..illifir001110101 191010miwomp.. I N.1 44 11i1N.. UP FRONT Sandy Levin Feeling The Heat ■ - Of State-Wide Reapportionment KIMBERLY LI FTON Staff Writer S o - • ander Levin doesn't like to talk about redistricting — not to the media, not to his friends and not to anyone else. He's got good reason: The U.S. representative from Southfield is uneasy with the many questions coming his way about his political destiny. The five-term House veteran represents the 17th Congressional District — one that political watchdogs say will be deeply affected by reapportionment. The state must scrap two of its 18 House seats because Mich- igan did not grow in popula- tion as much as other states in the last decade. "I'm under pressure, there is no doubt about that," says Mr. Levin, a Democrat. "I will try to persuade people that it is important that I return to Congress. I am try- ing to be as effective as I can in Congress." Line-drawing begins this fall in Michigan. Redistric- ting will go into effect for the January 1993 session. On Monday, the state Special Committee on Congressional Redistricting will hold its first public forum for consti- tuents in Detroit and neighboring communities at 11 a.m. at the Henry Ford Library in Dearborn. Also on Monday, the 1990 U.S. census figures will be finalized. Some political pundits speculate that Michigan will lose two Democratic seats As a non-black Democrat with less seniority, Mr. Levin may be vulnerable. - . because of population losses and political pressure. Others say a state with a Republican governor and a split delegation in its two state houses normally translates into the loss of one Republican and one Democratic seat. Most expect the battle over boundaries to be fierce, with the final districts drawn by the courts. The issue will land on court dockets if the state House — controlled by Democrats — and the Senate — controlled by Republicans — and Gov. John Engler, a Republican, can't agree. Because of the Voting Rights Act, which prioritizes the maintenance of minority districts, the two Detroit seats held by newly elected Rep. Barbara Rose Collins, a Democrat, and Rep. John Conyers, also a Democrat, are virtually safe. These districts are, however, the two which have suffered the heaviest population losses. Political experts on Capitol Hill say the process of deduction leaves Mr. Levin as a key redistricting target. Although he has served for nearly a decade, others hold more seniority. Democrats John Dingell and William Ford are protected by seniority and their leadership roles on Capitol Hill. Mr. Dingell is chair- man of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, and Mr. Ford chairs the Ed- ucation and Labor Com- mittee. Democrat David Bonior, chief' deputy whip, is pro- tected by his leadership role. And William Broomfield, who is Republican, is the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. That leaves Mr. Levin, and Robert Carr, whose Sixth Congressman Sander Levin District spans from Lansing Yet the only sure thing to Pontiac, as possible Dem- now, Mr. Alexander says, is ocratic victims. In addition, that "everybody is talking freshman legislator David and nobody knows what will Camp, who represents the happen. It is a fun parlor massive 10th District, re- game for political junkies to mains the vulnerable play. Republican. "It is a lot of conjecture "To maintain the two seats from all of us," Mr. Alex- in Detroit, the only way to go ander says. is two Democratic districts," "Sure there is a chance the says Jim Alexander, Oak- Democrats could lose two land County's Republican seats," Mr. Levin says. chairman. "The population "There is also a chance the loss is at the southeast end Republicans could lose two — a Democratic area." seats." ROUND UP Exhibit Traces 'Degenerate Art' Chicago — In 1937, the Nazis waged an attack on modern art by mounting En- tartete Kunst, "Degenerate Art," a derisive exhibition that contained 650 art works confiscated from German museums. " 'Degenerate Art': The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany," now on view at the Art Institute of Chicago through Sept. 8, recreates Entartete Kunst, with some of the 100 pain- tings and sculpture from the original exhibition, plus films, music and literature targeted by the Nazis. The exhibit also provides an ex- amination of the historical context of the persecution of art and artists. The Entartete Kunst ex- hibition marked the culmination of the cultural purges carried out by the Nazis after they took control of Germany in 1933. Six- teen-thousand works were Ernst Kirchner's "Self-Portrait as Soldier," labeled by the Nazis as "degenerate art." confiscated from 32 public art collections; a selection were displayed and crowded into 10 rooms in the former Archaeological Institute in Munich. The exhibition was arranged by theme: works that treated religious sub- jects, works by Jewish ar- tists, abstract art and art that demonstrated African or primitive influences. Graffiti and slogans on the walls denounced the works as "decadent," "un- German" and "morally offensive." The exhibition attracted 3 million visitors before its 13-city run ended in 1941. Boirowed from 90 public and private collections throughout the world, the works in " 'Degenerate Art': The Fate of the Avant- Garde" include paintings and drawings by Marc Chagall, Oscar Kokoschka, Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee. Tickets for the Chicago exhibition are on sale at all TicketMaster outlets, or may be reserved by calling the museum, (312) 902-1500. Immigrants Show Right-Wing Stance Jerusalem — A new survey conducted among Soviet immigrants to Israel shows their decided preference for a hard-line, right-wing political stance. The survey was sponsored by the National Council of Jewish Women Research In- stitute for Innovation in Ed- ucation at the Hebrew Uni- versity of Jerusalem School of Education. It showed that 53 percent of the immigrants would vote for a new polit- ical party that represented them, rather than a veteran Israeli party. But if no such party existed, nearly half of the olim would vote for par- ties of the right, 21 percent for parties of the left, and 4 percent for religious parties. The rest were undecided. In addition to political par- ty preferences, the survey showed the immigrants' hard-line attitudes toward relinquishing territories. Three-fourths of the re- spondents said they are against trading territories for peace. Two-thirds said they would agree, at least to some extent, with the state- ment that "the whole world is against us." Domestic Violence Focus Of Brochure Washington, D.C. — More than 50 percent of women are battered at some time in their lives and nearly 66 percent of all married wo- men experience physical violence in their marriages, according to a new brochure. The brochure, "Facts About Domestic Violence," is part of BBW's effort to heighten awareness of do- mestic violence in the United States. It describes the typical victims of do- mestic violence, profiles those who batter, explains why women stay in violent homes and offers recommen- dations to help break the cy- cle of domestic abuse. For a copy of the brochure, send $1 and a self-addressed, stamped envelope to B'nai B'rith Women Central Ser- vices, 1828 L St. NW, Wash- ington, D.C. 20036. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum