How Palestinians live In the rab world By T. D. ALLMAN Last of Four Parts SINCE THE BLOODY Palestinian defeat by Jordan's King Hussein in Black September, 1970, Israel has had one irrefutable response to criticisms of its treatment of the Pal- estinians. It is that the Arabs have treated the Palestinians even worse. There 'are no mass graves of slaughtered Palestinians in the Gaza, as in Beirut's Tel Zaatar camp, demolished by Syrian and Lebanese Christian forces last year. The Pales- tinians on the Israeli bank of the Jordan River are freer than the Palestinians on the Jordanian side. Whiile Palestinians in Israel openly denounced a govern- ment report calling them inferior to Jews, the jails of Syria filled up with Palestinians who opposed President Assad's in- tervention in Lebanon. Israeli troops killed 26 Palestinians during last year's pro- tests. Perhaps 8,000 Palestinians, mostly civilians, were killed during the Lebanese civil war. As Israel Koenig, governor of Israel's northern region, con- ceded in his report critical of the Palestinians, "the lack of tolerance shown by the middle-class Jew toward the Arab citi-. zen ... can amount to real hatred." But that hatred is muted in contrast to tie vicious anti-Palestinian statements one fre- quently hears in Amman, Damascus and Christian Lebanon. "IT IS A SIMPLE TRUTH," observed Mohammed Hasan Mulhim, the Palestinian mayor of the West Bank town of Halhul, "that our only free elections have been held under the Israelis. Our ambition is not to have one occupation force replaced by another." His Jericho colleague, Mayor Abed El Aziz El-Sweity, ex- pressed a similar view. "We Palestinians know we 'have no real friends on either side," he said. "That is why we want a state of our own." In Damascus, Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Ex-, ecutive Committee Secretary-General Mohammed Nashashibi said, "There are two kinds of Palestinians, those ruled by Israel and those ruled by Arabs. Why do you think we (the PLO) get such support from both? Our people want something bet- ter than either alternative.", Last year, when President Hafiz al-Assad sent troops of Saiqa (the Syrian-controlled Palestinian group) into Lebanon as a counter-force to the PLO, Saiga soldiers deserted their Syrian officers en masse to join troops loyal to Yasser Arafat. Saiga commander Musbah Budayri was captured by PLO units. Everywhere .one hears Palestinians say they want no part of a Saiga-like Palestinian state, even if the Israelis should permit it the trappings of sovereignty. "OUR STRUGGLE ALWAYS HAS BEEN a dual struggle," says Khalil Al-Wazi, a major PLO strategist and one of the founders of Fateh, the Palestine National Liberation Move- ment. "The struggle against the Israelis gets the most atten- tion. But the struggle for Arab recognition of our rights has been much more costly." . PLO officials in Beirut say twice as many Palestinians have been killed by Arabs as by Israelis since their struggle began. And AI-Wazi points out that the first casualty of the Palestinian nationalist movement was a commando named Ahmed Mousa, who was killed on Jan. 7, 1965, by the Jor- danian army. That date ever since has been commemorated as Martyr's Day, and regarded by Palestinians as the beginning of their struggle for emancipation. Arab opposition to independent Palestinian action has had another important effect. "Israel destroyed our national rights," one PLO official said. "But what we want from the Israelis is justice, not revenge. It is the savagery of Black September and Tel Zaatar that never will be forgotten. As for the Syrians, we feel deep regret at having to fight them, a deep sadness that things in Lebanon had come to that." WHETHER THE PALESTINIANS wanted to fight Presi- dent Assad's troops or not, the Syrian intervention closed the circle of Palestinian disenchantment with the Arab states. Yet Lebanon does not appear to have been as devastating a$ Black September. "The Palestinians still have a force in being," one high- ranking U.S. diplomat recently observed. "Today, the PLO has more weapons and more troops than it did a year ago. President Assad probably could not get rid of Arafat if he tried." The American official concluded: "The PLO remains the most powerful force in Lebanon, except for the Syrian army." ACCORD THROUGH DISCORD Even though they would be unlikely to admit it, Israel's Gen. Maimon in Gaza, Syria's President Assad, Gov. Koenig in Galilee and King Hussein in Jordan today all are much more united by the Palestinian problem they all' face than they are divided by their differences. Without admitting it, perhaps even without knowing it, but certainly without liking it very much, both Israel and the Arabs long have found themselves drifting toward accord on the Pales- tinian problem, and toward similar policies of repression against the Palestinians as well. This was evident as early as 1968, when, during the Jor- dan valley battle of Karameh, it was difficult to tell whether Gen. Dayan or King Hussein was more discomfited by the stiff Palestinian resistance an Israeli punitive raid met. But it became most obvious in Lebanon last year, when the Syrians and the Israelis - who still present themselves to the world as implacable enemies - found themselves clan- destine allies in a joint pincer movement against the PLO. The real measure of the bankruptcy on both sides is that Israel and Syria now are trapped in the same policy: one of permanent military occupation of other people's lands. ISRAEL TODAY IS SURROUNDED by