w W, w V V V w ' M V I E Mideast (Continued from Page 11) Middle East. That's very exciting to me. D: How about in the Middle East? P: It's a little soon to know. It has just come out. It came out in the United States May 30, and I understand that there's enormous interest in the Arab countries as well as in Israel. There seems to be less interest in Israel thus far. There's been one major review bu by a Hebrew newspaper in Israel. It was a highly favorable review by a respected intellectual there, a Dove. That was, I think, probably very important in in- troducing the book to the Israelis. I think it's got more to do with simple logistics. It's hard to get the book there and it's hard to even keep it in the bookstores. The book's in its eighth printing but there are still bookstores that are sold out of it. They have to wait ~weeks here, so I imagine you have to multiply that by many times when you're talking about the distributorship in Israel. D: Have there been any official responses to the book? P: There were four issues of the Near East Report devoted to lauding the book, which is, I understand, un- precedented. The PLO supporters, and the PLO themselves have understan- dably attacked the book now-now that they know that it can't be ignored. The attacks, however, have been seemingly without rebuttal. There is no way one can successfully rebut one's own words and most of the words in the book which are incisive in regard to Arab attitudes are citing the Arabs' own words. Th facts, of course, are documented totally and it's very hard to successfully rebu the truth. D: What do you perceive to be th current situation in the area? P: I'd like to look at it in the contex of the book. I think that what the book has shown, what it has done for me, is to convince me that the actions that ar taking place today are a direct result o the factors which are being exposed in the book. The motivating forces behin the actions today are directly iden tifiable as the very traditions which have been buried by propaganda-and they're operating right now. D: Do you see any end to the traditions in operation? P: There is an old Arab tradition o enmity, of racial intolerance towared towards Jews which goes back 1300 years.wThat by itself would not be so important if i had stopped 1300 or 1200 years ago. I fact, that tradition, that attitude per meates Arab/Muslim attitudes to thi very day, and has been uninterruptedly perpetuated throughout the ages. D: Do you see any signs that these at titudes are fading. Is there any possibl way they can be reversed? P: It could only be alteredi there was pressure brought to bear i favor* of a more reasonable, con ciliatory attitude on the part of the adamant, rejectionist, Arab states. D: What impact do you think the Egyptian-Israel Peace Treaty has on these Arab states? P: It's encouraging that there wa one. In fact, there was an Egyptian pharoh who offered his daughter in h s e y t e I t k [1 0 e f n d - h e >f is is t n r- is y t- marriage to Solomon, for what he called "good diplomatic and political reasons." Anwar Sadat went to Jerusalem. I saw the plane land, and we were all very happy when it did. Anything can happen, but it has to be encouraged, because there are fery few people with the kind of courage that Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin had. D: Where do you think this en- couragement will come from? P: I don't know. I think that one can only throw the truth out into the world and hope that there are enough sparks flying because of it so that there will be catalysts to prevent the truth from being buried. D: With reference to the area's leaders, what role does Khomeini play? P: I'm sure he is causing great tor- ment in the Muslim world. The in- timidation by the violence there is cer- tainly not going to encourage con- ciliation between Muslims and Jews, of any kind. Khomeini was greatly aided in his effort by the PLO. D: Does he now play any role in aiding the PLO? P: Oh, I think many people, for their own selfish motives, will give some aid or abetment to any organism that is disruptive. The force for distruction is a way of creating chaos and disorganization which is important to any power that wants to take over in an 'It's basically a fundamental problem for the Arab world to accept a Jewish state as an equal in any place near the Arab world.' -Joan Peters, author of 'From Time Immemorial' NEB Pi3E PREMIERES TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1985 e D: Do you see the role of the U.S. as being a catalyst? if P: Sure, could be. n D: Within the area, what would you i- say causes the conflict? Are the e problems political, social, religious or racial? 1e P: It's basically a fundamental n problem for the Arab world to accept a Jewish state as an equal in any place s near the Arab world. Jews have been n second class citizens, at best, in the n history of Arab/Muslim rule. For Jews to dare to be equal power in a region which has always held them low, is not acceptable to the Arab/Muslim world. D: And therefore they are only retaliating against accepting this? P: They have no intention of accep- ting it. They will accept it only if the free world insists on a standard of behavior which is more like the stan- dard of behavior which the West accep- ts from itself, expects from itself, and expects from each other. D: Does the Arab world see them- selves as exempt from the standards, or do they have a different set? P: Their standards are different from those in the West. . . the Jews' second class citizenship included not only forfeiting their property and, and having it expropriated, but also always included a special poll tax for non- believers, for infidels, for what they called the dhimmi population. In the nineteenth century a British consulate in Jerusalem wrote a