ANN ARBOR FOR A BRIGHT OUTLOOK FOR THE HOLIDAYS Competing for attention on the Diag are an Arab Student League display and Tagar's burning "school bus." Highlight the beauty of your rooms with the right chandelier, pendant, torchier or lamp. STOREWIDE SALE SAVINGS UP TO 30% =L. W Fast In Fashion Llghttrg 28801 Orchard Lake Rd., Farmington Hills, MI (313) 553-8540 DA•Y 40% to 75% OFF •ENTIRE INVENTORY• NO CREDIT CARDS • ALL SALES FINAL • SFECIAL ORDERS & PREVIOUS PURCHASES NOT INCLUDED • SALE STARTS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28.1988 Ic\z/e Ce THE ULTIMATE IN WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES La Mirage • 29555 Northwestern Hwy. Southfield, MI 48034 • (313)356-8870 98 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1988 SUSAN LUDMER-GLIEBE Special to The Jewish News ORCHARD LIGHTING CENTER 0 °L • Tensions In The Middle East Add Heat To U-M's Diag hen tensions rise in the Middle East they seem to heat up as well in the Midwest, especially at the University of Michigan. "I think that on this campus, which is fairly political, politics aren't han- dled productively, especially on this (the Arab-Israeli) issue," said Libby Adler, 21, a political science major from Rochester, N.Y. "There are tensions on cam- pus. Some things are threat- ening to Jewish students and at the same time other things are offensive to Arab stu- dents," said Adler. . In the past month alone, U-M has been the scene of a demonstration where the Israeli government has been compared to the Nazis; charges and counter-charges of anti-Semitism and racism have been traded; acerbic written exchanges have ap- peared in the Michigan Dai- ly; and name calling has become common. "Things are dichotomized," said Adler. The most recent incident reflecting the charged cam- pus climate occurred Nov. 14, when the right-of-center Israeli student group Tagar ("The Spirit of the Challenge") erected a wooden school bus on the U-M Diag commemorating the Oct. 30 bus attack that killed an Israeli woman and her three children. Tagar had original- ly painted a slogan on the bus that read: "Stop Arab Ter- rorism." "The reason we used the word (Arab) was for political reasons. It's not just Palesti- nians who oppose Israel," ex- plained Tagar president Keith Hope. "It's like the term Arab-Israeli conflict." But the phrase became a rallying point. It was con- sidered offensive and racist by a number of students and two . formal complaints against Tagar were filed with the university, charging discriminatory harassment against Arab and Arab- American students. The slogan was subsequent- ly painted over. It now says "Stop All Terrorism," and the suits have been ruled moot because the Diag is a free speech area. "I have no jurid- siction over the Diag," ex- plains Cynthia Straub, in- terim student policy ad- ministrator who handles the student discriminatory harassment policy. "But I spoke to the president of Tagar and the words were changed and an apology was issued in The Daily." That was not the end of the affair. Several student groups asked the Michigan Student Assembly to pass a resolution condemning Tagar and to withdraw MSA recognition. It would mean, among other things, a loss of funding and campus privileges. Tagar is one of several formally- recognized Jewish student organizations involved with issues affecting Israel. On Nov. 22, the MSA made four requests of Tagar. "We want them to show that they're sincere about their apologies," said Michael Phillips, MSA president. Ac- cording to Phillips, Tagar members were asked to at- tend a racism workshop by an Arab MSA representative; to take down the bus; to apologize officially in writing in The Daily, The Record and the Ann Arbor News; and to participate in a bucket drive to collect funds that would go to the minority affairs office on campus. "We're not doing it," said Laura Cibul, who's been with Tagar for the past three years. "We apologized in The Daily; we submitted a formal apology to the MSA before they asked for it. And the bus isn't coming down; the bus isn't moving." Keith Hope added that whatever Tagar does will not be sufficient. "We're still called racist," he said. "I think that the Arab students hate the pro-Israel students. You can feel it; you can see it in their eyes." A number of faculty and students felt that the MSA, acutely attuned to racism pro- blems, was caught in the mid-