PERSPECTIVES k I- The Michigan Daily Friday, July 29, 1988 Page 5 Fleming's inferno BY COREY DOLGAN This is the story of how some wide-eyed optimistic students and faculty tried to apply an idealistic set of democratic principles to a document on the "Rights and Obli- gations of Speakers, and Protestors at the University of Michigan," and how they were led down a path of crafty lies and unconscionable be- trayal by a University administra- tion hell-bent on destroying any last vestige of democracy on cam- pus. THE DARK WOOD Two years ago, the Civil Liberties Board began composing a new set of University guidelines on free speech and protest. This was in response to a rash of repressive University actions during campus demonstrations. On October 7, 1985, Vice-president Bush came to the University to commemorate the Peace Corp's 25th Anniversary. Many students, realizing the irony of Bush honoring the Peace Corp, protested his appearance. Campus security responded by harassing students, confiscating signs, and squelching the protestors' right to free speech. Libyan students arrested: Forgotten Rights Suppose a university student is taken from her/his home by govern- ment agents on charges that s/he conspired to ferment anti-government demonstrations. Suppose the community responds with suspicion and fearful silence. Suppose the newspapers churn out a few stories that read like press releases from the authorities. Suppose the university administrators say nothing. And suppose this happened not in some Third World torture state but at the University. Last week, as part of a dragnet apprehension of eight Libyan students around the country, FBI agents arrested University student Salem Zubeidy at his home on North Campus. He is accused of conspiring to divert funds from the Libyan government to support anti-American ac- tivities and send "minority activists" to Libya. The outrageousness of such charges has been met with quiet anxiety by many Arab students who fear they will become targets of government frame-ups or harass- ment if they speak out. Some say they have good reason for such fear. As one student ex- plained, "The men with black shiny shoes have come around. They've been around, knocking on doors." With such suppression of political dissidence going on, those of us who can still speak out should demand answers to some obvious ques- tions. First, Zubeidy was arrested and accused of similar crimes in Virginia over a year ago. And yet there was not enough evidence against him to even implicate him in a court of law, and he was released. Why again? Why now? Second, why is nothing being said about the Libyan disinformation campaign that has been carried out by the U.S. government and which is now a matter of public record? Two years ago the United States con- fessed to planting false stories in the foreign and domestic press about opposition movements within Libya. This operation was carried out in order to boost anti-Khadafy forces. Bob Woodward broke the story in the Washington Post, and newspapers around the nation admitted in bold headlines that they had become unwitting targets of deceptive pro- paganda. Why are they not wondering the same thing now? This exposure of deception is not an isolated incident. In 1981, we were told by an Iranian arms merchant that Colonel Khadafy was send- ing a hit squad to assassinate the president and other U.S. officials. The Iran-contra hearings have since revealed that this source was in fact an Israeli agent and that these reports were the fabrications of an Israeli in- telligence scam. The administration now tells us through "unnamed" sources that some of the Libyan students under arrest were part of a plot to assassi- nate Lt. Col. Oliver North. What is the evidence? Why is more journalistic skepticism not brought to bear on validity of these charges? Even high-ranking State Department officials have expressed doubts about these allegations. A fellow student has been arrested on political grounds. Until the above questions are answered, we all have plenty of reason to be afraid of the men in black shiny shoes. Steingraber is an Opinion Page staffer and Ahmed is an Opinion Page Editor. Protest of a live Today show broadcast and CIA recruitment followed and so did security's ha- rassment of demonstrators. As the University intensified its crushing of protest with physical force and violence, students claimed the need to restrict that power and the CLB began the difficult task of establishing guidelines for pro- testors' rights. Thus began the sav- age path forward. THE VESTIBULE OF HELL "Where the futile run perpetually after a whirling standard" From the beginning of the CLB's romp through the satanic rings of composing guidelines on free speech and protest, student mem- bers thought that such a policy could be manipulated by administrators to limit students' rights of protest. MSA president Michael Phillips declared, "We have fought against a code of non-aca- demic conduct for many years and we fear that any University policy regulating free speech may be used as a pretense for such a code." Still, something had to be done about the University's abuse of power. Thus, Dr. Peter Railton, CLB faculty member, drafted a statement regard- ing free speech and artistic expres- sion at the University. As the CLB faculty members led the students down through the la- byrinth of draft after draft of free speech guidelines, student members remained extremely cautious about ambiguous language that might let the administration use the guide- lines as a foundation for a code. With each draft, student members worked on modifying the document instead of questioning the premise of establishing fair guidelines on a campus where democratic principles were fragile at best. CLB members continued to criticize "language," while the black winds of hell kept rolling. NETHER H HERETICS T All along, son tioned the CLB' strayed further ft University's repr rights. The guid document concer ing between acce undue interferenc ing University sa tors of that line. In June 1987, the CLB declar versity was respc the opportunity f and dissent" and t from being silenc force," the CLB recommended th lishment of an e body... to adjudi freedom of spe expression of Uni It's no acciden appeared at the s Sharphorn, Uni began regularly meetings. Anxiet of the CLB as tt initial intentionsc wave of deception hounds reared th the souls of suicic By March, 198 deeper towards t tion. The "Sharp deleted, but stud wanted to insert ELL: FROM law 7.02. Students needed to safe- O TRAITORS guard what few democratic rights ne students ques- still remained. s path. Each draft A distinct claim that "any insti- om criticizing the tutional procedures for enforcement ession of students' ... fall within the jurisdiction of Jelines became a the University Council (and) bylaw ned with delineat- 7.02" might keep the administ- ptable protest and ration from using the guideline as a e, and recommend- springboard for a full-blown code. inctions for viola- But on April 29th, Fleming responded to the CLB recom- over a year after mendations regarding 7.02: "As you ed that the Uni- know, Bylaw 7.02 has, in practice, onsible to "ensure proven unworkable... I could not, or peaceful protest therefore, recommend approval of to "prevent protest this statement... it is pointless to ed by illegitimate rely upon (7.02) for resolving any new draft actually problems." As per Fleming's re- e "prompt estab- quest, the board deleted reference to ffective judiciary 7.02 and made its final recom- cate violations of mendations to the regents. ech and artistic THE SINS OF THE WOLF versity activities." The Frozen Rime of Judas, Brutus, it that this draft and Cassius. ame time that Dan At the June regents meeting, in versity attorney, response to a pre-graduation protest attending CLB of Jean Kirkpatrick's honorary de- y swept over some gree, Deane Baker asked Fleming to hey watched their make recommendations for control- cloaked in the first ling disruptions on campus. The n. And Hell's black stage was set for the final betrayal. eir sharp teeth at Fleming proposed a package using de. the CLB guidelines on free speech 8, students reeled and protest as a springboard for he regs of damna- suspending bylaw 7.02, recom- phorn clause" was mending a code be established under ent CLB members bylaw 2.01, and deputizing secu- a reference to by- rity., Whatstudents feared all along came true; the same document intended to stop the University's abuse of power had now solidified their power even more. Students had been led through the slimy levels of hell; comforted all the way in that "these guidelines are better than the '77 document." In the end, though, hell is hell. But it's not the end. The seeds of student protest are growing, not dying. Jim Duderstadt's dilemma is clear: he fears student protest and wants a code to deal with campus unrest; but by instituting a code, the University guarantees inciting more protest. For Duderstadt, the end is that he now has both judicial (a code) and military (deputized se- re now curity) force behind him. For stu- ministration. dents, this is just the beginning. GREGORY FOX/Agenda Ann Arbor police remove protesters during a filming of the Today Show on campus in fall, 1985. Protests, such as this January 1988 sit-in, a subject to civil rights violations by the ad