~iie 3i4' trn :fit Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Prejudice:,,A live and kicking i Friday, April 11, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 420 Maynard St., Ann 'Arbor, Mi. 48104 Another gesture backfires By ALAN RESNICK WHILE WATCHING the tele- vision in Chicago o n e evening in March a most fright- ening and shocking news event was shown. At the Howard Johnson Motor Lodge in Aurora, Illinois, several persons met to discuss their views on subjects ranging from modern society to economics. The interesting thing about this meeting was that all participants were wearing white sheets - the KKK was in Chi- cagoland. After hearing that the current economic crisis has been caus- ed by the Jews, and that our cities have been ruined by "Jew-inspired niggers", I was forced to face the fact that such attitudes were alive and well in places other than the Deep South. In fact, the KKK cur- rently has nine chapters in IT IS IRONIC that the two most prevalent stereotypes that exist today concerning J e w s are complete contradictions of each other. First, the Jews are notorious sympathizers of social- ist, communist, and anti-estab- lishment causes. Recent proof: Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoff- man. When Bobby Seale v a s on trial with the other Chi- cago defendents, which attorn- ey defended him? It was Wil- liam Kunstler, a Jew. When SDS was at its height in the 1960's, which single group was the most heavily represented? Again, the Jews. AND FINALLY, when George McGovern was prancing around calling for a minimum guaran- teed income and redistribution of wealth, it was the Jews who gave him overwhelming supptrt (YGE AGAIN, A well-meaning ges- ture by the University will be tripped up by the stumbling block of reality. While it is a nice idea for the University to recognize those students who worked hard enough to receive a high grade point-although the amount of work required is often debatable-those involved in plan- ning this year's Honors Convocation continue to ignore student and fac- ulty protest and have again scheduled the assembly for 10:30 a.m. This tim- ing effectively kills most of the under- graduate classes held between 9 a.m. and noon, which happens to be the time when a majority of classes are held. Many professors have already de- clared that they will not honor the honored, in other words that it will be "business as usual" on Friday morning no matter how many stu- dents are not there. This is rather ironical in that the honor students are the ones who are likely to be most hurt by missing lectures, especially with the end of the year and finals approaching fast. PROFESSORS ARE ALSO feeling the pressure in these last few weeks, and even one more lecture missed could have a bad effect on a course, especially considering the foul-up caused by the month-long GEO strike. In addition to the inconvenience of the event, many students who were invited to attend the Honors Convo- cation have decided not to make an appearance because of the emphasis it makes on getting a good grade point -an emphasis which more than one student has termed "elitist." But no matter how a student feels about the point of the whole thing, it is hoped that next year the Univer- sity will reconsider, or perhaps con- sider for the first time, the serious implications of calling a halt to an entire morning of classes so that a minority-of students and their par- ents can sit in Hill Auditorium and bask in the glory of their intelligence. "The simple fact is that Jews neither seek any- thing nor are anything different than anyone else in America. There are Jews who are rich, and those who are poor. Many are educated, and many are not. Some are liberal and others are conservative." ;r ;: ljy.r ?,,....;rr{vM tt! ;ra,"r n a sma<;:f;t}"??;:::;,,y..i " + ::a :,"y;:"n :? i.- n"?::"?: to be quite hard for any one group to claim either acconm- lishment, let alone both at the same time! A more in-depth look may clarify the situation. Gen. George Brown, chair- man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently remarked that t h e Jews controlled the newspape"s and banks in America. Do the 6 million American Jews - 3 per cent of our total population - actually exert such influence? Statistics indicate otherwise. Of newspapers read by Americans, 3 per cent of them are owned by Jews. Of these newspapers, the largest of them, the New- house Chain, has a policy of not hiring Jewish editors. It is done so their editorial view- points will be as objective as possible. Newhouse accounts for nearly half of all Jewish-own- ed papers. AN EXAMINATION of the current banking structure leads to further interesting results. In New York City, the financial capital of America, a regent survey indicated Jewish me-- bership on 'Boards of Directors of major banks represented a total of 3 per cent of all mem- bers. Furthermore, in the 25 largest banks outside of New York City there were no Jew- ish board members. Perhaps the only difference between Jews and non-Jews in America is the average level of education attained by the two