Page 2 - The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 7, 1989 A note about this section. Continuing the precedent set by last year's New Student Edition, this section is devoted to those minorities which are too often forgotten, ignored, unfairly treated, or marginal- ized because of their religion, sex, disability, sexual orienta- tion, the color of their skin, or their place of birth. While last year's section was entitled Identity, we feel that students on this campus have begun to not only discover their identities, but have become proud of them. Therefore we chose to entitle the section Speak Out. This section was written primarily by non-Daily staffers who through personal involvement in the organizations have greater insight into the issues and an surfeit of experience dealing with the problems of discrimination. By no means have all people or points of view been cov- ered here. Rather we hope to have alerted people to some of the more pressing dilemmas and issues facing us all as stu- dents at Michigan. Special thanks go to Liz Paige and Sharon Holland for their immeasurable assistance in pulling the whole thing to- gether. :" 4 I Seize your abortion rights before the courts decide to -D b ilda Betar 1rL [ . 1_. ,_ ' . ,Kl+d'i fr ' r ''-./ r __ ,_ is r i In January, 1989, the Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Abortion Rights - AACDAR - organized to defend and extend the reproductive rights of women. Because the Web- ster v. Reproductive Health case posed the greatest and most indis- criminate threat to women since their right to have an abortion was constitutionally recognized in 1973, AACDAR's immediate objectives were to maintain Roe v. Wade and to deflect and stop attacks on women's health clinics. Specifically, we have defended clinics against attacks made by "Operation Rescue," a fundamental- ist organization which claims to be "Right to Life," while employing methods of psychological intimida- tion and physical violence in order to impose its political and religious be- liefs on others - particularly on women seeking the privacy of coun- seling and/or abortion services. During the months in which the Supreme Court prepared itself to re- view the Webster case last winter, media coverage of the debate in- creased. Not coincidentally, OR at- tacks on clinics also increased. During this time, AACDAR orga- nized six "clinic defenses" in the Ann Arbor-Detroit area; five of these actions led to the arrest of OR mem- bers, and in three instances AACDAR was successful in keeping the clinics open. Since April, AACDAR has be- ds unity / '. .+ ,, r, \ , ., , , -- - ,,,, , .....--___ ... - 11 .- /f < ' t " ,ter ,-- f ' r . r srA(,Cp count'r gun to focus its activities toward changing current attitudes and legal and institutional practices which, re- gardless of the outcome of the Web- ster case, continue to render the status of women's reproductive free- dom subject to various forms of dis- crimination. The most notable of these mea- sures is the Hyde Amendment, a 1977 addition to a congressional ap- propriation bill which barred the use of federal fui'ds for any abortion un- der the medicaid program unless the life of the mother is endangered. This bill left individual states to de- termine whether or not to fund abor- tion. Since then, 43 of the states - including Michigan as of November 1988 when Proposal A was passed by referendum - have in turn left poor women with a restrictive and paradoxical burden. Although poor and rich women alike have the right to choose an abortion, the right to actually have an abortion is limited to those who can afford it. Because AACDAR advocates re- productive freedom for-all women, regardless of age, class, or race, we will work toward rolling back Mich- igan's discriminatory Proposal A and thereby restoring Michigan medicaid funds for abortions for all women. AACDAR has staged pickets at three phony "pregnancy clinics" in the area in order to inform the public that although they claim to be neu- tral, they are funded by "Right To Life" and that they aim their biased, manipulative and explicitly anti- choice counseling at teenagers. These clinics risk the lives of their clients. by asking them to sign a statement saying they will wait two weeks after counseling to come to a decision. AACDAR regards reproductive freedom not only as the freedom to choose an abortion, it also means the freedom to say "yes" to raising children in a healthy environment. For this reason, AACDAR is work- ing toward expanding social services and improving the quality of child- care on campus and the quality of sex education. Finally, AACDAR enthusiasti- cally supports the Domino's Boy- cott. Specifically, we object to Domino's owner Tom Monaghan's donation of $50,000-100,000 of business and personal funds to the "Right to Life" movement. AACDAR is also in solidarity with the truly life-affirming efforts of other organizations such as the Latin American Solidarity Com- mittee and the Tenants Union to end Monaghan's exploitation of local and international communities. ROBIN LOZNAKIDaiiy Protestors, including LSA junior Michelle Fleischer, try to drum up sup- port for their cause at a pro-choice rally last winter in Lansing. WE MUST WORK TOGETHER MAC aims towar by Delro Harris MAC Chair All