4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, October 14, 1988 The Michigan Dail), 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. IC, No. 27 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. 'Objectivity' is censorship ' s "t i. No Yankee aid LAST WEEK, President Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua announced that his coun- try would not permit any funds from the U.S. government to enter Nicaragua including two million dol- lars set aside for opposition political parties and five million in medical aid which was to be channeled through the Catholic Church hierarchy, Ortega stated, "We cannot allow re- csources of the Yankee government, supposedly for Nicaraguan children, to enter our country, when they are ap- roving funds to continue murdering Nicaraguan children." While it is true that Nicaragua is in dire need of foreign exchange to pro- Ivide for the basic needs of its people, it peed not accept it on the nebulous ,trms designated by the U.S. govern- ment. The "opposition groups" and the Catholic Church hierarchy have been 'complicit in Reagan's war against the 'Sandinistas and undermining the popu- 1ar revolution. These "opposition parties," heralded by Reagan, have been organized and funded by the Central Intelligence 'Agency. Bishop Antonio Vega and ,Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo have given their unequivocal support to the 'destabilizing forces in Nicaragua by re- fusing to denounce the "unchristian *ehavior" of the Contras who have wreaked terror on the Nicaraguan citi- 'nry. The United States has no business involving itself in the internal affairs of sovereign nation. If the Reagan ad- inistration is interested.in providing tnancial support as reparations for the 'bitensive damage caused by its illegal mar, funding should be done directly through the Nicaraguan govermnent. p With direct payment, U.S. taxpayers could be assured that their money was tiially being used productively and not 16r immoral purposes. Nicaragua would gladly receive money to buttress their exemplary social programs in land Uneform, health care, and education es- ::ablished by the Sandinistas. The U.S government's hypocrisy should be broadcast loudly. If the :United States is truly concerned with the medical needs of Nicaraguan chil- dren, and not increasing the popularity of the conservative, counter-revolu- tionary Catholic Church, then it would stop sending land mines and machine guns. These weapons are responsible for murder of hundreds of children and other civilians. The aims of funding the "opposition parties" is not to enhance democracy as one might expect, but to purchase arti- ficial support in a time when dollars are tempting to the desperate. People might not be so desperate if the war of attri- tion highlighted by the United States sponsored trade embargo, had not postponed development programs and caused crippling economic crises. Nicaragua's electoral system needs no external interference. It is the only Central American country that provides equal funding for all legitimate political parties, and assures them access to ra- dio and T.V. time as well as billboard space. In the "model democracies" of Central America showcased by the U.S. State Department, such as Guatemala, El Salvador or Honduras, opposition groups are outlawed and their leaders are systematically jailed and murdered. Ortega should be praised for his decision not to accept funds from the United States. This decision may seem unpopular when looked at on the sur- face but, when the intentions of the United States to further destabilize the democratic government of Nicaragua are exposed, it is clear that Ortega has done the right thing. The U.S. intentions should be no surprise due to the disgraceful behavior toward its neighbors to the south. Nicaragua does not need the patroniz- ing U.S. aid offered, especially if it does not include a complete end to U.S. hostilities in the region. Although the goals of the Nicaraguan Revolution will eventually succeed on their own the United States certainly has an obli- gation to extend unconditional support to Nicaragua to atone for the losses and destruction inflicted on them by a criminal foreign policy. By Camille Colatosti Again and again, we see the media cloaking censorship under the veil of "objectivity." Disgracefully one-sided was the coverage by the Detroit Free Press and the Ann Arbor News of the Campaign for a Democratic Campus protest against Duder- stadt's exclusive, expensive, and self-ag- grandizing inauguration, as well as the continued protest against newly instituted restrictions on students' free speech. The Free Press, Detroit's supposedly liberal pa- per, made no effort to interview protestors, but instead quoted only Ann Arbor police and a University of Michigan spokes- person. This version of the event thus poses as truth. When the Michigan Daily essays to tell a different story - the story of protestors' agenda rather than that of the University administrators, the story of our disgust with with Duderstadt both for his support of an anti-protest code that violates stu- dents' free speech and for his support of nuclear weapons research, and the story of abuse protestors suffered at the hands of Ann Arbor and University police (abuse that police were careful to repress until all mainstream reporters were safely enclosed within the walls of Hill Auditorium) - the Ann Arbor News accuses the student run paper of "bias." Karen Grassmuck's News article (10/10/88) quotes Michigan Regent Phillip Power, who is concerned about the Daily's "ideological" coverage of campus news. Thus the News congratulates itself for its so-called "non-ideological," "object- ive" reporting. Yet, one can't help but wonder about the ideology underlying the decision to write an entire article about the "concern" of a Uni- versity Regent, who clearly approves of Duderstadt since he helped select the new president in secret sessions last summer, a man who claims not to know "what the hell is going on," perhaps because he does not listen to the concerns and demands of students on the Ann Arbor campus he sup- posedly oversees. Why not interview a Camille Colatosti is a doctoral candidate in English member of the Campaign for a Democratic Campus about her opinion of media cover- age of the protest? Why not investigate what is troubling students, find out why we are protesting? What ideology underlies the decision to interview one of the wealthiest men in the community, who just so hap- pens to own "a group of suburban Detroit newspapers" and has more than enough op- portunities to express his "free" speech? Of the Ann Arbor News, the Free Press and the Daily, only the latter has the cou- rage to print, in Friday morning's paper, two stories on Duderstadt's inauguration- one focusing on the predictable pomp and circumstance, and one on the protest, actu- ally articulating student, worker, and fac- ulty demands for taking seriously a news- paper's duty to reveal a story from both the side of the powerful and the powerless. The Press and the News act as if there is only one way to view the protest, and they un- derstand that the privilege belongs to the Regents and the U-M administration. Last Friday morning, after reading the Free Press' coverage of the protest, I had a long phone conversation, which I will at- tempt to reproduce below, with Joe Grimm, assistant to the Press' executive editor, the man to call in order to report mistakes in fact. I informed him about that the injured protestor was not hurt because she fell (nor was she hurt in a "scuffle," as the Ann Arbor News insists), but because she was literally threwn-lifted off the ground and dropped-by an Ann Arbor po- lice officer. Her injury was far more severe than the Free Press reported-she suffered a concussion. When I told Mr. Grimm that his re- porters should have contacted a protestor for the facts, he replied that protestors are harder to get a hold of than police and uni- versity spokespersons, and thus his paper printed only information they'could attain. After I told him WEMU had managed to contact me, that Michael Phillips, president of the Michigan Student Assembly and one of the few students to attend the inaugura- tion ceremony, could easily have supplied reporters with names and phone numbers, he was awkwardly silenced. "Well, per- haps..." Telling him that the protestors did not, as his paper reported, force their way inside of Hill Auditorium, since to do so required that we pass about 25 police offir cers eager to trounce, he quipped, "Our re- porter saw protestors inside. Are you say- ing that our reporters imagine things?" "No," I answered. I'm saying that your reporters don't work hard enough. Investi- gative reporting involves investigation, calling all sources, even those who a re difficult to reach. Mr. Grimm then sug- gested that, in the future, protestors send out press releases so that reporters will be prepared for protests. "We sent out re- leases," I told him. "Oh, really, strange I hadn't heard," he answered. "But I'll pass on this information to our editors and maybe we'll do a follow up story." One week later, I'm writing to the Daily. I'll send a copy of this letter to the Ann Arbor News and the Free Press also, but I don't expect them to print it (though per- haps charges of censorship and biased re- porting will get them to act). Needless to say, the Free Press never did a second story nor did they print a correction to Friday's coverage of the protest. Despite the Ann Arbor News and the Free Press suit against the Regents for their selection of Duderstadt in closed sessions, both papers have ex- pressed nothing but glee and praises about his appointment. Absent from their re- portage and editorials is criticism of his so- called Michigan Mandate; nowhere do these papers attempt to analyze Duderstadt's re- peated double-speak and vague promises, his supposed hope that the 21st century will be a "diverse" one, and his continual displacement of solutions to the Univer- sity's present problems of institutional racism, sexism and heterosexism onto an idyllic future comfortably remote from Du- derstadt himself. Three cheers for the Michigan Daily, the only newspaper in the area willing to risk the anger of the powerful and wealthy, and smart enough to question the promises of the University's undemocratically elected leader, a president the majority of students, faculty and workers would have voted against had we, in this so-called free and democratic land, been given a vote. 4 4 4 I'V LIVE - wFGFQ ? 3 - uIu?-3J ND ' FrR RrtM YO HAV TOIO < Y " / E \AY NOT (AVE ME A Sob POM~& THE~ \NO~A'ZI ONE To Do IN ODS. To Cs T W LFPE? ON, NQ -- }i jN\OU PO&E of { x x X'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -X .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . x x X .............. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .......... 9 ........... X.: X. X N. Xx: ...... .. r . RPi natinn i viCtory AMIDST CHARGES of racism and 1lemands for his resignation; LSA Dean Peter Steiner announced Monday that he would step down at the end of the year and return to private life. In ap- pointing Steiner's replacement, the University should hire a person of color who will promote minority fac- ulty hiring, examine the criteria by which minority students are admitted, d restructure the eurocentric curricu- lum of LSA. Last Spring, Steiner outraged the University community with a series of racist comments which highlighted the type of institutional racism inherent in the policies and practices of top level, white male administrators. Anti-racist students demanded that Steiner retract his comments and make a formal apol- ogy to Black students, faculty, and Wayne State and Howard Universities. Steiner stated that he did not want the University to become a place "where minorities would naturally flock in much greater numbers... there are such institutions - including Wayne State anId Howard University." Steiner refused to apologize and re- sponded with more verbal attacks upon the Black community, attributing low minority enrollment to "small pools" of qualified applicants. This prompted student activists to respond with a de- mand for Steiner's resignation. A 26 hiur sit-in in the dean's office fol- l6wved. An embarrassed administration. al- !L L 1" r ' V v .in. T racial harassment policy which applied only to students, and has yet to be of- ficially amended to include faculty and staff, such as Steiner. Clearly, Steiner fails to fit into Duderstadt's "Michigan Mandate" or the "multi-cultural community." Steiner's statements and failure to hire minority faculty, directly contradict the commitments that the University made to minority students. His presence - at the head of LSA which contains over 70 percent of the student body - is a hypocritical slap in the face to students of color on this campus. Although Steiner leaves in a cloud of embarrassment and condemnation, his departure creates the correct atmosphere for the next appointed LSA dean. Anti- racist students on this campus will not tolerate racist remarks, actions, or policies on the part of any administra- tor, and will act swiftly to expose racism at every level. In its new found "commitment" to creating a "diverse" community, the University must see its selection of the new dean as a central issue. The new dean should be a person of color, committed to re-examining the subjec- tive standards by which minority stu- dents are admitted. This person should promote the work of people of color and women to restructure of the current eurocentric curriculum and should push for mandatory course of racism and sexism. In addition, the University Student demands rights To the Daily: I though I had detected a ma- jor mistake in Ryan Tutak's article "Four to face protest charges," (Daily 10/13/88) which describe Sandra Stein- graber being charged with as- saulting a police officer. I fig- ured since she was the one thrown to the ground, knocked unconscious and taken away in an ambulance, that Tutak had obviously reversed the names "Steingraber" and "Blake" in reporting who assaulted whom. But on page 5 of the same Daily issue, Steingraber's open letter to President Duderstadt, "Duderstadt, can you teach bi- ology?" revealed the abom- inable truth that Tutak had been correct in his reporting: Steingraber, a victim of unnecessary for and brutal vio- lence i the alleged criminal; Richard Blake, the perpetrator of this violence, is the defen- dant Being a new graduate student here at the University such a flagrant abuse of a colleague makes me feel fooled by the glorious impression this insti- tution had upon me as an out- sider. My concept of this school as a scholarly seat of arts, science and truth (sound familiar?) lies battered and as- saulted alongside the image of Steingraber's unconscious body. (Put that picture in the 1989-1990 catalog and see how many new students we get.) The Board of Regents and the President office here insult and break all agreements I made in good faith to respect University codes and bylaws. But I will not turn tail and run because of my disappointment. I hereby pledge to voice my discontent with University of Michigan policies by any and all means possible, should they disturb my ethical and moral conscience. As a student with no working affiliation to any University of Michigan gov- erning body, I personally de- mand the following: -The resignation of James Duderstadt from the University of Michigan presidency, and that he quit Ann Arbor. -The resignation of the Uni- versity of Michigan Board of Regents, and that they quit Ann Arbor if any reside here. -The resignation of Richard Blake from the Ann Arbor po- lice force. -That the governor of the State of Michigan hold a plebiscite - in which the vot- ing body be the University of Michigan students, faculty and alumni - to elect a new Uni- versity president and new re- gents. -That a public apology and financial retribution for medical costs be paid to Sandra Stein- graber by the University of Michigan President's office,. the regents, and the Ann Arbor police. -The repeal of any and all University codes and bylaws restricting nonviolent studenC and faculty dissent. If this be protest, make the most of it. My demands are peaceful, though a continuance of belligerent response to such proposals by the Universiti Administration could soon es= calate into a "fire for fire" dis-s course that I am sure nobody wands. End this lunacy now. -Eric Baumann October 13 States use Rally for your rights AFTER THE BRUTAL treatment and arrest of four Michigan students last Thurs- day, the University community needs to unite in support of the right to peaceful protest. The administration is attempting to limit student dissent though the use of deputized University Public Safety officers, the removal of students and faculty from the rule making process, and the imposition of a policy limiting protest of University events. Today's 1 p.m. rally will voice strong opposition against the administrations power grab: demanding that the charges against students be dropped and that the youth in war game To the Daily: I have read the letters arguing, about a parallel in brutality,' between Israel and South: Africa, and to my mind the real connection between the two lies in the turning of young people into killing machines: the soldier-enforcers of both countries are often younger than I, and are forced by their governments to play a deadly 4 d