Page 4 OPINION Friday, November 10, 1989 graduation The Michigan Daily Say By Andrew Mills I don't know how to break it to them. I read in the Daily last week that there's not going to be a graduation ceremony in Michigan Stadium, and I don't know how to pass along this disturbing piece of news to my parents. It seems that instead of one large ceremony, each school will conduct their own graduation, in an effort to involve the students - especially the undergraduates - more. You see, my parents, like many other parents of the thousands of soon-to-be- alumni on campus, have been looking forward to graduation since they dropped me off in my Couzens triple three years ago. It was that very weekend, in fact, the day after she helped me hang my posters and make my bed, that my mother visited the Campus Inn and asked if she could iIke reservations for the weekend of April 28, 1990. They said no, that they only took reservations three years in advance, and that she would have to call back in January. It wasn't long after New Years' no to reforms Day that my mother secured a block of rooms for my graduation. Graduation date has since been pushed back a week, and after some frantic phoning, Mom was able to switch the reservation. I don't care so much where I graduate. To be honest, by the time May rolls around, I'll be so anxious to get out of this burg, that I wouldn't mind if we all stood in line at CRISP - one last time - to pick up our diplomas. But graduation ceremonies, like confirmations, bar mitzvahs, and even weddings, are for the parents. At least that's how it's been in my family. Hell, they paid for my time here, why shouldn't they get a show at the end? Now I understand some of the reasoning of those high University officials who made the decision to "personalize" graduation in this way. Logistically, graduation in Michigan Stadium is a mess. Sitting in the stadium, students don't give a whit about the speaker, the honorary degree recipients, or the processional. They usually just talk with friends, pop some champagne, and try to figure out what to do with the gown once the ceremony ends. The parents can't pick out their children (whose names are never read off), and if it rains or if the weather turns arctic, as it did last year, sitting on a hard bench for hours isn't at all pleasant. But now that graduates will be spread out across campus - Engineering here, Business there, Natural Resources somewhere else - the entire mystique of a graduation ceremony is lost. Let's face it, the effect of thousands of mortarboards flying through the spring sky is somehow lost inside the Power Center, one of the proposed graduation venues under this new plan. A common complaint of past graduates has been the sub-standard quality of commencement speakers. Every spring, the New York Times runs a list of prominent graduation speakers at colleges across the nation. Bill Cosby, Garry Trudeau, Francois Mitterand, Walter Cronkite, and scores of other notable, interesting people are on hand at other schools. And while I don't mean to insult the speakers at Michigan's graduations past, they are rarely in the Times' article, and they surely don't make anyone's "A"- list. Sure, a poor speaker causes the students to pay a little less attention to the speech, and a little more attention to the beach ball bobbing around the stadium, but what will happen now? Without the prominence afforded by a large ceremony, the University is going to have an even tougher time attracting the big names. And if they do manage to nab a Ted Kennedy or a Jesse Jackson or even a Barbara Bush, only a select few graduates (most likely the masters and doctoral recipients) will have the privilege to hear them. To alleviate this, the University might broadcast the commencement address on closed-circuit TV. I don't think anyone really believes that will do the trick. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins - the whole clan is planning to make the trip to Ann Arbor for the annual spring ritual. But what do they have to look forward to now? A droll speech and "Good luck as you enter the world," from the dean, as we sit on our hands in Angell Hall Auditorium D? As the plan is laid out, the LSA college will get to graduate in Crisler Arena; it could be worse. I wonder to what auditorium of this sprawling campus some of the smaller schools will be relegated: Natural Science? Chemistry? MLB? It seems cruelly ironic that many of us will be going through graduation exercises in the very same room where we slept through so many lectures. Maybe, if we're lucky, we'll sleep through this one. Mills is an LSA senior, and co-Editor. of the Daily's Weekend Magazine. 