Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 16, 1989 al Activist reveals life in occupied lands BY DIMA ZALATIMO A Jewish-American activist re- vealed the daily life of Palestinians under Israeli occupation during the uprising in a slide show and lecture last night to about 50 students, fac- ulty, and community members. Todd May, a graduate philosophy student at Pennsylvania State Uni- versity, recently visited the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a member of an American human rights delega- tion. "Are we capable of doing this?" was the thought May said he had af- ter seeing the human rights viola- tions being committed against the Palestinians. He added the experience was even more difficult to witness as a Jew. During his stay in the Occupied Territories, May said he was one of five Americans who had their pass- ports seized by Israeli forces while he and his colleagues were watching a women's demonstration in the West Bank town of Ramallah. On the arrival of the Israeli forces, May said his delegation was asked, at gunpoint, to. stop the demonstration. When they explained to the Israelis that they were not in- volved in the demonstration, Todd said the Israelis confiscated their passports. After a week of negotia- tions between the Israelis and the American Counselate in Jerusalem, the passports were retreived. Most of May's lecture - spon- sored by the General Union of Palestinian Students - consisted of a slide show, which he narrated. May showed slides of the illegal Israeli settlements that are still being built in the Occupied Territories. He said that last year $16 million in tax deductible American donations were sent to build Israeli settlements. In Al Mahata, a small Palestinian community inside of Israel, May said that he saw how these Palestini- ans lived as second class citizens even though they were Israeli citizens. May showed many slides of the effects of the weapons used against Palestinians on the streets and in their homes. He said that the plastic bullets being used were actually 10 percent plastic - the rest comprised of various metals. "Symbols of the resistance are everywhere," he said, showing slides of widespread anti-Israeli slogans and illegal Palestinian flags. May added that there are uncon- firmed suspicions that Israeli offi- cials have been taking various or- gans out of Palestinian bodies while under autopsy. LIZ STEKETEE/Daily Todd May, a Jewish American activist, speaks to a crowd of about 50 people last night at Hutchins Hall. May went with a human rights delegation to visit the occupied territories in Israel last April. Author introduces book on Caribbean women BY KRISTIN HOFFMAN A University professor introduced her new book about the lies and achievements of Caribbean'women yesterday to an audience of about 40 people. Author and Adjunct Professor Nesha Haniff works jointly for the Women's Studies program and the Cbnter for Afro-American Studies. The book, entitled Blaze a Fire, ihcludes dialogue from 28 Caribbean C-ET . women and commentary on the feminist aspects of their lives by Haniff. Discussed are the lives of women who are in recognized positions of importance, such as government of- ficials, but it also includes six women who are "invisible". These "invisible" women are rec- ognized as having made valuable contributions to their communities as well as taking on leadership roles, but are not traditionally recognized. Haniff said one goal of her book was to provide a text for use at the high school and first year university level that discussed the achieve- ments of women. Young women do not encounter strong positive examples of female achievement in the body of literature that is presented to them through out their education, she said. "We are always talking about a low self-concept as contributing to lack of achievement. This book can do something about that, as it will show young women the valid con- tributions that are made to society by other women." Haniff also wanted the book to be an accessible example of feminist concepts, one for "the masses" to read. Her work, a practical applica- tion of feminist theory, is a contrast to the overtly theoretical and philo- sophical books produced by many tenured professors, she said. She said writing the book required making the story lines readable and interesting, while still striving to point out the feminist outlook that characterizes these women's lives. During the discussion, Haniff read an excerpt from the book, about a woman named Didi. Didi is a sugarcane cutter who has worked in the fields since she was ten years old. She has been active in the union struggles of cane workers. Her dual role as worker and union activist set her apart as a woman in non-traditional roles, Haniff asserted. Didi is one of the "invisible women" because she is not in a tra- ditionally recognized position of achievement, Haniff said. Within her community, however, she is a val- ued and respected leader because of her life-long struggle against a cor- rupt union and a management that exploits workers. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports Central American leaders agree to demobilize the Contra army SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador - Nicaraguan rebel leaders reacted skeptically yesterday to the Central American summit's agreement on elections and its plan to dismantle the rebel army. The five Central American presidents still face the task of getting the rebels and their U.S. sponsors to go along with the accords and of verifying Nicaraguan compliance on elections. "A lot of people put themselves out on a limb by signing this," Contra leader Adolfo Calero said yesterday. The presidents of Nicaragua, Honduras, Costa Rica, Guatemala and El Salvador announced Tuesday they agreed to develop a plan within 90 days to demobilize and dismantle the Contra army. An estimated 11,000 Contra fighters and several thousand family members are in Honduras, along the border with Nicaragua, many of them vowing to fight on. Iranians place bounty on novelist Iran yesterday placed a $2.6 million bounty on the head of Salman Rushdie, whose novel "The Satanic Verses" has enraged many of the world's Moslems, causing him to drop from sight, with police guarding his home and his publishers. Tehran radio denounced the book as "a shameless onslaught on the sacred character of Islam's prophet," and protestors shattered windows at the British Embassy in Tehran. Rushdie's book, which was published in Britain, has been formally banned by at least five countries. Earlier this week, Tehran Radio, quoted Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeni as saying Rushdie and his publishers "are hereby sentenced to death." "If the executioner is a foreigner he will receive a million dollars," said Hojatoleslam Hassan Saneie, head of the 15th Khordad Relief Agency, according to the Iranian news agency. The reward for an Iranian, however, will be 200 million rials, or $2.6 million. Education proposal will aid poor LANSING - Stronger local control of state dollars is the carrot in a new $1.5 billion school finance proposal that calls for boosting state aid for poorer districts, lawmakers said yesterday. The bipartisan plan calls for reducing the wide gap between rich and poor districts by raising the state sales tax to 5 percent from 4 percent and cutting property taxes by 25 percent. Under the plan, the state would eliminate its contributions to Social Security and retirement plans for school employees, and special aid for programs such as special education, transportation, and programs for gifted students, said Rep. William Keith, D-Garden City, one of the measure's authors. The money would be given to poorer school districts. They would have total control over how to spend the money under the plan by the House Education Committee. $14.5 mil awarded in Hudson case LOS ANGELES - Rock Hudson was guilty of "outrageous conduct" in concealing that he had AIDS from his lover, a jury ruled yesterday in awarding the lover $14.5 million from the late actor's estate. Marc Christian, 35, won $3.5 million more than he had sought in the case, regarded as a precedent-setting action and watched closely by lawyers. No similar case has had a like result when the plaintiff has not developed AIDS. Christian has consistently tested negative for the AIDS virus, but claimed he was entitled to compensation for the emotional distress he suffered in fear he would develop the disease. The jury ruled that Hudson conspired with secretary Mark Miller to keep secret the actor's disease to induce Christian to continue having high-risk sex with Hudson. Hudson, the Hollywood leading man who kept his homosexuality a secret from the public, died Oct. 5. 1985, at age 58. EXTRAS Rolling Stones may give more 'Satisfaction' to their fans LOS ANGELES - The Rolling Stones plan to record their first al- bum in three years and may go back on the road, a publicist said yester- day. The band's battling leaders, guitarist Keith Richards and singer Mick Jagger, had been pursuing solo careers lately. But they apparently smoothed over their differences during a recent stay in the Caribbean, said Paul Wasserman, a spokesperson for Richards. "Nothing is official yet, but it looks like it's going to happen," said Wasserman. "Keith was down there. Mick was down there. And they talked about writing some songs. They might have even written some al- ready." The album would be the second in the group's $28 million, four-record deal with CBS, following the 1986 album "Dirty Work." The tour would be their first since the record-setting 1981 tour that brought in $54 mil- lion in ticket sales. + W ~ The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fail and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $25.00 in-town and $35 out-of-town, for fall only $15.00 in-town and $20.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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