I PINTON Page 4 Thursday, February 23, 1989 b + idaig iaiI Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. IC, No. 103 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. Feminists far Pesticide is poison T HE ENVIRONMENTAL Protection Agency's February 16th failure to implement a comprehensive ban on the use of the carcinogenic fungicide cap- tan indicates a continuation of EPA pesticide regulation policies which disregard public health and safety. The EPA has been aware of links be- tween captan and cancer since 1977. In the ensuing twelve years, the powerful agri-chemical and agri-business indus- tries have manipulated the EPA to avoid a ban on the 10 million pounds of captan annually applied to crops. The result of this corporate intimidation is an EPA policy which accomplishes virtually nothing in terms of consumer and farm worker safety. The EPA's ban does not cover 24 fruits and vegetables which account for an enormous percentage of the captan applied to products each year. The im- pact on the production of the 42 prod- ucts to which the ban does apply is negligible. The agri-chemical and agri- business industries have protected their interests by coercing the EPA into ap- plying the captan ban to products like oranges (107 lbs. applied in California in 1986) but not grapes (200,000 lbs. applied in CA in 1986). The seven products which account for the most numerous captan applications are all unaffected by the ban. The EPA's decision represents a fur- ther dismantling of the Delaney Clause, part of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act which prohibits any residue of cancer-causing substances on food. The EPA's policy poses a senseless risk to consumers as even EPA acting deputy administrator Dr. John Moore admits that there are no 'demonstrable benefits' from the use of captan be- cause safer alternatives are available. Farm workers are placed in grave danger by the EPA policy. Because captan is not even a restricted-use pesticide, growers can force their workers to apply this carcinogen with- out reporting it to the government. Farm workers face regular exposure to captan and other dangerous cancer- causing pesticides and their children are paying the price. Several "cancer clusters" exist in California. McFarland, a small town of farm workers, has a child cancer rate more than 400 percent above the norm. The EPA seems solely concerned with protecting corporate interests, in- stead of protecting consumers and workers from the ethically groundless agri-chemical and agri-business indus- tries. The Bush administration must restore credibility to the EPA and enforce stricter pesticide regulations. All carcinogenic pesticides must be banned. In addition, the Bush must reimplement President Carter's execu- tive order prohibiting U.S. companies from exporting banned pesticides which was dismantled in the early years of the Reagan/Bush administra- tion. Until these policy changes are en- acted, public health will continue to be threatened by corporate interests. Consumers, particularly women in their reproductive years, should be aware that the almonds, apples, apri- cots, blueberries, cherries, dewberries, eggplant, grapes, green onions, lettuce, mangoes, nectarines, peaches, pears, peppers, pimientos, plums, prunes, raspberries, strawberries, taro, and tomatoes which they consume are likely to bear the residue of cancer- causing pesticides. By Daniel Smith The author of the editorial, "Porn Illustrated" (Daily, 2/13/89) exhorts us to "Boycott Sports Illustrated.." because it ..perpetuates the myth of women as sexual objects who need and want to be conquered." The conclusion that Sports Illustrated is indirectly telling men to rape women is an interesting conclusion, but not a reasonable one. At the very least the author's conclusion is an intense exaggeration. This type of exaggeration seems very common among some women's groups and I find it disturbing. I agree with the basic premises that women are used as sale/sex objects. I further agree that women should have the same economic opportunity as men. I even agree, that certain types of porn should be outlawed, and that their existence is an embarrassment to humanity, but I disagree with the tone, method, and dynamics of many "feminists" that the author above typifies. The problem, according to certain feminists, is that whenever some man says "What a babe!" they are reducing the object of their stare to an object, and thinking only of that object's sex appeal. This begins a process of psychological breakdown which ends with the total objectification of people (women). When you objectify a person you cease to have empathy for them or respect for their boundaries. Women become a thing for male use and enjoyment in much the same way a bicycle is a thing. This, they contend, is how SI assists in allowing men to feel justified in raping women as women have ceased to be real to men. What disturbs me is that it isn't Sports Illustrated that causes offenders to rape, nor is it the use of the pronoun Daniel Smith is an Ann Arbor resident and a self-identified feminist. "Mankind" or explicit telev sociopathology within the offei is caused by things alot deep eight and a half by twenty two t spread page of Christie Brinkley bikini. Most rapists aren't habit Illustrated readers. They are have been victims of sexual a child. The nature of the o pathology isn't in what he c read, it's in his history in th family, among other things. While I agree that the SI po women surely doesn't help ther in our society, I don't think it; equated with causes of rape. I have a