4 OPINION Friday. April 3. 1987 Page 4 The Michigan Daily,. ......, T . ..... .. 4 4 " A a 1 1w3irhijan iaiIu Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan To blue, or not 'Vol. XCVII, No. 126 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 .,;,nsigned 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. City endorsements MONDAY, ANN ARBOR WILL VOTE for mayor'and city council cahdidates. The following are the Dilly's choices in three of Ann Arbor's five wards. First Ward: In a ward which i ariably elects Democrats, the R epublicans have had difficulty attracting credible candidates. This year is no exception. ,.Like last year's Republican candidate Debra Shannon, this year's nominee, Ron Witchie, is not only a newcomer to city politics, but a newcomer to the city itself. Witchie, an environmental engineer, moved to the city just six months ago. Witchie's Democratic opponent, Ann Marie Coleman, is a campus minister at Guild House and has had over a decade of experience in local politics. Unlike Witchie, Coleman has experience both with students and in the rest of the community. Coleman has worked with campus groups opposed to intervention in Central America. As a councilperson, she would put the off-campus housing crunch at the forefront of city concerns. Coleman has hands on experience working in city government, most notably in the pay equity study. Ann Marie Coleman is clearly the best choice in the first ward.. Second Ward: As one of Ann Arbor's most affluent wards, the second ward has traditionally voted Republican. Seth Hirshorn broke this pattern last year by running a grass roots campaign advocating the interests of students and homeowners. This year's Democratic nominee, Mary Reilly, is following in Hirshorn's footsteps. Republican candidate Terry Martin is a fiscal and social Walking foi EVERYONE IN ANN ARBOR should take a stand against racism by walking in tomorrow's second annual Freedom March. The Freedom March commemorates the twentieth anniversary of Martin Luther King, Jr.'s death and expresses solidarity with oppressed people of color all over the world. For the University community, the march begins on the Diag at one in the afternoon. For other residents of Washtenaw county, the march begins as early as 9:30 a.m. when members of the Ypsilanti community gather. Groups of marchers from Ypsilanti, metropolitan Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan campus will come together for a rally featuring local and national speakers including a representative of the African National Congress, the leading organization of Blacks in South Africa. It is in the interest of students to participate in the march and express their concern over racial problems. Both overt and structural racism are present in the University today. Racially motivated harassment and vandalism are regular occurrences. Structural racism pervades the administration's hiring and admis - sions policies. Not all the opposition comes from overtly racist people. Some conservative who favors limited government. Her opposition to school desegregation as a school board member in the 1970s contrasts starkly with Reilly's opposition to racism both on campus and in the community. To alleviate Ann Arbor's housing crunch, Reilly is committed to pressuring the University to build more student housing and should be supported in Monday's election. Third Ward: Because of its willingness to unseat incumbents of either party, the Third Ward is considered Ann Arbor's swing ward. Incumbent Democrat Jeff Epton seems unlikely to fall victim to this fate. Two years ago he won reelection by more than 700 votes and has maintained close contact with his constituents. While Epton has been criticized by his opponent, Republican Isaac- Jacobein Campbell, for spending time on national and international issues rather than local concerns. Epton's concerns accurately reflect those of his constituents. Despite opposition from Republicans, the sister city proposal was passed with 61 percent of the vote. Though The Daily, and most students in the ward, opposed Epton's support of rezoning in North Burns ,Park, Campbell has said he also would have voted for rezoning Campbell is justified in his concern about crime in Ann Arbor and budgetary responsibility. His enthusiasm, articulateness, and warm, friendly manner would be excellent qualities in a city councilperson. In terms of experience, however, Jeff Epton has the edge and deserves reelection. r the dream The racist tendencies of the University, however, a reflection of national racism. The Reagan administration, purports this racist tone, taking harsh stands against programs advocating proportional representation and legislation prohibiting racial biases in the job market. Forsyth County publicizes its disdain for Black people and lynchings occur in Central Park. Members of the Ann Arbor community who participate in the Freedom March will set an example for the country by showing that they actively oppose the racist aspects of U. S. society. In South Africa, Blacks continue to struggle against the life shat - tering system of apartheid that rules the country. The University of Michigan deigned to award Nelson Mandela an honorary degree, but, hypocritically, full divestment still is not a reality