ON CAMPUS OPINION 'Palestin e ctives on The HIGHEST Money Market Rate Among Major Financial Institutions in the Detroit Metropolitan Area for ,666oeY •-• ' :l wi':::. th7 :: '... .-- '' '''' ,,, , lika r...d. ,7"&Y':tl PerSP e fa, 'd ;CZ ,ulatio n.. b.:, .,11,, Traa'raula ,,, reaches at 7,,,,..01:t ‘,„aaarma6Y6 ,..,666 the „ram. ,a, a _ dya :,:..:.... :( 4 Z ,sraeli Oar._ on ,.. . ::t .71:...771 ,,,,a;o.ftrtt-, }s a nab. ....2.14,:sca... _., ...1 rj .1-7.,a, partica. , ,,,,yay ::: ca ved hi, ,..?":1". ...;,,::: .. ,. ,..., .6 a.. ,‘ :,,,as ,,.,,a .,,, .::. 1: .c., , ...:;.=, a 1 rra. rtICIS = ,,„„,661 6 24, rsirl, u,,,dat so ..--. . COMO 258 ...... , noj T-i3O7 ,1 ,,, . . 04-,-; ai Consecutive Weeks Pase Franklin Savings 8.00 National Bank of Detroit 7.40 Manufacturers 7.00 Comerica 7.00 Michigan National of Detroit 6.70 Standard Federal 6.50 First Federal of Michigan 6.50 First Federal Savings Bank & Trust 6.30 First of America 6.30 `Based on S10,000 deposit. Some minimum deposit requirements may he lower. Higher rates may be available for larger deposits. Looking for a Tax Break? Call us about a Home Equity Loan. With: v No Costs v No Annual Fee V Free Home Appraisal v 80% of Home Value 358-5170 Fri SAVINGS Ask About Our Other Full Service Products 26336 Twelve Mile Rd. • Southfield (313) 358.5170 20247 Mack Avenue • Grosse Pointe Woods (Between 7 & 8 Mile Roads) CQUAL HOUSING OPFORTUAarY c- 0, 04 (313) 881-5200 . Partiees Galore! Complete Party Planning .0 • Bat Mitzvahs • Bar Mitzvahs • Weddings • Anniversaries Call Parties Galore: 855-8801 18 FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1989 taYucalaradin«iiig. te„isZnadczonist , Z . ' ecks follow- 0 sbai‘ 0, - 7, Prc:cYr'' P INTEREST RATES AS OF: 3-1-89 MONEY MARKET RATES' es 103 jol. a anatinn :it Va' a, teHh , :z . : : . . ..„ ,,,,,, ..,,,,:: A.. ‘ ,.1 Ori° th 'eee „:„,: C 0.,. __ , 4 ,.. . 7 ....c. .6' lr. : : :: , see. wbo. w ."."---,c re... it. ,,,,,,,,,,1041 ' „... body of 660.1.1 9 • up in the alr - INSTANT LIQUIDITY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS imDOtuoi He poi gip; ,;( °L g.... so :s IldW far as rttal wbere terconst scGuaas.:111e days : c'--" ,... . t _ 0, ,,,, ,,%, • ,,,, ,,,,,,:: ., ,„,,h,.._.‘ry......°Y7'te ... s .i , -,.. ti "7 ''' , ,,,caed6.1 1.hc"' .166- 0." r., Isreal•N.''' . ra -- ri .. s. g: . :-` : ::dit7 ' _:.1::: i l y: ...: cr.:,,, inv aa."" mr,vim ,. , , pave. — . 064. —4. eo,,,,,,,,.10..,. 0, .... f,61 00 .. Feb. was in editorial suggested u Israel volved in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. Students Ponder Aftermath Of Michigan Daily Incident ELIZABETH KAPLAN Features Editor B radley Kurtzberg seems anything but the student rebel. Like other students' apart- ments, his is filled with bot- tles of Mountain Dew, notebooks with papers in disarray and a black phone in perpetual use. A senior from Dix Hills in Long Island, N.Y., Kurtzberg is mainly concerned with graduate school these days. Yet Kurtzberg recently started a revolution of sorts at the University of Michigan. With five other Jewish students, Kurtzberg fought against what he calls anti- Semitic editorials in the stu- dent newspaper, The Michigan Daily. Among his protests, he organized a demonstration outside the offices of The Dai- ly. He also helped coordinate a meeting last week between Jewish students and the newspaper staff. The protests followed a series of editorials that equate Zionism with racism and accuse Israel of bringing Ethiopian Jews to the Jewish state to displace Palestinians. Participants agree the talks were positive. Daily