elections in Nicaragua. The opposition of- fers no alternative but a daily effort to un- dermine the government's credibility at the expense of the free and accurate dissemination of information. Though not intentional like La Prensa, the Daily's account of Ms. Lappe's talk under- mines her credibility as an author and spokesperson on this subject. It portrays her as an extremist, as more for the San- dinistas than they are for themselves. This is especially unfortunate and ironic. And we are taking the time to point this out only because accurate an thoughtful infor- mation about Nicaragaua appears so in- frequently in our nation's media. Ms. Lap- pe's analysis of the conditions in Nicaragua and of the appropriate responses strikes very important middle ground in an issue characterized by polarization in this coun- try and on this campus. The major obstacle to freedom and democracy in Nicaragua, explained Ms. Lappe, is the offensive policy of the U.S. gover- nment for Nicaragua, our successful effort to block loans to and thus to economically isolate Nicaragua and, most significantly, our support of the Contras. We are conduc- ting a war that polls consistently show does not have the support of the majority of people in our country. We are conducting war at the expense of dialogue, of peace, and of thousands of lives in Nicaragua. How can we expect freedom and democracy less than seven years old to flourish under these pressures? In the conclusion of her talk, Ms. Lappe urged us to remove these pressures, "to give change a chance" in Nicaragua. To do so we must pressure our government to be accountable to needs of its people, to tell us the truth, to truly promote, at home and abroad, the principles of freedom and democracy. Wasserman, IX-tou&vr 1sy W~zs GOING To SI IFY TAYSG j-_ - aQn~7 -_- 4 DIRSCTL.Y To ill P.NTA Ar/ tb LETTERS: Research rights entail JOHA NESBURG- SOUTH AFRICA .. . :4 p - I - ?C:1:: ?;:;!; ; ::i " ;:;::i::}:::::{, 1:?;~,C:::[.(: If~~:; To the Daily: David Vogel's editorial, "Military researcher rights" (Daily, 3/31/86), urges Univer- sity leaders to "dismantle the current research guidelines" because they deny professors and students freedom to conduct classified research. It is indeed a worthwhile goal of any university to give the maximum possible freedom to its faculty and researchers. Yet, as with any democratic institution, with freedom comes responsibilities. For example, we have the con- stitutional right to own firearms. However, it is our responsibility to follow safety precautions when storing or handling them keeping small children away f.nm innarin Ind ainna e4 nn matters little if what is being taught or discussed addresses military of civilian needs; the principle is that in this open en- vironment the fullest possible flow of information occurs. The current University guidelines recognize this fact in limiting classified research. If we removed the guidelines and allowclassified research with longer limitations on publication we are impeding the very academic freedom that should be encouraged. We restrict the academic freedom of faculty and students to learn, to be informed. For example, sup- pose a graduate student proposes to a professor a certain research technique to solve a problem en- nn~nn~n Lnh... noa s.nl r i Laboratories,] more, etc. I student chooses to classifed re free to reloca stitutions, wher teach and infor In conclusion leaders to alo responsibility Lawrence Liver- remain on our campus by f a professor or establishing the responsibilities s to devote efforts of faculty and students to educate esearch, they are and inform. For without these ate to these in- responsiblities freedom to re the obligation to research is meaningless. m is removed. Ramakrishna Kakarala , I urge Universtiy Computer Engineering Senior ow democracy to April 2 a 4 -~ i Cartoon was cheap shot To the Daily: I think that it's fair to say that cartoons are drawn to make light of an accepted reality that might be a problem in our society or of a controversial individual - the key word being accepted. Bering's cartoon in the April 1st editionnof the Dailv. "Ssame Herzl, Weitzm an, Ben-Gurion or Golda Meir to be placed with the like of Lincoln, Ghandi and Sadat. If Bering has some serious problems with Israel or its government, let him articulate his positions for responsible discussion. Otherwise. his car-