UWR. UNIVEQ6AL WATCH REPAIR • Seiko • Pulsar • Bulova • Citizen • Longines • Wittnauer you must comR in and it to it THOUSANDS OF NEW WATCHES FOR SALE! Starting at $2000 810-358-2211 28411 Northwestern Hwy. at Beck Rd. Suite 250 • Southfield SALE cn LU C/) LU CC F- LU C:1 LU 60 JAMES D. BESSER WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT C alifornia often leads the nation in fad and fashion. And with voters across the country turning to polling booths to vent a raging, un- focused anger, Californians may be aheactof the political curve, as well. This possibility may be omi- nous news for the Jewish com- munity. On Nov. 8, California voters resoundingly passed Proposition 187, a ballot initia- tive that will deny basic health and educational services to ille- gal immigrants and their chil- dren. That vote is part of a broader trend that is legitimiz- ing the politics of scapegoating — a shrill alarm signal to other vulnerable minorities. In California and other states, illegal immigration and the re- sulting burdens on government agencies are serious matters. But the pro-187 fight went far beyond the debate over how best to con- a very divisive campaign, one that manipulated fears and anxieties that were compounded by our economic problems. Any time you unleash that kind of fear of the stranger, everybody is swept in." That atmosphere of near-hys- teria has become particularly evident to Mark Slavkin in recent days. Mr. Slavkin, president of the Los Angeles Board of Educa- tion, is the target of a recall effort because his agency joined hun- dreds of other California school boards that filed a legal challenge to Proposition 187. That action resulted in a restraining order blocking the act's education provisions. "Maybe it's just a coincidence that they chose me, a Jew, as a target of recall," he said of the ef- fort to force his ouster. "But Jews have a real reason to be con- cerned. The mind-set, the passion and, often, the hysteria of this re" 12 Mile Road Beck Road 696 F...,sAtimS.-Mal. ONLY • ROBES/SUPPERS • SLEEPWEAR • ON-THE-GO-WEAR • • BRAS/PANTIES • PETTICOATS/TEDDIES • o- 4 Does the new California law portend degrading of other minorities? Retail Value $150-$350 30% OFF (prior purchases excluded) Prop. 187 & The Politics Of Anger Ras Intimate A Applegate Square Northwestern Highway & Inkster Road 353-5522 Hours: M-S 10-5:30, THURSDAY 10-8, SUNDAY 1 2-5 trol our borders and parcel out expensive services in an era of budgetary austerity. "The campaign was devastat- ing," said Betty Reuben, Califor- nia state public affairs chair for the National Council of Jewish Women, a group that fought hard against the initiative. "Some of the ads," she said, "portrayed people rushing over the border, as if they were in- vading. A lot of publicity focused on immigrants in general, not just on illegal immigrants. It was remind us of similar things in the past, when constitutional guar- antees have been trampled in the name of the will of the people." Seen by itself, Proposition 187 is just another example of Cali- fornia's peculiar system of voter initiatives. But the mean- spirited vote did not occur in a vacuum. Instead, it was an ex- pression of a growing tendency to seek out vulnerable groups on which to vent voters' collective feelings of anger and frustration. Focus group studies in Cali-