Eighty-three years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan __ __ The INTER VIE W: Once (gulp) more 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1974 An unfortunate defeat GENERAL ECONOMIC problems facing the country and the usual voter re- luctance to increase their own taxes seem to have taken their toll in yester- day's unfortunate defeat of a proposal for an area-wide vocational training cen- ter for Washtenaw County. Unfortunate is the word, for the pro- posed center would have filled a gap in the education of high school students in the county, especially those who do not plan to go to college. Various studies of high school gradu- ates throughout the nation and locally have concluded that many, if not most, high school students not planning on college graduate with few saleable skills. It is just such training, in a number of areas from business to transportation, that the center would have provided to a degree that the more academically-ori- ented high schools cannot offer alone, largely because of lack of funds and fa- cilities. As IS OFTEN the case in such elections, only a tiny minority of voters turned out to express their opinion, which may have helped bring about this rejection of the center for the third time since 1968. Even the support of nine of the ten county school districts, the League of Women Voters, the city Chamber of Com- merce and many local political leaders did not bring the voters out. Despite the rejection voiced yesterday, support is growing nationwide for such vocational centers, which provide in- creased specialized educational opportu- nities at a lower cost by pooling the re- sources of a larger area than just one school district. Until voters see fit sometime in the future to approve such a vocational cen- ter and the necessary funding the brunt of the effort will have to remain with the local school districts, who will have to seek increased funding from the state and federal governments to meet these needs. THOSE MOST HURT by yesterday's vote are those students who find that the emphasis on academic subjects in traditional high schools does not ade- quately meet their needs and interests. Hopefully it will only be a short timeI before the public recognizes that demand for such educational services will only increase. By GORDON ATCHESON T SLOWLY PUT on the chocolate colored tie. Each motion was meticulously per- formed. No unnecessary wrinkles. Nice, tight knot. OK. So what if it took me five tries to get the thing perfect - finally it was perfect. Then I slipped on a brand -new-never-been sweated-in- tan sports jacket. Instant young executive. The only times I ever got this dressed up before were for ceremonies of life - marriages, funerals, and bar mitz- vahs. But I guess the first big job inter- view is something like a ceremony of life. Trying to hustle a summer job as a news- paper reporter isn't easy. The field is glut- ted with eager young journalists who have new suits and what they think must be near Pulitzer Prize winning articles from the college newspapers. I was no exception. Still I wondered if the others were scared shitless before the INTERVIEW. Doing my homework seemed to be the key to beating the confrontation. Or at least not losing to it. Cause if I lost now all those dreams of the New York Times, the Washington Post, editor in chief would remain dreams forever. FIRST SELECT the stories to show the grand inquisitor. Poring over the articles done during my brief career - they were all flawed in one way or another - may- be it will be a while before a Pulitzer drops in my lap. No matter. After picking a couple of the "goodies" I mounted them on stiff, off-white card- board, carefully lettered with the publica- tion date. Make them LOOK impressive if nothing else. Then I cornered several of the Daily old salts - veterans who had gone through a couple interviews - w h a t kind of ques- tions did they ask? Did they badger and scream at the trembling victims? The only thing apparent from these quer- ies was that no two interviews are the same. Great. Like going into a Howard Johnson's and ordering chef's surprise. THE NIGHT BEFORE, I slept fitfully for several hours - haunted by dreams of ogre- like city editors who dined on inexperienc- ed reporters coming hat in hand looking for summer jobs. They casually tossed the bones aside and smiled a smile of satisfac- tion - revealing slime covered fang. Finally the homework, the dreams, and the tie tying were behind me - I entered the newspaper office. Reporters - attach- ed to desks - hammered at typewriters. Copy spelled out faster than I ever imag- ined it could. Massive intimidation factor. I tried to glide coolly across the room to the managing editors office. Pretend the s~hrt collar isn't chafing. Look loose. But I knew my entire appearance actually look- ed as if a mischievous gnome had jammed a broom handle up my ass. Reaching out to shake the man's hand, he didn't look imposing. Just old. Like he might have been around to hear Horace Greeley say "go west young man" or something. HE SMILED NOT a smile of satisfaction but of fatherly concern as if reflecting on his first attempt to get a summer job and the trials of going through the INTER- VIEW. His hand was as old as the rest of him. Just skin and bone. When people get old the muscle and veins must deteriorate leaving just skin