OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 2, 1990 Last words from the Opinion The Michigan Daily Editors by Betsy Esch and Amy Harmon For the past year as editors of the Opin- ion Page we've been attacked and criticized by a long list of people and organizations including University President Duderstadt, his assistant Shirley Clarkston, the Chair of the Economics Department, the Chair of the Communications Department, the Chair of the Board for Student Publica- tions, a group of Sociology professors, the director of Hillel, the Conservative Coalition, pro-Zionist student groups, the Michigan Review, and countless individ- ual students. Some of our critics have simply expressed a difference of opinion while others have maintained that we have "gone too fa, that our political positions are "too extreme,"that we alienate rather than educate and that it is we who have stifled debate by saying things that might potentially offend people. Though these criticisms have come loudly and often, we have taken a position which is rooted in anti-racist principles and the belief in self-* determination for all people. These principles have taken many forms and have shaped our approach to the Uni- versity administration, to student ac- tivism, to U.S. foreign policy, to the me- dia and to the belief in an independent stu- dent press. We have spoken from the per- spective of students, of activists, of inter- nationalists and of writers. More often than not, such principles have received tremendous criticism, with particilar re- gard to our stance that Zionism is an ille- gitimate and unacceptable, basis for a state. The sentiment that the Daily was "anti- Semitic" because it took a principled stand supporting self-determination for Pales- tinians culminated in a protest of the Daily on February 22, 1989. Attended by over 200 supporters of Israel, the protest began a long campaign against the Daily which was to take many forms. The Washtenaw Jewish News ran a cover story just after the protest entitled "What's Wrong With the Michigan Daily?" and stated, "The center of the con- cern is the opinion page, which has be- come increasingly anti-Zionist and anti- Semitic." Comments from students who had participated in a discussion with edi- tors from the Daily wrote their recommen- dations in an "open forum" in the same is- sue. Their comments included remarks like, "we are prepared to bring major student pressure to bear on the Daily... the only effective response for readers is to continue to write letters to the editor, and to the University administration to voice their unhappiness with the paper's present poli- cies ...I am also hopeful that the Washte- naw County Jewish community will con- tinue to monitor the situation and respond whenever necessary. Until then, the battle many Jewish students are fighting against the Daily will not end..." Not long after this a press conference was held by "concerned Jewish students" claiming that in spite of their attempts to dialogue with the Daily, the Opinion Page was still entrenched in its old attitudes and this could only indicate one thing: that the Daily didn't care about the collective con- cerns expressed by these students. Yet in spite of these claims that the Opinion Page was responsible for distort- ing the dialogue around the state of Israel and unfairly representing the history, some fundamental questions were never raised or answered by those who claimed to be on the side of honest and open debate. Referring specifically to some of the comments made by the students who par- ticipated in the forum, we have several questions..' Why should it be the sole responsibility of the Jewish community to "monitor" the discussion? Why should we not look with equal sincerity to the Palestinian commu- nity to "monitor" the discussion? Cer- tainly it has a collective emotional and historical connection to the creation of the state of Israel. Why can those who claim to be interested in dialogue - which we assume to mean honest exchange - choose not to recognize that such ex- change must be with the Palestine Libera- tion Organization and those who support it, as they are the sole legitimate represen- tatives of the Palestinians? Why can debate only occur within a specific framework, which defines Zion- ism as inextricably linked to Judaism, de- fines Jewish critics of such a framework "self-hating" and defines Palestinians as terrorists or supporters of terrorism? And why, if honest dialogue is what is desired, should limits be placed on one of the only institutions on the campus where such dia- logue has been encouraged? The inevitable response to these ques- tions is that real debate and real questions are not what the organized supporters of Israel are interested in. If it were, the premise of the debate would not be "the Opinion Page is anti-Semitic" or "what's wrong with the Daily?" but would instead