Page 8- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1988 ACTIVISM BY ADOLEENA GONZALEZ As a Hispanic student on campus, I welcome all of you, and a much- deserved congratulations on your acceptance and presence at the Uni- versity. First-year students, you have un- dertaken a passage that will prepare you for the rest of your lives. His- panic students - as distinct as their backgrounds may be - on this Un- iversity's campus must come to- BY LINDA KURTZ "Welcome, incoming students of the University of Michigan. The re- gents and administration of the Uni- versity of Michigan welcome you, at least on paper, no matter what your race, your sex, your color, your reli- gion, your creed, your national ori- gin or ancestry, your age, your marital status, your handicap, or your Vietnam-era veteran status. We protect you, through regental bylaw 14.06, from discrimination and ha- rassment. You say you're a divorced female? That's no cause for us to IBienverndos! gether to identify the goals and pri- orities that are pertinent to us, as students as well as citizens of this great United States in which we live. English only, voter registration, immigration, and enrollment at institutions of higher education are some of the important issues that face the Hispanic community. We have battles to fight in the political arena as well as the backyard of this campus. As our community continues to grow in record numbers, our pres- ence will be undeniably felt by ev- eryone. There are thousands of peo- ple coast to coast, border to border, who are involved in activities that deserve the University's attention. However, institutions in the public and private sectors too often remain impervious to the interest of His- panics. It's time for the University to become aware of our contri- butions and stop abdicating its re- sponsibilities to us as significant members of this community. Re- member, involvement and academic excellence are two keys to furthering our Hispanic cultures. -Gonzalez is president of the Socially Active Latino Students Association. sity divestment from South African businesses)" and supportive of quash- ing non-reactionary (leftist or even middle-of-the-road) views on cam- pus. He typifies the white, male, heterosexist power structure that any oppressed group in this society is fighting. We must unite against Baker and all like him. He is the symbol of oppression. Gay men and lesbians are the symbol of hope and equality, for we are included in every race, ev- ery class, every sex, every religion. "WAIT A MINUTE! What's that you said? You're also a lesbian? A lesbian?!!! Get out of here! You're unnatural, a sexual pervert! We don't want any queers here. It doesn't matter if we protect you on the basis of every other characteristic, whether innate - such as race - or acquired - such as marital status. We don't like queers. We don't include you in the non-discrimination bylaw." For over three years, the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Com- mittee has fought for the inclusion of sexual orientation in regental by- law 14.06. We have been flatly de- nied our equal rights by the eight re- gents who set University policy. Last winter, in a 7-0 vote, with one abstention, the regents voted against the inclusion of sexual orientation in the University's non-discrimination bylaw. The regents bring up various arguments that they say support discrimination against lesbians and gay men. Regent Thomas Roach (R- Saline) claims that if sexual orien- tation is included in the bylaw, the University will have to take affir- mative action for lesbians and gay men. ROACH HIMSELF knows this is a lie. The University cur- rently does not take affirmative ac- tion on the basis of religion, marital status, etc. Fui nore, lesbians and gay men do not need affirmative action. We are better-represented on campus (13 percent of the University population) than in society at large. Inclusion of sexual orientation will not, as some regents claim, force the University to stop dealing with those groups which discriminate against gays. The ROTC operates on campus despite the fact that it dis- criminates on the basis of sex, handicap, and Vietnam-era veteran status. The real reason the regents op- pose the bylaw change is that they are ignorant of and fearful of homo- sexuality. Regent Deane Baker (R- Ann Arbor) is fearful that an inno- cent, wide-eyed student from a rural area (city people are more worldly, he believes) will be seduced into the homosexual lifestyle. Baker stated, in March 1984, that "there are some areas where discrimination... is ap- propriate... For example, a homo- sexual should not be employed in a summer camp dealing with small children, just as a male attendant should not be employed in a female locker room."~ THESE MEN are utterly igno- rant! They do not realize that homo- sexuality is a sexual orientation, not a sexual preference. In other words, people are gay or straight or bi be- cause that's they way they are, not because they woke up one day and decided to choose to be emotionally and erotically attracted to one sex over another or because a roommate seduced them into the "homosexual lifestyle." Many of us gay people have attempted to be heterosexuals and have entered into what are, for us, unnatural heterosexual relation- ships. We have explained this to the regents. We have mentioned to them that many students and faculty are gay. But this does not sway them. Neither do fine words. Neither does logic. We have shown the holes in the regental arguments against inclusion in the bylaw. The only thing that speaks to the regents is money, power, and prestige. Thus far, their homophobia has out- weighed their desire to keep up with the othe:: Big Ten schools that have included sexual orientation in their non-discrimination bylaws. Money, we as students do not have. But power we may. We can vote against homophobic regents in November. BOTH BAKER, the most ne- farious of all regents, and Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) are running for re- election. Vote against them. Deane Baker is not only viciously anti-gay, he is also racist (opposing Univer- Gay men and lesbians are the symbol of hope and equality, for we are in- cluded in every race, every class, every sex, every re- ligion. To support gay rights is to support an end to oppression and dis- crimination. To support gay rights is to support an end to oppression and discrimina- tion. Rally behind us, for it is your life as well as ours. -Kurtz is a member of the Les- bian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee. discriminate against you. You're Buddhist in religious upbringing? Ah, regental bylaw 14.06 prohibits us from discriminating against you. You're over 40 and disabled? Still we must treat you equally! We wel- come you! You are protected on ev- ery