stretched across bones. If the hand weren't warm, I would've bet it be- longed to a corpse. My hand did feel like a corpse's. Cold. Clammy. Sweat almost dripping off it. The thought crossed my mind to ask the guy if he ever shook hands with a dead body. But that might sound weird and would even seem stranger if I tried to explain. The --, stion remained unasked. We sat. He smiled and nodded. I smiled and nodded back. Wonder if my tie was on cock-eyed. Maybe there was some mus- tard on my nose. I don't know. He smiled and nodded some more. Chat. Chat. Chat. Very low key. No tough questions. He didn't scream or badger. The chef's surprise turn- ed out to be palatable. HE SAID - I know what you can do but - we would like you to take a little writing test. The logic escaped me. If he already knew . Finished the test easy enough. Not a great job, not a complete wash out either. Left .the papers on his desk. He said "thank you very much for corn- We'll let you know sometime next nth if we have a place for you this summer." OK. I walked out. Took off the tie. I wonder if I won or lost during the INTERVIEW? Bet he already knew. Myth America Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB Gordon A/cheson is a staff The Michigan Daily. uvriter for ACCORDING TO A U. N. report issued yesterday, advertising is responsible for perpetuating images of women that are degrading and artificial. Perhaps this information will surprise some people. But anyone who carefully watches TV commercials or looks closely at magazine Editoriai Staff CHRISTOPHER PARKS and EUGENE ROBINSON Co-Editors in Chief TONY SCHWARTZ....... .. ........ Sunday Editor DIANE LEVICK......................Arts Editor MARTIN PORTER.................. Sunday Editor MARILYN RILEY........ Associate Managing Editor ZACHARY SCRILLER............EditorialDirector ERIC SCHOCH..................Editorial Director CHARL3S STEIN....................City Editor TED STEIN......................!Executive Editor ROLP'E TESSEM ............Managing Editor EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS: Manie Heyn, Chuck Wilbur, David Yalowitz STAFF WRITERS: Prakash Aswani, Gordon Atcheson, Dan Biddle, Penny Blank. Dan Blugerman, Howard Brick, Dave Burheun, Bonnie Carnes, Charles 4Vole- man, Mike Duweck. Ted Evanoff, Deborah Good, William Heenan, Cindy Hill, Jack Krost, Jean Love- Josephine Marcotty, Cheryl Pilate, Judy Ruskin, Ann Rauma, Bob Seidenstein, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Sue 6ttephenson, David Stoll, Rebecca Warner TODAY'S STAFF: News: Prakash Aswani, Sue Stephenson, Della DiPietro, Mike Duweck, G e n e Robinson, Jeff Sorensen, Ted Stein, Rolfe Tessem Editorial Page: Clifford Brown, Ted Hart- zell, Marnie Heyn Arts Page: Diane Levick Photo Technician: Thomas Gottlieb and newspaper ads knows that most roles Madison Avenue conceives of for women are the amoral, rather stupid jet set swinger, or alternately, the well-scrub- bed; rather stupid mother/wife of a man who'll "keep her." Sexism in advertising is aimed at two distinct markets: women are used as status objects in pitches directed at men, and competent, glamorous - but passive -females push convenient household gadgets and vitamin products to the housewife/working woman set. While advertising exploits such derog- atory stereotypes, it certainly did not create the myths behind those stereo- types. AS LONG AS people continue to take the bait, to buy products on the basis of the number of women and/or the de- gree of husbandly adoration promised, marketing executives will pump out Geritol and Winchester ads and snicker all the way to the bank. It would be simplistic to imagine that any legislative sanction or pronounce- ment of the U. N. will prevent the con- tinued, and continuous, flow of exploita- tive advertising, especially since the so- cialization implicit in that advertising is echoed everywhere in our society. The possibility of ending sexist adver- tising lies, then, in rejecting the myths behind the advertising, and further, in refusing to support organizations that use such advertising in the only lan- guage that they understand-stop giving them money for their products, and write them a letter explaining why. It's OOL REFLECTION is required in the face of the controversy elicited by the advertisement "Arab Racism, Anti-Semitism" and the "Response to 'Arab Racism' ad" by Ahmad Beshareh (Daily, December 6, 12, 1973). Many Israelis and observers sym- pathetic to Israel were sorry to read the ad. While its facts were painfully correct - particularly the activities of Nazis in Egypt and Syria, and the de facto black slav- ery in six Arab oil states - the emotional tone of the ad defeated its purpose. , Yet nothing can be gained by publishing replies filled with his- torical errors and conceptual sub- terfuge. It would have been bet- ter had Ahmed Beshareh refuted the facts cited, which of couse he cannot. His response even upheld the very principle he sought to condemn in the ad, for his own re- ference to "Arabs as a people and collectively" confirms the proprie- ty of speaking about collectivities in history without being racist. The ad attempted to characterize the behavior of a nationality inso- far as its historical relations with minority groups such as Jews are concerned. This is neither slander nor racism, simply one area of truth. If the ad had generalized its