at the University. Black citizens of South Africa face a costly struggle to gain the right of self-determination. People partici - pating in the Freedom March will show solidarity with the oppressed Blacks of South Africa and send a message of opposition to their white oppressors. Twenty years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. died in Memphis, Tennessee. He was assassinated while showing his solidarity with By Anonymous Reason 3: To Allow Non-gays to Feel the Kind of Oppression All Gay People Suffer, Whether Open or Closeted. If the above two reasons were our only goals, we could have adopted much more direct and simpler methods. The merits of employing the tactic of a Blue Jeans Day are at once subtler but more profound. Sexuality is something we each feel very personally; it infuses our daily lives, and is a key aspect of who we are, who we love. Its expression to and acceptance by self and others is critical to healthy human functioning. Non-gay people feel free to present their true selves to the world, that is, to be open and blatant about their heterosexuality, without fear of verbal harassment, violence, or the loss of civil rights. They are at liberty to wear wedding rings and hold hands with their opposite-sex partners in public, to discuss their feelings and relationship joys or problems with classmates or co- workers, and to enjoy in a multitude of other ways the self-affirmation and social support of their opposite-sex relationships that comes with being freely open. Lesbians and gay men have the very same human needs, but every day our homophobic society forces gay people to make a choice about how they will present themselves to the outside world - about the kind of psycho-social "clothes" they will wear that day. A gay person can choose to be equally honest and open about her/his same-sex orientation, but being open does not mean being free. While this "coming out" can be an incredibly self-affirming process (and is why so many gay people over the past two decades have taken the risk), instead of receiving social support and acceptance the openly-gay person is exposed to the many overt forms of anti- gay prejudice already described. Or a gay person can attempt to "pass him/herself off as straight" - an ability unique among oppressed minorities. "Passing" hides the prevalence of our numbers and masks the extent of anti-gay repression, but it reduces neither. That is, passing does not avoid the oppression; it The author's name has been withheld on request,for obvious reasons. Wasserman- only internalizes it. It means withholding the expression of many of your most important feelings, even to those close to you. (Instead of being the ultimate source of comfort and acceptance, the family, and particularly your parents, threatens the ultimate fear of rejection.) Especially for people who have significant same-sex feelings but haven't accepted them, passing isolates you in a very silent, very lonely, very painful world of self-denial, and reinforces a negative self-image that society perpetuates through vicious mis- characterizations of what kind of people gay people are, The pain of self-denial inherent in passing is incredibly intense, but is matched only by the fear of discovery. Passing means living a double-life: keeping friendships artificially superficial, being evasive to friendly queries about what you did last weekend, being careful to substitute "she" when you mean "he" and vice versa. A slipped pronoun at work, or a picture of your lover mistakenly over-looked in your frantic attempt to "degay" your home when the family or landlord comes over, can mean the loss of a lifetime of employment. And pension. And health insurance. And housing. And family. And expose you to the myriad of other forms of abuse you'd spent so much mental energy and worry trying desperately to avoid. Passing is incredibly draining - but if done right, then nobody knows. The invisibility of lesbians and gay men on this campus only dramatizes the prevalence, not the absence, of anti-gay oppression here. Gay people, then, indeed have a choice about what clothes they will present to the outside world. They can wear the clothes that represent their real selves, or they can wear the clothes of passing. But neither choice allows lesbians and gay men to avoid the homophobia and heterosexism that society thrusts upon us. That is, gay people have a limited ,choice how to be oppressed, but not whether or not to be oppressed. The tactic of thrusting upon the 'U' a Gay Blue Jeans Day portrays this lack of effective choice to escape such imposition, while reflecting back on the whole university community a hint of its own anti-gay bigotry, that gay people usually invisibly suffer alone. For most students, being our normal selves clothes- wise means wearing blue jeans. But Blue to blue Jeans Day forces people to choose either to be their normal denim-clad selves, and so expose themselves to that amount of anti-gay ridicule that attends even those who support such a radical proposal as fair treatment and equal rights for gay people. Or people can choose purposefully to avoid their usual denim and instead clothe themselves in a facade of other fabric in the hope of avoiding that ridicule. What people can not do is avoid the