Editor-in-Chief Adam Schrager says he now better understands the issue. An up- coming story in The Daily will discuss the difference bet- ween anti-Semitism and anti- Zionism. And, Schrager says, the paper plans to make a distinction between Zionism in general and practices of a particular Israeli administration. The paper will continue to be pro-Palestinian, but Schrager says The Daily will be more sensitive to the issues. Some Jewish students, like Kurtzberg, are optimistic that changes soon will take place at the paper. He'll be wat- ching carefully. So will Laura Cibul, a founding member of the pro- Israel student group, Tagar: A junior from Chicago, Cibul is worried that the paper may already have influenced the university community. Students are often isolated from the rest of the world, she says. "The only source of in- formation may be that one paper — and that's detrimen- tal, especially when all we learn from it is that Israel is evil and oppressive." Both Kurtzberg and Cibul wonder why this is happening at U-M and at a paper with a largely Jewish staff. They say it's a clear case of anti- Semitism, and they don't understand why everyone doesn't see such an obvious bias. S tudies by Arab student groups show that The Daily has been con- sistantly pro-Palestinian for the past several years. But it was a November piece that sparked Kurtzberg to action. The editorial, written in response to the Knesset ban on Rabbi Meir Kahane's Kach Party, equated Zionism with racism. Kurtzberg discussed the issue with several Jewish faculty members and met with other Jewish students also disturbed by The Daily's editorials. Eventually, they formed a core group of six students. They met in November with members of The Daily staff, but Kurtzberg says the talks were not productive. Meanwhile, The Daily con- tinued to run editorials that many Jewish students found offensive. A Jan. 23 editorial, "Ethio- pians Exploited," said that "mass immigration of Ethio- pian Jews to Israel, at this juncture, is but a ruse disguis- ed as humanitarianism, to provide more occupiers of Palestinian land." A Daily editorial on Feb. 14 suggested Israel might be behind the Dec. 21 explosion aboard Pan American Flight 103. "If the Mossad (Israeli equivalent of the CIA) or other Israelis were indeed responsible for the crash, the reasons for South African Foreign Minister, Pik Botha, (a close Israeli ally), and a group of Hassidic Jews cancelling their reservations of flight 103 at the last mo- ment, may be understood." The Feb. 14 editorial "went beyond politics," Kurtzberg says. "It was an attack on the Jewish people." It prompted Kuitzberg to organize a demonstration out- side The Daily office. He gave speeches, hung posters and spoke to fraternities and sororities to encourage participation. He also contacted the The New York Times. A Detroit- based Times reporter covered the event. About 200 students par- ticipated in the Feb. 21 demonstration. They carried signs saying "Stop Jew- Baiting" and "Daily Editorials Slander Jews." A number of Arab students say the editorials are pro- Palestinian, not anti-Semitic. The Arabs say the editorials have sparked much- needed dialogue about the Middle East. Such talks, they add, will ultimately bring good. Hilary Shadroui is a member of the Palestine Solidarity Committee and a writer for The Michigan Dai- ly's opinion page. Of Lebanese descent and rarely seen without a kaffiyah, she is working toward a Ph.D. in modern Middle East history. Shadroui says the issue is not anti-Semitism, but free speech. She believes Jewish