OPINION ... Page 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Thursday, November 9, 1989 Groups respond to "T Vol. C, No. 47 420 Maynard St. 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. Rally for choice 4. TO SHOW support for every woman's right to reproductive control, women and men will rally in Washington this Sunday, November 12. Decisions in three crucial cases affecting a woman's access to safe, legal abortion are cur- rently pending in the Supreme Court. Two of these cases (Ohio v. Akron Reproductive Health and Hodgson v. Minnesota) question whether women under eighteen years old should be re- quired to obtain both parents' consent before having an abortion. The dangers of a law like this are many. Parents may force their daughters to carry a pregnancy to term and keep the baby, early second trimester abortions by forcing abortion clinics and doctors' offices (where 90 per cent of all abor- tions are performed) to become mini- hospitals equipped with expensive and unnecessary medical equipment. Addi- tionally, this case would require clinics to adhere to all hospital codes, includ- ing foolish regulations about hall size - stipulating that halls in abortion clinics be wide enough for two rolling hospital beds to pass. Because patients are able to walk easily after an abor- tion, such hospital beds are neither needed nor used. Rather than improv- ing facilities, these regulations would force many women's healthcare clinics, where abortions are performed, to close. Abortion clinics, like all other medi- cal clinics, are already tightly regulated by state and federal laws. If this case is upheld abortion clinics would be forced to raise the cost of a single abortion. This law, in conjunction with cuts in Medicaid funding, would make abor- tions inaccessible for most women. Unwilling to risk the political heat of making abortion illegal in this country, the Supreme Court may instead deprive the right to abortion of any real mean- ing by slowly chipping away at women's accessibility to a procedure that becomes more costly and less available with each passing week. It is vital that women and men show the Supreme Court, Congress, and the President that they will not allow them to take away women's right to control their own bodies. by Mitzvah Project, AZYF, PZC, Hill St. Forum, IMPAC, Conservative Minyan, JLSU, Hill St. Cinema, USI, UJA, SSSI, Reform Havura, Prospect, Orthodox Minyan, Hillel The policy of the Opinion Page of the Michigan Daily explicitly affirms a noble aspiration - never to publish anything racist. Unfortunately, the Daily has con- sistently failed to live up to that aspiration over the past year. Racism is a broad ,term, subsuming many different forms of antisocial behav- ior. Its meaning does and ought to shift over time in order to reflect more mature understandings of social relations. But one form of behavior lies at the core of any meaningful conception of racism. It is intolerable in any free society. All of the undersigned groups join in condemn- ing it: To judge an entire people on the basis of invidious stereotypes without regard for individual differences is racist. On Friday, October 13, 1989, the Opin- ion Page editors of the Michigan Daily chose to reprint, under the heading "Theology: in the service of the state", an essay written by someone who is not a member of the University of Michigan community. The essay's thesis, reflected in its title, is that modern Jewish theol- ogy, all of it, is "in the service of the state" of Israel. The essay asserts: -Like any theology which legitimates a state, Jewish theology is called upon to justify the exercise of power over which it has no control. -Jewish theologians ... are now quies- cent in the service of Jewish state power. -Not one major Jewish theologian has said what is obvious to many Jews and non-Jews alike: In the process of conquer- ing and displacing the Palestinian people, Jews have done what has been done to them over two millennia [and] have be- come everything they loathed about their oppressors. The essay thus asserts that all Jews sub- scribe to a theology that mandates apolo- getics for Israel's reaction to the intifadah. The essay then brands that theology as loathsome. The essay is not only false; it is a racist group libel. Its description of Jews and Jewish the- ology is a blatant distortion ignoring, as all such stereotypes do, a range of individ- ual opinions among Jews. Nothing in Jewish theology compels Jews to defend Israeli government policy. Many Jewish theologians have publicly criticized that policy as inimical to Judaism. We cannot accept the recent efforts of the Daily to deny accountability for their decision to publish Ellis's hate-filled writ- ings. The Daily has insisted that the "right side" of the Opinion Page does not reflect the views of the paper, "only those of the author." That sort of disingenuous evasion has a decidedly hollow ring when the au- thor is not a member of the university community. The Daily chose to inflict an outsider's diatribe upon us; we are pro- foundly disturbed by their efforts to dis- claim responsibility for their efforts to disclaim responsibility for their choice. If the publication of Ellis's essay were an isolated incident, we would not have written this letter. It was not an isolated incident. Sadly, we cannot even say it came as a surprise to those who have ob- served the pattern of the Opinion Page over the past year. The Daily has taken an editorial posi- tion in support of the intifadah and of con- demnation for Israel's response. We wholeheartedly endorse the Daily's free- dom to take such an editorial position. The issue is a matter of appropriate public concern. The Daily is not, however, free to cou- ple its views about the intifadah with anti- Semitism. To argue that current Israeli The Michigan Daily' heology" government policy is inseparable from th existence of a Jewish state, or even worse to argue that it is inseparable from JewishW theology, is to