OPINION Wednesday, January 22, 1986 The Michigan Daily - MM Eitt mgbsunat ni t iig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Ferraro 's untold story Vol. XCVI, No. 79 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Put Goetz away BERNARD GOETZ is a lunatic vigilante, who should go to pr- ison. Last week, a New York Supreme Court dismissed eight at- tempted murder and assault charges against Goetz. The judge said that the prosecutor has neglected to explain the self-defense law to the second grand jury. Apparently, the judge wanted the jury to decide if Goetz had felt threatened. The jury's role is not to evaluate Goetz's feelings, but to reasonably determine if he behaved appropriately, con- sidering the circumstances that faced him. Even if the jury em- pathized with Goetz, the additional shot he fired into one of the woun- ded boys was clearly not aimed in self defense. Such evidence is crucial to the outcome of the case, although it was not revealed until after the initial uproar in the press and largely positive public reaction to Goetz's "get tough on crime" ac- tion. It was belatedly reported that Goetz said, "You don't look so bad; here have another", as he shot one of the boys who was already on the ground. In addition, the judge charged that two of the boys who Goetz allegedly attacked seemed to have contradicted themselves. The judge's source of information ap- pears to be the Daily News. Hence, procedural difficulties in the trial have temporarily ob- scured the fact that Goetz admitted to having shot the black youths who allegedly tried to rob him of $5 dollars on a New York City train. The prosecutor wisely decided to appeal the judge's decision the day after it was announced. Also, charges against Goetz for reckless endangerment still stand. The shots that did not hit the black youths are evidence for relatively minor charges against Goetz. The prosecutor should not try to violate procedural laws just to lock-up Goetz, but it is a good thing the prosecutor made his quick public announcement that the case would continue. Unfortunately, the court system has had to give the appearance of condoning vigilan- tism and the excessive use of force of a white man against black youth. The prosecutor must work to dispel this appearance as soon as possible. By Jackie Young I have just finished Ferraro: My Story. It took several weeks, almost a month, to get through it. Part of the problem is that I, like most readers, had expected something dif- ferent from this book. I expected to learn about Geraldine Ferraro's early years as a young woman growing up in New York. Instead, the former vice presidential can- didate's autobiography is primarily about her race for the second highest seat in the U.S. government. Its usefulness seems less to learn about the woman and more to rehash the 1984 post-convention campaign for those who hadn't followed it while it was going on. In short, the book is far from inspiring, although it recounts an extremely inspiring event. Ferraro is a politician, after all, and not a writer. But with another writer helping her out, co-author Linda Bird Francke, you would think they could have produced something a little more readable. But the fact that this book is poorly written and edited is no reason to quickly pass it over in the library or bookstore for more colorful reading. There is much of value in the book, especially in the chapter "Reflections," where Ferraro lets loose and gives us some snippets of the fan mail she says kept her going when she was "getting hit from all sides in the worst moments of the campaign." From a 39-year-old single woman, Ferraro received this letter: "The psychological impact of your candidacy and the manner in which you conducted your campaign have meant more to women of my generation and in my situation, have given us more self-esteem and courage, than it is possible for me to convey in words alone... We have a voice now in the affairs of this country greater than we have previously had. I no longer fear that voice can be silen- ced." Ferraro concludes the chapter, affirming the importance of her candidacy, with a particularly emotional moment. Ferraro tells how she overheard a college-age woman, who she "didn't recognize," ask one of her female campaign staff members how she should go about preparing to run for president in 1996. "Give me your name and number and we'll be in touch," the Ferraro campaign staffer responded, taking out her notebook, "I smiled," Ferraro writes. "That moment said it all. My candidacy had been worth it. Absolutely." Indeed, this is one of the things that made reading her book worthwhile. But little of the book is devoted to such positive aspects of Ferraro's candidacy. As much as I hate to admit it, most of the book is a rather sad comment on Ferraro, because she paints herself as a human being - an appearance-conscious woman and highly partisan politican - not some divine goddess of wisdom. Sidney Blumenthal, in a Jan. 6 & 13 edition of The NewuRepublic magazine, is quick to point out some of the silly incidents Ferraro cites in her book that seem to fit right into the stereotype of the mindless woman who worries more about her hair and what dress to wear than about pressing national issues. Much of what he notes does seem legitimately prissy. At one point, Ferraro insists that she keep a hair appointment, forcing a Mondale staffer who is in- vestigating her finances to wait an