statements to include Arab be- havior vis-a-vis other nations, or if it had spoken in terms of broad ethnic activity, that would indeed have been racism. But the ad merely confined itself to Arab- Jewish relations. ITS TONE was unfortunate, granted, but the propagandistic re- action it provoked in Mr. Beshar- eh is more deeply disturbing. His expert use of slogans suggests that we may well be dealing with the insincerity of the current Arab po- sition. Take the major concept in re- cent Arab propaganda: the myth of the Golden Age when Arab and Jew lived happily tokether in Mos- em Spain. Given this model of time for capricious fortune (good and bad) which buffetted Jews under Arab rule 711 to 1300, only the D o n Quixotes among Israelis would risk living under an Arab government today. In the year 1012 Jewish prosperity under the Moslem Urn- maiyad rulers was shaken by the Moslem Berber sacking of Cor- dova and by.the slaughter of Jews in Granada in 1066. Later in the 11th and 12th Cen- turies Jewish culture flourished de- spite the Kakhihs' religious intol- erance under the first Almoravides. After a period of recovery from these events, Jews in 1146 were told by the Almohades to choose between emigration or conversion to Islam. Therefore to state that Jewish self-expression developed during many periods of Moslem Spain is to place ONE truth in the context Df other omitted truths. Jews also enjoyed prosperous times, though less spectacularly and less often, in Christian Spain prior to 1350. The point is that both Moslem and Christian r e - gimes subjected the Jewish minor- ity to varying degrees of hard- ship. If there is any lesson to be learned from the "Golden Age" history, it is that in stabilizing zhe lestiny of a people, there is no substitute for a state and govern- ment of its own. IN MODERN TIMES one wond- ers how well Israeli Jews would fare under Arab rule. It is trivial for Mr. Beshareh to note that 'Arab Jews worked together with other Arabs" to fight the British :olonialists. No such coexistence occurred in 1929 during the mas- sacre of religious Jews in Hebron. These events, in any case, occur- red prior to independent A r a b rule. Once the Arabs gained poli- .tical power, the treatment of mi- norities hardened. The Kurdish minority in Syria today suffers a harsh persecution, and the Jewish Iraqis continue as hostages in a hostile environment. Neither situation inspires confi- dence in the ability of an Arab government to rule a Jewish minor- ity with justice. These are histori- c-al judgments, not racism. Noteworthy too are those Jewish refugees from Arab countries set- tIed in Israel. Poverty and protest notwithstanding, neither they nor the Jewish Black Panthers show any sign of wishing to return to their country or origin. In con- trast, 250 Russian Jews (about 25 per cent of recent Jews immigrat- ing from Russia) won emigration rights to Israel, only to request return to their native Russia sub- sequently. THE MYTH of a Golden Age, however misleading, is at least a form of wishful thinking. Not so the devices of propagandistic my.- tification. Mr. Besharen resorts to such a device when he strains to see a distinction between J e w s and Zionists. In this view, Jews are good but Zionists are colonial- ists and fascist supremacists. Arabs are hospitable to their Jewish bre- thren at home while fighting op- pressiive Zionists abroad. This distinction is sophistry for several reasons. The issue is not non-Israeli Jews but the Jews of Israel. Virtually everyone Jewish in Israel is a Zionist and these two elements are inseparable. Is- raeli Jews believe in the ideology of their national liberation, a con- cept formed during their historic oppression as a minority in foreign countries. That is what makes the Israeli Jew different from his kinsmen abroad. Zionism is for Israeli Jews what Arab nationalism is for Arabs. It certifies the legitimate national aspirations of a people by validating statehood as the best guarantor against oppression by a hostile majority. If this inde- pendence is safeguarded for the Arab people by fifteen states, then one Jewish state is a meager tok- en to maintain for an independent Jewish people. YET SUPPOSING the dismantle- ment of Israel were achieved, in defiance of international law. The fibers of Arab hatred would not dissolve easily after twenty five years of growth. Concepts I i k e holy war (Jihad), pushing the Jews into the sea, and insane random murder by terrorists are rooted into the consciousness of the mo- dern Arab political mind. Note that the Yom Kippur war was declared on the official Cairo radio as a "Jihad" and that the murders of defenseless Israeli ath- letes at the Munich Olympics was hailed by virtually the entire Arab press. This is not to say that heal- thy roots are absent. But in view of traditional Arab insensitivity to ethnic and religious minorities, how can the Jewish-Israeli population believe in the subtleties of being exterminated as Zionists but soar- ed as Jews? This leads to a final slogan which stems from as ostensibly healthy root. Arabs currently speak of a 'secular democratic state''. The concept has an appealing ring, but the reality behind t h i s ring is another matter. The idea would carry plausibility if the cour- ageous, but minute, band of Arab intellectuals enjoyed some influ- ence in political power. But the most casual