0 OPINION Wednesday, November 2, 1988 3 Page 4 The Michigan Daily A. $beLirigan a Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. IC, No.40 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. Vote for Varner and A b B Anyone but Baker ON NOVEMBER 8, two of the seats would support as a regent: the on the University of Michigan's Board Governor's or the University's. of Regents are up for election. The Lewand feels that he would bring a Regents are the eight administrators, "fresh approach" to the University elected by state voters, who make the since he has never been a student or final decisions about University policy, member of the faculty. He believes that confer degrees, allocate funds, and high tuition could be remedied by appoint faculty; the people determine increased state funding for the school. tlle institutional priorities of the Lewand is unsure of his position on the University. code and uninformed in general. Two Regents are elected by the Baker has also never attended the voters of Michigan every two years. University in any other capacity than This election, the Daily endorses Regent. The two-term incumbent is Regent Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) for trying to win another eight year term to reelection and encourages voters to the board. choose either Ciff Taylor (R-East Baker has viciously attacked the gay Lansing) or Tom Lewand (D- male and lesbian community. He has Birmingham) as a vote against Regent said, "I know of instances of Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor). homosexual activity on campus which I Vamer served one eight-year term on cannot and will not tolerate." He the Board and previously was abused his position as regent to launch University's first Affirmative Action "investigations" and has lobbied director. Varner also received her against inclusion of sexual preference Ph.D. from Michigan. in the University's anti-discrimination To her credit, Varner has advocated bylaw. University divestment from South Baker also opposed divestment from Africa. However, Varner favored South Africa, claiming that students Former President Robben Fleming's who advocated divestment were limitations on student protest and she engaging in "gross and crass attempts was the only regent absent from last to intimidate the Regents." spring's meeting when the Further, Baker tried to prevent tuition discriminatory acts policy was funding of the Michigan Student discussed and approved. Assembly and succeeded in limiting the East Lansing attorney Cliff Taylor scope of student legal services. received one of the Republican On these grounds and others, nominations at this fall's state con- numerous student groups, including vention. Taylor wants to keep tuition the Daily, have called for Baker's down and increase evening classes for resignation. part-time students. He also hopes to Baker reportedly called former raise money by "cutting fat" off the candidate for University president, University's budget. Taylor graduated Vartan Gregorian, and explained his from the University in 1964 and hopes opposition to Gregorian's appoint- to use his ties with the Republican ment. Two days after this unilateral party to lobby the legislature on the action, Gregorian removed his name University's behalf. from the search committee's list. The second Democrat, Tom Lewand, Considering Baker's name recog- never attended the University. Lewand nition as an incumbent candidate and maintains that his close relationship the strength of the republican ticket, a with Governor James Blanchard will vote for no one is most likely a vote for help him lobby for the University in Baker. Lansing. He is the Governor's Vote for Nellie Vamer and one of the personal lawyer and this raises the other two candidates to prevent Baker question of whose interest Lewand from returning as Regent. Anti-Semitism specifies Jews By Karen Smith As an English T.A., I feel compelled to respond on a "linguistic level" to Sami W. Tabsh's letter (Daily, 10/4/88). In this letter, itself a response to an ACSI ad quoting passages from the Koran as evi- dence of Muslim Arab anti-Semitism, Tabsh argues that Arabs cannot be anti- Semitic because they are themselves Semitic. To the extent that one cannot be anti-self, Tabsh is correct; to say "anti- Semitic Arab," and to mean it literally, is to express a contradiction in terms. Tabsh misses an important point, how- ever, when he assumes that most of us use this term literally, for most of us do not. The word was in fact created in an effort to avoid the literal. "Anti-Semitism" was coined in 1879 by Wilhem Marr, "an anti- Jewish spokesman in Germany," to de- scribe a rising tide of discriminatory acts and attitudes toward Jews at that time in Europe. (Prager & Telushkin, Why the Jews? , p.199) As a euphemism, the word enabled thinkers to discuss the trend "politely." That is, it enabled them to promote hatred toward Jews without hav- ing to pronounce the unpleasant words: "hatred," "Jew." (Judenhass ) Needless to say, "anti-Semitism" as a term is rooted in anti-Semitism as a phenomenon. On that basis alone, perhaps the word should be changed Tabsh, however, is clearly not concerned with exposing the anti-Semitism in "anti- Semitism." On the contrary, in an effort to whitewash the anti-Jewish ideology canonized in the Koran, and to argue by extension that Arab anti-Zionism is en- tirely free from such ideology, Tabsh tries to expose what he sees as a Jewish, racist conspiracy working