I OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, April 22, 1987 The Michigan Daily . _ .T.e_ Mi_..aan.. Doily A ie £irgbtan ailtj Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVII, No. 139 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and lettersrdo not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Dismantling nuclear arms Year in the life By Chihiro Kikuchi As a nuclear engineer who has for many years been concerned about peace in the nuclear age, I find it strange that there has not more public discussion on the central issue of what to do with the nuclear bombs we have already. There have been endless rounds of rhetoric on nuclear wars, on how our front yards would be turned instantly into huge atomic bomb microwave ovens, about nuclear winters, or nuclear autumns as some prefer to call it, and so forth. But so far I have not heard any comments on what we might do in our backyards to prevent such catastrophes from befalling us. In passing, let me note that I am identifying the personal and public, and not the international issues of peace, because I am using the typical method of engineering - that of focusing on the solutions. Instead of merely dwelling on the societal issue only, our approach is to analyze it carefully, try to identify the specific component problems, and then to search for the technical means available for their solutions. For the societal issue of nuclear peace, the public fear is that the enemy will, by accident or design, release a salvo of nuclear missiles, turn our front yards instantly into a huge microwave oven, and we ourselves, along with millions of others, will be instantly fried to death. The obvious way is to make this impossible, of course, is to reduce the number and to destroy the nuclear bombs we already have, through a mutual international agreement. But if we start to think through this problem, we will find that it is easier said than done. According to reports, in the U.S. nuclear arsenal alone, it's been reported that there are somewhere between 10,000 to 50,000 nuclear warheads. Presumably, the Soviets have a comparable number. To get rid of them, we would need to dismantle them to remove the nuclear explosive, which is bomb-grade Plutonium, and then to find the ways and means to dispose of this Plutonium, or to make it unfit for use again in nuclear weapons. And keep in mind that it has been reported that a mere microgram - a millionth of a gram - can cause cancer, and the amount we have here in the U.S. alone is probably in the neighborhood of 100 trillion micrograms! Even the first step of dismantling could raise sensitive personal and public issues. In the first place, it cannot be done openly, because there will be the danger of international proliferation of th60 nuclear weapons technology. In addition, there is the danger of Plutonium theft by terrorist groups. This means that the dismantling plants, despite the fact that they are for nuclear peace, would need to be kept under heavy armed guards day and night. Furthermore, the workers will no doubt have to be cleared for top secret work and tested for drug use. But the research and development for the peaceful uses of the bomb-grade- Plutonium will need to go on, and the research workers would need to be recruited from the academic community. This, in turn, means that some of the R & D on Plutonium uses will need to be carried out as classified research on campuses, and the research results kept secret, not just for one year but, in some cases, for many years. I hope that the readers will no' misunderstand me. I am not an advocate of classified research. I feel that it shoult See PROFESSOR, Page 5 A REVIEW OF THIS YEAR in the "life" of the University community should focus on the many visible gains achieved by and for students. Another standard of .review, however, is less tangible; a consideration of student self- perception. A shift in the attitudes of many students about their rights and their abilities as members of 'the university community is the root of renewed activism on campus. Students are asserting their rights as shapers of their experience at the University, as they develop confidence in their 'power to do so. This confidence was demonstrated early in the year, as more than 500 students offered themselves as volunteers for the Dean Baker campaign. The degree of support for a graduate student's bid for a Congressional seat reflected a renewed faith in the student voice and the liberal agenda. Baker's defeat of Don .Grimes in the Democratic primary, and his formidable challenge to the incumbent Carl Pursell (R- Plymouth), was a victory for all students. Students this year examined the quality of University services on :campus and assumed responsibility ;for their safety. The expansion of Night Owl and the installment of emergency phones were largely the result of student lobbying efforts through the Sexual Assault ,Prevention and Awareness Center, :a center also initiated by students. Similiarly, SAFEWALK was created by students to accomodate the needs of women, which have been ignored by the University. Members of the Greek system also evaluated their needs, and ,developed Greeks for Peace; an organization combining the efforts :of students from different houses to address the proliferation of .'nuclear weapons other political issues. More recently, members of V the IFC/Panhel Greek system and :the Black Greek Association bridged their long-standing ,,separation to raise money