Page 4-Saturday, October 13; 1979-The Michigan Daily I No such thing as a moderate: 3dan ~aiI Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 33 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The hushed voice of K k a 0 Palestinians in the U.S. The Florida caucuses: Much ado about nothing THE FOUNDING fathers, when they were drafting a constitution for the newly-independent nations in Philadelphia in 1783, never envisioned that their carefully-devised system of allowing the nation's elite to elect the president would, by 1979, degenerate into a system where delegates to a Florida state convention can make or break candidates a year before the ac- tual presidential election. .With the rise of the importance of the media in American politics, projecting the image of a "winner" early on has become tantamount to election, and indeed much more relevant than the insignificent details of a candidate's ipsue positions and accountability. Thus we have the draft-Kennedy forces and the re-elect Carter forces spending millions of dollars and hours of time in Florida in preparation for today's Democratic party caucus meetings. Not that those meetings mean anything to the selection of delegates to the 1980 Democratic National Con- vention in New York. Rather,, today's caucuses will be selecting delegates to the November 17 Florida state conven- tion, and that convention a month away is - scheduled to take a meaningless straw vote of those in at- tendance on whether they prefer Ken- nedy or Carter in 1980. The trivality of the candidates forays into Florida becomes all the more evident considering that neither Carter nor Kennedy considers the Florida straw vote important at all-at least not publically. Senator Kennedy has a built-in advantage, since the Kennedy organizations in Florida are theoretically independent, not af- filiated with Kennedy, not taking clues from the candidate. That logic, however, is something like saying the r* f C Tb All CIO is not affiliated with the AFL, or that Fidel Castro doesn't take cues from the Soviet Politburo. But for Kennedy at least, he has the best of both worlds-if he loses in Florida, he can say it doesn't matter at all since its only a straw vote and he doesn't even have an organization there. If he wins, however, rest assured the senator will be calling it a momentous victory. The president, meanwhile, has in- dicated through his press secretary that he, like Kennedy, thinks the Florida caucus is the meaningless, in- significant gathering of unimportant, insignificant apeople that it really is. However, Carter has been directly challenged in Florida by the "unaf- filiated" Kennedy operatives there, so he must either respond to the challenge and drain valuables funds from future battles, or he can acknowledge Florida as unimportant, and take the risk of an upset. In all, the great Carter/Kennedy bat- -tle for Florida rates as one of the greatest non-events since the 1976 vice- presidential candidates debate. Not only will nothing be resolved, but the entire costly affair will serve only as ego gratification for the candidates. themselves, and perhaps for the han- dful of political pundits who will find some kind of self-serving importance in being the first to declare either can- didate as a lost cause four months before the first real primary election for delegates to the national conven- tion. For the voter, the entire farcical spector of candidates spending millions on a beauty contest in Florida in November 1979 must only add to the loss of credibility in American political institutions, and the general sense of apathy that has pervaded American elections in the last few decades. SAN FRANCISCO-One year ago, a group of prominent Palestinians met in a solemn conclave at a secret location in San Francisco. The Camp David accords between Egypt and Israel had just been signed and these militant supporters of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) were plan- ning a strategy to demonstrate to the U.S. their unanimous rejec- tion of the treaty. With great solemnity, they con- sidered what was fbr them a dring suggestion: THEY WOULD send a jointly signed telegram to President Carter announcing their op- position. The telegram was never gent. After hours of debate over' the risks and benefits of such. an outlandish action, it was decided it was too dangerous for Palestinians living in the country that is Israel's closestaally. These same Palestinian leaders, who represent some 8,000 Palestinians living in San Francisco (the second largest enclave in the U.S., next to Detroit), are nonetheless openly committed to Yasser Arafat, and to the PLO as their legitimate representative. THE MILITARY of their politics toward Israel and the ut- ter timidity . of their actual political action here in the United States is one of the more in- triguing characteristics of the large and growing community of Palestinians in America. But no one should be deceived into thinking that Palestinian rhetoric about Israel is only skin- deep, or that it does not represent the vast majority of ordinary Palestinians in this country. Af- ter interviews with scores of Palestinians in the tightly-knit San Francisco community, this reporter failed to find a single Palestinian who did not support Arafat as the true representative of the Palestinian people, and who did not demonstrate that support with generous cash con- tributions. The degree of commitment to Arafat found among Palestinians here must call into question one of the principal assumptions un- derlying U.S. policy toward the Israeli-Palestinian dispute: the existence of "moderate" Palestinians. IF ONLY THESE moderates would come forth, say Israeli and U.S. policy makers, we could reason with them and arrive at a just solution, for they are the true representatives of the Palestinian people. But the reason they do not come forth, says virtually every Palestinian here, is that they do not exist; they are either a figment of Israel's imagination or a myth constructed to influen- ce Western opinion. Wafa Darwazeh, a Palestinian who produces an Arabic language radio show in San Francisco, explains matter-of- factly, 'The PLO represents all Palestinians from all walks of life. It is just like a government- in-exile." "THERE ARE 105 countries in the world that have recognized the PLO as the only legal legitimate representative of the Palestinians. If all those Islamic, African, and Third World coun- tries, plus some European coun- tries, have recognized that the PLO represents us, -who is trying to change the facts?~The PLO is our legitimate representative, whethr America wants it or not, whether Israel wants it or not." A congress of major Palestinian - American organiza- tions declared its "unconditional support" for the PLO in New. York in December 1978. William Gedeon, a Palestinian lawyer By Wanda J. MacClarin the feelings of others in his com- munity when he says, "The guerrillas might be terrorist to Begin, but to us they are freedom fighters." Such is the common at, titude expressed by Palestinians here. Even those who don't support attacks on civilians believe Americans are biased in their condemnation of such attacks. Ibrahim Tawasha, the owner of an import-export firm, says, "I have always abhorred and con- demned violence, but I want the same standards applied to the Israeli government as are ap- "But the reason they do not come forth, says virtually every. Palestinian here, is that they do not exist; they are either a fig- ment of Israel's imagination or a myth constructed to influence Western opinion. " who attended the congress, believes it was an event of major significance, but he says it was ignored or downplayed by the American press. San Francisco's Palestinians say they silently supported the PLO when they lived on the West Bank, but they were afraid for themselves and their families to say so publicly. It is only in the freer political climate of the United States that they feel secure enough to declare their allegiance. IN SAN FRANCISCO, a clear majority of Palestinians freely and openly supports Al-Fatah, the largest political faction within the PLO. Al-Fatah, a nationalist and non-communist group, coordinates attacks on Israeli targets, but it has con- demned generalized acts of terror, especially those directed at targets outside Israel. Since Al-Fatah is the majority party within the PLO, its leader Yasser Arafat is also the chairman of the. PLO as a whole. The' small minority of Palestinian Marxists in San Francisco who belong to the PLO's fringe groups are primarily the young and the well- educated. They are often studen- ts who appear to be campus revolutionaries only, despite their verbal militance. In their determination to win back all of Palestine, San Fran- cisco's Palestinians are almost unanimous in their approval of guerrilla attacks on Israeli military targets. One former guerrilla now in San Francisco says he attacked an oil refinery, Israeli army pesonnel and vehicles on his raids into Israel, but the attacks were never repor- ted in the press. WAFA DARWAZEH sums up plied to Palestinian terrorists." When Palestinians kill women and children, says Tawasha, they are called terrorists, but when the Israelis bomb refugee cam- pus, killing women and children there, they are said to be bom- bing "terrorist strongholds." MANY OF THE Palestinians here have no difficulty rationalizing guerrilla attacks on Israeli civilians, or even foreign tourists in Israel. "If the Israelis can't walk the streets without fear, then it's worth it-not to give them the ability to live and enjoy living while we. can't," said a man who claimed to be a former "fedayeen," or freedom fighter., They also argue that there are no civilians in Israel, because a high percentage of the Isreali population can be mobilied for war. Such attitudes spring from a deep emotionalism toward Palestine that few Americans could understand. Many of the emigres here were living in their own Arab villages on the West Bank until only a short time ago. The older Palestinians vividly remember that in Palestine only 31 years ago the Arab population was almost twice as large asthe Jewish population. They have an intense desire to reclaim the land they fled, or were expelled from, in 1948. Said one prominent Palestinian who left his hometown of Nablus in 1954, "There is a Palestinian saying: "It is better to have a hut in Palestine than a palace in a foreign land.' I have been here 25 years. Get me a piece of land to call my own, to carry, a passport of it, and I'll be goddamned if I don't leave here within seven days. Not for hatred of the United States. But I want something to call my own. w YET DESPITE the nostalgic* passion and the political militan- cy, the Palestinians in the United States have developed almost no ability to organize a pressure or lobby group. Collecting money for the PLO is almost the only organized: political action they engage in: hee: Community leaders say: $100,000 a year is collected in San Francisco alone for the PLO. Many think it is illegal to con- tribute to the PLO, and are con- sequently reluctant to admit they contribute. Others are proud of the size of their donations-one man says he gives $1,500 a year, anothr says he gives $4,000 a year. (It js legal to