Page 4-Thursday, March 29, 1979-The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Holocaust memories must never be forgotten Vol. LXXXIX, No. 142 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Court opens the way for capital punishment T HREE DAYS ago, the Supreme TCourt declined to hear the appeal df John Spenkelink, a Florida man who wyas sentenced several years ago to die in the electric chair for first-degree murder. The high court's ruling makes it very possible that Spenkelink will become the first person in the country to be executed since Gary Gilmore was killed by a Utah firing squad two years ago. While the Supreme Court's rejection of the Spenkelink case set no legal precedent that could affect the cases of 482 other men under sentence of death across the country, it should have broad implications within the six-state Jurisdiction, from Georgia to Texas, of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which had affirmed his conviction. Of the 363 in the Fifth Circuit, only Spenkelink and two others have exhausted the final stage, known as federal habeas corpus, of the three- tiered review process for state 'riminal convictions. But the ruling will make it more difficult for death- sentenced individuals to obtain habeas dorpus. Opponents of capital punishment feared that Gilmore's death in 1977 would start a flood of executions across the country. Fortunately, that hasn't Happened. But this week's court decision will raise similar fears. Despite the support of a majority of Americans, the death penalty should not be exercised in any case. It is bar- baric, it incites other murders, and it is .rreversible in cases of erroneous con- viction. aeSupporters of the death penalty most frequently cite its deterrent value as ts strongest point. Claiming to use common sense," proponents argue that the, threat of the electric chair .iaturally deters potential killers from committing the crime. Supporters point to the 1973 study conducted by rUniversity of Chicag economist Isaac Ehrlich which indicated that capital punishnmient served as an effective deterrent. But since Ehrlich's study, literally dozens of erroneous rocedures have been found in his 'analysis. Most recently, Lawrence :Klein, president of the American economic Association led a team of tesearchers that detailed many methodological and statistical pjroblems with Ehrlich's study. Brian Forst, one of Klein's colleagues and the director of a further study of his own, said, "The findings give no support to *Ae hypothesis that capital punishment eters homicide." More importantly, however, is the fact that the nation's criminal justice 4.' , I { 2 ii system should be more heavily geared toward rehabilitation than punish- ment. And capital punishment cer- tainly does not give a criminal a chan- ce to become rehabilitated. There is even some evidence that capital punishment not only fails to deter murder, but that it actually brings it about. There are often 'suicide-murder" cases, many clinically documented, of persons who wanted but feared to take their own lives and committed murder so that the state would execute them. There are imitative killings by the weak- minded, who are incited by the sen- sational publicity surrounding murder trials and sentencing. And, while there is no direct way of proving it, there are certainly murders which would never have occurred if not for the in- creasingly violent atmosphere in American society. Killing, legal or not, is a violent act, and contributes to that atmosphere. Behavioral 'psychologists have con- clusively shown that the important fac- tor in deterrence is not severity, but promptness and surety of punishment. But execution is never prompt: the Supreme Court does recognize the necessity of extensive reviews of every imposition of, the death penalty and this takes years. In the meantime, hundreds of murderers are on death row awaiting extermination. Spenkelink has only one more chan- ce to be saved from execution. Florida's governor, Bob Graham, has said he would review Sp~enkelink's case and decide within 50 days whether to grant executive clemency.- But Spenkelink was already denied clemency under the previous ad- ministration of Governor Reubin Askew. Graham should ignore that decision and grant clemency to Spenkelink so that the inhumane death penalty can be avoided. But even if clemency is granted in this case, what about the other 363 mem sentenced to death in the six- state jurisdiction of the United Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Would they also have to be granted special clemency from the governor? And is there any guarantee that they would also receive it? "As of today, there is no longer any legal barrier toathe execution of John Spenkelink," said Andrew Graham, one member of the national defense team that has been fighting the death penalty in Florida. Others may not follow, but abolishing the legal barrier to the execution of one man is a dangerous and barbaric crime. "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." This warning of George San- tayana is often used in reference to the memory of the Holocaust. To think of the Holocaust as a "memory" or as the pst" is not fully accurate. For the Holocaust. is much more than an ugly chap- ter of "past" human history. Last year's television produc- tion of "Holocaust" popularized the subject for American audien- ces. Through the experiences of a fictional family - but by no means fictional experiences - "Holocaust" portrayed for the American public the German destruction of European Jewry from 1933-1945. Whatever its drawbacks, the TV show did ser- ve as an important reminder and a primary teacher for those who never lerned about the Holocaust. BUT THE production of "Holocaust" - as with all media programs - came to an end. When the credits came on the TV screen at the end of the final episode, "Holocaust" was abrup- tly over. Many viewers returned to their normal routines recognizing the evil they had wit- nessed but left with a feeling of catharsis because the evil had come to an end. Their lives were not really touched because their impression of the Holocaust was that itwas an ugly event of the past, just like the TV show. But the Holocaust was not merely an isolated historical event.Recent showings of the American production of "Holocaust" in West Germany were received with hostility by many German individuals and ,. groups. Neo-Nazi groups threatened many of the television stations that aired the program and actually bomber others. The growing strength of such organizations in recent years not only in Germany but in the United States alarms us that Nazism is not a phenomenon of the past. There are those today who seek to finish Hitler's work. To. dismiss this fact is not only short-sighted but blasphemous. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS And yet next year the Statute of Limitations for prosecuting Nazi war criminals is set to go into ef- fect in Germany. So few of the murderers responsible for the destruction of six million Jews and others during the Nazi regime have ever been brought to . justice. Unless the West German Government responds to world opinion, these criminals, guilty of the most bestial acts, will be free By Jeffrey Colman of any calls to justice. It is bad enough that the postwar world abandoned its promise to pursue these criminals to all ends of the earth. It is unforgiveable that soon the past will be pushed even further behind and that it will be impossible to bring the guilty to face judgment. ANTI-ZIONISM IN 1970's THE NAZIS ARE not the only ones today who threaten to fulfill Hitler's work. One need not only listen to the constant anti- Jewish remarks emanating from what former Israeli Ambassador linked to Jewish history, both past and contemporary. For the Holocaust was the culmination (though not the finale) of cen- turies of anti-Semitism and anti- Judaism. The crime Hitler executed had been contemplated for years and years. That's why the world let him do it! JUST AS THE Holocaust can- not be separated from the past, it cannot be separated from the present. When President Jimmy Carter visited Israel recently, he was taken to the Yad Vashem Memorial for the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust, as was President Anwar Sadat ''The gro wing strength of such organizations in recen t years not only in Germany but in the United States alarms us that Nazism is not a phenomenon of the past. There are those today who seek to finish Hitler's work. To dismiss this fact is not only short-sighted but blasphemous. " happen again. We un- derestimated humanity's poten- tial for evil and destruction even as we witness countless genocides in the "post-Holocaust world." WE KNOW TOO little about how the world let Hitler institute his "final solution" to the Jewish problem. Because we do not know-or because we prefer to forget what we distastefully know - we fail to prevent (and ac- tually encourage) future oc- currences. We do not know enough about the complacency of the Church which hardly did more than watch as European Jewry was destroyed. We do not know enough about how little the United States did to save Jews, even with full knowledge of the concentration camps. Not only are we unfamiliar with the history, but we do not know enough about the personal side of the Holocaust. We do not know enough about personal ex- periences. We do not know enough about individual acts of heroism and even artistic ex- pression that occurred in the midst of darkness. "A Glimpse Into Darkness: A Conference on the Holocaust" at the University from Sunday, April 1 to Tuesday, April 3 will explore all these subjects. The program of the Conference is mixed to include many perspec- tives: historical, Jewish theological, Christian and per- sonal. Three highly acclaimed scholars- Emil Fackenheim, Rev. John Pawlikowski and Henry Feingold - will be featured speakers at the Con- ference. On Sunday evening, a Multimedia Program will ex- plore the Holocaust through ar- tistic expression and the personal experiences of two Holocaust survivors. Passive remembrance of the Holocaustrwill not prevent the "past" from being repeated. Only an active commitment during one's life not to allow Hitler's successors to succeed is sufficient. The primary obligation of such a commitment is to teach others, to bear wit- ness, to open for others a glimpse into darkness. That is what this Conference on the Holocaust is all about. As ElidWiesel has said: "Anyone who does not engage in keeping these memories alive is an accomplice'of the killers." Jeffrey Colman is the coor- dinator of "A Glimpse into Darkness: A conference on the Holocaust," an upcoming forum to discuss various aspects of the Holocaust. * Chaim Herzog labeled the "world center for anti-Semitism": the United Nations. Quadafi from Tripoli, Khomeini from Teheran, Arafat from whatever capital he's courting support from, echo Gobbels' calls for the destruction of the Jews. Theodore Bikel, the actor and prominentJewish ac- tivist, answers: "In the wake of the Holocaust, it was for years unfashionable and impolitic to say anything insulting and per- jorative against Jews. Now once again you can say anything you