conflate politics with1 racism. It denies American Jews and Israeli, Jewish dissenters the right to define thet*-i selves. It is intolerable in a university community. Moreover, observations that might' plausibly be non-racist in isolation can be woven together into a racist pattern. UI- balanced, selective presentations of facts- can create a false picture, stimulating and reinforcing invidious stereotypes. Thus, if would be unquestionably racist for a newspaper to report crimes only whel they were perpetrated by members of one' race. It would be equally racist for a news paper to present a daily account of an eth-0 nic group's successes in only one partici- lar field of human endeavor. And even though it might not necessarily be racist for a newspaper to editorialize about al' execution in Iran (although it would al'- ways be racist to describe the execution as "Muslim Theology"), daily assaults dn Iran's right to exist would cross the line. In the case of the Michigan Daily, what began as a legitimate, strongly felt edito8- rial position regarding the intifadah has fi the past year taken on the line of antis Semitic obsession. It takes hard work to produce a newspa- per. The reward for that work is an oppora tunity to influence public opinion. A well run university newspaper can give voice to the noblest aspirations of the community: It can be a force for good in the world. It can be a source of pride for the university's The University of Michigan deserves bet:' ter than it has, been getting from the Daily. Enough is enough. Editorial anti Semitism must end now. Mitzvah Project, AZYF, PZC, Hill St: Forum, IMPAC, Conservative Minyan JLSU, Hill St. Cinema, USI, UJA, SSA." Reform Havura, Prospect, Orthodox' Minyan, and Hillel are Jewish student or"" ganizations. effectively denying young women's right to determine the course of their own lives. Many young women in unsupportive or abusive households may find them- selves with few options; some may at- tempt self-abortion or they may be forced to leave home. The remaining case (Ragsdale v. Tumnock) challenges first trimester and ":"L ett :{':{: e'" ":'.'{:{'t t :::{ Ed :i: I i :{i {'"{"{':{'{::{{ii::"' . ';'"Y". ... YW :." i:"":rs::s ::: .... 0...... ....:."I I U. .: ..Y 1. . ."Lh:V. l. .. , " i "..::: ": . 1: March for abortion rimts On Sunday, November 12 there will be a national pro-Choice rally in Washingon D.C.. Participants will asemble at 11:00 am at the Lincoln Memorial; speeches will begin at 12 noon. With three cru- cial Supreme Court decision concerning abortion pending, it is important that everyone make an effort to attend this rally. For more information about the rally and about rides to Washing- ton call the Ann Arbor Committee to Defend Aborition Rights at 665-2709. Good for Applause the economy for Guys onrI Inlkc Graduate together Ta thv Dilu can gain everything they need from friends within their own school, both academically and s- cially; why do they need oth' schools? Dollars for bases PHILIPPINE PRESIDENT Corazon Aquino will meet with U.S. officials in December -to discuss extending the U.S. leases on six military installa- tions. The leases, which end in September 1991, are controversial in the Philippines. Many people, including thousands of demonstrators who protested the U.S. presence when Vice-President Quayle visited the Philippines at the end of September, believe the bases give the United States too much influence within the country.(WSJ 9/28). Faced with this kind of domestic pressure, the Philippines' government is looking for a better bribe before they agree to allow U.S. bases there. The justification for U.S. aid is always the "potential bright future" of the Aquino government that came to power in the Philippines three years ago, calling itself the People Power movement. Recently the European Community tripled its aid to. the Philippines to $350 million a year; Japan also promises to give more (NYT 7/5). Despite the increase in aid from the West, the Aquino government has failed to make substantial changes since taking office. Economic growth has averaged a dismal 5 percent a year, while the population growth rate is 2.7 percent. The Filipino economic growth rate is the lowest in Southeast Asia. Land reform has failed .--. not surprising since Aquino herself is a large land-holder. The death toll continues to mount in the countryside. Aquino may have succeeded in weakening the New People's Army - still attempting to overthrow the government - but her coun- terinsurgency campaign has added significantly to the problem of human rights abuse in the Philippines. Finally, with the death on September 28 of Ferdinand Marcos, the Philippine dictator before Aquino came to power, Aquino's failure to retrieve the $3.5 to $10 stolen by the Marcos family from the poor and often starving people of the Philippines is painfully felt. The United States has corroborated in this crime by allowing Marcos to pocket U.S. aid in the first place, and further for not returning the money to the people of the Philippines since Marcos first found refuge in the United States. The State Department ignores these facts when it asks Congress for $1 billion in additional aid to the Philippines for the next five years. The issue Congress should be debating is the Marcos' corruption, and the irresponsibility of U.S. foreign policy which results in the continued suffering of the Filipino people - not a billion dollar check in order to maintain an armed presence in the Philippines. To the Daily: The wave of mergers and acqui- sitions in the 1980s has greatly' helped the stock market and our economy because they lead to; economic efficiency. During the 1970s the U.S. economy was a shambles because of the lack of mergers and acquisitions. Takeovers lead to a restructur- ing of the economy being taken over. This process often gets rid of poor managers who made bad decisions about how to run the corporations properly. With new, and better, managers the company can use its resources more