focus on the good the Opinion Page has done as it has brought Palestinians to the center of the discussion an1 supported their place in the dialogue as subject rather than object. Benjamin Ben-Baruch in his piece, "Organized Zionist groups control debate" writes, "The campaign against the Daily seems to have several goals: 1) to rally and mobilize. Jewish students to remain "loyal" and "faithful" to the political pro- gram, and ideology of the American Jew- ish institutions;2) to demarcate and articu- late the boundaries of what it means to be "loyal" and "faithful"; 3) to restrict debate on campus within non-threatening parame- ters; 4) to discredit and demobilize politi- cal and intellectual opposition. All of this has not occurred in a histori- cal vacuum. When Amy Harmon had a brick thrown through her bedroom window it came as no surprise that it was signed in the same way the fascist Stern Gang used to sign their documents, as "Fighters For the Freedom of Israel." And when the Daily was broken into and spray-painted with the slogans "Jew haters will pay" and "Long live Israel" such a historical context could not be overlooked. The violence with which Palestinians and supporters of Palestinian self-determi- nation have been met on this campus and others is indicative of the way racism has shaped all of our thinking. From paid ad- vertisements in the Wayne State Univer- sity paper on Palestinian Independence Day warning students that all Palestinians are terrorists to B'nai Brith letters warning parents of the Arab money which is pour- ing into campuses the scare tactics used have their foundations in racism. And throughout all of this, we have been la- belled anti-Semitic because we have dared to push the limits which have been im- posed on us by a history which has always denied Palestinians any legitimacy or dig- nity. When the Daily refused to change its ed- itorial policy (editorials are voted on by Daily members who attend weekly meet- ings to discuss the content of the leftsides) to suit Hillel and the other pro-Zionist student groups who sponsored the protest, pressure was applied through a different fo- rum - the Board for Student Publica- tions. The Board is a body of students, faculty and professional journalists which over- sees the Daily and is accountable to the Regents. According to Regent's Bylaw 13.11 the Board "shall have full authority with respect to the assets, budget, and fi- nancial affairs of the [student publica- tions]. In all other matters the Board shall act in an advisory capacity." Though the Board has agreed not to intervene in the Daily's editorial policies, it obviously wields great influence over all aspects of the Daily's production through its eco- nomic control of the paper. At the Board's March meeting, Board Chair Professor Amnon Rosenthal invited the members of Hillel who had demanded a change in the Daily's editorial stance on Palestine to a Board meeting to express their views. At that time, Rosenthal was also a member of Hillel's Board of Direc- tors. He did not choose to make this known to the other Board members or the Daily staffers who he was clearly trying to influence by inviting members of Hillel to speak, and he has since then consistently refused to respond to Daily staffers and other Board members' assertions that he has a conflict of interest and should not be in a position of such influence over the Daily. Whether in order to limit the Daily's criticisms of Israel or simply to consoli- date administrative control over a poten- tially dangerously independent student newspaper, Rosenthal has managed to stack the Board with people who have a demonstrated antagonism for the Daily. He admitted to the Daily's Editor-in-Chief that he personally recruited Professors Raymond Tanter and Ned Gramlick to join the Board because they were hostile to the Opinion Page. Tanter has threatened to sue the Daily if it allowed an investigative story about him to be printed, and Gram- lick was furious when the Daily printed an anonymous letter from several Economics graduate students asserting that there was a "climate of fear" stifling leftist dissent in the Econ. Dept. In December, all the current editors of the Daily, the Ensian and the Gargoyle sent a memo to the Board members re- questing that Tanter "be removed from the Board because of the obvious conflict of interest... Tanter's threatened lawsuit indi- cates he does not have the Daily's or the student publications' best financial interest in mind." Despite this, or perhaps because of it, Rosenthal has refused to have a Board meeting for the last three months. In addition, he has continued to challenge the credentials of the student representa- tives to the Board, leaving Daily staffers with no representation by their peers. MSA recently appointed Alan Woronoff, also a member of Hillel and one of the or- ganizers of the February protest, to the