4 OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, March 1, 1988 The Michigan Daily 1 , Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCVIII, No. 100 420 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. Negatively labelling Blacks 4 Polluters should pay IN 1986, 60 FAMILIES living near the Gelman Science facility o n Wagner Road in Ann Arbor were put on bottled water because dan- gerous levels of 1,4-dioxane were found in their wells by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). It was also found that the chemical had been leaking into the groundwater beneath the Saginaw forest. Numerous studies have shown that dioxane causes cancerous tu- mors in rats. It was also linked to birth defects at the Love Canal, a chemical dump. Gelman has since hired three law firms to help them fight a State lawsuit for damages resulting from their irresponsible handling of dioxane. The company's lawyers have been trying every trick in the book to absolve Gelman of the blame. Gelman's tactics are contradic- tory. Gelman refuses to admit that dioxane is harmful to people. At the same time, they maintain that Gel- man is not at fault for damages re- sulting from dioxane because Dow chemical company, where Gelman obtained the dioxane, did not properly instruct them how to handle it. _ Whether or not Dow provided the proper instructions, it is ludicrous for Gelman to play the innocent victim in this case. The evidence suggests that Gelman knew they were doing something wrong, and that they did it anyway. A company does not create the second worst toxic waste site in the state of Michigan by accident, according to the EPA. *Gelman has known that there was a problem with the way they were disposing of dioxane for a long time. At least three times since February of 1981, the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) dis- tributed memos warning that diox- ane was carcinogenic, and that the chemical could leak from its sewage lagoon and spray irrigation system into the groundwater. *Two former employees of Gel- man told the Ann Arbor News that they had been told to dump chemi- cals in what they thought was an improper manner. *The company resisted perform- ing studies and installing monitor- ing equipment that could have de- tected groundwater contamination before toxic chemical wastes mi- grated off company property. *Gelman sprayed wastewater onto company land without a permit starting in 1972. It did not receive a permit for doing this until 1976, and this permit did not allow for spraying dioxane. *Gelman has been extremely slow to deliver important data to the DNR. In July 1986, a hose carrying wastewater ruptured, spilling 18,000 gallons into the ground. Gelman didn't inform the DNR for 10 days, and the spill has still not been cleaned up. Gelman exists to make a profit, and proper disposal of toxic waste costs money. Unfortunately, it is extremely difficult to monitor the activities of the private sector, and watchdogs such as the DNR lack the resources to deal with all the companies that are threatening peo- ple's health and lives. Moreover, it is the companies that can afford to hire the most lawyers, as well as the most expensive ones. Everybody knows that a corpora- tion will try to get away with what- ever it can. But it is to be hoped that this will be one of those rare cases in which the company will be forced to clean up its own deadly, multi-million dollar mess. By Walter Allen, Vonnie C. Mcloyd, Aldon Morris, and Ernest Wilson this is the second of a two-part series There is a particularly insidious form of institutional racism in the attitude of some we encounter at this University who say that Michigan should recruit Black scholars who teach in areas unrelated to Afro-American issues, because if we bring Black scholars here to teach in the disciplines of political science, sociology or psychology, and they study Black people in these areas, then their colleagues will think them incompetent or less of a scholar. This is racist and insulting to Black faculty in general, and the Center for Afro-American and African Studies in particular. Why should a scholar applying the best methodologies and sophisticated theories to Afro-American materials be judged only three-fifths of a scholar? The Black experience is as "universal" as any other. This expression of institutional racism raises profound questions of educational philosophy that touch on the ways in which we portray the wide world to ourselves and our students at Michigan. Of course, we want to integrate the entire Walter Allen is an Associate Prof. of Sociology. Vonnie C. Mcloyd is an Associate Prof. of Psychology. .Aldon Morris is an Associate Prof. and the Associate Chair of Sociology. Ernest Wilson is an Associate Prof. of Political Science and Public Policy. academy so that everyone can be comfortable and welcome teaching in any field. But our concern is