through the usage of the term "anti-Semitism." Indeed, to read Tabsh's words, which I believe are charac- teristic of much anti-Zionist rhetoric on this campus, one could conclude that Eu- ropean Jews actually invented the word "anti-Semitism" (and perhaps the phe- nomenon as well) in order to promote the idea that Jews are a (superior) race. As a Jew, I feel compelled to respond to the Karen Smith is an English teaching as- sistant. dangerous implications of Tabsh' s "linguistic" analysis. Jews are not a race; we have never con- sidered ourselves such, although many of our enemies have. Jewish Law recognizes conversion; thus, a sincere person of any race may become a Jew. If we are an insu- lar, sometimes xenophobic, community, it is in response to a history of persecu- tion. For centuries we have lived under systems of religious apartheid in both the Christian and Muslim worlds. In Europe we have been periodically pushed into ghettos and allowed to interact with mem- bers of the dominant culture only when it became economically convenient for them. In Muslim countries we, along with founding of Israel is what many anti- Zionists conveniently forget. The passages . from the Koran quoted by the ACSI, which clearly condemn - indeed sanction violence against - Jews, may remind usr of the reality. (Incidentally, I have no,{ connections with the ASCI, or, for that matter, any other "Jewish group"). I do not mean to say that all anti-Zion- ists are anti-Jewish, and I certainly do not, mean to trivialize or excuse U.S-supported, Israeli military excesses in Lebanon in 1982, and in the West Bank and Gaza strip today. But I am very tired of seeing anti- & Semitism trivialized and excused in such pathetic arguments as the one I have crir tiqued here. At the pro-Palestinian lectures #Q 'The myth that Jewish identity is based on racial unity is prop- , agated by anti-Zionists today as it was in the 1930s by Nazi anti-Zionists to discredit as racist the Jews' return to Israel.' Christians, have been at times relegated to the subservient status of the dhimmi, subject to special taxes. In both worlds, it has often been a capital crime for a Jew to convert a non-Jew to Judaism. This history of anti-Semitism is responsible for modes of behavior in the Jewish community that many outside of it are quick to label "racism." But, while it is difficult in this secular era to pinpoint what makes a Jew a Jew, I believe most of us would name such factors as religious belief and practice, a shared cultural her- itage, and/or an ethics of survival, free- dom, and justice that comes out of our own experience of persecution, rather than Semitic blood. We are a people, not a race. The myth that Jewish' identity is based on racial unity is propagated by anti- Zionists today as it was in the 1930s by Nazi anti-Zionists to discredit as racist the Jews' return to Israel. Tabsh's acceptance of this myth indicates that he subscribes to the popular notion that the founding of Israel was another instance of European racist imperialism, and that it alone created anti-Jewish feeling in the Arab countries. That Arab anti-Semitism predates the I have attended, I have been stunned to hear the old patterns rehashed by seem ingly "progressive" and educated peoples Jewish conspiracy, Jews as a race and as racists, Jewish money controlling the world, Jews as false victims - or as vir- tual "Christkillers" posing as victims (the Palestinians are the guiltless Christ fig.,, ures in this analogy). Meanwhile, old fashioned Jew-hating marches on: the Nazis come to town, a man on the street calls me a yid, walls are adorned with, - swastikas of all political persuasions (some are preceded with "Zionism is" ), and the acronym JAP is a staple in the campus vocabulary. Anti-Semitism has become not only acceptable but politically correct on this campus. We need to address this phe-r nomenon squarely-- to stop measuring and then dismissing Jewish oppression with theories of race and class, to stop defining- .4 it simply as superficial prejudice. Anti-,. Semitism is a distinct, systematic ideol- ogy in its own right and needs to be ad- dressed as such. Anti-Semitism kills. And it is allowed to reach the point of murder precisely because we ignore or deny its day-to-day presence. I w~o AE o ^ O7ING 'TO VOTE ORMAAM 1 W .l. , G oRGE I BU541, I GUESS... 1 .; - -- / 1(_ j II -"t = t ' j . I. MEAN, YOU NE.OPLE NAVE P.LADY ~ECLAED MMA THE WINN4ER, AVN NT WQ ? oOFopCOQU,6- C \ i ~vt POUT '92 _2 L~ i f\3 o .1 S ............................. ................................... . .................. ci ........................ . .. ........ ............. ............ ....................... ........... ............... i ,t Pictures of time, you listen to your own words and put dignity of every Myth of Black rapist human being first. homeless -Beth Octo insensitive Vntp fr Supina ber 18 IN AN ATTEMPT to discredit Michael Dukakis, the Bush campaign is using tactics which are blatantly, racist. In anti -Dukakis commercials, Bush's campaign uses a photograph of a Black man accused of raping a white woman while on furlough. These commercials perpetuate the myth of the Black rapist, which has been historically used to justify overt racism and lynching. According to information gathered by the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center, Black men and men of color are no more likely to rape than white men. In fact, white men rape Black women twice as often as Black men rape white women. In over 