observer can see that the most secular demo- cratic state in the Middle East is Israel, despite its faults. None of the Arab states, revolutionary as they claim to be, provides as much freedom and welfare as Israel does to all its citizens (including Arabs). Imperfect as the modern world may be, political alternatives must be judged realistically. To s a y "secular democratic Palestine," therefore, is to speak a coded lang- uage. Decoded, the slogan means one more undemocratic Islamic state. From the fundamentalist Moslem regime in Lybia to the feudal system in Saudi Arabia, and from the Syrian or Egyptian dictatorships to the monarchy of Jordan, the Jewish minority would suffer the same fate as the minor- ities cited by the advertisement. MR. BESHARE unfortunately spent only a few words on the real issue - his plan for an Arab State of Palestine to replace the State of Israel. Whether such a Palestinian state will be democratic and secular in- deed is an academic question. That it will have to be erected over the dead bodies of 90 per cent of the Israelis is a fact well established. This plan of a Palestinian state was also adopted in the recent (Dec. 1973) Algiers meeting of the Arab heads of state. It does not call for a peace with Israel. It galls instead for the forced expul- sion of al Israelis who came there in the last 26 years (75 per cent of the present population) - back to Russia, back to Germany, back to .Lybia, back to Iraq and back to Syria. When nevertheless now Egpytian President Sadat mentions "peace with Israel" we do not know whe- ther to trust him. We trust more the words of Arab students on this campus. Unfortunately, they still demand a peace "over" Israel. As Israeli students we would like to see them change their minds and adopt a line calling for the coexistence of the State of Israel and a Palestin- ian State. This is our line. Hebrew is not spoken today in Spain, or Russia or Lybia. We feel that the Hebrew speaking Is- raelis have as much a right for self determination as have the 15 or so Arab nations. Once we agree on this basis the rest becomes a matter of detail, to be hammered out in a friendly dialog. Can we start this dialog maybe soon? Shim on Nof submitted this ar- ticle for The Israeli Student Or- ganization. A ra b-Israeli dia log ., .. .. Letters: Indian democracy a myth To The Daily: I MUST CONGRATULATE YOU for your timely publication of Ms. Gail Omvedt's article entiled "In- dia: Feminist power from below" (Jan. 22). As an Indian I ought to be ashamed at the plight of my country after almost twenty-seven years of independence. While a neighboring country, which attained freedom from the shackles of foreign imperialism two years later than ours, became the third most powerful nation of the world overcoming seemingly insurmountable barriers, we boast- ed of the largest "democracy" and allowed ourselves to land in the present quagmire. I believe, however, that it is nec- PlOOr% t o -tnf. -AMPf a tha or, in the American way of say- ing, the "mess." SINCE THE INDEPENDENCE in 1947 India has been ruled by a single party-the Congress, which split into two a few years ago. Mrs. Gandhi heads what is called New Congress. In spite of the mas- sive foreign aid the country re- ceived during the last quarter cen- tury the development and progress have heen little. Promises have been made before every election and they have been quietly forgotten after the parlia- mentary ritual was over. In the meanwhile mountaining struggles of the masses have been ruthlessly suppressed. Several democraticallyelsected ment and most of the state as- semblies. BUT THE EUPHORIA over the victory in the war or socialistic phraseology of the Congress lead- ership like Garibi Hathao (means "eradicate poverty") did not help solve the chronic problems like in- flation, unemployment or food shortage which assumed colossal magnitudes and thus resulted in the massive outburst of the un- surpassed grievances. During the list few years al- though there have been struggles in certain parts of the country like West Bengal, Kerala, Anthra, etc., the' Iyave not been so widespread. But right now it seems the whole country is in a state of siege. A nou topia, but . . To The Daily: MAY AN OLD history professor trespass on your column long enough to comment on Mr. Haarz's indictment that we Americans are "the most selfish, the most prejud- iced, the least cultured people in the world"? Doubtless his letter was well meant as a deflation of spread-eagle self-glorification. But a misstatement on one side of the question does not balance a mis- statement on the other side Some of his "facts" are just not so. For example, "my country burned people as witches." Witches were hanged in Salem: not burned, as in Scotland and Germany at freedom of speech, of the press, of assembly, of organization, of open opposition to the government in power? If you compare us with Utopia we show very badly; if you com- pare us with other times and other countries, pretty well. In half the world Mr. Haarz's letter could not have been printed. IT IS TRUE that some countries have done better than we in some respects; for instance, Northwest- grn Europe has less crime. It is true that we have had many ad- vantages, such as an uncrowded country with vast natural resourc- es. It is true that we might have Ann ..tta,- thanw A have. Buttha WEJUM vwrwm~