ad- ditional day to meet with her. However, Blumenthal goes too far. He chastises Ferraro for her mention of the shortage of female Secret Service agents and her frequently stated desire to go to the ladies' room. "Ferraro's book might have been appropriately titled To the Ladies' Room. The taffeta touches must be seen as a calculated appeal to Redbook readers, an essential constituency if Ferraro is to make back her one-million-dollar advance for her publisher," he writes. Blumenthal's demeaning remarks in The New Republic article get less favorable as the article proceeds. For example, he boldly compares Ferraro's acceptance of Walter Mondale's nomination with Molly Bloom's thoughts at the conclusion of James Joyce's classic work Ulysses. "Ferraro's acceptance of Walter Mon- dale's proposal apparently inspired her to think like Molly Bloom: 'Yes, I decided. Yes,' " Blumenthal mockingly writes. Molly Bloom, of course, is a domineering wife, thus this is a particularly offensive comparison. On several occasions, Ferraro questions whether a man would have been treated the same way she was during the campaign, a legitimate question since she is the first woman to run for this top position and few would dispute that sex discrimination exists in this country. But Blumenthal calls her questioning a matter of blaming her own failures on "an accursed sexism," implying that she has no right to suspect sexism. Actually, I felt Ferraro intimated sexism far less than she could have, probably fearing that people would see it as an excuse rather than the unfortunate handicap that it, like racial prejudice for black candidates, is for female candidates. Particularly in the area where Ferraro has had the most problems, finances, women have traditionally faced greater obstacles than their male colleagues. Having less access to the Wall Street powerbrokers and the 'Boys Clubs' that control the big buck, female candidates have traditionally found it har- der to raise money for their campaigns. Blumenthal, however, not only makes light of sex discrimination, he bad mouths Ferraro's ethnic heritage. This is, I sup- pose, his piece de resistance, which he saves to conclude his article. He hints that Ferraro's relatives, and especially her husband,shave direct ties to the Mafia, going so far as to compare her aspiration for legitimate power to that of characters in The Godfather. Then he finishes her off, writing: "The die for Ferraro was cast when she married her husband. Though she projects herself as a kind of Horatio Alger heroine, that story never happened. Instead, she married well within a certain circle, fulfilling her initial ambition. But she could never reject her past without rejecting her husband - and most of her life." That's just a bit harsh, to say the least. Blumenthal's nasty innuendo regarding Ferraro's background seemed shady to me. It seems he wanted to prove that journalists can dig up dirt on anyone, especially overly idealized historic figures, to prove that nobody is free of corruption. Blumenthal makes me ashamed to be a journalist. His work seems intended to shame Ferraro without adequately proving wrongdoing. I agree with Ferraro, as she writes in her book, that "The past actions of anyone's family should not have any bearing on that person's capacities to serve as the Vice President, the Vice President's wife, or the Vice President's husband." But enough of Blumenthal's opinion of Ferraro's book and candidacy. The most revealing tidbits to be gleaned from Ferraro's book are the lessons that her can- didacy has for future generations of female candidates. And there are many. Among these lessons is the problem of claiming that a victory for one woman can- didate is a victory for all women. Ferraro explains that this is a dilemma in the politics of race and gender which she has yet to resolve for herself. She admits to cam- paigning for male candidates whom she supported on the issues over female can- didates she did not agree with on issues. Although Ferraro admits that Mondale probably chose her because he thought more women would vote for him, the ticket failed precisely because this did not happen "It demeans women to think that they would vote in a mindless bloc just because of their gender - or a candidate's gender," Ferraro writes. But this is exactly what the Mondale Ferraro campaign was hoping for. In the future, perhaps candidates should avoid focusing on gender so much and prove why everyone would be worse off under their opponent. Another lesson is that even when you lose, you win. - Post-election polls in five congressional districts in Utah, Kansas, Missouri, New Hampshire, and Florida revealed that 27 percent of the respondents said they would be more likely to vote for a woman than before the 1984 election; 7 per-* cent said they would be less likely; while by far the largest percentage, 64 percent, said it would make no difference. In addition, as Ferraro writes: "Some of the negative stereotyping that had plagued female candidates in the past had been erased. (She might think differently after reading Blumenthal's article). Women can- didates were in fact ranked more positively than men with regard to the characteristics of being effective in office, caring, having strong opinions and new ideas, fighting for their beliefs, understanding voters' needs, and speaking to the point." Despite the positive lessons, the negative outcome of Ferraro's candidacy - that some may claim the defeat of one woman as a judgment on all women candidates - should only convince more women of the need to run for political office. As Ferraro advises in the closing pages if her book: "It is now more important than ever for more and more young women to en- ter politics and make politics a career." "For all that we make up fifty-two percent of the population, women are sorely un- derrepresented in the policy-making bodies of this country. There are still only twenty- three congresswomen out of 435 members of the House, two senators out of one hundred, two governors of fifty states. "An important voice - springing from the knowledge of women, their bond to living things - is not being heard." More women should take Ferraro's ad- vice. Unfortunately, many women may not 0 want to wade through her book and relive her problematic and traumatic candidacy, ~thus they won't get the message. They may just read The New Republic's scornful review of her book and neglect to read it for themselves. That would be a tragedy. But rarely do men and women learn the lessons that history teaches. Addressing the aged THE REAGAN administration's lack of concern for the plight of the elderly in this country is clearly demonstrated in its inten- tions to eliminate an exemplary housing construction program for senior citizens. Despite the administration's limited protection of Social Security and Medicare benefits, this cut outlined in a White House draft of the 1987 budget appears to be one of many bureaucratic "back doors." Bipartisan supporters of the housing program in Congress do say that the program's popularity may insure its existence. Never- theless, it has undergone several severe cutbacks that have significantly diminished the quality and quantity of the low-cost housing projects. There is also sub- stantial evidence that the distribution of federal loans by the Department of Housing and Urban development is in part motivated by political favoritism. Similarly, the spending cuts outlined in the new budget laws in- dicate the administration's failure to make the needs of the elderly an unconditional priority. The threat of adverse political consequences forced the authors of the new budget to make Social Security benefits exempt from spending cuts and limit cuts for Medicare to 1 percent. However, these exemptions don't extend to the ad- ministrative budgets of these programs. As a result, doctors will receive less for treating elderly Medicare patients - a consequen- ce that many senior citizens can ill afford. The problems of the elderly have been ignored and understated. But a new and particularly disturbing attitude is developing within the government as well as the general public. Claims are now being made that the elderly are actually the wealthy of this country, and take unfair advantage of Social Security and Medicare benefits. Such statements may have validity in isolated cases but clearly the financial insecurity of many senior citizens is an undeniable reality that cannot be whitewashed. It is difficult to reconcile cuts in low-cost housing projects, Social Security and Medicare when one looks at what Reagan has deemed as a priority over these concerns. His Strategic Defense Initiative program is excluded from virtually all spending cuts - a fact that re- defines the word "necessity." For poor senior citizens, the anxiety over affordable housing and ef- ficient medical services is far greater than anxiety for the coun- try's nuclear arsenal. Wasserman 1* A NDNATOQY SEPT BEST LAW LIS A M/OLATION OF OUP FREEDOM,. 00 _) StXI"L UP Fog £ s ow INVITATON To OF?9-SsSION t'f( CAS DRJ41KIL ?PfltE- owe U X Lr:T TINS HAPENW, THE NEXT STEP 15 LEA.P STER COMMIES- NOT S FLUORIDE wIOUR. PPAN kING- WATfi.. Myu12Cr 521T0 t6 LETTERS: Zionists oppose extremism 1 r. ,,,. ' .:lV . ..-- } . . - r ' To the Daily: A battle has been waged on the editorial page of The Daily, a bat- tle of attack and counter-attack to sway public opinion on the Arab-Israeli conflict. We believe there is a more constructive alternative to the vicious rhetoric. We are a group of Zionists op- posed to extremism on both sides of the conflict. Zionism, in part, grew in reaction to Anti- Semitism, a form of racism. It is racism. Moreover, we are pained by the racist and oppressive tendencies within the Zionist community. These streams, both within and outside of Israel, maintain the repression in the Occupied Territories and the denial of the national and human rights of the Palestinian people. We cannot accept Schreier and Coleman's optimistic and inaccurate por- trayal of the modern Israeli reality. We do not agree that all Jewish-Arab settlement within Israel, sponsors a school for peace. Thousands of Israeli Arabs and Jews have par- ticipated in seminars there to promote understanding and to eliminate stereotypes. Shalom Achshav (Peace Now), an active Israeli movement, works for a peaceful solution to the Middle East conflict. Yesh Gvul (There's a Limit), a group of Israeli soldiers, refused to serve in the Lebanese War, feeling that the political, social and economic challenges facing Israel today. We work within the Jewish com munity to raise an awareness of these issues, hoping to combat extremism and promote respon- sible Zionism. In these ways we are actively implementing change. We urge the campus and the community to continue the debate, but in a constructive manner. -The Progressive Zionist - j U