Page 4-Wednesday, April 9, 1980-The Michigan Daily Some advice you've never seen in the papers One of the more widely-read columns in American newspapers is "Dear Abby," in which people delight in the tragedies and suf- ferings of their fellow human beings. Not only do the questions make one's own personal problems seem miniscule, they can be clipped and read at parties. Well, Abigail has just finished editing a book 0 <- called Confidential Letters De-Classified, in which she betrays the trust of hundreds in or- der to pay for a new psychoanalyst. A copy of the book was obtained three weeks before its of- ficial release date, and owing nothing to Abby, we have decided to print some excerpts from the new book:; Dear Abby: My small son and daughter don't, get along. When my daughter is playing quietly, my son sneaks up on her, grabs all her dolls;, i runs into the bathroom, locks the door, and at- tempts to flush them down the toilet. He often does this when we have guests. I have many af- fairs and wonder if this has anything to do with my son's problems. My daughter is 3 years old, my son, 16. Should I stop running around?-Confused and worried. Dear Confused: If you had a head on your shoulders, you'd stop giving your daughter dolls. If that doesn't work, stop having guests over. Dear Abby: My husband died last summer, and since then I've become very sad. I just sit at home all day. I don't have a radio or television, can't read, can't see well, never have enough to eat, and have stopped receiving my social security checks. Please, please, can you help me?-Miserable. Dear Miserable: You're in sad shape. Sounds like you need some activity. This is America, honey, where opportunities are plen- By Nick Katsarelas tiful. Get out and shovel snow or maybe deliver the Shopping News. But just don't sit there and gloat in your pity. Dear Abby: I've been having a lesbian affair with my daughter's college roommate for about a year now. Last week, my daughter found out, accused me of trying to be "hip," and told me to act my age. What should I do?-Despairing in Ann Arbor Dear Despairing: Who does your daughter think she is? Hold your ground, and if she doesn't like it, take away her Peugot. Dear Abby: I'm 84 years old, and people refer to me as a "senior citizen." I find this a little disgusting. Do you?-Young at Heart Dear Granny: If you're not a senior citizen, what are you? A wild tigress? If it makes you feel better, ask people to call you "chronologically advanced." Dear Abby: Whenever we visit the con- dominium of my husband's mother in Miami, she always makes me feel real guilty. She says things like, "How many towels did you get dirty this morning?" or, "I thought I left Chicago to get away from the bad elements." Should I say something to my husband?-Scared from Skokie Dear Scared: No dearie, But next time mother-in-law mouths off to you, hide her glasses. Why get hubby involved? Dear Abby: My son is a mess. He's only 14, and so far, he's been in and out of juvenile homes, gets into fights, drinks, smokes, does chemicals, often stays out all night, and associates with young hoodlums. When I tell him to behave, he just says, "Aw, mom," and pouts. Any advice?-Puzzled Dear Puzzled: You should try to stop mothering the poor kid, despite the fact that you've probably already wrecked him beyond rehabilitation. Dear Abby: For 35 years, I have faithfully served my husband, cleaning up after him, washing his clothes, preparing his meals, disciplining his kids, putting up with his drinking and carousing, and spending all my, life as his housewife. I have just been offered a job, about 10 hours a week, at the local publi library. Should I take it?-Restless Dear Restless: What? And be unfair to your husband. Listen, sweetie, no one forced you to marry the oaf. Your husband needs you at home. Dear Abby; These boys in my high school chemistry class were talking about harming Mrs. Schafer, our chemistry teacher, with some contact explosives, so I told Mr. Green, the principal. Did I do the right thing?-Theresa Dear Theresa (your handwriting 0 atrocious): First of all, you should mind your own business. Next, wouldn't it have been fun to watch? And finally, how do you ever expect to be a cheerleader if you tell on your friends? Some of Nick Katsarelas' best friends are daily newspaper columnists. Kat's play ap- pears every Wednesday on this page. V 0 A.1190ii, - NittelY Year()f (Editorial Feedom Vol. XC, No. 150 News Phone: 764-0552 '" T11111. THIS MC FOR ALL OEE y i li. 12 L i x.34845 12 'NTI I "rESOPII4 OTE IS LEGAL TENDER - BTS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE L314 8 4 36 12 13 6 E5100 471 I Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Another election foul-up I DIDN'T THINK it could happen. It's like a nightmare come true. The Michigan Student Assembly elec- tions have been fouled up for the second year in a row. The problem this time is not of the magnitude of last year's widespread fraud and ethical transgressions. This year, a mere foolish oversight has caused the name of one LSA candidate to be left off one-fourth of the ballots, and the name