characteristic which makes you a minority! Groups fight Asian stereotypes BY JENNIFER LIU AND JOANNA SU The Asian American student po- litical movement on the University campus has followed a cyclic pattern of development. Little has changed in three decades; the issues and problems encountered by the groups stay the same. In the late 1960s, the racist as- pects of the Vietnam War prompted Asian Americans on campus to band together in a group called "One Life In Unity." After the war, this orga- nization disbanded, but in 1973, East Wind was formed by Asian Ameri- can students who also wanted a po- litical focus for Asian Americans on campus. EAST WIND member Ted Liu said "the leadership of the group used the existing University student gov- ernment apparatus to achieve the group's objectives." East Wind was working to discover Asian American identity and history, and to dispel common stereotypes. East Wind sought to address issues including the exclusion of Asian Americans in the Opportunity Program, the ab- sence of an Asian American repre- sentative in the Office of Minority Student Services, and the lack of Asian American Studies courses in the University curriculum. During the second Black Action Movement strike of 1973, East Wind joined the Third World Coali- tion Council in a sit-in at the Flem- ing Administration Building and presented a demand for an Asian American advocate to the University administration. Despite the efforts of Asian American student activists, the Uni- versity administration did not deal adequately with the needs of Asian Americans. The Asian American ad- vocate position was not established until five years after the initial de- NEW from Hewlett-Packard Two smart ways to do business. mand was made. "(The position that was estab- lished) didn't really meet our con- ception of an Asian American ad- vocate," said Parker Woo, a former member of East Wind and a current member of American Citizens for Justice. "The University changed the name from 'advocate' to 'repre- sentative."' WOO ADDED that the Uni- versity had total control over the selection process for the Asian American representative In addition, the representative che fn had no previous experience. "(The Univer- sity) found someone who wouldn't make a lot of waves," Woo said. By 1977, East Wind's focus had changed due to a number of factors. Strong dissent from members of the group who felt East Wind was too radical created friction. Woo attri- buted most of the change in focus to the changing of the times. "The incoming members were not so po- litical," he said. East Wind's focus became more social and cultural, and the group increased in size. It changed its name to the Asian Am- erican Association. Current AAA President Eddie Chu plans to continue the tradition of social and cultural events. "AAA is a place where individuals can grow," Chu said. "An individual finds friends in AAA in the fall, then becomes involved in programs dur- ing winter term... This is part of an individual's personal growth. People don't come into this university knowing how to speak with admin- istrators." In February 1987, a small faction of politically interested students split off from AAA and formed the Uni- versity of Michigan Asian Student Coalition (UMASC). Asian Ameri- can students rallied around the retrial for the 1981 murder of Vincent Chin in Detroit. Much like East Wind and the Third World Coalition Council, UMASC supported the United Co- alition Against Racism in its de- mands for anti-racist policies at the University of Michigan throughout the 1987-1988 school year. Again like East Wind, UMASC's goals are to educate the Asian American stu- dent population and the University community on Asian American is- sues and to increase awareness of Asian American identity, history, and stereotypes. THE GROUP also has an ac- tivist focus, contrary to the common stereotype that Asians are not a po- litically visible minority. "(Asians) should not be afraid to be confronta- tional," said University graduate Ray Lin, one of the founding members of UMASC. "We do speak up about our is- sues," said Scott Wong, a graduate student member of UMASC. "But they get ignored." Some membersof the group be- lieve UMASC should be more politically active than it is now. "We need to be more progressive," said Dung Nguyen, a current and founding member. "We need to be very active." Asian concerns today have not changed greatly from Asian concerns a decade ago. They still encompass the struggle against stereotypes, the struggle to discover identity and his- tory, and the struggle for recognition at local and national levels. Like its predecessors, UMASC was created in response to a volatile issue of the day: the retrial of Ronald Ebens, who murdered Chin. LIKE 19AST WIND in the 1970s, several members of UMASC and the Asian American community are still unfamiliar and uncomfort- able with confrontational tactics and activist strategies. A gap exists in the experiences of Discover a place on campus you probably never knew existed. The University of Michigan Museum of Art members with such methods. Some members believe this problem can be resolved by focusing on long- term goals, rather than keeping the group issue-oriented. "Individual projects are good for the moment," UMASC member David Sasaki said. "We need to find links between the projects and our long-term goals." The same problem is now being addressed by ACJ, Woo said. "We need to refocus. We need to regain a sense of where we're going as a group. That's something we're still grappling with." IT APPEARS that the strong- est insurance against dissolution that Asian American student groups have at the moment is their strength in unity. There are many strong Asian American student organizations ac- ross the country. Two of the largest are the East Coast Student Union, which was created in April 1977 by members of Asian student organizations at col- leges and universities along the East Coast, and the Asian-Pacific Stu- dent Union, which is comprised of Asian American student organiza- tions on the West Coast. Despite organizational difficul- ties, Asian American students on campus seem to be headed toward a stronger cohesion through a greater unity of ideas and direction. Last year, the United Asian Organization was formed through collaborative efforts from several University Asian American student organizations. Members of AAA and UMASC are currently planning a Midwest Asian Alliance that will unite Asian American student organizations in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, and Illi- nois. -Liu and Su are UMASC members. 1. The HP Business Consultant II. 2. The HP-17B. They get you to your solutions with ease. Come in and try these and the complete line' of Hewlett-Packard products today. no ~1~ae °°-v ,A 0 1pp® ®®®O 0 ®pQ® UpA© ° ®®r®® °®®es - .._