imposition of having to make such a choice, and the assumptions about your sexuality and moral worth people will make that day based on what you wear. Many people will avoid denim like the plague on Friday, as they conspicuously did during the last two local Gay Blue Jeans Day's in '78 and '81. Some people will be caught unaware and may feel they have to explain themselves. Many will be incensed at the idea and imposition of a Blue Jeans Day altogether. Well, we at- LaGROC think you should be incensed. We are. We have the same homophobic oppression thrust upon us in the very same way. But we have to deal with it every day of our lives, not just Friday, and riskfar greater consequences, whether from being identified as gay or from surpressing our feelings and identity. If you already support gay rights then it's simple: if you don't have to wear some uniform, make sure you wear denim on Friday. If you are incensed at the imposition of a Blue Jeans Day in the: first place, then you should be equally: incensed at anti-gay oppression, because the form and the substance of both are the same. Speak out against the impositions Blue Jeans Day represents, then, by: speaking out against anti-gay oppression.t Rather than internalize your oppression by "passing" as a non-supporter, exercise your right to self-determination while supporting ours at the same time by, wearing denimon Friday. You won't be: able to tell whether any one person is wearing denim that day to make a protest statement, or because that is what that person normally wears. The ambiguity; both protects the individual while makijng everyone a suspect supporter. Rather you'll have to look for any campus-wid change in denim wear and attitude to get a, hint of the extent of anti-gay oppression here. For our part, though, we hope to; see the campus decked out in denim. 4 4 A I 4 4 MYJ' D)OLT WE ACCEPT T -5 O'AT OFKJ2 FoR A BAN ON NUCLEAR 1" IN&? ~LETTERS_ P~c4 el-SnN& j I loRMTrFog NEW W PaNS D6V7"t.OMENT.. 0 AND DEVeOPMENT D~o WE~ NEED IS ME.Y To STaPNTE61c SUPEtRIORTY? SoQERIOi~y/ Lam' T HAOW ELSE CAN \N- GE T N ,5W(FITS To .roF 1%TIN& 2 4 t Families of POWs-MIAs stil To the Daily: Movies like "Rambo" and "Missing in Action" have helped to popularize the plight of over 1,797 United States service men still listed as missing in action in Vietnam. They have raised awareness of the issue that many families have been suffering from for a long time. Namely, when will the son, brother or father who went to Vietnam come home. For many of these families it has been a hard road to travel. They have lived through 680 eyewitness accounts that stated the finding of the United States Vote 'straight' To the Daily: The Lesbian-Gay Political Caucus of Washtenaw County is pleased to endorse all of the Democratic candidates in the Ann Arbor General Election. These candidates for Mayor and for City Council have given oral and written con - firmation of their support for the civil and human rights of service men still alive in Vietnam, only to be crushed by despair when further investi - gation and scrutiny find the reports invalid. The Pentagon now list all but one symbolic prisoner of war as presumed dead, but they continue to check up on all reported sightings of American service men. This is despite the 1979 report from a special Congressional committee that concluded, as did a more recent panel specially appointed by former President Carter, that there were no more prisoners of war left in Vietnam. Democratic particular needs that the City should address. A statement made by Second Ward Republican candidate Terry Martin can speak for itself: "I cannot accept assump - tions of universal discrimi - nation as I personally find the gays of my acquaintance sensi - tive and responsible citizens." For a fuller analysis of the The Reagan administration is putting pressure on the com - munist government of Vietnam for resolution of the POW- MIA issue. The Admini - stration hopes that Hanoi's desire for renewal of diplomatic ties with the U. S. will lead to the resolution of the POW- MIA problem. The Reagan administration knows that the communist government hopes that it will receive economic aid for its shattered economy in exchange for the remains of missing service men. The administration is using this as leverage to gain access to the crash sites of American aircraft in Vietnam. Clean up pO. To the Daily: Spring is finally here. The birds are chirping, flowers blooming, and students studying on the grass or enjoying the beautiful weather. What a glorious time to be in Ann Arbor- P suffer Already the Hanoi government has made significant con cessions to the Reagan admini;t stration. They have sent th6 remains of many service mew back to the United States; They have also agreed to other joint activities that could help to resolve the POW-MIA issue. However, no American service men have been found alive in Vietnam. The chances of finding live Americans is slim at best, but the friends and families of POW-MIAs continue to hope for miracles. -Daniel Scheffler January 11 'ter pollution an effective way to get their messages across to the student body. They put it down, and then, perhaps we read it. But who picks it up? I think that everyone who is responsible for using this kind of free I S