Ninety- nine years of editorialfreedom Vol. IC, No. 34 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, October 25, 1988 Copyright 1988, The Michigan Daily Arabs, Jews begin campus dialogue BY TARA GRUZEN A newly organized group, "Sa'lam Shalom - The Arab Jewish Peace Project" met for the first time last night to openly discuss members' differing viewpoints about the current state of relations in the Middle East. The meeting, which drew approx- imately 30 Arab and Jewish students, was organized by interested students who feel that there is a need for an open dialogue between Arabs and Jews on campus. "We are always working against each other," said Suha Hamid, a Pharmacy graduate student who started the group. "We agree on a lot - for instance, we all think that there should be human rights for all people." Lynn Schler, a LSA senior who helped establish the group added, "the point of the meeting is that we don't agree on everything." The group was started by four students who joined together at See Peace, Page 5 C.ity e BY DAVID SCHWARTZ Noting local problems of waste contamination, the Ann Arbor City Council unanimously approved a resolution last night endorsing two Michigan ballot proposals, both of which provide a means of funding public land improvement. The resolution, introduced by Councilmember Liz Brater (D-Third N Ward), urges all Ann Arbor citizens to vote in favor of Proposals C and D on the Nov. 8 ballot. Proposal C calls for the state to Blanchard attacks Proposal A It's pumpkin time... DAVID LUBUNER/Daily LSA sophomore Karen Meckstroth and Steve Rappaport LSA Junior sell pumpkins on the Diag. yesterday to raise rIoney for the Institute for Children's Burns Medicine. ndorses proposals LANSING (AP) - A proposal to end tax-funded abortions for poor women is extreme because it doesn't make exceptions for women who are the victims of rape or incest, Gov. James Blanchard and two of his pre- decessors said yesterday. The Democratic governor and former Governors William Milliken, a Republican, and John Swainson, a Democrat, joined forces at news con- ference to urge Michigan voters to defeat the abortion ban, known as Proposal A on the Nov. 8 ballot "We're here today to indicate that we think A is extreme. It goes too far. It is unfair. The proof positive is that it would deny poor women who have been victims of rape or incest any relief whatsoever. That is the work of extremists pure and simple," Blanchard said. "I don't think many reasonable,- fair-minded people do or can disagree about the right of an individual who is a victim of rape or incest to have access to abortion. It is totally unfair to deny that right simply because she happens to be poor and that's what. this proposal would do," Milliken said. A spokesperson for the Commit- tee to End Tax-Funded Abortions ac- cused the governors of trying to con- fuse voters. "What they are simply trying to do is play off everyone's fear of rape," said David Szymanski. States that have exceptions for rape and incest have found the provi- sion unenforceable, resulting in many women falsely claiming they were raped in order to qualify for state-paid abortions, he said. Pregnancies from rape are rare, he said, noting that Wisconsin last year issue $660 million in bonds to fi- nance toxic waste clean-up and waste management; Proposal D authorizes the state to issue $140 million in bonds to fund improvement of pub- lic recreation facilities. "It seems to me that Ann Arbor has a special interest in Proposal C, given our problems with contami- nation," Brater said. "Proposal D will help fund recreational areas." "Neither of these bond issues will result in raising anyone's taxes," Brater said. 'In other business, council ap- proved a resolution codifying Ann Arbor's application to the Michigan Equity Grant Program, a state pro- gram which allocates money for lo- cal cultural projects. In 1988, Ann Arbor received $367,800 in grants from the equity program. Last night, council ap- proved a measure asking for over $638,000 for the upcoming year. Ronald Olson, superintendent of the Ann Arbor Parks and Recreation department, attributed the large re- quest to attempts to garner funding for as many groups as possible. Discussion of the resolution cen- tered upon the council's request for $100,000 in funding for the McKin- ley Foundation to provide facilities for non-profit community groups. The foundation received $150,000 from the equity program this year. Councilmember Mark Ouimet (R-Fourth Ward) commended the McKinley Foundation for making a See Council, Page 2 Panel calls for multi- paid for four Medicaid abortions due to rape and Iowa only one. But Swainson said rape and incest are much more common than crime reports indicate. "To deny a person the opportunity to terminate the pregnancy caused by these conditions I think is an extra burden placed on people who don't 'We're here today to indicate that we think A is extreme. It goes too far. It is unfair.'