4 OPINION Page 4 Thursday, October 29, 1987 Thfe MichliganlDily e mbt a n Michig an Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Peace Corps visits Africa Vol. XCVIII, No. 36. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 The following interview is to contribute to the continuing political debate about the Peace Corps, which has a recruiting office on campus. Daily co-editor Henry Park interviewed former Peace Corps volunteer Pia Lopez. 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. PIRGIM and democracy LAST WEEK, the Public Interest Research Group In Michigan signed a contract with the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly under which PIR- GIM will receive a 75 cent refusable fee per term from each student. Two aspects of the process which determined this funding system show a disrespect for the demo- cratic process. The most blatant example was the University's Board of Regents' de- cision to cut the MSA budget re- quest from $8.35 per student to $7. The assembly determined the larger figure to comply with increases supported by students in the March student government election. If $8.35 had been approved, PIRGIM would have received $1.25 rather than 75 cents. Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) said that the regents considered it their re- sponsibility to determine a "reason- able fee." Since the only group on campus directly affected by the MSA fee is the students, it is difficult to under- stand how the original fee could be unreasonable. All of the individual increases for programs and organi- zations such as Student Legal Ser- vices and the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, as well as PIRGIM, were approved by wide margins in a ref- erendum. If the regents were to ig- nore the results of a state referen- dum dealing with state institutions of higher education, they would be removed from office. Somewhat less disturbing than the dictatorial power wielded by the re- gents, but also objectionable, is PIRGIM's insistence that the con- tract prohibit candidates for their board of directors from running under the party affiliation. PIRGIM says that if candidates ran as mem- bers of campus-wide political par- ties, non-PIRGIM issues would seep into their elections and candi- dates poorly versed in the group's concerns or hostile to the group's existence might be elected. While PIRGIM's fears are under- standable, their concerns are less compelling than the elimination of freedom of speech and association that the contract institutionalizes. The assembly's constitution guarantees the right of students to form political parties to run in MSA-supervised elections. In elec- tions for the Board of Student Pub- lications, which supervises the fi- nancial operations of the Daily, the Ensian, and the Gargoyle, candi- dates are allowed to run under party labels but the issues remain those of concern to the board. Obviously, under a system of parties, there is a danger that stu- dents, voting a straight party line, would support candidates opposed to PIRGIM. Jrue democracy, however, always entails risks. PIRGIM would be right to scream and yell at the regents for their un- democratic decision to cut MSA funding. At the same time, how- ever, PIRGIM should not scream when the democratic process re- quires that PIRGIM risk its most immediate interests. Daily: When and where were you in southern Africa? Lopez: South Africa, Botswana, Swaziland, Lesotho, Namibia, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tanzania, Kenya, all of southern Africa. From June 1981 to February 1985. Daily: When and where was your Peace Corps stint? Lopez: In Swaziland from 1981 to 1985. I was a teacher of mathematics at a junior high school in a small rural area and also set up chicken cooperatives with adults. Daily: What can you say about Peace Corps, do you think it makes a positive contribution overall? Lopez: I think that in some sense volunteers are somewhat separated from the Peace Corps as an organization. I think that the Peace Corps as a n organization is generally a conservative, reformist organization, being part of the U.S. government. But I think that Peace Corps volunteers don't see themselves as being part of the foreign aid apparatus of the United States. They see themselves as individuals doing something on the ground. Daily: Do you think that they're correct in that perception? Lopez: Yes and no. In some sense I think it's a delusion because you're, I'm somewhat reluctant to say this, in essence there to make people love Americans. That's the bad side of the coin. On the good side of the coin, I think the individuals on the ground in particular communities do a lot to aid the development process in those countries. And it varies among different volunteers. I think there are people genuinely committed to the development process. Daily: Maybe you should say more about racial relations on the ground. Lopez: I was the only white person in about a 25 mile radius from my school. Daily: And did you feel that you could create any relations that you liked or were you set up to be superior? Lopez: Not at all, not at all. I think that in the situation I was in I was set up to be not even remotely superior. It was clearly a relationship of peers. I think that in Swaziland and in other places I traveled through they're used to seeing white people as superior, so even if you're not superior, the onus is on you to show them that you're not a superior. There were certainly circumstances in which people would come up to me and call me "baas" in Afrikaans and I would have to make it clear to them that I was not their master. I think that no matter what, you never get away from the fact that you're a white person. And I think that the people you deal with on an everyday level, if they ever thought that you were a superior person, they lose that very quickly. When you have to fight over who is going to fetch water, who is going to scrub the floor, who is going to cook, who is going to arrange the duties at the school this day or this week, those things break down pretty quickly. People are people. Daily: What would you like to say generally about the Peace Corps in southern Africa? Lopez: Personally, I think it's a good idea because South Africa is such a monolith in that area and there are such perceptions of the strength of ihis white monolith, and at least in the rural areas, there is the perception that perhaps that's something that can never change, that white people are superior, smarter, stronger, whatever. There's resignation. So I think that Peace Corps has a good role in making these countries on the frontline stronger, if only in a psychological way, if in no other way. No matter how you look at it, the frontline states are bound by South Africa and they are economic as well as military hostages of South Africa. But I think that for individual Peace Corps volunteers, from