groups. Time magazine recent- ly mentioned that only one- fourth of Americans 25 years or older have had any college training. In contrast, a 1971 study found 54 per cent of Jews 25 years or older had been to college - twice as great a per- centage. The government recently re- ported that 18 million Ameri- cans use food stamps. Out of a total of 210 million, thisrepre- sents less than 9 per cent of our population. It is intere.iting to note that the study mentioned by "Time" indicated that 10 per cent of Jewish-American families were at the $4,000 pov- erty line or below. MAX LERNER, author of William Kunstler Arthur Burns Subtle as a sledgehammer Illinois, including ones in Aur- ora, Cicero, and Joliet. THE KLAN spokesman told a reporter that the KKK is no dif- ferent than the Jewish Anti- Defamation League or the NAACP insofar as its purpose is concerned. His logic, or lack of it, was that if Jews and Blacks could have their own groups, then whites should also have their own group. The ob- vious fallacy of such thinking is that the ADL and the NAACP function to promote the better- ment of their respective groups without stripping any o c h e r person or group of their rights or causing them injury. The KKK, on the other hand, holds deeply rooted stereotypes t h a t guide its members through hate- filled pathways. Why do these stereotypes exist against Jews, and what exactly are they? rather than voting for Richard Nixon. While this stereotype is com- monly heard, another viewpiint is also widely held. The Jews are rich - they're not suffer- ing from the recession, t h e y have money, and they cintrol the economy. Many find Jews responsible for the current un- employment. Current proof: Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Council of Economic Ad- visors, and Arthur Burns, chair- man of the Federal Reserve. Besides, aren't those p e o p 1 e driving around Bloomfield Hills in their Cadillacs all Jews? IN RETROSPECT, the absurd- ity of such charges in mind- boggling. How is it that the Jews are the wealthy controllers of our vast, capitalist econ- omy, and yet are the leading socialists and anti-establishment radicals? Indeed, it would seem America As a Civilization, class- ifies the five major goals in American life as success, pres- tige, money, power, and secur- ity. The concept of the Amer- ican Dream has changed since Frederick Jackson Turner wrote of the closing of the American Frontier. Authors from F. Scott Fitzgerald to Norman Mailer have satirized and exposed this tarnished dream. When a non- Jew strides towards these g.als he is considered to be in search of the American Dream. While becoming acculturated to Ame:- ican society, the Jew has ac- cented these same standars. Yet, amongst those who hld stereotvpes, the Jew in search of the same things is often seen as ereedy or searching for con- trol. The simile fact is that Jews neither seek anything nor are anvthine different than anvo-e ele in America. There are Jew who are rich, and those who are poor. Manv are educated, and many are not. Some are liberal and others conservative. Desnfte this. American Jews are cur- rentlv facing their gr test challenge since World War IT. AS UNEMPLOYMENT lines grow, more and more irrational minds claim that the Jew. are the cause of the economic mal- IJURINGHIS TWO years in office, Mayor James Stephenson has tried to mold city government to suit his conservative politics-in much the same way god supposedly created man in his own image. It seems, though, that Stephenson has gotten carried away with the lordly parallel. At a special City Coun- cil session Wednesday night, Stephen- son and his Republican cohorts rail- roaded through legislation that may extend their terms beyond the normal expiration date. Stephenson and the present coun- cil would ordinarily be replaced by the in-coming members next Monday. And the mayor's chair will be filled by Democrat Albert Wheeler, who narrowly defeated Stephenson. But because of the closeness of the outcome and unprecendented confu- sion resultiing from the preferential voting system, it is conceivable the new council members including the mayor may not be able to take office as scheduled. Rather than waiting to confront this problem if it arises, the Republi- cans undertook an unethical-and probably illegal--step. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Gordon Atcheson, Paul Kelly, Ann Marie Lipinski, Jo Marcotty, Nora Pomerantz, Jeff Ristine, Step- hen Selbst, Nathalie Walker Editorial Page: Clifford Brown, Bar- bara Cornell, Paul Haskins, Debra Hurwitz, Greg Rest Arts Page: James Valk Photo Technician: Steve Kagan They approved a resolution extend- ing Stephenson's reign in the event the Board of Canvassers refuses to certify the election results and con- sequently to affirm Wheeler's victory. Cooked up just hours before the council meeting, the move smacks of political opportunism and the im- passioned desire to prolong Republi- can domination of City Hall, despite election results demonstrating that the voters want a change. If the Republican majority were to remain in power it