terrible confession t The Michigan Daily too angry ision, it's active in feminism, are college students. nder. Rape They can afford to pay for school. When er than an they receive their diploma, they will be echnicolor able to afford many things others can't. y in a lycra These women have managed, in many tual Sports cases, to remain impervious to the men who economic injustice of sexism. They have abuse as a luckily never felt the poverty of a forty offenders' year old secretary and never will. hooses to The vehemence with which some e primary "feminists" brow beat and preach would lead us to believe that these women are )rtrayal of these forty year old secretaries and not m advance upper middle class 19 to 25 year olds who should be get a check from home every month. I can hear many of these feminists responding now, "Isn't the fact that we are victims of omake. I sexual harassment and violence enough to I have a terrible confession to make. I found some of the scantily clad models in Sports Illustrated incredibly attractive! (I know, it's terrible, but I am trying to reform myself.)' 4 found some of the scantily clad models in Sports Illustrated incredibly attractive! (I know, it's terrible, but I am. trying to reform myself.) Often I think some "feminists" are "angryists" and they rationalize their misery by claiming that they are the victims of a sexist society, instead of looking more closely at what they are angry about. They are looking for something to blame, rather than confronting their own neurosis. Societies have blamed Jews, Blacks, and homosexuals. When I want to blame someone, I blame my parents. Feminists, of this hardcore brand, blame the pronoun mankind, and this issue of SI. Many of the women I know who are justify self righteous anger?" It's horribly true that women have been the repeated victims of rape or incest. Rape is the most horrible and evil crime a man can commit and it is an absolute disgrace on our society that it happens so frequently and is dealt with so leniently. I am horrified and disgusted with the way our system deals with rape. It's terribly true that many Michigan students are sexual assault victims. I think men would be more willing to use inclusive language if women would use inclusive (as well as sensible) protest. The "feminist" movement would obviously benefit if it presented itself in a way that attracted more supporters from both genders. ( .... ... .... ... .... ... .... ... .... .. ............. .. ..4. .e.t:}.r.11to the "::edr.itor. Steps for Soviet Jews LAST WEEK the first officially ap- proved Jewish cultural center in the Soviet Union was inaugurated. The center, which is to house classes in Yiddish and Hebrew, a Jewish library with works in Yiddish and Hebrew, and an exhibition gallery, comes as a part of Glasnost, and, more specifi- cally, of the easing of long held op- pressive policies toward the Jews. The history of oppression of Jews in the region is far older than the Soviet Union. For hundreds of years, almost since the Jews first came to Eastern Europe, hatred of Jews, oppressive policies, and pogroms have been the accepted norm. Long before the founding of the Soviet state, the murder and rape of Jews in government sponsored pogroms was commonplace. During the German occupation of the Ukraine in World War II, the local population took the chance to turn against the Jews by aiding the Nazis and committing murders and atrocities of their own. Even Ukrainian partizans resisting the occupation turned in Jewish partizans fighting for the same goal. During the Stalinist purges the Jews were specifi- cally targeted for extermination. The entire history of the modern state is marked by attempts to eradicate the Jews as a culture, as a religion, and as a people. The practice of the Jewish re- ligion has been illegal, as has the study of Jewish culture and language, and the right of Jews to flee the oppression by emigrating has been restricted. It is illegal to own Hebrew, Yiddish, and other Jewish books and religious objects, such as menorahs, prayer shawls and phylacteries. Jews who apply for exit visas often lose their jobs and apartments, or are branded as dissidents, and are imprisoned. The oppression of Jews under the modern state is simply the continuation of the ancient hatred of Jews in this area. In light of history, this step is to be commended, and the program of Glas- nost encouraged., although it should not be forgotten that the much publi- cized increase in the granting of exit visas leaves many thousands of Jews captive in a nation that denies them their civil rights. Though the opening of a cultural center will not erase the rampant oppression of Jews by the government or hatred of Jews in the Soviet Union, it is a step in the right direction. The approval of this center, and Glasnost in general, bring closer the goal of universal human rights and, like any such step, are to be com- mended and encouraged. Daily bashes Bush again To the Daily: Your article on our forty-first President (Daily, 2/9/89) once again proves the Daily is incapable of producing any- thing but editorial garbage. Not only have you misplaced the source of President Bush's new accommodation of Congress, but you have, save for being an "editorial", slandered a man who isn't here to defend him- self. Let's look at the facts for just a minute: -Ex-President Reagan did have Congress working on his agenda for a better part of six years. During this period, he was not only a very effective leader, but the United States enjoyed a peacetime expansion which continues to this day. President Reagan, not