- Michigan Gov. James Blanchard have funds to obtain an abortion otherwise," he said. Blanchard and Milliken have ve- toed legislation to ban tax-paid abor- tions a total of 17 times. Such legislation never came before Swain- son while he was governor, but he said if it had, he would have vetoed it, too. Blanchard didn't have a chance to veto the law submitted to voters un- der Proposal A because it had its roots in the initiative process, which shields it from gubernatorial scrutiny. Passage of the proposal would end state expenditure of nearly $6 million a year for some 18,000 abortions. It wouldn't affect abortions performed on state employees whose health care coverage is paid for with state funds. The governors also said that vot- ers will not save money with Pro- posal A because welfare spending would increase to cover the cost of births and support payments for the children who would be born rather than aborted. Storm smashes Central America GUATEMALA CITY (AP) - Guatemala and El Salvador were under states of alert yesterday as Tropical Storm Miriam whirled off- shore, and other Latin American countries tried to recover from the devastation left by the high winds and heavy rains. At 4 p.m. yesterday, Miriam's center was about 150 miles west- southwest of Guatemala City, accor- ding to the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables, Fla. It said the storm had maximum sustained winds of 55 mph and was moving west- northwest at about 10 mph. A tropical storm warning was in effect in El Salvador and Guatemala and forecasters said there was a pos- sibility of heavy rains, tides three to four feet above normal, flash floods and mudslides. Hurricane Joan left at least 111 people dead in five countries over the past week and ripped across Nicar- agua from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific before it was downgraded to a tropical storm and renamed Miriam. Forecasters had feared the storm would regain strength and become a hurricane again as it reached the warm waters of the Pacific, but they said yesterday that it was sticking too close to the coast to gather force. The known death toll from the weeklong storm was 50 people in Nicaragua over the weekend, 21 in feta An f r :-nn-m 7 . racial wome BY NICOLE SHAW The women's movement should focus on race and class as well as gender, said speakers last night in a panel discussion on "Connections between Sexism and Racism." As part of Sexual Assault Awareness Week, the panel focused on racism in the Feminist Movement, sexism in the legal system, and the connection between racism and sexism in our "rape culture." Racism in the feminist movement began shortly after the Civil War, when Black men were given the right to vote while white women were not. This caused a split between the two movements, and "gave rise to an autonomous white women's movement," explained panelist and United Coalition Against Racism member Barbara Ransby. The women's movement further became alienating to women of color with feminist role modles like Elizabeth Stanton, who Ransby said were blatantly racist. "A multi-issued movement doesn't lessen our strength but augments it," Ransby said. There is a close connection between racism and sexism in sexual assault, explained graduate student and panel member Cathy Cohen. The definition of rape by contemporary society has to be broadened, because now it only emphasises a woman's vunerability . , "I will no longer buy into that," Cohen said. "It's not enough to suggest that we're all weak and that we all experience the same rape-we don't." Women of color also experience class and economic n's coalition problems which have to be taken into account when defining women's struggles, she said.w "White women coming out of the 1970s saw the women's movement as a nice comfortable place," Cohen said. But when women of color move into the women's movement, it removes that comfort. Thus Black women ' feel alienated and are hesitant to join. This further promotes racism, she said.. "Experiences of women of color are central to all women," she said.u One thing Cohen cited was that there are not enough women of color helping other women of color through rape. Black women can't volunteer as much as white X women because they don't have the time, Cohen .A explained. Assistant Wane County prosecutor and panel member Betty Jo Walker cited examples of sexism and racism in the the legal profession. In 1957 New York's 30 largest law firms had a total of three Black lawyers, and that figure isn't much better today, she said. "One of the reasons Blacks are not given thej opportunities as white lawyers are is that corporate clients are not willing to accept counseling from black lawyers," Walker said. DAVID LUBLINER/Daily Also discussed at the end of the panel were the Twana Rackham Graduate student Cathy Cohen, a member of People Organized to Wipe Out Rape, speaks in a Sexual Assault Brawley case, racism in the Bush presidential campaign, Awareness Week forum on "Connectives between Sexism and prison issues, and recent problems at the Nectarine Racism." There is not enough support for Black women who Ballroom. are raped, Cohen said. Dems. renew charges of GOP racism FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen assailed the Republicans be- fore a business group yesterday, re- newing his weekend claim that Re- publicans were guilty of racist adver- tising. Mi;haelnk nic acne Virme. certainly came through in the ad," he said of the case of Willie Horton, the Massachusetts prisoner who escaped while on furlough and brutalized a Maryland couple. Dan Quayle rebutted that charge as "totally absurd" as he campaigned in Missouri: "I think it shows just how desperate they really are to start fan- ning the fires of racism." Campaigning through New Eng- land, Bush made an unusual departure from his prepared speech to reject Dukakis' charges of campaign distortions and deceptions. He said he could document every one of the allegations made on television advertisements criticizing a Massachusetts prison furlough program and his rival's record on your side?" Bush defended his tax proposal as good for creating new jobs. He said Dukakis is likely to raise taxes if elected and the nation could face an "economic disaster if the liberals take over the White House." The day's campaigning generally reflected Dukakis' hope that the vot- ers were "reapd to take aennd lank