I DETROIT ewish Community Council Campus Issues Survey The Task Force on College-Related Issues is dedicated to helping Jewish students cope with the rising tide of anti- Semitism and anti-Israel propaganda on Michigan's college campuses. We would greatly appreciate your taking a few minutes to complete this questionnaire, so that we may have input into the issues our Jewish students are facing. When complete, please mail to: Campus Issues Survey Jewish Community Council 163 Madison Detroit, Michigan 48226 Do you know any Jewish college students enrolled on Michigan campuses? If yes, which campus? Does he/she live on campus? Has he/she brought to your attention any problems he/she is having on campus associated with being Jewish? Please describe. Is he/she encountering any problems as they relate to Israel? Please describe. Would you like to be sent information which could be of help to this student? If so, please complete the section below. Name Address Phone - Thank you for your input. ,c1)/ Silberg Loebl, Chairperson tuv REURABFR.2U9Q(1 Howard I. Wallach, Co Chairperson - Students Get Tips On Fighting Bias SUSAN GRANT Staff Writer ith reports of in- creases of anti- Semitism on college campuses around the coun- try, Jewish students must deal with more than just the pressure of getting good grades. . Fifty-one incidents of anti- Semitism have been re- ported on campuses during 1989, including three in Michigan, said Dr. Jeffrey Ross, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith direc- tor of campus affairs That's a jump from the six reported incidents in 1984 and the 38 cited in 1988, he said. Speaking to more than 100 parents, students and com- munity leaders Sunday night at Temple Emanu-El, Dr. Ross gave advice on how to combat the increasing tide of anti-Israel propaganda on college campuses. The incidents range from letters and cartoons con- demning Zionism to edito- rials in the University of Michigan's student news- paper, the Michigan Daily, insinuating that Israel was responsible for the bombing of Pam Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. In the larger Jewish com- munity, anti-Israel groups are perceived as a fringe element, Dr. Ross said. However, on campuses around the country anti- Israel groups are perceived as a larger majority in part because the moderate posi- tion on campus is a two-state solution, he said. The argument runs "that the Palestinians have a just cause. The PLO (Palestinian Liberation Organization) is a legitimate representative. The only compromise is a Palestinian state run by Pa- lestinians," he said. Although anti-Zionist groups are spreading their literature, the real threat to Jewish identity comes from Jewish students, Dr. Ross said. "The greatest threat to Jews is not anti-Semitism, but apathy and ignorance," he said. "The big problem is not external, but internal. We cannot expect people who don't know how to translate the Shema to face questions about Israel." Larry Seegull, president of the Hillel student board at Michigan State University, said he is unhappy when speakers like Nation of Islam leader Rev. Louis Far- rakhan visit the campus or when classes begin on Rosh Hashanah. But, he said, ex- ternal threats have a way of uniting Jewish students. "When Farrakhan spoke (last February) there was an outpouring of Jewish sup- port," Mr. Seegull said. "The big problem is assimilated Jews and apathy. Students are losing their Jewishness faster than any anti-Semite can take it away." Sharon Goldstein, a- senior at Wayne State University, said while Jewish programs in both college and high school are expected to in- crease the sense of Jewish identity, parents have to be involved. "If you as parents don't start preparing kids before they get to college, if you don't teach it at home, the "The greatest threat to Jews is not anti-Semitism, but apathy and ignorance." Jeffrey Ross facility can't do it for you," said Ms. Goldstein, presi- dent of the WSU's Zionist Student Organization and the Michigan Alliance of Students for Israel (MASI). Jewish student groups, in- cluding Hillel and MASI, are trying to combat anti-Zionist propaganda and Jewish apathy. At Michigan State, Hillel is trying to reach out to the school's estimated 400 Jew- ish students with moderate success, Mr. Seegull said. On the University of Mich- igan campus, groups like Taga•, which monitors the Michigan Daily for inac- curacies about Israel and has planted a tree in Israel for each mistake, also strive to reach students. Mr. Ross urged Jewish groups to work with admin- istrators to sensitize them to Jewish needs, concerns and values and use ADL study guides to prepare incoming freshmen for campus anti- Semitism. Jewish groups should not be on the defensive when an- swering anti-Zionist attacks, Mr. Ross said. Instead of