of another to be listed twice. The error occurred because there are several versions of the ballot, allowing a rotation of the order of the candidates' names. As the deadline for this page ap- proaches, it appears that the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) - the body invested with the power to certify the election - is considering how it will go about certifying part or all of the balloting. CSJ could choose to certify most of the winning candidates, leaving one or two seats open for a runoff election between the lowest winning vote- getters and the students whose names were bungled. Yet it seems ap- propriate to ask whether such a solution would be fair, considering that the candidates who are forced into a runoff election - and whose competi- tion was split among dozens of other candidates - will face stiffer com- petition against a single opponent. Or CSJ could decide not to certify the election at all. This choice, too, could be questioned, because it would in- volve much cost and injustice to can- didates who won seats. Please think carefully, CSJ. The legitimacy of a student government rests on your shoulders. e3I A tough sanction at last It has become fashionable for some of us to assume that white racism is dead. Prejudice against blacks in the sphere of political activity is not always illegal, but most assuredly frowned upon. George Wallace no longer blocks schoolhouse entrances; Strom Thurmond now courts South Carolina's black electorate with candy-sweet promises of gover- nment subsidies and programs for the poor. In the cultural arena, blacks are not as "in- visible" as they once were. A fragile but growing black middle class now resides comfortably in the sprawling suburbs of the nation's cities. It is something of a rude shock to the satisfied and complacent within the black community when evidence springs up that contradicts the myth of black ad- vancement. Yet, in Connecticut in February, virtually ignored by the media, just such an incident took place. STATE Representative Russell Reynolds of West Haven, Connecticut received a question- naire from a representative of United Press International on a variety of issues. When the third- term Democratic legislator reached the question on in- creasing state taxes, he wrote: "No! No! No! Income tax. No more taxes. Limit spending. Put the Niggers back to work." Reynolds completed the questionnaire and signed his name, UPI revealed. When Reynolds' statement became public knowledge, angry black state legislators demanded his permanent expulsion from the House on the grounds of racism. PRESIDENT CARTER'S decision to break diplomatic ties with Iran, while it may seem-to be the boldest and sternest of the retaliatory measures he announced Monday, might not have as much effect on the Iranian authorities as another, less publicized measure. The president issued several directives which could eventally land Iranian moneys currently held in the U.S. into the- 'hands of the hostages, their families, and other claimants against the Islamic "Republic." On November 4, Carter froze most Iranian assets in the U.S. in response to the Iranians' signalling an intent to withdraw their government's billions. from American corporations and banks. Since that time, the possibility of using those assets to settle damages against Americans has certainly always been in the air, but it has only rarely been mentioned. While the complaints that Carter waited too long before taking this kind of meaningful action may be justified, it certainly is commendable that he has enacted several harsh actions against Iran, in two different spheres (diplomatic and financial) at the same time., It could be years before any of the complainants against Iran will see the money; the assets cannot be made available to the courts by a simple executive fiat. Congress and the president will have to approve legislation formalizing the procedures for disbursing the funds before they can be seized. But Carter's initiatives could serve as notification to Khomeini and company that the months of American passivity and tolerance for the militants' claims are drawing to a close. 'Putting the niggers back. to work'. By Manning Marable Reynolds issued a public apology before his colleagues in the House chamber. "I stand as one who has brought shame upon myself and this Assembly. I have used a term that is derogatory," he admitted. "I am here as a man to accept my responsibility for my acts and ask your forgiveness." WHITE Democratic and Republican leaders alike refused to make an unqualified public * stand against Reynolds' racist slur. With few exceptions, the only legislators who supported his expulsion were black. In- stead, House leaders decided to sponsor a resolution which ver- bally reprimanded and censured Reynolds. Censure carries neither legal penalties nor forces a legislator from office. Many conservative legislators refused to censure Reynolds for what was, in their opinion, merely a verbal miscue. "This man is ruined, politically and financially," pleaded Republican representative Eugene Migliaro. "What the devil more do you