for a local charity, and take a visible step ..against racism. P.A.S.S. (Pepper and SaltrShakers) and Greeks for Peace are indications that many in the Greek system are interested in establishing a new agenda for :Greeks, and assuming a new role in the University community. This building energy and motivation of students throughout 1986-87 was most successfully ,channeled in response to new indications of racism. Those who ,accepted the reality of racism on campus came together to force the administration's committment to change this reality. The United Coalition Against Racism (UCAR) ,and the Black Action Movement III (BAM) consists of students who have recognized their responsibity to other students at the University, and future students. The renewed activity of another student group, Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (LaGROC), is a further indication of a new awareness among students; an awareness of violated rights and the right to challenge the attitudes of both the administration and their fellow students. More importantly, the organizations believe in their capabilities to achieve their goals. Students have been able to see the potential effects of sincere mobilization. The University Board of Regent's long-awaited decision to award Nelson Mandela an honorary degree at this year's commencement is a direct result of the Free South Africa Coordinating Commitee's (FSACC) sustained lobbying efforts for a coherent University stand against apartheid. Similarly, the administration has begun to recognize the legitimacy of UCAR and BAM III's demands, and has taken steps - albeit limited ones - to address the issues of minority representation on campus. Unfortunately, the administration has not been able to sustain a committment to student needs and values. The regent's decision to eliminate the "end-use" clause from University research guidlines (the clause prohibited research on projects potentially harmful to human life), and the administration's intimations toward code-like procedures to reprimand students involved in racist incidents, are significant steps backward for the University community. These issues demand the continued attention and involvement from students throughout the summer and beyond. The activists of the 1960s demonstrated students' potential to affect change when they are willing to take action. The momentum of those peace and civil rights movements has helped to set the pace for student mobilization this year. It is crucial, howeverpthat students of the 19 80's don't prove themselves selective historians, and choose to remember only the outstanding rallies and sit-ins of that decade. Substantial changes were only brought about through follow-up and patience. If rallies are to become hollow gestures, students become party to the same hypocrisy that they challenge in the administration. The true legacy of the '60s activists, is for students today to demonstrate a sustained committment to the values and demands applauded on the diag. Kikuchi is a Professor Emeritus Engineering. University of Nuclear LETTERS: Alumnus applauds journalist Wallace' I I To the Daily: In 1981, a San Diego federal savings and loan institution was preying upon the poorer, disadvantaged members of that California community by participating in a scheme by which such citizens, largely Black and Hispanic, were without full knowledge signing away their homes as collateral for the purchase of air conditioning units. Even just - ified failures to make the scheduled payments were resulting in loss of hard-won homes. Technically, the scheme was unassailable - the securing paper, once passed by the merchant to a finance institution, was free of defenses (and right to withhold payment) by a dissatisfied purchaser. Mike Wallace, in his role as investigative reporter for the CBS News program, "60 Minutes," took on the then huge (now out of business) institution, and forced admis - sion that the scheme, while perhaps meeting the letter of the law, met no other business or moral standard. I have not followed up whether Mr. Wallace's effort caused an immediate abandonment of the scheme, but I believe that we must suppose that the exposure made the continuance of the practice untenable. The sophistication of the conditioner purchasers was critical to the scheme, and to the story, in two important regards. First the conditioner vendors depended upon the trust, and lack of business sophistication, of the more disadvantaged members of the community, to obtain sig - nature to an outrageous "legal" document which mortgaged a full house to secure a minor purchase, an air conditioner. Secondly, the savings and loan depended upon the lack of sophistication to bully the hapless purchaser into the belief that he or she had no recourse other than to see a home lost. In an off camera moment, Wallace emphasized the heart of the matter, the disparity in sophistication between the poor, minority purchasers and the massive financial institution, by homely refer - ence to what are supposed to be stereotypical dietary staples of at least the more recently arrived members of the two minority communities preyed upon by the conditioner whose essential defense was: "A deal's a deal. They knew what they were doing." A poor choice of words by which to emphasize the controlling disparity? Perhaps. But, a "racist comment," as alleges your quoted student, Mr. Linzie? Hardly. Indeed, it is not Mr. Wallace who should issue "a national apology." It is