effi- ciently. This causes the corpora- tion to produce more than before with less resorces than before. This then leads to more produc- tivity by the economy as a whole, as more and more compa- nies get taken over and restruc- tured. With companies producing more efficiently, our scarce resor- ces will be used better and not wasted. And with corporations produc- ing more for less, it raises its profits. With higher profits the corporation can offer higher divi- dends to its shareholders, which benefits the economy. The takeovers benefit the con- sumer as well. As the corpora- tions become more efficient it can put a greater quantity of goods on the market, lowering the prices the consumers pay. So overall, mergers and acqui- sitions benefit the economy and the consumer. If this present con- dition remains for a long period of time a more efficient and better economy will result. - Michael Allen Wilson An illiterate bigot To the Daily: I'm glad Nuts and Bolts car- toonist Judd Winick is able to :ictf. h:rr iet et. n. of C rtn .. To the Daily: The UAC/MUSKET produc- tion of Guys and Dolls qualified as one of the best shows I have seen in my four years here at the University of Michigan. Guys and Dolls made three hours of my time pass as if it were one. I laughed, I enjoyed myself, I was genuinely touched. This Monday, however, I opened the Daily to find a review by Jay Pekala that was terribly off base. It was as if Pekala had a personal vendetta with the entire cast, especially each of the four leads, and wouldn't allow himself to enjoy a performance which brought the audience to their feet cheering. Instead he delivered a string of nothing but cheap jabs, entirely unfounded. I question whether or not Pekala and I even viewed the same production. There wasn't a single negative remark to be heard as I left the performance, only raves, and many of the pa- trons were Michigan alumni, thrilled to see the arts alive and well on campus. These students devote them- selves for months to bring such a pleasing show to campus. They are not paid to perform, nor do they receive credit. I would like to see them appreciated for the evening of entertainment they brought to many of us this past weekend instead of cut down by a review that offered only whiny remarks and no constructive criti- cism whatsoever. Shows like this are an asset to the University community and to Ann Arbor; nothing less. Bravo to MUSKET, and bravo to Guys and Dolls! There are many stu- dents here who applaud you. -Amy Sabin 4llu "Villa } I I t t i t i 1 c 1 1 1 1 c 1 c 1 f l i i ! Ute Va!y y " Following a weekend filled Why does the school suddenly," with tradition, the University an- feel that the students are inca*1 nounces that it may move Com- pable of handling being a part of mencement to separate buildings the University of Michigan? throughout the campus. After dozens of CRISP lines; After many seniors have left after hundreds of sporting events, the building for the last time after hours of classes, does the- (thanks to scheduling of the last University really feel that it canl football game over Thanksgiving convince the students that are not break), they are told that they coming from a school with. may not come back. 35,000 other students? If they be- Following the news that the lieve that special attention to University of Michigan has just each student is necessary, maybe= won its 700th game, one of the they should consider some sort of highest totals in the nation, the recognition ceremony before the, students are told that they may actual graduation. This is already not graduate with some of their being done in some of the best friends from the past four schools in the University, but it years. is not eliminating a large gradua1 Just after the realization that tion from the University as a next week's game against Illinois whole. Maybe individual schools may mean the key to the Rose should hold a ceremony the Fri- Bowl and the potential national day before graduation to corm ;A champs, students are told that mend each student and bring the. they're graduating from their in- schools together as a whole on dividual schools, not from the Saturday. University of Michigan. What does the school have in The University of Michigan is store for the students in the up- filled with tradition. One of thes4 coming years? Maybe student traditions is being one of the sections at sporting events should largest schools in the nation. All be divided by school, not by year. of the students knew that when After all, wouldn't the crowd be they applied. Why shouldn't they less rowdy when the students know that when they graduate IG from the Business School are Did the school ever consider that separated from those in Natural students may have come to the Resources? Rather than marsh- school because it is so largg mallow fights between friends there will be competition be- But the University feels tha tween each school. In fact, there doesn't matter because we show4 is no need for a football team - graduate as individuals, not as4 we could have competitions school. Then maybe Universit, within the University. officials can explain why, whent I How about student housing? look back at my memories of Wouldn't it be smarter to isolate Michigan they're not going to b4 each school within its own dor- only of my individual efforts but mitory? Why shouldn't the more of the times I've had an school put LS&A students only the frends I've made. in West Quad, or Engineering students on North Campus? After Hopefully one of these memo all, these people are going to be ries can be the joy of graduating graduating together; do they re- with friends rather than wonder ally need to make other friends? ing why some of my best friends As a result of this new housing spent graduation on the other side system we would have, as Dean of campus. 4 Bovlan nut it. "individual reco- -Kevin Wonodnn- The Opinion page is actively recruiting women, people of color, lesbians and gay men. Staff - - n .1 1 1 . I