6 Ebe £idi4jau flyrtA Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C, No. 48 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. he same old story Abortion in Br SIX WEEKS ago, the Committee of Mothers and Family Members of Polit- ical Prisoners, Disappeared, and As- sassinated of El Salvador (COMADRES) - a group of women organized to protest the terror perpe- trated by the Salvadoran government's death squads -occupied the Costa Ri- can Embassy in San Salvador. The women sought to draw interna- tional attention to the right-wing ARENA government's escalating hu- man rights violations - the kidnapping and murder this year alone of almost 2,500 peasants and union members fighting for the political and economic reforms necessary to combat El Sal- vador's devastating poverty. The women had planned to stay for two hours during which they would make a brief statement. But when the women entered, the Salvadoran mili- tary and police immediately surrounded the embassy. The protesters risked ar- rest and imprisonment if they left the embassy. Rather than facing imprisonment in El Salvador, the women remained in- side the embassy - blockading them- selves for 28 hours - at which point the Red Cross was finally permitted to escort the protesters to safety. A few weeks later, the Salvadoran government struck back. A bomb went off outside the COMADRES office, wounding four bystanders. Men in governmental uniforms were seen fleeing the scene just prior to the ex- plosion. The same day another bomb ex- ploded at the office of the National Sal- vadoran Workers' Federation (FENASTRES), killing ten and injur- ing forty, including FENASTRES' charismatic leader, the thirty-five-year old Febe Elizabeth Velasquez. FENE- TRAS is one of several organizations 'that COMADRES had tried to protect from the governmental-sponsored vio- lence. FENETRAS' office had already been bombed twice before this year. This type of action, in a chilling re- play of the mass murders of the early eighties, is once again becoming repre- sentative of the Salvadoran govern- ment's response to those who oppose its concerted rollback against labor, failure to implement land reform, mas- sive oppression, and lack of democ- racy. The U.S. State Department - much like the Salvadoran government itself -insists that such atrocities are being committed by right-wing extremists bent on sabotaging any hope of peace. And they are right. What they fail to mention is how inseparable such "extremists" and El Salvador's gov- ernment have become since ARENA's accession to power last June. Even the usually conservative Salvadoran human rights organization Tutela Legal is now documenting a pattern of systematic human rights abuses by government security personnel. Right-wing killings in El Salvador are hardly a new thing; the Daily's pages have provided documentation of their frequency often enough. But the recent increase in such killings - and ARENA's growing audacity in tar- geting church-sponsored peace or- ganizations and even respected interna- tional political figures such as Ruben Zamora - suggests an ominous ex- tension of the usual pattern. In this context, it is as crucial as it has ever been at any point in El Sal- vador's long war for the U.S. public to stand up and be counted. Our tax dol- lars - to the tune of $4 billion dollars in the last decade - have funded and continue to fund these killings. Is it not ironic that MSA's Conservative Coali- tion can spend so much energy protesting the expenditure of four thou- sand dollars on a student mission for peace in El Salvador while all too many of us remain silent about how much more of our money continues to fund death in the same country? By Mark Buchan As the abortion issue continues to dom- inate U.S. politics, it is of interest to note that the U.S. is not the only country where debate rages. British parliament is set to have its first full-scale discussion of abortion reform since Thatcher took office in 1979. As in the U.S., there is a large anti- choice movement, which has become in- creasingly identified with politicians of the right. And there is a national pro-choice campaign supported by the Labour party. However it is not federal funding of abor- tions which is under question, nor whether there should be exceptions in the case of rape or incest. A National Health Service, which guarantees access to abortion for all women, makes such questions obsolete. In England, the debate is over a pro- posed reduction of the 28 week limit for termination of pregnancy. The anti-choice movement seeks a 22 or 20 week limit. The Labour party will compromise at 24 weeks - a move favored by both the Prime Minister and her health secretary - but only on certain conditions: that excep- tions be made in cases of rape, incest and fetal abnormalities; that the bureaucracy which delays a woman's access to abortion facilities be trimmed; and that one, not two, doctors approve the procedure. The compromise appears exemplary, but in the political arena the situation is not so simple. Strictly, the government debate is not on abortion, but on research on human embryos. Abortion is only being debated because of the pressure the anti- choice movement has put on the govern- ment to link it to embryo research. This blurs two separate questions. In 1982, a Committee of Inquiry was di- rected to examine the problems arising out of new developments in embryology. In its report, it specifically avoided questions of abortion. The Committee felt it wrong to merge the question of how scientists should limit their research on embryos be- cause of the "humanity" of the embryos, and the entirely separate issue of when a fetus within the uterus may be aborted for the sake of the mother. In allowing abor- tion to be debated as an issue related to embryo research, the government is delib- itain expense. Thus abortion itself is not being attacked, but only the right of poor women to abortions. In Britain, because medical care is available to all, govern- ment funding of abortion is not an issue. If a reduction in the 28 week limit does pass, it will apply to everyone. The debate is being followed beyond Britain's shore. Each