Mr. Linzie. Or are we to ignore context - and allow comments to be excised much like your movie page advertisements treat the true, full comments of a reviewer? Are we to ignore what Mr. Wallace was up to in San Diego - the in effect, and in fact, championing of those who had been "had" against those who had "had" them, and confident of the relative impotence, were going to go right on taking away not the conditioner, not the furniture, but whole homes from people who had not realized they were "agreeing" to such a "deal?" It strikes me that Mike Wallace, when one judges (as one should, when arrogating an estimate of an other) a life as opposed to a 10-second excerpt, is precisely the kind of citizen that Michigan hopes to produce, as it goes about its haphazard attemptli "educate." -Lawrence Kelly University alumnus April 16 UCAR to unwelcome speaker Mike Wallace To the Daily: Once again the University has shown its hypocrisy with the invitation of Mike Wallace as the 1987 commencement speaker. Just two months ago on our campus a congressional hearing on racism was held where President Shapiro stated "Every incident of racism or bigotry - whether blatant or otherwise - undermines our aspirations and diminishes the ideals of our community. Each such incident is a couse for grief and dismay for us all." UCAR and others ask what better reason to be called a hypocrite than to invite Mike Wallace as the commencement speaker. It is utterly outrageous that Mike Wallace or the admin - istration would attempt to trivialize the significance of Wallace's overtly racist comments by suggesting that they were simply jokes in poor taste. Does this mean that the administration endorses "discrete" racism? . The comments were that Black and Latino people who had been defrauded in a real estate scheme probably could not read the leases over their watermelons and tacos., Wallace's comments reflect the same type of malignant racist attitudes that have been demon- strated in various forms on this campus over the past few months - and, just as those aspects of racism were not tolerated, this should not be either. To allow Wallace to speak, after his racist comments have resurfaced, would be to send a dangerous signal and message to the sudents on this campus. It would, in fact, suggest that racism is not serious; hurtful racist stereotypes can be funny (if you are not the target); and one who promotes and espouses such bigoted stereotypes is still deserving of encourage U of M graduates to model themselves after? Let's hope not. It is hypocritical for the University to diligently pursue disciplinary proceedings against the two racist student disc jockeys, Mike Gonzalez and Ted Sevransky, while at the same time playing host to another racist broadcaster with a lot more power and influence than our two local amateurs. We had hoped we would be able to proudly attend this year's graduation and call it U of M's anti-Apartheid, anti- racist commencement, an event which would make an important symbolic statement against racism by honoring Nelson Mandela. The choice of Wallace as a speaker will mar the event. President Shapiro has suggested that we not focus on Wallace's faults and mistakes but on his assets and contributions. This suggestion trivializes the malicious character of Wallace's remarks and his unrepentant tone to thiA day. In addition, as the owner of extensive property in Haiti, Wallace is one of the white Americans contributing to the oppression this destitute and predominantly Black country. We invite all students who support the anti-racist struggle at Michigan to join us at a rally before graduation to protest Wallace's presence on campus. We will meet at 11:00 a.m. at Elvell Field, corner of Hoover and S. Division to pass out literature and make a symbolic statement during the ceremony. Be there. We cannot make racists feel welcome here, be they racist student disc jockeys, anonymous assailants, or so-called liberal journalists.' -Barbary Ransby UCAR April 21 Toys won' t stop racist jokes To the Daily: Saturday's New York Times carried a large article about our University. I have sent a copy to Professor Nick Steneck, who will no doubt want it for his course on the history of the University. If anyone else wants-a copy, I'll gladly give you one. Just stop by my office. You might want to take it home to your parents - in case they missed it. The headline reads "Ethnic jokes in Campus Computer Prompt Debate." The story is about what the Times calls "a collection of ethnic, racist, and other jokes offensive to' specific groups, all put into a computer by students at the University of Michigan." Fun and the First Amendment. Indulged Sickness. The Vice-President for Gim - mickry, Mr. Duderstadt, says t1... ntz n s L''.1 ........- C. electronic stuff, and promises more. There are rumors that next fall, when you return, all of th4 classrooms in Mason Hall will be equipped with electric trains for you to play with. If you have your parents' permission, you can play with the trains that have Black porters and red- caps to wait on you. If we spent the computer- games and electric trains money on education, we might learn - maybe - why w4 shouldn't be indulging in racism and other socially and personally destructive prejudices. But the Vice- President for Gimmickry says he doesn't want teachers; teaching isn't innovative - and he wants innovative approaches to education. And your tuition is going up six to ten percent for flexl Reconsideration: