4 OPINION e Page 4 Thursday, October 30, 1986 The Michigan Dily 0 'l Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Reconsider internships Vol. XCVII, No. 41 420 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. Perry FOR 14 YEARS, Perry Bullard has represented the residents of the 53rd House district, and he should continue to serve. Bullard recognizes the importance of the University to his district and has worked closely with the community for many years. Bullard is a familiar face around campus. His Bullard Film Society sponsors educational movies and documentaries on such issues as nuclear war, equal rights, and Central America. He has worked closely with the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) for the Student Bill of Rights to assure student- rights from a non-academic conduct code. He has also pushed for legislation calling for a student regent seat on the Board of Regents. Bullard has advocated tenants' rights for both students and non-students through his work with the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union. Bullard's activism goes beyond strictly student related issues. He co-sponsored the bill to divest state pension fund investments from companies that do business in South Africa and has worked to make Ann Arbor a nuclear free zone. He has championed employee rights with the Bullard/Plawecki Employee Right to Know Act of 1978, which makes employer files on workers accessible to the employees. As chairman of the House Judiciary Bullard Committee, Bullard has tried to simplify the legal and criminal justice system. He has also worked for womens' issues. He fully supports a woman's right to choose to have an abortion and defends the rights of domestic violence victims. Bullard has shown his commitment to environmental issues. He is not in favor of nuclear energy, and has introduced legislation which led to the Michigan Solar Tax Credit Program. He wants companies to be responsible for their waste materials and urges harsher penalties for businesses violating those regulations. Bullard's challenger, Vic Holz, has expressed concern about the drug problem and favors increased funding to rehabilitation programs and stiffer penalties for drug users. A former businessman and engineer at Bechtel corps, he has said that there are other means of environmental protection beyond conservation and favors reduced government regulation of industry. His self proclaimed ignorance of State National Guard training in Honduras, and failure to recognize a woman's right to choose to have an abortion are serious weaknesses, especially when compared to Bullard's consistently progressive\ record. By Bert Hornback Let's recruit several hundred students from political science and economics and other humanising disciplines - the sciences can be just as humanising as philosophy is, and more so than literary criticism is! Let's put them to work in this little place, both at the University and in the city, at levels at which they can actually see what's going on and have some influence on it. Let's tell them that their job is to do good things, and to make things work. These new interns might, for example, examine University bureaucracy, and determine whether or not we can afford it. At this crazy place, one vice-president and his staff costs us eight teaching faculty - something you might remember every time you go into a crowded classroom. Our new interns might invade the Office of Financial Aid, too, with a determination to make it possible for any good student to attend this state-supported university in this democratic free land. To achieve this end, they may have to demand rebates from the highest paid among us; they may have to tax the wealthy among themselves. Their mission, as interns, will be to achieve their goal - not to write a report, or make up a plan, or set new guidelines, or hire a staff to occupy an office and file paper. In the city these new interns might take on the problem of poverty. There is obviously enough wealth in Ann Arbor for everybody to be fed and housed decently. Bright university students should b able to figure out how to match the money with the people so that everybody will be fed: isn't that what economics is all about? "How we live at home" is what the word means, after all. If we need more housing, what better thing could be done than to start building it? Political science might as well start learning the art of building the polis - Hornback is a Professor of English. and building houses should be a natural ambition for economics students. If our new interns run out of good, constructive, useful, and educational things to do, I'm sure the Mayor of Ann Arbor, Dr. Ed Pierce, will have some suggestions for them. But let's don't go to Washington - yet. Let's clean up our own backyard first, and learn how to do good things - how to make government work. The first trick to learning the former is to want to do good things, instead of serving ourselves and being important. The way to manage the second - make government work - is to do the work ourselves. Washington needs the services of bright young men and women, desperately. But it needs them, not to learn how it now operates - that will only corrupt them. Rather, it needs them to change and correct and restore what we call government - which is what you can't learn in Washington. You can learn that, however, here at home, working in someplace like the University of our city. There's no prestige attached to being an Ann Arbor intern, of course - but then as President Shapiro will tell you, prestige is a bad thing. The work means illusion, and trickery: glitter, and false importance. The Peace Corps was founded in Ann Arbor when somebody asked us if we were willing to do something with -our lives. He didn't ask us if we wanted to go to Washington and be important - and though he wanted, then, to go to Washington, I don't think he wanted just importance. Why don't we ask ourselves, this time, to do something with our lives. A hundred or so interns here in Ann Arbor, working seriously at solving our local problems, should both learn a lot and accomplish good things. Who could ask for more? It's that time of year again. There are signs up everywhere, littering our world with enticing suggestions. At the University of Michigan, we regularly send hundreds of young men and women - undergraduate students studying political science and economics and other things - to Washington D.C., to serve as interns in various government agencies. What they are supposed to d is double: learn how government works, and learn what you do in governmrit. They also assist congressmen for bureaucrats or presidential aids in doing good things - supposedly. It sounds exciting, and' important. Who could ask for more? But government doesn't work. And few congressmen or bureaucrats or presidential aids do very many good things. And all that our interns lear about what you do in government is that you spin your wheels and be important Anybody who wants evidence :to support these allegations need only open an eye or two. Look at the arms race, at the crazy stockpiling of outrageous destructiveness which we call national defense - and look at how we manage' to keep building more and more of it. Look at the corruption in the Pentagon, and i the American businesses with which it is allied. Look at this nation's economy and at the millions of people here and elsewhere starving while we store an impossibly oversized grain surplus. Look at crime and violence - and the locks on your doors, and your fears of rape or worse, and the handy emergency phones all over Ann Arbor -in this land of the free. Look at your prospects for a future. Since government doesn't work, in Washington, and nobody in the nation's capital does anything much that's good, let's quit sending young people there to be tricked by prestige and other kinds of false pretence at importance. Instead, let's start a new kind of internship program, here in Ann Arbor, for our students. And let's plan on their accomplishing something of value. Then, when they, grow up into careers in government - i4 Washington or elsewhere - maybe they will still expect to accomplish something of value, and maybe they will change this vorld. LETTERS. Brown and Waters Balance of power justifies Contra aid' . . . Regent Muskegon) James Waters (D- REGENTS PAUL BROWN (D-Petoskey) and James Waters (D-Muskegon) should be re- elected to the University's governing board next week. With each having 16 years experience in making key University decisions, they have the sense of history needed to make educated decisions in the future. Brown and Waters were both key when the regents approved a set of guidelines for research conducted on campus 'in 1972. Although they both voted to review these guidelines last year they should remember their position of 14 years ago, when the regents banned from campus classified research endangering human life. The incumbents' experience will also be invaluable for finding solutions to the University's budget problems. Since the state's recession of the late '70s and early '80s resulted in inadequate state funding to the University, regents and administrators, hoping for . . . Regent Paul Brown (D- Petosky) budget cuts such as the "five-year plan" that severely downsized the schools of Education, Natural Resources, and Art. Instead, they prefer increasing little-tapped but available resources such as alumni contributions. While Republican regental candidates Gary Frink and Cynthia Hudgins have had some contact with the University-Frink is an alumni and Hudgins is the liason between the University and Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Michigan)-they cannot match Brown and Waters' 16 years. Brown and Waters have been two of the most responsive regents to student concerns. While they have not always agreed with student standpoints, they have always listened. Brown established the regents' public comments session where students have been able to express their concerns to