year, some 4000 Irish women come to the United Kingdom for safe, legal abortions. Abortion remains illegal in Eire. As the pro-choice campaign in the U.S. gains impetus, a glance at the situation in Britain helps clarify its implications. A woman cannot have freedom to control her life without access to health services that ' facilitate that choice, regardless of her in- 'In the U.S. access to abortion is being systematically reduced by increasing its expense. In Britain, because medical care is available to all women, government funding of abortion is not an issue.' erately ignoring the findings of its own experts. Despite the deliberate attempts of the anti-choice movement to confuse separate issues, the abortion debate in Britain re- mains centered on what is important - the welfare of pregnant women. It is sig- nificant that the anti-choice movement is reduced by public pressure to merely cam- paigning for a 20 week limit. In the U.S. access to abortion is being systematically reduced by increasing its come. When the U.S. realizes that in a fair society abortion must be equally available to all women, it is only a short step away from recognizing that medical care should be equally available to all.. The power of the pro-choice campaign can be seen in elections all over the U.S.; there is no need to stop there. Mark Buchan is a graduate student in the Department of Classical Studies, and a member of the opinion staff. a A U.S. double standard By Tania Drelichman On October 3, 1989 a coup d'etat to overthrow the Panamanian dictator General Manuel Noriega flopped. The coup failed for one reason - the United States broke its promise to take action against Noriega. A day after the coup, The New York Times ran an article by Elaine Sciolino, "Once Again, A Survivor". A quote from this article clearly illustrates how nega- tively the Reagan and Bush Administra- tions view Noriega, even though they tol- erate him. According to them, General Noriega stands for everything repugnant in a political leader. He has been accused of taking part in election fraud, drug traffick- ing, money laundering, espionage against the United States and even murder. It is hypocritical of the Reagan and Bush administrations to have made this statement, since both of their administra- tions can be accused of similar activities. First of all, Noriega was accused of taking part in fraudulent elections last May. In the 1982 El Salvadoran elections, the Reagan administration placed a conserva- tive business leader into power after the people had already elected another candi- date. Another example of U.S.-supported election manipulation involves the up- coming Nicaraguan elections, in which President Bush openly and financially supports the opposition coalition. Although the contras are scheduled to de- mobilize by December 5 this year, as of now, they continue to fight the Sandin- ic.a Ar~eri.t n.'cnn _ tof.hern- government and the Colombian drug deal- ers. The money-making process went as follows: the drugs arrived in Panama from Colombia, then the drugs were flown to the U.S. to be sold, and ultimately money from these sales was used to supply the Nicaraguan contras. This is a critical point, since it is this relationship with Noriega that both the Reagan and Bush administrations wish to conceal from the American public. As for money laundering, it occurs so often in the U.S. government that to ac- cuse Noriega of this same crime before looking into things here seems ludicrous. For example, Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North and General Secord were tainted with money laundering during the Iran- Contra hearings. Other members of the Reagan administration that have been as- sociated with money laundering include Edwin Meese, James Watt, and Samuel Pierce Jr. Noriega's last two "repugnant" activities happen to be integral aspects of U.S. for- eign policy. If espionage against the U.S. is so terrible, why has the U.S. spied on other countries so many times? All U.S. administrations have been guilty of espi- onage. The Central Intelligence Agency's raison-d'etre is to spy on other countries and individuals for the U.S. government! And yes, the U.S. has even committed murder, directly and indirectly. In 1973 in Chile, the U.S. was directly behind the murder of President Salvadore Allende After Allende's murder, an executive order was passed prohibiting the U.S. from any involvement in direct assassination at- tempts. It was this order that suspended Reagan's plot to overthrow Noriega in 1988. 4 . The order, however, has not prevented. the U.S. from being indirectly involved in numerous killings. Whenever the U.S. supports a corrupt government or group it is indirectly involved with murders. The Reagan and Bush administrations' support of the Duarte and Christiani regimes in El Salvador, the Cerezo regime in Guatemala, and the contras in Nicaragua provide just a few examples of the indirect role the U.S. government has played in the loss of thousands of lives. The Bush administration was scared to come through on its promise in Panama primarily because of the Iran-Contra scan- dal. The fear that Noriega will squeal pre- vents Bush from taking any drastic mea- sures against him. Ironically, actions of Noriega that Reagan and Bush find repug- nant only mirror their own. Tania Drelichman is a sophomore in LSA. t[ 's ,, March for abortion ri hts U111 1 11YjI Y,19 A, f{ , I