OPINION Tuesday, January 31, 1989 Page 4 The Michigan Doily' Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Steiner and others reject recommendation to hire Black female scholar: 0 Academitc Diversity 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. IC, No.86 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. Alled with apartheid IN HIS first week of shaping the U.S. Foreign policy agenda, President Bush krinounced that military aid and diplo- nnatic support to The National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) - the "contras" of Angola I-. will continue unabated through his administration. UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi, affectionately called a 'freedom fighter" by the right, was a familiar guest in the Reagan White House. George Bush is rolling out the same bloody red carpet. UNITA is a proxy army that owes its existence and sustenance to the United States and South Africa. It was created in 1975, when Angola won indepen- dence from Portugal, to be a channel for U.S. and South African aggression against the popularly elected govern- rrient of Angola. As the Angolan repre- sentative to the United Nations stated, 4 UNITA was created from outside An- gola, and is able to survive only be- cause of the oxygen it receives from Ireign forces." "The U.S. has justified its aggression aainst Angola by citing the presence bf 50,000 Cuban troops in Angola. Doublespeak at its best, the U.S. gov- prnment has once again confused the response with the cause. South African U.S. aggression came first; the ;cuban troops, invited by the Angolan ;government, came second. The aim of U.S. - South African ag- gression has been to destroy the An- golan economy. UNITA has tried to do 'this by using terrorist tactics against rural villages and farms to force people Doff their land. The economy has been #hurt, resulting in a tremendous in- crease in human suffering. The New 'York Times, in a conservative estimate, -reports that there are at least 20,000 :civilian amputees - innocent vic- tims- of UNITA land mines. South Africa's terrorism against Angola is not only designed to destabi- lize Angola, but seeks to preserve apartheid as well.The African National Congress (ANC), which was banned by the South African government, has several training bases in Angola. As Black liberation forces across southern Africa have joined together, the United States and South Africa have sought to destroy them. Terrorism directed against the ANC and Angola is one ex- ample. In addition, the strategy for main- taining white domination over the Black majority includes crippling the economies of the frontline states (Namibia, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Angola) thus keeping them dependent on South Africa. This dependency de- ters some countries from showing soli- darity with or support for the Black liberation struggle within South Africa. In United Nations resolution 435, the resolution for Namibian indepen- dence, South Africa tied its pullout from Namibia to the removal of Cuban troops from Angola. South Africa also agreed to end all aid to UNITA.This has major implications for the United States, which already supplies over $15 million dollars in covert military aid to UNITA annually. Taking up where South Africa leaves off, the United States and Israel (who has funnelled arms to UNITA) will inevitably increase their aid to UNITA. For all of Bush's talk about a "kinder, gentler nation," the ugly truth' is that he is committed to imposing the will of the United States by force and violence on smaller nations. The struggle in Angola has always been for independence and self-determination. The South African government naturally sees Angolan independence as a threat to white minority rule. Bush's continued collaboration with South Africa against Angolan independence is, unfortunately, an all-too-clear example of this administration's foreign policy agenda. Co-signed: Barbara Ransby, United Coalition Against Racism; Sharon Hol- land, Women of Color Constituency Group, Women's Studies Program; Michael Wilson, Black Medical Associa- tion; Tracy Ore, Rackham Student Gov- ernment; Jocelyn Sargent, Minority Orga- nization of Rackham; Pam Kisch, People Organized for Women, Equality and Rights; Delro Harris, Minority Affairs Committee of MSA; Kathy Yang, Asian American Association; Daxa Patel, Indian and Pakistani American Students Council; Pedro Bonilla, Puerto Rican Solidarity Organization; Pam Nadasen, Free South Africa Coordinating Committee; Kathryn Savoie, Latin American Solidarity Com- mittee; Roderick Linzie, Sociologists of Color; Susan Rhee, University of Michi- gan Asian Student Coalition; Tracye Matthews, Black Student Union. The Department of Sociology and the Women's Studies Program have been in- volved in an arduous 18 month selection process to identify a candidate for a joint faculty position at the University. When the two units finally agreed recently upon a senior Black female scholar, widely re- spected in her field, the LSA Executive committee, chaired by Dean Steiner, in its infinite wisdom, opted to summarily reject that