could easily use the opportunity to push through numerous measures reflective of the anti-progressive attitudes fostered during the past two years. The city can illafford so much as an extra day of such leadership. The only election results which re- main in question are those pertaining to the mayoral race. Each of the council contests was clearly decided by a decisive margin. It makes sense that these duely elected representatives should be seated on time; but that would deny the Republicans control-unless Ste- phenson remained in office. The day-to-day governmental af- fairs, however, can efficiently be car- ried on by a full council minus the mayor. If something is amiss in the mayor- al election and certification is with- held, Wheeler should not be sworn in until the cloud is lifted. But in exactly the same vein, Stephenson must not continue to serve-maintaining power only because of a resolution that's nothing more than a political stunt. ady. This is the all too tragic "scapegoat" theory. During the harsh economic times there are always those who get relief from placing blame on anather person or group. One need only think back a year to remember a bumper sticker declaring "Burn Jews, Not Oil." Author and survivor of Nazi concentra- tion camps, Elie Wiesel, like most other American Jews, does not forsee Jews being killed in American cities as was done in Nazi Europe. While few people expect the scapegoat attitude to lead to such consequences, a shift toward placing blame for problems ranging from reces- sion to pollution on the Jews has been felt by many. Whether or not Jews who feel such pressure are hyper- sensitive or not cannot be deter- mined at this point. The rise of groups such as the KKK and statements by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff do, however, lend credence to the rising concern. Such groups who base their feelings on inva d and illogical stereotypes present a clear danger not only toward American Jews or minorities, but to the very moral fiber of America itself. Alan Resnick is an Editorial Page staf writer. Palestinians' desire for a lard of their own, but no one can deny Israel's right to existence. No people's history has been marked by more expulsion than that of the Jews. It took the senseless slaughter of six million human lives to get the right to reclaim their homeland. As for Boshar's claim that Palestinians are oppressed - who would know the scars of oppression better than the Jew- ish people? orphans To The Daily: CONGRATULATIONS on lour editorial "Orphan tragedy re- doubled." It is one of the best editorials I have read ia the Daily for a long time. It must be pointed out that the adoption of orphans by foreign- ers is an idea unacceptable to the Vietnamese, and the a i r- lifting an act violating the sov- ereignty of Vietnam. Hanoi has protested against this act;.on, Letters and even the Saigon regime is unwilling to go all the way in this. Of course the Saigon pup- pet regime can only yield when U.S. "exerts pressure," and the airlifting of Vietnamese child- ren continues. In doing this, the U.S. has totally disregarded oth- er people's custom, and flag- rantly violated the stVc sov- ereignty of Vietnam. This is not surprising, and hardly a n y - thing else could be expected from a government which has to The .m::.The Li ghter S ide .w" m' .Detente eschewed: Closing the gum gap maammmeam...Dick West -e WASHINGTON (UPI) - Remember the reaction when the Soviet Union first exploded an atomic bomb? That accomplishment by what Americans regarded as a tech- nically backward nation created shock waves of surprise, dismay and alarm in this country. Since then, of course, we have become conditioned to Soviet breakthroughs. Too much so, perhaps. The degree of calmness with which we accepted their latest scientific fat was phlegmatic almost to the point of torpor. HARDLY ANYONE was galvanized by the news that the U.S.S.R. now has the know-how to produce its own chewing gum. Yet on a boding-no-good scale of 1 to 10 that development hits at least 6.8. Since I personally have retained a trace of old-fashioned anxiety, I contacted certain sources in the intelligence community and asked them to evaluate the Soviet gum program. "ITS CHIEF SIGNIFICANCE lies in the fact that it will give Kremlin officials the extra dimension of being able to walk and chew gum at the same time," one evaluator told me. "As you probably know from things you have heard about President Ford, chewing gum while walking is considered a high priority asset in a world leader. "It's right up there with wearing a helmet while playing football." I said, "Does this mean the Soviets are on the verge of closing the gum gap?" "At present we don't view the Soviet gum-making capability as a threat to American superiority in that field," the evaluator replied. "Our agents obtained a wad of it from the bottom of a Moscow theater seat. Tests show it is still in the primitive stage with a licorice flavor that quickly dissipates. "MOREOVER, THEIR productive potential currently is limited to about three packs per capita per year. Many veteran