a psychological perspective, they can be helpful over time in that situation. Daily: What about the role of the CIA? Lopez: In Swaziland, there was never ever any suspicion that any of the volunteers were CIA. I was never accused of it. Daily: Do you have anything else in general to say? Lopez: About travel in South Africa that was one of the big issues that we had. People felt that we shouldn't go into South Africa at all because in doing so you would be patronizing say hotels there, say campgrounds. You would be buying things there; you would be doing things there. The other side of the coin was well listen, we're 8,000 miles from home; we should not go back with the exact same views and prejudices that we came over with. And, my view was the second view that we should go to South Africa as much as we can and see what's going on there. And as far as patronizing hotels and things like that, living in any of the frontline states, when you brush your teeth, you are buying something from South Africa. When you buy your food, it's all food from South Africa. So that's unavoidable. If you take that position, you should not be a Peace Corps volunteer in those countries either. Doris Lessing says that the trouble is in a place like Rhodesia it is no good looking coolly from the outside. You have to experience the paranoia, the adolescent sentimentality, the neurosis, then retreat to a cool look from the outside. Most politicians and journalists do their judging from the outside only. Most of the people on the spot are lost in a violent emotionalism. So I agreed with that entirely, that you should go and see for yourself. LETTERS 4 I i1 7 ... fOU * au .. b OE 5O Nt~U MAEHCt a WI4E-41)i(A NOM '° L11 E %UUSNT o You MA.IL P~T TH1( LJ4 AA Kr W GIG KLMrN To You. WA AA NOW ~ ~TNoW ?AY Cou D rW 0 J Write fo, To the Daily: Since 1974 political prison- ers in the Soviet Union have observed October 30 as the "Day of the Soviet Political Prisoner." The date is usually marked by the political prison- ers with hunger strikes throughout the country. This date, October 30, also provides a unique opportunity for indi- viduals in the West to demon- strate their solidarity with So- viet political prisoners by joining them in their struggle for freedom. As a member of an under- graduate group of Amnesty In- ternational on campus and Ann Arbor's Local Group #61, we are asking readers to observe October 30th by writing letters to the Soviet Ambassador in Washington on behalf of a prisoner of conscience, Tatyana Velikanova. Ms. Velikanova was sentenced to four years in a labor colony and five in inter- nal exile in Beyneu (Kazakhstan) for "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda." At the time of her arrest in Octo- ber, 1979, Ms. Velikanova was among the foremost human rights activists in the Soviet Union. She had earlier been forced to give up her job as a computer scientist as a result of her human rights activities, specifically, the founding of the Initiative Group for the Defense of Human Rights. Speak-out on To the Daily: In conjunction with the Sexual Assault Awareness Week, Thursday, October 29, IF IT, 6WLFSSO DAMNaWS... 4%0 IS W t} $?I.INtG? r Soviet poliical prisoners We ask that everyone write and unconditional release of -Deborah Blatt to His Excellency Y.V. Du- Tatyana Velikanova, a prisoner Undergrads for binin, Embassy of the USSR, of conscience imprisoned for Amnesty International 1 Andrei Sakharov Plaza NW, the non-violent exercise of her Ann Arbor Group Washington, D.C. 20036, and right to freedom of expression. #61 politely request the immediate October 28 'U' hiring: not only racist, but also sexist To the Daily: The Ann Arbor News con- tinues its tradition of down- playing sexism on the Univer- sity of Michigan campus. Em- phasis was given in its Sunday article to the lack of Blacks (read Black men) among new faculty hires. The University has a far worse hiring record for women, and especially women if color, as evidenced by a faculty to student ratio that is ap- proximately twice as large for Blacks as it is for women and is so dismal for women of color to be negligible. The claim that the lack of women Ph.d.s is responsible for these skewed ratios is ludi- crous in many fields. Even in areas such as romance lan- guages where women have long been the recipients of the majority of Doctorates, the hiring and promotion record of the University is dismal. An instance of racism on the student run radio station was rightfully given press, but it is obvious what is indicated when instances of sexist jokes harassment What is the value of a speak- out? Sexual assault affects us all, but is all too often not discussed. It is important that on this radio station occur es- sentially daily and are ignored by the newspaper and the Uni- versity administration. Women dormitory students report harassing phone calls to campus security each week. Women are daily recipients of unwanted leers and lewd state- ments and gestures. Harold Shapiro has recently stated that the University takes. n o responsibility for conduct of fraternities towards women. Calls the police on parties Imagine what the outcry would (rightfully) be if Blacks were constantly under the threat of the type of hatred and violence that women experience when they are raped. Shame on the Ann Arbor News for its selec- tive reporting and shame on the University of Michigan for its too obvious lack of commit- ment to opportunity for women. -J.D. Davidson October 27 To the Daily: I'd like to clear up what seems to be a big mystery to many University students, in- cluding some of the Daily edi- tors. The mystery is why the Ann Arbor police are so intent on quieting down the South University/Church Street area. The answer is that we, the residents of the neighborhood, call them up and beg them to. This is because we are kept up nightly until long after the lo- cal bars close by people yelling and screaming. It is also be- cause drunks get in fights in our yards, and can't stop vomiting beneath our bedroom windows. When it is 3 a.m. and the party has moved to the parking lot behind my house, and the car stereos are blasting, and I have to get un at 7. 1 call don't understand. The real mystery to me is why these noisy people have failed to no- tice (during the day, and/or when they are sober) that this area is not, in fact an outdoor toilet, but a heavily residential area. Closer inspection might reveal to them the presence of a number of elderly residents in the area (or maybe they just look old, from lack of sleep). I personally am very thank-4 ful to the local police. I agree that bopping these kids with flashlights is not the most ap- propriate action to take, but what does it take to make them shut up and go away? I'd like to think that the offenders will read this, and (shocked at their insensitiveness,) immediately mend their ways. I could get snme sleen rind the noliepA