recommendation. This rejection was made in spite of the fact that the candidate is currently a respected member of the fac- ulty at an institution ranked higher in so- ciology than UM, has a prestigious grant for training minority graduate students which she would have brought with her to Michigan, is widely published, gave two well received lectures in Ann Arbor, and is tenured in her current position. Since it is crystal clear to us, and to two committees of her peers, that this candi- date was more than qualified for the vacant position, coupled with the sad fact that last year there was only one tenured Black female faculty in all of LSA, we find this unusual decision on the part of Dean Steiner's committee, difficult to swallow. This decision is also incongruent with the President's publicity campaign around the importance of cultural diversity, and his own personal pledge to do everything possible to realize that goal. Quite frankly, this type of incident makes the promises from the current administration ring quite hollow. We feel this incident is yet another example of the "unintentional" and often unnoticed institutional racism and sexism that Duderstadt has promised to diligently uproot. He can begin digging at the doorsteps of the LSA administra- tion. For the following reasons we call upon the President to intervene and advise the Executive Committee to reconsider its ill- informed decision. 1. The search committees involved la- bored long and hard to select the candidate recommended. They compared her with other possible candidates, read her work extensively and tapped their own knowl- edge of her field of research to make their decision. In essence she was fully and fairly evaluated by a panel of her peers, all of whom deemed her desirable as a col- league. The LSA Executive Committee, many of whom are not even trained in the social sciences, overrode that decision with are inconsistent with the University's pledge to do all possible to recruit and keep quality minority scholars. Moreover, because of confidentiality concerns and the desire of rejected candidates to avoid embarrassment, we fear that many more cases like this have occurred tacitly. 6. There are so few Black senior-level faculty to work with graduate students and provide support and role models for in- coming junior minority faculty, this rejection hits even harder. 7. Other minority faculty who may be rethinking their continued tenure at the University, are likely to be further alien- ated by the callous maltreatment of this applicant It sends a sad message about how the University intends to handle mi- 'S 6 'This decision is also incongruent with the President's pub- licity campaign around the importance of cultural diversity, and his own personal pledge to do everything possible to real- ize that goal.' much less evidence at their disposal and after much less intensive deliberation. This is not only an unusual move on the part of LSA, but reflects a great deal of arrogance and short sightedness. 2. The decision seems to dismiss the years of hard work by a female minority scholar as low quality because it does not conform to their obviously questionable (since qualified colleagues have disagreed) criteria. 3. It is also our understanding that the single Black member of the recently desegregated Executive Committee did not participate in the decision or the vote re- garding this candidate, because he is a member of the Sociology Department. 4. Since it is rare for LSA to override the decision of search committees, we are highly suspect of the conscious and un- conscious bias implicit in this case. 5. We know that there are other similar cases in which minority candidates, deemed qualified by many of their col- leagues have been rejected by the Univer- sity at various levels , two Black candi- dates in economics and one Asian candi- date in English. Again, these occurrences nority faculty issues in the future. 8. It is ironic that a decision by two of the units with some demonstrable success in recruiting minorities has been overrid- den by the LSA Executive Committee, a group which has been charged with dis- crimination in the past and has only re- cently added a Black faculty member to its roster. 9. Finally, this decision calls into ques- tion whether the leadership of LSA has learned anything from last years charges of longstanding racism. All of these concerns and issues lead us to the very disturbing conclusion that we have encountered yet another example of institutional racism at the University. As students concerned with this issue and as potential benefactors or victims of how the University resolves this and similar issues, we demand that Duderstadt make good on his promise to combat racism at Michigan in all its forms, and to hold all university units accountable in this regard. He can start by intervening in this case and calling upon the LSA Executive Committee to publicly explain its seem- ingly arbitrary actions and to consider a thorough re-evaluation of this case. a" .... . . . . . . .. . i' I..4 ...,,.................,..".r.. { DOar as saam LuandaNWaZati MAINUNIALngw AREA \ZAM\iIA \ \\\\ Lw~u~aaO \ ' .. K'r''"* H.we OVAMBOLAND\ CAPRTFabmub COR DM AREAS OF HEAVY a Towab.STRIP REAMuO ATIIT N MW \A rn I \ BrTW NANZAW UE * a ) + a DESERT m N~oiMMOPsM m M,-4 " L "O d SOUTH AFRICA The above map shows the countries which make up southern Africa. Daily Opinion Page letter policy Due to the volume of mail, the Daily cannot print all the letters and columns it receives. although an effort is made to print the majority of the Daily distorts issue To the Daily: In addition to containing several blantant falsehoods, the editorial "Ethiopians Ex- ploited" (Daily, 1/23/89) criti- cized the motives of the fundraiser which occured the Tuesday prior. As the coordinators of that project, we feel compelled to respond. The Daily used the Ethiopian Jews as pawns in their on-go- ing attack on Israel. It manupulated a humanitarian issue to suit its political agenda Israel was established 42 years ago as a haven for perse- cuted Jews all over the world. When she opens her gates for Ethiopian Jews she is doing her main task - helping Jews who suffer merely for being Jews. The American Association for Ethiopian Jews (AAEJ) is not attempting to bring about an "end to the Ethiopian tragedy" by a "transfer of a fraction of Ethiopia's popula- tion to another part of the world" as the Daily, not sub- tly, insinuates Their concern is for the Jews who live as a persectued people in the land of Ethiopia. Today 10-15,000 Jews re- main in Ethiopia. They are nrnominantlv cnmmunity of co-signator of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations, how- ever, Ethiopia is obligated to abide by the clause "permitting and assisting the unification of families separated by migra- tion." Ethiopia is currently at war with rebels in the northern provinces of Tigre and Eritrea. Fighting often carries over into neighboring Gondar, putting the Jews of Gondar in a precar- ious position. They become endangered not only by the war but by the preventing of emer- gency food deliveries along the one main road to Northern Gondar. Currently about 18,000 Jews of Ethiopian descent reside in Israel. The majority of them have relatives remaining in Ethiopia. Parents are separated from children, brother form sister, husband from wife. While the immigrants, many of whom are orphans, struggle to learn how to use electricity and indoor plumbing, they have to cope with the separa- tion from their families. It is virtually impossible to know of their relatives' whereabouts or well-being. The Jewish community in Ethiopia needs our help. Those who participated in the meal sacrifice or donated their time or money should be com- mended -Jeff Levin Melissa Silverman Sue Aronowitz Ta.u.., Id "Praise for the PLO" (Daily, 1/12/89), written a hostile anti- Israel article. A careful analysis of clauses in the editorial reveals bitter anti-Israel sentiment support- ing violence and Israel's over- throw. Paragraph one: "In a concession to Secretary of State George Shultz's newspeak...," paints the recent PLO statements as a political maneuver to gain U.S. favor, not action directed at coming to terms with demands which will lead towards peace, either those of the U.S. or Israel. In the second paragraph the PLO is further "commended for their political pragmatism," by the editors. Further in the third and fourth paragraphs the PLO's recent actions of accepting U.N. resolutions 242 and 338 and renouncing terrorism are referred to: "Nonetheless, in a classic example of victim blaming, they (PLO) are now asked to give up even more...sacrificing many of the PLO's fundamen- tal objectives..." The first clause shows ed- itorial contention over the "sacrifices" the PLO has made. The second unequivocally demonstrates editorial resolve in Israel's destruction. By defining Arafat's recent state- ments, which many have con- sidered a move towards peace, as a compromise of a "fundamental objective," the Daily has aligned itself with the most extreme and hostile anti-Israel forces. parties' including Israel 'to ex- ist in peace and security' and 'totally and absolutely re= nounces terrorism." Salah Khalaf: "'The U.S. can stop now (with negotia- tions) if they think we (th PLO) will cease attacks on Is- raeli military targets. (Arafat's second-in-command). The Daily here boldly tries to slam Israeli politics (which have been hollering about PLQ ideological inconsistencies) by first showing us how Yasser Arafat wants peace, which well he might, and then promising Israel continued assault throughi Khalaf. To the extent that this edito- rial reveals hostility towards Israel's U.N.-affirmed right to exist it should be considered reprehensible. The manner in which it does this and other things is, however, neither re- sponsible nor honest and cer- tainly not in the spirit of peace. -Yariv Houvras January 17 Unethical editorial To The Daily: In a recent editorial, you ac- cused the genuinely humanitarian act of bringing Ethiopian Jews to Israel as be- ing a disguise to oppress Palestinians. Regardless of your vies on the Palestinian issue, it was totally unethical to cite the Ethiopian Jew pro- iar. n -axi arf %_n1,A I a I In m