not just more Black bodies to fill any slot, but to make the curriculum and research agenda of modern scholarship better than it the past by studying heretofore excluded segments of social reality in creative new ways. Excellence through diversity. The University cannot be truly great if its faculty and students are not from diverse backgrounds. Yet, the University has failed Black students throughout its history by not recruiting them in large numbers and by not providing them with a quality intellectual and social environment. Yet is has beendthese very students, with a small number of committed white students, who have had to spend their precious time organizing and protesting to change this dismal situation. Recently we have been en- couraged by the fact that some white faculty throughout the University, as well as some white students, have begun to speak out publicly about the unjust nature of institutional racism which affects all members of the University community. We must ask, however, why have the majority of students, white faculty, and administrators only responded to this fundamental issue when challenged. Institutional racism appears to be the answer. Yes, as Carmichael and Hamilton wrote in the late 1960's, "Black people in the United States must raise hard questions which challenge the very nature of the society itself: its long-standing values, beliefs, and institutions." Black people at the University of Michigan are living up to their historical and social respon- sibilities. Yet, institutional racism causes our white friends to label us over- sensitive, emotional, unreasonable, and thin-skinned. Historically, whites have always portrayed Black people as highly emotional, irrational, and uninformed. By contrast, white males are portrayed as 4 highly rational, perfectly informed, and in charge. When Blacks protest racism these same arrogant epithets are once again used as if Blacks don't quite know what they are talking about. Since white males have decided that they know what is best for Blacks, Black people should sit down and shut up. A perfect example is the counterattack against Black students and faculty launched in recent editorials of Detroit and Ann Arbor papers. Complaints by the sufferers of racism (whether anti- Black, anti-Jewish, or anti-female) are ir- relevant until validated by whites. We will bear this burden of being negatively labeled as we have done for centuries. But let it be clear, we shall always seek truth and clarity because like our foreparents we are committed to making this University and America more democratic. What can all of us do to close the gap between Black and white students and Black and white faculty? How do we educate the educators, so that they can better educate the youth? Should white faculty meet together in small groups to discuss the issue? Should new courses be offered? In this forum we cannot provide solutions; but we do offer a serious challenge to therentirerUniversity community to generate proposals that address all forms of institutional racism. These proposals can then form the reservoir of ideas from which concrete actions can flow. Letter misinterprets UCAR By Alexia Ridley Eddie Pont's letter "Steiner's comments not a racist act" (Daily, 2/8/88), is typical of some who feel called upon to disparage those fighting for equality on campus, while seeking to justify, excuse and ex- plain away Dean Peter Steiner's racially offensive beliefs. Mr. Pont's letter is filled with lamenta- tions over the outcry against Steiner. He "find(s) it sad," that those outraged by Steiner's comments have focused on those comments themselves. He "is dismayed" that UCAR sought to clarify comments he made four months ago (even though UCAR only learned of them recently). He "is disturbed" that Steiner's call for a Black attitudinal revolution towards education carries racist overtones when heard by members of the Black commu- nity. Such touching sympathy! Mr. Pont does not truly understand dis- crimination when he argues that Steiner's comments "do not seem compelling 4 enough to me" to warrant protest. He goes to great lengths in defense of Steiner's sniping at Wayne State and Howard Uni- versities, and "see(s) no racism in his comment." Mr. Pont even attempts to use Malcolm X to support Steiner's con- tention that Blacks need a "revolution" in their attitudes toward education. My question to Mr. Pont is this. With such compassion demonstrated for the victims of racial harassment, may we cor- rectly assume that you have been in the forefront of the battle for equality? That you have diligently sought to expunge the subtleties of racism in yourself, your friends, and your environment? May we assume you have invested your time and energy in helping to make UCAR the type of efficient anti-racist organization you envision? Surely you must have used your writing talents to decry the racial attacks