states each palpably obsessed with one objective: to reach a settlement, to avoid another war on behalf of a Palestinian cause for which they have little remaining sympathy and even less national interest. Yet Israel continues to predicate its security requirements on the assumption that it faces a unitary Arab menance, not separate Jordanian, Egyptian, Syrian efforts to- escape the failed doctrines of the past. Unwilling to see that its best prospects for security lie in stable neighbors - not perpetual Arab destablization - Israel continues to react to civil war in Lebanon or riots in Cairo as if they were good news, not bad. The Arabs, for their part, also find it hard to admit what, within themselves, they already know: that what the Israelis want, what they have always wanted, are not impenetrable fortifications of their neighbors' lands, but a sense of security in their own homes. As a result, for all the talk of 1977 being the year of com- prehensive peace, a great historical opportunity is both likely to be grasped and liable to be lost. All sides may indeed fi- nally get the peace talks in Geneva. But once there, therstereo- types are likely to win again. THERE WILL BE IMPASSES over kilometer posts in the Sinai, over kibbutzim in the Golan Heights, crises involving the U.S. secretary of State over whether one Israeli coopera- tive or two Palestinian villages will get water from the well. But neither side will be able to make the other answer the question it dares not ask itself: what is to be done with the Palestinians? Indeed, while the Israelis reiterate their position that the Palestinians shall have nothing at all,' similar sentiments are also expressing themselves in Arabic. While calling for a Palestinian national state, President Sadat suggests it might, after all, .be confederated with Jor- dan. If the Palestinians don't want Jordan, President Assad of Syria implies, they can feel the force of Syrian troops in- stead. And while embracing the principles of self-determina- tion, King Hussein conspires with them both -- and the Israelis, too - to get back his unwilling subjects. "I CAN SEE WHAT THE ISRAELIS and the Arab states and the superpowers will get out of Geneva," a Palestinian student at Bethlehem University recently said. "But what's in it for us?" The Palestinians - who see themselves as the greatest victims of the perpetual refusal in the Mideast not just to solve the central problem but to ridmit it even exists - them- selves hope to gain a certain advantage from the Geneva im- passe: survival, at least of a kind. "Those hopes in Syria that Arafat will be sent packing; those dreams in Israel that the PLO is finished, forget them," remarked an American intelligence sources after the Lebanon war. "The PLO has not lost, it's proved it knows how to play the game. Wait till you see how they play in Geneva." This story narks the end of a four part series on Palestin- ians byT. D. Allman. Dr. Allman is a freelance journalist who has been in the Mideast and written about it many years. He spent several researching this series for the Pacific News Service. t9aan Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 'IT, MSA NOTES: mii aee'ent Onen Friday; March 25, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. s ConlRepub icans ignorec stdetnts' cut TU funds By MIKE TAYLOR ABOUT A MONTH ago, I was directed by the Mich- igan Student Assembly (MSA) to write a letter to the Regents and President Fleming expressing our hope that the Michigan Open Meetings Act be imple- mented at all levels of the University. The law, which takes effect April 1, requires that all meetings with public policy decision-making power be open to the public; only in a few specific cases can they be closed. It is MSA's opinion that the law should apply to all university and college committees with decision-making power. For example, we believe that the intent of the law is that bodies such as the LSA Executive Committee, which is never open to student or faculty spectators, should hold open meetings. On March 17, I appeared before the Regents to present MSA's position once again. I was told that a de- cision had not yet been reached. President Fleming, however, did mention that the'crucial question would be "does the body in question have true decision-mak- ing power, or does it serve in a purely advisory capac- ity?" I asked if they consider the LSA Executive Committee to be a decision-making body or an advisory one. No one felt "prepared" to comment at the time. The next day, the Regents decided that they are the only decision-making body on campus, and thus ruled that the Open Meetings Act applies only to them. AS STUDENTS, we must regard this as a slap in our faces. It is distressing that the opinion of the elect- ed representatives of University students can be ignored so easily by the Board of Regent. For students to be able to participate in University and college decision- making, they must at least be able to attend meetings where decisions that afect them are made. Thus,' the Ieetings Act Regents' decision directly thwarts the efforts student government members have been working on for years. Most ourrageous, however, is the Regents' belief that the LSA Executive Committee and similar bodies do not have decision-making power. While it is true that the ultimate authority remains the Regents, the bulk of decisions affecting students and faculty are made at the level of college governing bodies and committees. To say otherwise is absurd! On March \2, MSA unanimously voted to