donate,- collect, and send the money, just as it is legal to buy Israeli bonds: or- contribute to the Irish Republican Army) Because of the widspread belief that it is illegal, all of th money is collected in cash: Special fund-raising events o parties are held, or a group i$ delegated to visit Palestinians at their businesses and ask for con tributions. There is tremendous community pressure to give, Almost everyone who is asked willl buy a ticket to a party, evert if he does not plan to attend. The cash is exchanged several times a year for a cashier's check, which is hand-carried to BeiruĀ± or Damascus by different people who are traveling there on other business. No accounting at all is made to the community of where or when or how the money is sent. "It is all based on trust. If you do not trust your own people, you do not trust yourself," says one community leader, Tawfiq Morrar. The Palestinians have limited their organized political activity to fundraising for many reasons. They regard with astonishment and appreciation the degree of political freedom that exists in the United States, but they do not know how to use the American political system. The Arab men- tality, says William Gedeon, a Palestinian lawyer, is: "If our cause is just, why should we have to advertise it? God knows we're right. We are the refugees. We are the ones who were kicked out." This, for the most part, they confine their political expression to clubs where they can fume to each 6ther, but make almost no effort to influence American public opinion. Wanda MacClarin, a San Francisco freelance journalist, spent six months interviewing members of the city's Palestin- ian community in preparation for a Master's Thesis at the University of California's School of Journalism. She wrote this piece for the Pacific- News Service. Letters to TheL % 0 jr r T E MILWAUKEE JOURNAL 'Yes, you might say they're heading for Disney World.' To the Daily: I have just returned from a five-hour frozen vigil to buy tickets for the Grateful Dead concert at Chrysler (sic) Arena. Once again my wait was in vain as the Office of Major Events in- stigated its "screw you" policy of allowing people to buy an unlimited number of tickets off the floor section. As a result, people who stood in line for hours were forced to stand by as newcomers went to the front of the line to give others money to buy their tickets, and scalpers walked off with the primo seats. This is by no means the first time this has happened. It is a consistent practice of an organization that has no qualms about screwing the consumer if it results in a reduction of their distribution costs. The University UP about his little tiff with Bo. To mention it once-maybe even twice-is understandable. But further talk about this minor shoving incident is not worth Daily readers' time. By drawing undue attention to himself as the "underdog" in this petty affair, Perrin appears to be enjoying a fair amount of ego gratification. Fortunately, there's a differen- ce between getting attention and being recognized as a respon- sible, interesting sports writer. -Linda Tanzini To the Daily: Last Saturday Mediatrics films played the thriller Sleuth in Nat. Sci. Auditorium. In addition to that, the audience got more than what it thought it was paying for. Mediatrics threw in a for an eternity. The audience had not shown up to see an X film, and under no circumstances should it have been shown. Those who wish to see sexually explicit footage, will pay to do so, no objection there, but those who don't want to shouldn't have to. I will also add that I was fur- ther angered by Mediatrics choice of film at all. The "sneak preview" they showed included part of a rape scene. Violence against women should not be por- trayed as entertainment, serving only to continue that violence. Pornography is not the same as sexually explicit material. -Ellen L. Prokopow To the Daily: Few weapons programs have 'any class to spend tens of billions of dollars to build means of destruc- tion while ignoring this country's pressing social needs. Socialist Labor Party alorng with millions of working people deplore this action. This is not just a case of misplaced priorities by a few. misguided politicians. Quite the contrary. The project is clearly dictated by the profit in- terests that are part and parcel of capitalism. Among the beneficiaries of this military boondoggle will be some of the leading lights of monopoly capital. Martin Marietta Coro., Boeing, Avco, General Tire and Rubber, Northrop Corp., General Electlric and Rockwell Inter- national, all in hot pursuit of the "obscene" profits that will ensue from the construction of these ol be Michigan Bttilg EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner ............................ EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard Berke, Julie Rovuer..........MANAGING EIDITORS Michael Arkush, Keith Richburg .....EDITORIAL -DIRECTORS Brian Blanchard ........................ UNIVERSITY EDITOR Judy Rakowsky .................................. CITY EDITOR Shelley Wolson ....................... PERSONNEL DIRECTOR Amy Saltzman ............................ FEATURES EDITOR Leonard Bernstein ........................ SPECIAL PROJECTS SPORTS STAFF GEOFF LARCOM.........................Sports Editor BILLY SAHN...................... Executive Sports Editor BILLY NEFF ..........................Managing Sports Editor DAN PERRIN ........................ Managing Sports Editor PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF MAUREEN O'MALLEY .................. Chief Photographer JIM KRUZ ................................. Staff Photographer