90% of rape cases, the rapist and victim are of the same race and socio-economic class. However, rape by Black men is five times more likely to be reported than rape by white men. Of rape cases thdt go to court, when the accused is a man of color, the case is more likely to end in conviction and the sentence is usually more severe. Of 455 men exe- cuted for rape between 1930 and 1967, 405 of them were Black. The myth of the Black rapist emerged during the Reconstruction period fol- lowing the Civil War, created by white The white community attempted to cover-up the murder of Till under the guise of protecting white womanhood. Not only do lynchings of Black men continue today,although less fre- quently,but the myth of the Black rapist continues as a justification of these lynchings. The Bush campaign perpetuates this myth, by using a Black man as the subject of the anti-furlough commercials - fostering the "lynch a Black man" mentality. It preys upon the unjustified and socialized fears of white women and men who have been taught to fear Black men. The media contributes to this racist myth by only mentioning the race of the alleged perpetrator of a crime when the person is Black. Rarely does one read that the possible assailant is "white." It is also rare that composite sketches of white men appear in news- papers, like those of two Black men. that appeared in the Daily (10/28/88). Especially when white men are known by the victims, or belong to the middle or upper class, they have greater power to bring suit against these publications and their pictures never appear. Such was the case with Griffith Neal, the student accused of raping a woman last year. To the Daily: Last Friday, the main article of your Weekend section was about the homeless. ("The Shelter at 420 West Huron," Daily, 10/14) It did an excel- lent job of informing people about that problem in our own backyard we find so easy to ig- nore. However, articles such as this usually call for a bit more sensitivity, particularly con- cerning the photography. I'm sure there were some people who were more than happy to help with the story and get their pictures plastered all over the newspaper. Still, are all those people allowing you to declare their homelessness to the city? What about their dig- nity? Isn't it embarrassing enough "walking around the streets and campus. People laugh and mock. "? It's won- derful that you went to the shelter to truly understand what it is to be homeless, but in that time did you ever walk past an old newspaper seeing a picture of yourself with the homeless stamped underneath? What would it be like to see something like that? The arti- cle itself states the difficulty TV V l J %.J regents important To the Daily: The president, vice presidents and deans of this University are not publicly elected. But the people who appoint them are elected. The U-M Regents, who have the ulti- mate say on every major policy decision made by this Univer- sity, are accountable to all the voters and taxpayers of Michi- gan. Two Regents will be elected on November 8 for an eight year term - twice as long as the President of the United States. Will tuition keep getting in- creased 10 percent per year? Will there be continued efforts to recruit qualified minority students to U-M? Its up to the Regents to decide. These people affect our lives - they set tuition and class size limitations and faculty salaries. They decide which classrooms get renovated and when. It's important that students, votes count. This year, 6, 731 drunken stupor on new students registered to vote night without a date in Ann Arbor. In 1980, one -A i U-M Regent won an upset O victory with a winning margin of just 6,000 votes. X h h -Zachary Kittrie Which October 31 witch i4 Attire is no hich? licence for To the Daily: Wow, quite an e4 harassment hadthere Afew th bit skewed though. To the Daily: signed (understanc To the three sexual harassers tonal entitled, "In of Saturday night: Witches," the auth Approximately 9:30 on think reasonably o Saturday, Oct. 29, you three areas. He/She sure guys sexually harassed my "religious" people I friend and I while we were asking that certai walking between South Quad traditionally used 1 and West Quad, not quite half Halloween be left+ of a block. Your actions of children's classroom disrespect and physical abuse notice that these p are not to be excused just concerned only with because you were drunk. As that contained the you pushed each other into us They were not out and made crude suggestions, such occurrences you happened to ask if we the school system. would "do it" with you while p referring to the fact that we their children n would because of the way we teaching contrary to were dressed. they are giving ther My friend and I were dressed also, isn't witchcr up in nice, moderate dresses on religious belief tha our way to a party. Our attire ship (as the editor does not give your three guys quently divulged), t an excuse to sexually harass us one's life to a be nor does it give you reason to than him/hersel have rape on the brain, books, and other el a Saturday e. nonymous ctober 31 sk S p. ;ditonial you ,~ kings were a, iIn the u-' dably!) edi- n Praise of or failed to rn a couple made those n elements' to celebrate out of their ms. One will arents were h the classes ir children:. to stop all throughout Isn't it the "4 insist that ot receive o that which ,m at home? aft in fact a' at has wor-' rial so elo- he giving of ing greater* f, "holy" ements that"-