oppose the Regents on this crucial issue. We will make a pre- sentation at next month's Regents meeting,, asking for the ruling to be reversed. It is most unfortunate that the only group we can appeal to is the very body that made the decision in the first place. With enough work, however, we should be able to win - we trust! If you would like to help, please call me at 764-0650, or MSA at 763-3242. CITY COUNCIL'S vote Tuesday night to cut off Community Develop- ment Block Grant (CDBG) funds from the Ann Arbor Tenants Union (TU) demonstrates once again the council's failure to back u its- pro- fessed desire to improve city housing with cash. TU has consistently championed the cause of tenants in the city, or- ganizing rent strikes, preparing edu- cational materials, negotiating con- tracts for tenants, providing legal advice. For this reason it has been' a thorn in the, side of local land- lords and two of them - Trony As- sociates and Reliable Realty -- are currently suing TU for interference with contracts. The Republican majority on coun- oil voted unanimously to cut off TU funding, despite Republican mayoral 3andidate Louis Belcher's promise to :Hake student housing "a top priori- y as Belcher's vote alone could have swung the close 6-5 vote, but he chose to join his colleagues, leaving it to Republican councilman Robert Hen- :y to mumble about "a multiplicity ) agencies giving our legal aid." Republican council members have also said repeatedly that they wish to stimulate housing reform through the private sector, but in action this has come to mean voting down reforms in the public sector - the area where city council can have its greatest effect. AND EVEN THE private sector has not been stimulated. Nothing has been built to rent in the central city in eight years - a period covered by both Democrdtic and Republican administrations - and the last ma- jor project was the high-priced Tow- er Plaza. The cutoff of TU funds is not only a non-progresive step toward solving the housing crisis, it is regressive. It impairs the work of one of the few organizations in the city which has made so much as a loud noise in favor of tenants' rights. The Model Cities Legal Aid and Washtenaw County Legal Aid Programs, which Henry cited as alternatives, are sim- ply not equipped to do the same job. There have been hints that the proposal to refund TU will come up again after the April council elec- tions. If council does not reconsider its action before that date, we cer- tainly hope the new council will do so. L etter news? reverse, the popular verdict. In fr thie r rpel hn honaa 1 to the To the Daill tac L1J1s reversacna It seems as though in these three times, in 1824, times of total liberation, 'bet- 1888. ter racial relations' and post But there is another Civil Rights movements, a stu- against it which I sho dent would not have to write bring out. It makes n to complain of discrimination, too much a matter especially not on the campus of phy. Why have most o the University of Michigan. inations since the C Black students, Mexican stu- gone to two states,7 dents, Asian students, white stu- and Ohio? Because, dents and students of other rac- large and doubtful a ial and ethnic groups comprise help in the Electoral { the student body of the Univer- course, fortunately f sity of Michigan. No student, old solid South, and1 therefore, should be denied ade- equally solid North, h quate coverage in the student Iv become doubtful. publication. the Civil War to theI The point to be made here is most states could be that the Michigan Daily - the granted. We have a widely read and respectable stu- from Georgia; how me dent publication - neglected to would he have stoo print an article announcing the ination by either pa recent crowning of Miss Black those seven decades? U of M. This same young lady Let me give just or went on to capture the title of tion. In 1928 there Miss Black State of Michigan, men, both able, bot representing this dear and sac- both handicapped by red 'Maize and Blue.' Despite all man Catholics: Goven this, the Daily did not carry an of New York and Sen article covering this news. of Montana. Smith u Would it not be of interest to ated. Nobody though others? The student body has a Why? Montana had right to know what is going on. electoral votes, New If it had been news of some rac- forty-five. Surely, th ial conflict, the Daily w o u 1 d reputation and stan have printed an article regard- candidate is of morei ing the situation - but never than the location of about something as common s dence. a Miss Black U of M. -reston Sloss WHY NOT? It is news!J -Linda M. Moragne In any election, po Electoral College where the votes are. To the Daily: tively affluent town I see that the question of abol- Arbor, that means w ishing the Electoral College is middle-aged membe again to the fore. The usual middle class. But th argument is that it always dis- of government is w torts, and may at any election worries about. Who c Gandhi I WHEN SU'NDAR Rajan was released from a Bombay jail he turned to the warden and said, "If Mrs. Gandhi wins the election, you will start taking us one by one from the night of March 22 itself!" The warden replied, "If the opposition wins, some of you here will become cabinet ministers and we prison officials will have to dance to your tune!" Indira is out. Hopefully India's long nightmare is over and Indians will no longer have to fear the mid- s appeneda 1876 and argument ould like to ominations of geogra- f the nom- Civil Wa r New York they were nd might