4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, March 24, 1987 The Michigan Daily SIb Sidj43au 1OatI4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVII, No. 118 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109, Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. LETTERS Support affirmative A BAM III demands FOLLOWING PROTESTS AT THE Fleming Administration Building and the Michigan League, University President ' Harold Shapiro agreed to meet with leaders of the Black Action Movement III yesterday morning. Shapiro should support the thrust of the BAM demands. The call to increase funding for the Black Student Union through the University is justified. The BSU provides valuable resources for Blacks on this campus and serves as a lobby and a voice to the administration for Black concerns. BAM calls for the immediate endowment of $150,000 for the Trotter House from the University. This step is important to the preservation of Afro-American and other minority cultural ideals on campus. The BAM demand that Blacks be appointed to the chairpersonships of 30 percent of academic departments of the University is perhaps more applicable to minorities as a whole. The administration should adopt a plan to insure that more departments are chaired by minority representatives. BAM demands the immediate addition of a discriminatory harassmen'clause to University, rules arft regulations. The University should be to inform offenders -of their rights of due process. By putting a racial harassment clause in the dormitory lease for instance, the University can seek legal prosecution of criminal racist acts. It might also pursue civil suits against those who engage in discriminatory behavior at the University. The racial harassment clause should not be a tool for the administration to usurp the functions of the legal system. Also, the harassment clause must clearly define what discriminatory harassment entails. The University's hesitancy to listen to past student demands and proposals has forced a militant stance on the part of students. President Shapiro is in a position to demonstrate a willingness to heed legitimate student desires. The University maintains that it will not cater to every group that makes demands. The administration question what makes BAM and the United Coalition Against Racism so special that their needs should be served before those of other groups. The University should recognize these groups because of the support they have mustered and the seriousness of the problem which they are trying to combat. The intentions and suggestions of the BAM demands, including its advocacy of the UCAR proposals, are justified for the most part.. The University must accept and negotiate some of these demands in an open-minded way or pay the price of student unrest here on campus and deserved em - barrassment nationwide. To the Daily: I have' just finished reading James Elliot's letter ("Will this madness ever stop?" Daily, March 19) and I am very angry, not at Elliot, but at a society that breeds and perpetuates his type of thinking. I agree with Elliot that the University community upholds separatism by supporting many "black" organizations. However, these separated groups are not racist. They are a means by which Blacks can fulfill certain social needs which are not fulfilled in a typical "white" society. In addition, Elliot's whole argument against recruiting "minorities" was bullshit. I don't think he understands the idea behind Affirmative Action, which is to provide opportunities to blacks which have long been denied them. Encouraging them to attend college by facilitating their ability to do so is a small attempt to compensate them for discrimination they have suffered. Eventually, Affirmative Action should no longer be necessary because blacks will have become recognized as equal with the rest of society. If there is any truth to rumors about lowering standards to admit blacks to universities and other schools, I am certain there is truth to rumors about lowering standards to admit extremely wealthy students. I believe I am a qualified representative of the point of view I am espousing, especially since I am white and suffered at the hands of the Office of Financial Aid, yet this has not turned me against blacks on campus as perpetrators of my predicament. whites tend to focus blame on blacks because they, in the words of Ayn Rand, as quoted in Elliot's letter, "are frustrated, by a need to protest, not knowing against what." Rather, the basic nature of this society is such that whites and blacks are forced to compete for what rightfully belongs to all. Towards the end of his letter, Elliot implied that what blacks want is not equality, but supremacy. I have to wonder what ever gave him this idea. The desire to achieve equality and the desire to be supreme are radically different, and I would think blacks would at least achieve equality before they think about supremacy. The United Coalition Against Racism is not demanding awareness of racial problems, the University is well aware of these problems, but it is demanding that specific action be taken to purge this campus of racism. I realize Elliot had good intentions in exploring this issue and trying to come to the root of the racist problem. However, by using old, worn- out arguments he avoided the true problem and failed to find any solution. Elliot wrote, "The problem is these groups do not realize what they will have to give up to achieve equality." Was this a typographical error or an attempt at satire? The only things blacks would have to give up are grief, oppression and anxiety caused by a white- imbecile dominated society. If it were possible to change society overnight, a solution would be simple. Unfortunately, society takes years, decades, even centuries to change its attitudes. By doing nothing blacks would achieve nothing, but by organizing and making their apppeals heard they can only improve their place in society as a group, as well as society's view of them as individuals. Historically, every advance for hbaks nn matter hnw sma1l Standards not lowered that the situation has been ignored for so long that blacks have to resort to extremes, but if rallies, boycotts, and sit-ins are what it takes to shame the administration into doing something then they deserve To the Daily: I would like to respond to the letter you carried by James Elliot ("Will this madness ever stop?" Daily, March 19). Mr. Elliot, if you desire an end to racism in our society and on campus then you must be willing to pursue the truth about it. Unfortunately, your letter reveals you are as yet unwilling to accept this responsibility: 1)° You said, "The medical school has to lower their standards...to accept the black student because they have to reach their quota of minority students." The truth is the medical school does not lower its standards to accept the black student adthe medical school has no minority quota. 2) You asked, "Why should the medical school be forced to take students who are not qualified and shouldn't they instead be looking for good doctors?" The truth is the medical school refuses admissions to students who are not qualified because they are looking for good doctors. 3) You said that you, "...Guess society does not have enough black doctors." The truth is black society does not have enough black doctors. 