the board. Recognizing that while the session was a step forward, To the Daily: In "Nicaraguan Sister City" (Daily, 9/29/86) the editorial board supported the recent ad - option of Juigalpa as Ann Arbor's sister city "to oppose the Reagan administration's aggressive policy against Nicaragua." In principle, I support the spirit of taking symbolic stands. However, in supporting the "sister city" project, the Daily unobject - ively criticized President Reagan's policy. In no way do I blindly em - brace Reagan's policies. Ideal - ly, the U.S. government as well as the Soviet government should not intervene in Nicaragua. Unfortunately, we do not live in an ideal world. Due to the globalization of economies and post-world-war U.S. and Soviet foreign policies, we exist in a bi-polar world. In order to achieve a balance of power, regions like Nicaragua, El Salvador, Angola, the Mideast, and Indo- china have become theaters for U.S.-Soviet proxy fighting. Being a recent draft regis - trant, the thought of a direct conflict terrifies me. Yet, I also understand the complex - ities of international relations. The Daily branded Reagan's policy as "aggressive" but failed to realize the $100 mil - lion. dollar Contra aid package appropriated by Congress is dwarfed by the $500 million dollar Soviet aid package. Currently, the Sandinistas have a fleet of 25 Mi-17 jet fighters, 12 Mi-24 gunship helecopter, 150 Soviet made tanks (source: Newsweek), not to overlook the 3,500 Cuban advisors. The Daily also failed to strategically located to threaten sea-lanes that transport more than half of crude oil imports to the United States. More threatening is that the Panama Canal-the most vital choke point to the Western Hemi - sphere-is a half hours flight from Nicaraguan bases. With Warsaw Pact engineers current - ly constructing a port on the Caribbean side (source: Time), there is a genuine threat of a Soviet naval base. Under these conditions, out best deterrence is to counter with strength. A laissez-faire attitude may be perceived by the Soviets as a lack of will. Just as the U.S. support the Contras, the Soviets and Sandinistas back the rebels seeking to overthrow the pro-U.S. government in El Salvador. Perhaps the moral - ities of determining the fate of another sovereign state is suspect, it is still a vital part of the U.S.-Soviet relations. Rather than portraying Reagan's policy as oppressive, the Daily should have been objective and recognized the fundamentals of world politics. Another issue of concern was the Daily's treatment of Contra human rights abuses. To be fair, I am the first to concede the Contras are not the angels of freedom that Reagan has portrayed. The abuses may in fact exist which warrant no excuse. Of the $100 million dollar aid package, $3.5 mil - lion will go to the investigat - ion of misconduct. There, however, seems to be no reform on the Sandinistas. The Daily sensationalized the alleged abuses of the Contras and was sympathetic to the Sandinistas. Contrary to the recent closing of opposition newspapers. How can the Daily espouse editorial freedom and individual rights, yet condone the closing of La Prensa? What if during the student protest and building takeovers of the 1960's the university administration had closed the Daily because "it felt threatened." Would the Daily be able to claim "ninety-seven years of editorial freedom?" The Daily equated the closing of La Prensa with "past oppressive actions" of the U.S. when it felt threatened. True, President Lincoln did suspenld the Writ of Habeas Corpus during the Civil War. How - ever, there can be no equation between Lincoln's actions and Ortega's. At the time of our Civil War, the Confederate rebels were still represented in a true democracy. Can Ortega (or the Daily) claim this for Nicaragua? No, because the current civil war witnesses an opposition with no represent - ation and a fraudulent court system not attending Sandin - ista rallies. It also witnesses censorship (or should I say lack of censorship since opposing papers no longer exist?), the harassment of the Catholic Church and labor unions, along with human rights abuses. How can there be an equation? Yet not one hint of criticism for the Daily. I admit, there are faults with Reagan's policy such as CIA's mining of Nicaraguan harbors, Reagan's rejection of WorldE Court jurisdiction and CIA manuals advocating the "neutralization" of opponents. On the converse, there are many rational reasons to support the Contras. Just as the current administration's campaign of "Red-Baiting" and "Soft on Communism" is unethical, so is the ploy of portraying the administration's policy as "murderous" and "oppressive." The Daily being liberal is one matter, but when it loses its objectivity to achieve political gains, all the readers suffer. Therefore, I propose we adopt Matagalpa along with Juigalpa to symbolically oppose the aggressive policies of the1 Soviet Union as well as the Sandinistas' many faults over - looked by the Daily. James Lin -October 24 op j