report to the home office which reported that an Arab had been arrested for invading a Jewish house and robbing and abusing the family. The consulate wrote that the Arab thief was outraged at the aboration of being arrested, because, as he said, it was his right and his family's from time immemorial to take what belonged to the Jews without giving account. I think that that at- titude which evidenced itself then is also quite identifiable among the Arab and PLO members and supporters who discuss the situation now. If you look at their words-and I have quoted them in the book, at length-that attitude is identifyable, and it is recognizable. D: Do you see any end to this? P: I hope so. area. D: What about Libya's Khadafi? P: I don't think his role is important (in this struggle). I think the important role is history. I think he is one of the Middle East actors in a drama, but the drama that's being enactedis being enacted the way it is because the Arab/Muslim worldihas been given a rubber stamp until now to operate any which way it saw fit. This is at the ex- pense of the Arabs who are refugees, or migrants, or whatever, but theysare people who are being turned into a human bomb directed toward Israel. D: How can Israel protect itself against propaganda that's portraying Israel as the aggressor in the area? P: In 1967, the Israelis finally took control of the area that Jordan calls the West Bank and the area called the Gaza strip. This area comprises only about 5 to 6% of the whole of Palestine and it is really not a very important area. However, Arab militants see it as the stepping stone to destroying the whole of Israel. You can't even look at the PLO claims to what they call Palestine, without addressing the question of what Palestine is. Once you begin to look at the history of what Palestine is. It is the area both east and west of the Jordan River, which is, of course, why Jordan calls it the West Bank of Palestine, as opposed to the East Bank, which is Jor- dan. This is why it isn't, and never was, an Arab political entity. Palestine was never called Palestine as a political nation. It was never ruled by Arabs as a place called Palestine, and in fact, it only became important as a geographical entity after the First World War. The League of Nations, the ancestor of the United Nations proclaimed a Jewish national homeland in Palestine. They took all the other lands around it as indepen- dent Arab states, but Palestine was ex- cluded. It was internationally ordained as a Jewish national home. That was the only time that a geographical entity called Palestine was really operative. Of course the name was given to the land peripherally by the Romans, who called it 'palestina' to eradicate all the traces of the Jewish nation they had just destroyed there. The Jews never left that land though. 2010: A space travesty 2010 Director: Peter Hyams Stars: Roy Schieder, John Lithgow, Bob Balanban By Byron L. Bull EVENTEEN years ago, Stanley 1.Kubrick made his greatest and most controversial film: 2001: A Space Odyssey. It was a majestic and (though few critics have ever caught on) grandly farcical epic dream about humanity's evolutionary ascent. 2001 charted the development of man from a subhuman to a superhuman. The film affects viewers' subconscious mind rather than their intellect, which may be part of the reason for the initial, i cious denounciations by so many critics which were later followed by the film's achievement of landmark status. It is, despite its conceptual shortcomings, undeniably powerful experience for the sense, a deliriously sensual experiment in film that really is an elaborate seduction. All of the technological refinements in film since then (things like motion control systems and com- puter enhanced matte techniques) have done little to detract from the beauty of Kubrick's sublime orchestration of color and movement on the screen. The subsequent attempts by techno- wonderkids like Lucas and Spielberg to snatch the mantle from Kubrick's hand have been little more than pitifully clumsy barrages of flambouyant but empty showmanship. M G M'S 2010, one of the most incon- cievable and overtly exploitive sequels, hangs onto the memory its predessecor like an ugly little barnacle. Director Peter Hyams, who adapted the film from Arthur Clarke's flimsy novel of the same name, claims to have been profoundly influenced by 2010. Sadly, there's not a trace of inspiration even symbolic connections between 2010 and 2001. Hyams even conveniently ignores the original's ending without so much as a hasty loophole to excuse himself. in this graceless, clutzy hardware opus. The story unfolds nine years after the events of 2010. A joint American-Soviet expedition embarks to the moon of Jupiter to determine what happened to the previous U.S. mission. Roy Scheider (typecast again as an Everyman) plays American comman- der Heywood Floyd, who boards the derelict spaceship Discovery and is confronted by the ghost of astronaut Daivd Bowman (Keir Dullea in a cameo reprise). Bowman warns him of grave, though of course enigmatic, con- sequences if the expedition doesn't im- mediately turn back. Hyams drags out countless pieces of 2001 artifacts, from the now famous Zarathustra theme to shabby plastic reconstructions of the sets. He even sinks so low as to use some of the actual footage in the background as part of an awful in-joke. What he doesn't do is put any of the window dressing to any good use; it's all just up there littering the screen. There are, in fact, no logical or OCIT N FIZEN, So Beautiful The much more melodr v r 1 o - MON.7 t " wrx , 1 - r V3U ld] a weekly feature every Tuesdayi " MTS information " Good buys " Expert advice in The Michigan Daily " New equipment " Product reviews " Stories 12 Weekend/Friday, February 8, 1985 Weekend/Frida