of our people have the same goals, the same objective. That ob- jective is freedom, justice, equality. All of 'us want recognition and re- spect as human beings. We don't want to be integrationists. Nor do we want to be separationists. We want to be human beings. Inte- gration is only a method that is used by some groups to. obtain.freedom, justice, equality and respegt as hu- man -beings. Separation is only a method that is used by other groups to obtain freedom, justice, equality or human dignity. Our people have made the mis- take of confusing the methods with the objectives, As long as we agree on objectives, we should never fall out with each other just because we believe in different methods or tac- tics or strategy to reach a common objective. "We have to keep in mind at all times that we are not fighting for in- tegration, nor are we fighting for separation. We are fighting for re- cognition as human beings. We are fighting for the right to live as free humans in this society." (Malcolm X, April 8, 1964) Divisions. A simple enough concept, yet we all have such a' hard time getting beyond it. The "average person" accepts them. Sociologists study them. Filmmaker Spike Lee has devoted two films to them. And when it comes down to it, when race is involved, we can't afford them. Malcolm X's quote refers to the widely publicized division between the in'tegrationists and the separa- tionists, but it can also be applied to many of the groups on campus. At the U, "diversity" is one of the things that is being encouraged. Yet, with over 100 different minor- ity and ethnic organizations, diver- sity is a*virtual given. Each group exists with a certain toine, a certain method, which helps to distinguish it from similar groups. However, when two groups share a similar purpose, it's very easy to feel that fine is going about things the "right way" and the other is "wrong". A di- vision is created and no longer are people free to reach for their objec- tives. People are forced instead to take sides and energy is spent further defining those divisions instead of achieving anything positive. Another way we tend to create di- visions is to argue about who "really" has it bad. Some Blacks complain, "We've suffered more dis- crimination than anyone else," and some Asian-Americans complain, "We get blown off more than any other group." This helps to make a wide gulf even wider. As a new student, I was shocked and surprised that, given the Uni- versity's "diversity", there was no group dedicated to the unification of all our peoples. However, where once there was nothing, now such a group exists. Within the Michigan Student Assembly exists a group known as the Minority Affairs Commission. After a slow evolution of a number of years, the MAC has emerged as a leading organization promoting both unification of a number of groups, and the distinctions between vari- ous groups. Based in the Trotter House, representatives from a num- ber of minority and ethnic organiza- tions attend meetings in order for their group to have input in- MAC decisions. On the individual level, MAC al- lows a student to deal with issues re- lating to a large number of people. For the student who's unsure of which group to join, it exposes you to a variety of groups. MAC allows for personal growth. You meet peo- ple from a variety of backgrounds and discover how real or imagined are our divisions. By bringing to- gether a diverse group of people, we find that some "Black problems" are also "Latino problems" and that a "Native American issue" might also DAVID LUBLINER/Doily The Minority Affairs Commission has become the leading organization on campus for promoting both unification between various minority groups and the distinctions between the groups. be seen as an "Asian-American is- sue". And if these issues are one and the same, so we stand to lose any- thing by working together? Trying to prove that my problem can never be your problem, and vice versa, is ultimately a waste of time and en- ergy. In MAC we don't play that game. We all don't immediately agree on every issue, and sometimes we never agree, but that's okay. I also want to encourage people who know what group they want to join, to join that group. Strength- ening the many groups in MAC only helps to strengthen MAC itself. This is a plug. I have no shame whatsoever in admitting to that. However, if this has made you think a little bit, or inspired you to join MAC or any other of the many groups here, then it's more than just a plug -- it's your objective. MAC meets weekly in the Trotter House. Call 998-7037. For times and dates. Welcome Freshmen! r i 1 I 1 Financial Aid for school from all 15 locations. ruro Health Care Clinic we care for you WOMAN'S SUPPORT CENTER . No applications to complete! | Clip this coupon and bring it to f any Macauley's location and buy | your school supplies for 25% off the Mfr. List Price. You can wait 'till you arrive on campus, because * there is a Macauley's at the North I * Campus Plaza... or shop at a Macau lev's near vou. supplies1 1" 1 / 1 1 _. 1 0:I 1- LIST PRICE; U 0 " ABORTION " Tubal Ligation " Minor Surgery " Pap Smears " Free Counseling " Marriaaa RIM T~ct n " BIRTH CONTROL " Vasectomy " General Anesthesia. " Physical Examinations " VD Testing & Treatment OFF MFR. I I