like about a Jew as long as you call him a Zionist." Continuing in his open letter to actress Vanessa Redgrave an outspoken supporter of the Palestinian Liberation Organization, Bikel writes: "You dishonor me as a human being and as a Jew by distorting history and by pretending that there is a difference between those Jew- haters who destroyed Jerusalem 2,000 years ago and those who seek to destroy it now." 4 The Holocaust, though unique in its magnitude and destruc- tiveness, was not an isolated historical event. It is .inherently when he visited Israel over a year ago. The Israelis were trying.to show both leaders and the rest of the world that- if they wanted to understand Israel and the Jewish people, they would first have to look at the Holocaust. For the Israelis, there is no such thing as the "post-Holocaust world." The same people that survived the concentration cam- ps of Europe were never allowed to live in peace. Only a few years after Auschwitz, they faced both threats and military actions from Arab countries trying to "drive the Jews into the sea." And as ther world remained silent-ex- cept to condemn Israel as the "agressor"-thee Jews found themselves alone again like they had been not only from 1933-1945 but for all of Jewish history. MORE KNOWLEDGE NEEDED We do not know enough about the Holocaust. We tend to explain its causes as unique to a par- ticular society as a particular time in history. Such explanation serves to comfort us that the Holocaust ended and never could Letters MSA needs internalfunding To the Daily: In an editorial published Sun- day, March 25, the Daily suppor- ted the concept of Michigan Student Assembly .(MSA) inter- nal funding but urged the defeat of the ballot proposal for the MSA election which would allow inter- nal funding to be initiated. The Daily, however, misunderstood the ballot proposal and unfor- tunately may have misguided its readers. The ballot proposal in question would eliminate a constitutional restriction upon payment of fun- ds to MSA members and impose a 3.9 per cent ceiling on the total amount of funds available for this purpose.The Daily viewed it as a plan to allocate 3.9 per cent, or roughly $9,000, to its officers. The editorial focused upon little other than that figure; it ignored the substantive issues involved. The 3.9 per cent figure is a ceiling rather than an allocation. It would simply permit the newly elected Assembly to implement a plan of subsidies-or salaries if you prefer-but nothing would become effective without sub- sequent Assembly action. The political process would then be use to work out the details. BEFORE GIVING my reasons ficers to do this. Since the vast majority of the Assembly would not be paid, the membership would have, no interest in over- compensation. An example of the frugality of the Assembly in "taking care of their own" was its great reluctance to do so much as purchase bagels for its Budget Committee, which holds four and five hour meetings through din- ner-time. If a rip-off is feared, the solution is to elect responsible representatives. Internal funding is important if the organization is to function more efficiently and dynamically. In the past year, four different officers have resigned, a somewhat debilitating turnover. An officer who is paid would be more ac- countable to those who pay him or her. Furthermore, volun- teerism excludes or limits those who must work to remain in school. A great number of Assembly members have part- time jobs that limit their time commitment to Assembly duties. We envision an Assembly capable of responding to every shallenge and initiating action for the benefit of all students. I am proud of the way the Assembly has grown in the past year. But our canabilities are limited hby and coordinate an alternative work study program to research the problems confronting it. It is time for MSA to mature. -Jeffrey Supowit MSA, Law School Representative March 27,1979 Deer Hunter To the Daily: The Deer Hunter, as Daily reviewer Christopher Potter suggests, is indeed cinematically magnificent, yet ambivalent in its depiction of its American heroes. It is also a morally and politically reprehensible film, in that it attempts-to make a point about the effect of the war on Americans by vilifying the Viet- namese. I agree with the reviewer that The Deer Hunter is about "bonds of human frien- dship and love." But Potter betrays a blind spot in failing to acknowledge that the "forces ....alien to all that is familiar and good" which threaten those bonds are represented by a real people worthy of our respect. victims-presumably victims of other Vietnamese, since- Americans are only seen shooting in self-defense. They are por- trayed, as, in a word, "Gooks." The audience recognizes this typical war-movie racism even if Potter does not. When Robert DeNiro, at the end of, an ex- crutiatingly long scene of psychological torture (which so far as I know has no basis in reality), blows away his Viet- namese captors, the audience cheers. They know what they have just seen - John Wayne, Erroll Flynn, the archetypical brave American overcoming great odds of trick and then ex- terminate the sinister yellow bastards who embody evil. This may not be the "True sub- ject" of The Deer Hunter, but it is its unconscious, and uncon- scionable, message. The viewer shows that he has received this message by twice referring to the NLF soldiers as "the Cong," echoing the racial-political slurs of war. In dealing with American and Americans, The Deer Hunter is a sensitive film and Potter is a sensitive reviewer. But we can no innop nl ra ,sineh hruetaliain