and ha- rassment on campus last spring. No doubt you participated in and helped to organize the many teach-ins and alternative educa- tional programs held during Martin Luther King Day. If such is the case, you are to be lauded. If not, by what right do you criticize? If your record of Daily columns is a true indication, you have not once raised your voice and pen to denounce the overt racist acts of the past. Swastikas painted on Jewish Greek houses, fliers declaring "open season" on Blacks, threats of vio- lence against Asian=American students, KKK uniforms displayed form dorm win- dows, vicious racist jokes aired on the ra- dio - none of these incidents moved you to the point of action. How strange that you have suddenly found your voice. Stranger still is your choice of targets. When one is not the object of discrimi- nation or insinuations (based solely on color) regarding intellectual capacities, when one is raised and nurtured in a soci- ety of inequality, when one benefits from the status quo but is suddenly forced to face unpleasant realities, it is easy to pompously hold oneself up as a discerner of errors committed by those who threaten privileged positions. Mr. Pont's views exemplify this phe- nomenon. He criticizes those who would combat inequality but offers no solutions of his own. Pity the minority students at West Quad who must look at him as an R.A. capable of understanding the com- plexities of racism. 4 4 Mayor Young's idea squanders $150,000 on a bad pretense: No gambling in Detroit Alexia Ridley is a senior in LSA FOR MANY YEARS, Detroit Mayor Coleman Young has tried to con- vince the City Council and the peo- ple of Michigan that casino gam- bling in Detroit would bring thou- sands of new jobs to the city and a jolt to the southeastern Michigan economy. Though there are eco- nomic positives such as tourism dollars, new construction, and 50,000 jobs (according to the Mayor), the negatives of casino gambling are numerous. Atlantic City, for example, has a rich downtown area with hotels and casinos. Within blocks of the casi- nos, however, lies total destitution. In these run-down tenements live the poor, who receive little of the casinos' prosperity. On the other hand, Las Vegas was built around and in conjunction with the hotel-casino industry and there- fore a living, vibrant city survives with "The Strip" in it. Detroit is a long-established city and thus is ill- suited for an invasion of gambling that have existed for approximately the past twenty-five years. Detroit is coming back: the downtown area has been seeing more business activity, and increasingly more people from the suburbs are spending their money in Detroit. Granted, there remains high un- employment and a virtually non- existent tourism industry, but gambling is not the answer. Crime is already a major problem in Detroit. Gambling, with its well- documented links to illicit activity, would worsen Detroit's inauspi- cious position in U.S. crime rank- ings. Organized crime and prostitu- tion would surely increase with the gambling environment. The gambling commission is a waste of valuable funds. The $150,000 could be better spent in studies assisting Detroit's homeless and retraining its unemployed, not to mention bolstering existing social programs. LETTERS Lab should be required for LSA A To the Daily: I am a first year chemistry graduate student, and I feel compelled to respond to several points made in the Daily over the past few days. First, a re- sponse to Ms. Pierce ("Don't strengthen lab require- ments,"Daily, 2/16/88). Your letter to the Daily is proof positive that LSA gradu- ates should be required to take a laboratory course. Your asser- tion that "...what is important to non-science majors is scien- tific ideas, not procedures..." is ignorant. This would be the same as a science major say- ing, "teach me about Joyce, Shakespeare, and Milton but don't require me to write papers about their literature." Clearly, this is absurd. In the humani- ties, papers are used as vehicles for students to express their grasp of the concepts which are .-r -. t . in.ha ei:n -e .h be abstract are removed from the chalkboard and through the labs, become understandable. This understanding is sorely lacking from the editorial staff of the Daily. In your editorial, "Inhumanities 101," (Daily, 2/15/88) you state "...scientists among us research the effects of chemical weapons designed to maim people of color in the Third World. "The implication that one can synthesize a race specific chemical weapon is absurd. In addition, your portrayal of scientists a the University huddled extremely offensive. Your ideas reveal a fundamental ignorance of science. This deficiency would be rectified if students were required to take lecture science 4 courses and laboratory science courses. -James W. Hovick February 20 Zinn You $iST -CRY SPREADING.. p. ® N 4 ,fWr I ~ ~ I~Z7~L~ A~A, A