College. Of for us, the the almost have large- But, from New Deal, taken for president uch chance td of nom- rty during ne illustra- were two h popular, being Ro- rnor Smith ator Walsh was nomin- of Walsh. only four York had he national ding of a importance his resi- on Belcher liticians go In a rela- like Ann hite, male rs of the e real test 'ho else it cares about the people without the big voice and the bigger expense account? In Ann Arbor's mayoral race this year, the candidates are appealing to very different groups. Al Wheeler, the incum- bent, has been working for so- cial changes. He has shown an interest in bringing the poor, students and women into the governmental process. Louis Belcher has tried to run on a non-partisan image, but his vot- ing record on City Coupcil re- veals a consistent bias toward the traditional sources of Re- publican strength. Al Wheeler came to the mayorship after two decadesas. a civil rights leader, and his work as mayor reflects that. One of the key thrusts of his two years has been to create a Human Services budget, that would allow more emphasis on and better delivery of things like day care and legal services to Ann Arbor residents. But Belcher and the Republicans de- feated the plan. Belcher's oppo- sition to social services goes very deep; he voted to spend $25,000 of a federal grant in- tended for social services for a Chamber of Commerce Hos- pitality Committee! Al Wheeler is a strong advo- cate of women's rights. He re- cently joined the National Or- ganization of Women (NOW), and is writing to other Michigan mayors to urge them to do the same. Belcher and the Republi- cans have defferent ideas; this year they tried to restrict the areas in which day care cen- ters could be operated. Only the mayor's veto stopped -hem. A high Democratic priority has been the development of public transportation, to help those Daly without cars to get around. A lot has been done. We do have dial-a-ride. Belcher, however, seems only to care about peo- ple with cars. He recently said, "You tell the American people to use public transportation,tand they'll tell you to stick it in your ear." Even the Ann Arbor News had to speak out against the elitism implicit in this atti- tude. How do the candidates feel about students? Belcher has consistently opposed the ap- proval of rock concerts. He vo- ted two years ago to put repeal of the $5 pot law on the ballot. And he voted against door-to- door registration, the method that got thousands of University of Michigan registered last fall. Wheeler opposed Belcher on all these things. No wonder there have been students among the Democrats on city council for years. Belcher may sweep the silent majority on April 4. But that's who he'll work for. The non- white, non-male, non-old or non- middle class voter will certain- ly choose Wheeler. Steve Grossbart AFSCME To the Daily: I am one of five student work- ers who were fired during the strike for honoring the picket line and not reporting to work for the duration of the st!ike. As far as I know, East Quad was the only place on campus where this occurred. Most of those who were fired, including myself, were memb- ers of the AFSCME Student Support Committee and were ac- tive supporters of the strike. Al- though it is true that all of us had accumulated more than the three absences need .for "term- ination", there were many eth- er studrnt workers in the same situation who did not lose their jobs. Not only were these politically active students fired for the rest of the term, but they were also suspended from working next fall term and have been placed on probat-bn for winter term 1978. They were also told that it would be difficult to obtain another University job during this time. These students need this employment to help them cover educational costs and liv- ing expenses. It is unfortunate that the University seeks to make it difficult for them to continue their higher education. This sort of political blacklist- ing has no place at thlis institu- tion. I find it abhorrent that the University is actively partici- pating in the suppression of free speech and political belief in 1977. I strongly urge the Board of Regents and Housing Director John Feldkamp to look into this matter immediately. I was dis- tressed by Mr. Feldkamp's statement in Tuesday's Daily that students were being fired solely "for their failure to re- port to work" and "are not be- ing disciplined for their 3ym- pathy with the strike". A true investigation of the fac:s will show that this is certainly not the case. -Richard M. Rosenthal Editorials and cartoons that aopeor on the riqht side of the Editorial Page are the opinion of the a u t h or or artist, and not necessarily the opinion of the paper. oses, democracy wins decentralization of industry and government so that more will be available to the people. With better U.S.- India relations, there could be tremendous investment possibilities for American concerns in India. Perspective den has probably been the biggest example of this yet. There, the ruling socialist party was voted out of office after over thirty years of rule. Great Britain and West Germany have been part of this too. In both countries, the ruling socialist parties were greatly weakened in last year's elections. Great Britain's financial woes have partly been attributed to theid over-socialization. Now in India, where the cities are choking with people and the government was only worsening the problem with their centralized industrialization proj3cts, the AK1r L ______ _. . _____