want?" By a narrow margin, 70-67, the vote to "reprimand and censure" Reynolds passed. The- final resolution declared that the Democrat's statement had been "demeaning, insulting, and belit- tling of a group of citizens representing a major segment of American study and which statement is further a derogatory and racist one which is offensive to public order and decency and to be abhorred by all citizens of the'State of Connecticut." MANY LOCAL BLACK leaders were still dissatisfied. Represen- tative Thirman Milner correctly termed censure for Reynolds as ''no more than a slap on the wrist." State NAACP President Benjamin Andrews complained that the censure was "not a solution, because "the at- mosphere of racism" still existed. The public controversy surrounding Reynold's censure by the Connecticut legislature obscures the essential questions raised by the white politician's original remarks. First of all, neither black nor white taxpayers appreciate higher taxes, wheth federal, state or local. Everyone wants to limit federal spen- ding-the only debate is whether to cut human services, like edue- ation and health care, or to diminish expenditures for defen- se. And virtually every black man and woman with a family to support wants a job. In every poll, blacks as a group are the strongest advocates of full e ployment. So the real question becomes this: Can America's economic system, as it currently operates, "put the blacks back to work?" The answer isno. Unless there is a major shift in political priorities, from the White House and Congress at the top to the local level, which places the. productive capabilities of people ahead of the narrower, sel interested profit motives of cor- porate conglomerates, black people will still have unem- ployment rates above 15 and 20 per cent. And racist legislators across the country will continue to complain in public and in private that "blacks don't want jobs." As long as we live in a racist society, we will be plagued by t backward epithets of men li Reynolds. To believe otherwise is to ignore four centuries of bitter but very real history. - Manning Marable is an associate professor of history at Cornell University's Africana Studies and Research Center and is a leader of the National Black Politic Assembly. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Prosterman has finally told the 'truth' X SE W14ERe CA'RER AS CAVFP IN TO 1THE POST OFFICE- Y LO~Y IN REGA~RD TO 1415 BuDG6T CUTS. HC5 LITI TNI POST OFFICE. CONTNUE 5ATUiIP4Y PELIVEW~I&S! I 'To the Daily: All year I have been waiting for H. Scott Prosterman (those of us who know Yiddish will know how well the name suits him) to tell the truth about Israel and the Middle East. He has come very close to doing so in his last analysis, which reports the views of my esteemed colleague at the Hebrew University, Professor Shahak (Daily, April 5). I refer to Prosterman's final remarks, in which he notes that Zionism now supports world-wide fascism, which in turn made the Holocaust possible. How true, Mr. Prosterman. But this is not the whole truth. As a historian, let me explain what really hap- pened. The facts are as follows: At a pseudonym, Hitler) as chancellor of Germany, and Adolph Eich- mannstein (well known by his "Aryan" name, Eichmanrr) as director of the "Holocaust plot." Let me explain to the students of this University that both these men were, in fact, Jews. During World War II, the Jewish-Nazi regime did in fact destroy some Jews (although it has been proven beyond a doubt that only 50, and not six million, were done away with-those who remained secretly alive now rule the com- munist countries of Eastern Europe, as well as the U.S.S.R.) Now why should the Jews want all this to happen? Why should they want even a few of their brethren destroyed? The answer is simple, and although Mr. ' Prneforman wil 1 l nrnIShhi. This is a sad tale. But there are some signs that the real story is becoming well known. Mr. Prosterman, an American specialist in Arab affairs, albeit of the Mosaic persuasion, has performed a notable service to the truth. Carry on, Mr. Prosterman. And well done, Michigan Daily, for giving him the opportunity to let the truth bS known. Yes, Pravda and the Arab propaganda machine have poin- ted all this out before. But how many of our students can read Russian and Arabic? -Ezra Mendelsohn Visiting Professor of History April 5 Police tolerant at Bash -I- '''~~~' ur4 P112N'T CAVCE IN 1TONE POE~T OFFICE ' HF- JUS~T wNM15 To MAKE' 5URF, JIE 1C4) LVFER N15 CUTS T0 OUR BUDQE(T) To the Daily: As a freshman here at, the University, I witnessed my first Hash Bash on April Fools Day. I, as one who was present when the police made their sweep of the Diag at 5:45 p.m., feel that the Ann Arbor police deserve quite a bit of credit for the way they han- started busting heads; but that's why I'm'not a police officer. There is no reason why anyone should have to take that much abuse. Both my sister and my brother-in- law are police officers, and to listen to what they have to put up with for such small salaries is beyond belief. Granted, there are times when the t