an intelligent Congress, achieved this dramatic turnaround from the Democratic nightmare left by "Mister Peanut" Jimmy Carter. -Just because President Bush is friendly to Congress does not mean he is trying to de- stroy the line between execu- tive and legislative branch. Rather President Bush has realized what Ronald Reagan saw too late: Congress is try- ing to overrun the executive branch by meddling in its af- fairs. Speaker Wright's inter- vention in Central America should be punished to the fullest extent of the law: im- peachment. He had no author- ity or reason to interfere in foreign policy. That is solely left to the executive branch. President Bush's new open attitude toward Congress is merely a way to stop Congress from doing what he is elected to do. -The concept that corpo- protect their own interests would spell doom for the economic structure of this nation. Your article not only showed your narrow-mindedness, "con- servative-phobia", biasedness, and shallow thinking, but your staff should seriously consider resigning and being replaced by those with a large interest in fairness and moderation. Your trash only serves those who want to project the University as a place for bigots and close- minded idiots. Think about it carefully. -Michael J. Corbin February 9 Religious furor out of hand To the Daily: Fellow observers of the ve- hement denunciations of "The Satanic Verses" may also recall the rage that greeted a former April Fool's Day editorial in the entitled, "God is dead" (Daily, 4/1/88) and more re- cently a movie called "The Last Temptation of Christ." Such similar reactions in different culture systems are enough to cause wonder as to what kind of god "creator" it is that could or would inspire competing biographers of itself with little humor and great fear and hatred. Such situations demonstrate the wisdom in Bertrand Rus- sell's comment: "The degree of one's emotion varies inversely with one's knowledge of the facts - the less you know the hotter you get." This observer suspects that such forms of competition have more to do with power and influence than with a god worth the exaltation of the name, and that Voltaire was right on the money when he said, "People who believe ab- surdities will commit atroci- ties." _i2 Fl ...linann "Operation Rescue," a splinter group of the "Right-To-Life" movement, has been attacking abortion clinics and harassing women entering them. The Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights (A2CDAR), along with the Detroit Coalition to Defend Abortion Rights (DCDAR), is building a movement to stop them. In Livonia on 11/12/88, and in Detroit on 1/21/89, we mobilized to thwart the anti- choicers' attempts to shut down clinics and provided escorts to protect clients and staff from harassment. In some cases, "Operation Rescue" has physically assaulted women entering clinics. This Saturday, February 25, "Operation Rescue" will attack a clinic in Lake Orion, Michigan. Once again, A2CDAR and DCDAR are mobilizing to keep the doors open and protect clients and staff from harrassment and abuse. A car pool will leave from Ann Arbor early Saturday morning to join Ypsilanti and' Detroit abortion rights supporters. Come to Community High School on Division five blocks north of Liberty at 5:30am Saturday morning to join our efforts. Call 995-8958 for more information. -Dawn Chalker Rhonda Laur Andrea Bozoki February 22 RAM JAM follow up To the Daily: A big muchas gracias to ev- eryone who helped make "RAM JAM" such a success! This benefit concert, sponsored by the Rainforest Action Movement, took place at The Beat on Feb. 2. As a result of on rainforests and other envi- ronmental issues. Beautiful slides of the Tambopata rain- forest were shown, as well as slides depicting rainforest dev- astation. But certainly the tone or "beat" of the evening was set by The Iodine Raincoats and Big Box of Nines - who had the crowd of nearly 300 dancing into the morning hours. A special thanks to the members of the bands - for their generosity, high energy, and music! An excellent follow-up to RAM JAM is taking place on Saturday, March 4, and I urge everyone who wants to learn more about the rainforest to attend. The day-long program of presentations, workshops and lectures is sponsored by the Detroit Audubon Society. A number of environmental is- sues will be addressed, includ- ing an update on the Detroit incinerator litigation, for ex- ample. But the primary focus will be on the tropical rainfor- est. Experts on the Brazilian jaguar, on conservation in Africa and in Central America, will give presentations. The talks will provide a broad perspective, and many will include wildlife slides. The dependence of biological diver- sity upon economic and politi- cal realities will be discussed. One of the most exciting speakers promises to be Victor Gonzales, the President of the Belize Audubon Society. Re- cently, he organized the first joint meeting of environmental government officials from all 7 Central American countries. He and the U of M's own James19 Birchfield will provide an especially interesting perspec- tive on the complex problems of Central America. Just $5 covers a whole day of presentations, and all pro- ceeds go directly towards pre- serving the tropical rainforests of Belize. Call the Detroit Audubon Society for more in- formation: 545-2929. 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 material on a wide range of views. The Daily cuts letters and columns for space in both the edi- torial process and in production. The Dailv dne not nrint blatantly sexist. racist or homo-