U.S. gum lovers chew that much gum in an hour. "The Soviets, however, have a history of making the most of their limitations. We anticipate that in a few years they'll be turning out peppermint, spearmint and assorted other flavors that give American crewing gum supremacy. I'F.rnm th anint it's on n nuetion of tismm nilithev advance persistently carried out imper- ialistic and big-power chauvinis- tic policies all over the world. However, American peope must realize that the time when big countries could dictate t h e i r will and impose their value system on small countries is gone. Peace can only be a hiev- ed if nations, big and smail, re- spect each other and commit to non-interference. U.S. HAS plundered n u g e quantity of natural resources fromnthe Third World countrie: already. Is it going aoe step further by looting childre i from other people now? -An Asian Student April 8 inhumanity To The Daily. WHILE IT MAY seem "ap- parent" to the Black Student Liberation Front; Organization of Arab Students; Revolutionary Student Brigade; and the Mid- dle East Liberation Committee that "the people are winning in Indochina" (to quote from the opening sentence of their letter to The Daily of April 1), recent newsreels from Vietnam create a very dfiferent and less jubilant effect in me. The kind of thinking that which finds for celebrating a victory of "the people" in the ghastly pano- rama of the suffering of ordi- nary people in Vietnam is of- fensive to me. I wonder if it isn't time to take a hard look at the attitudes and values of such "revolutnoary" and "lib- erating" (hence, "idealistic") organizations as those which signed the letter of April 1, and see if we don't find there some of that character of inhumanity against which they claim to fight. Daily Despite the anti-war posture of the letter, some of these or- ganizations appear perfectly willing to advocate war against Israel in the Middle East. Such a war-stimulated by certain violence - prone Palestinian Arabs who see it as a solution to their problem would bring misery and death to thousands of other Arabs and Jews, who in fact want nothing more than to be left alone to live in peace. These, too, are people. The peo- ple never win when wars are fought - they only lose in them. Fred Horowitz April 2 gays To The Daily: THE FOLLOWING students and faculty members of Michi- gan's Center for the Study of Higher Education believe that "sexual preference" should lie included in the University of Michigan's non-discrimination policy. We believe that g iy employf;cs should be protected againsh ocs- criihination on the basi.; of their sexual preference. We ask the University to move in this way to correct the imustice which gay people may surfer, injustice which is based on oatworn stereotypes. -Ellen Armstrowg R. Benson Barr David Boris and thirteen others March 15 boycott To The Daily: WE WERE appauled to read Mr. Boshar's letter requesting the boycott of the hanorary de- gree given to Ephrian Katzir, President of Israel. One can sympathize with the President Katzir righteously deserves the honorary degree as he has contributed a gr e at deal to the field of Science. Who would you suggest as a deserv- ing recipient of the honorary degree-the PLO terrorists who continue to take the lives of in- nocent people? -Cindy Lieberman Linda Brenners March 14 housing To The Daily: THERE IS a simple far-range solution to the dormitory hous- ing shortage and this proposal will also solve the problem of what to do with a soon to be abandoned building. We suggest that the Housing Office examine the possibility of purchasing St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after the facility mov- es to their new building. The location is excellent for q dorm- itory, the cafeteria is already built, most rooms were origin- ally designed as living areas, and parking and office space is available. Clearly, it would be renamed North Quadrangle. -Boyd Bronson Charles Ellis April 9 FAU (V ANt' .:'rv'"Xi ::.o:4.:... 1e, .. :i:.i.".s:1nn'.i ":;. No lid on right to take By ROBERT MILLER ANY DIVIDING line which purports to separate t h e University from the Ann Arbor community can only be an arti- ficial one. Students and their re- presentative governments, there- fore, have an obligation to take a firm stand on issues which concern them and the commun- ity directly, even when those is- sues are presented within the framework of city government. For this reason,, LSA student government should be commend- ed for its unanimous decision to allot $150 to a group which continue the present rate of "legal" extortion. It is theresponsibility of poli- tical organizations on campus to make partisan decisions on the important issues which concern the entire city. LSA-SG and even SGC can become dynamic or- ganizations if they assist out- side groups, and take the initia- tive themselves in mobilizing and educating people around is- sues which affect them. LSA-SG and SGC do not repre- sent all Michigan students, but it would be foolish to suppose that they or any representative omvrnmant rcuwld-Wht TA A- >1% _ " v.:ma so -