4) You said that the fact remains-"Many blacks are accepted to the medical school are not qualified." The truth is every student in the medical school is qualified to be there. Clearly, anyone dedicated to the truth would not attempt to substitute empty assessments and opinionated simplicities as facts. The admissions committee's definition of a qualified applicant is much more dynamic than you are at present able to realize. For them, "qualified" is not synonymous with a particular test score or GPA (as you assessment would suggest), although GPA's and test scores do help to define a distribution for the qualified appplicant. Also, your assessment causally links qualified (a certain GPA by your terms) with competency (being a good physician). This is incorrect. In fact, they aresnot causally related. This is why many students, both white and black, with GPA's and test scores well within the medical school's standards are rejected. It is not my attempt to explain to you the complexities of the admissions process. I can not. Rather, I only seek to alert you to the shallowness of your own thought processes. In speaking about the black organizations on campus, that labeling the Black Medical Association, for example, as "black" promotes racism and that "By the titles alone, white people can not join these groups due to their color." The "black" in the Black Medical Association (BMA) does not stand for no whites allowed. If the BMA did not want to allow white students into their organization, then they would have called the organization NWAMA for NoWhites Allowed Medical Association. As a political organization, the BMA does not suscribe to a politics of exclusion as you seem to believe, rather, theirs is a politics of inclusion-a valuable contribution can come from anybody. The BMA is also a cultural organization. It, provides one setting for blacks to maintain and express their culture. It does not prohibit others from experiencing that'. culture. If you believe the expression of black or any other culture will prevent an. end to racism and the, procurement of total equality as you seem to suggest: "The problem is these groups do not realize what they will have to give up to achieve equality," then perhaps you are diknowingly constrained by your own cultural interpretations of the problem. If this is so, then how much more important to you become those campus organizations expressing a culture distinct from your own. In closing, I would like to leave you with this thought. Truth is reality. If you are not dedicated to the truth, you will not be able to see the reality of racism clearly; you will not be prepared to deal with racism. -Garfield Bryant, U of M Medical School March 20" full support by everyone. Hopefully, this University will serve as an example to others by demonstrating what can be accomplished through organized, persistent efforts. In answer to the question, "Will action this madness ever stop?" - only when whites stop " complaining as if they were being oppressed and start'4 working to help those who are. -Jeri Schneider March 1 Waivers are not justified To the Daily:d- "Tuition waiver for all doesn't seem right. M under-represented minorities" people work hard in hi was one of the demands the school in order to g United Coalition Against admission to this prestig Racism presented to University University. Would it be fai tY ~hem:- if- thyadaig Provost James DuderstadtG ..A, or hithey had a hig (Daily, March 5). What is this? G.P.A or higher test sco I thought to myself iss because the were white some kind of joke? I understandbeas thenvry wryite that blacks have been the target the University was trying of racism at U of M lately, but fill the quota with blacks? this has gone a bit too far. What about WJJ Should e als give free Personally, I condemnI tuition to the Japanese just actions of the disc-jockey because they're in the airing the racist jokes, bu minority? How about the shut down the entire ra Hispanics or Jews, or even the station for the actions ofc Christians? If you think about person is a bit too much. N it. I am sure all of us could Couzens (hall) shut down identify ourselves as a part of the actions of one person? some minority. Please don't Please don't get me wr get me wrong, I'm all for free I am not a racist, nor d tuition, but I really don't think approve of the incidentst this idea is quite practical. have occurred at t Is it also fair to have a quota University. I do, howev for the number of blacks to be believe that the reaction to admitted to this University? I incidents has gotten a bit realize full well that the blacks of hand, and the whl are in the minority here, but to situation has gone way too lower admissions for blacks as Bryan Mis opposed to whites somehow Marcl any high ain ous r to gher res, sion and gto TX? the for t to adio one Was for ong- o L_:" that his verb'. the : out - hole far. tele $ h 9: Lest we forget From Compromise and things half done Keep me with stern and stubborn pride; And when at last thefight is won, God, keep me still unsatisfied. -Louis Untermeyer, A Prayer A PALL HANGS OVER the fortunes of United States interventionists. Their Central American policy is rapidly deteriorating under the pressure of mounting domestic opposition and the strain of internal Contra rivalry. Illegal funding of the Nicaraguan rebels has brought increased scrutiny upon the inherently undemocratic nature of violating a country's sovereignity and a people's will. With Arturo Cruz, former Contra leader, becoming the latest rat to leave a sinking ship, the so-called "freedom fighters" have lost their most credible lobbyist for continued congressional support. Compounding its effect, the Cruz resignation has occurred in the wake of Democratic ascendency in the Senate. Yet, those who oppose inter - ventionist policies cannot afford to confidently await an imminent disbandment of the rebel forces. The recent defeat, by a Democratically controlled Senate, of legislation aimed at denying further Contra aid has demonstrated that imperialism is neither uniquely Republican nor necessarily doomed. The intoxication of anticipated victory should not render political opposition unduly sedate. Vigilance must be maintained if peace in Central America is to be assured. It is crucial that the voices of dissent remain vocal and do not prematurely turn to exaltations of victory. A mass demonstration being held in Detroit this Friday beginning at 1 p.m. affords an important opportunity to voice opposition to interventionist policies in Central America. The march and rally is being sponsored by hundreds of unions, religious groups, and political organizations opposing United States involvement in Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and - lest we forget - El Salvador. Car pools are being organized and those wishing to attend the rally should meet in front of the Union at 11:30 on Friday, with cars if possible. The Detroit rally should serve as a prelude to a larger, national demonstration in Washington, D.C. on April 25 protesting both Contra aid and continuing relations with apartheid South Africa. If people desire more information on either rally, they can call the Latin America Solidarity Committee at 665-8438. ---- _ k^ yK S_ X1''6. 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