Board. Perhaps now that Rosenthal has a student ally who has publicly acknowl- edged that he wanted to get on the Board in order to change the Daily's editorial pol- icy, he will allow the Board to meet. The Daily's masthead which proudly proclaims "Ninety-nine years of editorial freedom," is not entirely an accurate statement. The Daily is accountable to the Board, and the Board is accountable to the Regents. In September 1988, when a Daily editor was arrested for protesting at Duderstadt's presidential inauguration, Re- gent Philip Power, University President Duderstadt and Rosenthal met to discuss the possibility of closing down the Daily for a few days. And after the February protest of the Daily, Duderstadt issued a letter pleading for "reason tolerance and ci- vility," and another one expressing his concern about the Daily's alleged anti- Semitism - the implication being that we'd better shape up or face the conse- quences. (Duderstadt did not, however, see fit to comment on the degree of civility on campus when the Daily was vandalized or when the rock was thrown through Amy's bedroom window). Another growing threat to the Daily's independence is the Board's secretary and director of Student Publications Building, Nancy McGlothlin. McGlothlin is em- ployed by the University, not by the stu- dent publications, although her salary of $44,500 is taken from the funds generated by the student publications. McGlothlin's influence over the Daily's finances and edi- torial policies is growing at an alarming rate. Last month, she decided to cut off the Daily's work-study program because a staffer who was receiving work study funds refused to sign an incomplete policy manual of editorial rules. This staffer was one of the few people of color working at the Daily and one of the few who had chal- lenged McGlothlin's authority by refusing to sign a manual the staff had not ap- proved. McGlothlin has frequently used any power at her disposal to intimidate the Daily. In September she "discovered" that a Daily editor had used Daily telephones and computers to communicate with other computers long-distance. This cost ap- proximately $200. McGlothlin used this fact as a pretext for turning the Daily edi- tor over to the police. McGlothlin has also developed a rela- tionship with the FBI such that she admits that in the last six years she has let the FBI into the Daily's offices. The pretext for this is that the FBI would like to ex- amine old Daily issues to do security checks on FBI employees; yet, the Daily is available on microfiche in the graduate library. When a Daily editor attempted to interview the FBI about what FBI busi- ness was in the building, McGlothlin ver- bally and physically attempted to prevent the editor from doing so. An examination of her harassment of ed- itors and staff makes sense in light of her previous attempt to name herself publisher of the Daily. So far, the Board of Student Publications has refused to give McGloth- lin such editorial control of the paper. Pressure from pro-Zionist groups and from the University administration has so far failed to stop the Opinion Page from trying to expand the debate on campus, na- tional and international issues beyond the narrow context in which theyare typically defined. We hope that the Daily will con- tinue to strive for total independence and will remain free from constraints on its ed- itorial freedom. Betsy Esch and Amy Harmon were the Opinion Page Editors from January 1989 January1990. Good luck to David Schwartz, the next Opinion Page Editor. LIBERATION NOW! Events in January One month in world history 1. Paraguay The leadership changes from Stroesner to Rodriguez, from the continent's number orke drug-runner to number two. 2. Colombia U.S. aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy ar- rives offshore. President Barco first learns of this from a newspaper, and is understandably upset. A savvy business- man, he suggests that if the U.S. market dried up, the drug producers could be put out business - without force of arms. 3. Panama Bringing Noriega to trial in the U.S., Bush leaves democracy behind in the form of Endara, one of the country's yyealthiest citizens and an avowed ad- mirer of Hitler. 4. Nicaragua Contras kill a nun and the U.S. press finds a way to blame the Sandinistas. U.S.-backed oppostion candidates are trading home appliances for votes in the upcoming elections, but the Sandinistas wvill win anyway. 5. Haiti Showing that he is a true heir to the Du- valiers, Gen. Prosper Avril declares mar- tial law for a week in the poorest country in the hemisphere. His tontons macoutes security police sweep the land, jailing end expelling opposition leaders and killing a popular radio satirist. Bush has said that Gen. Avril represents the best hype for democracy in the region and backs him accordingly. 6. Washington D.C. While the Marion Barry set-up domi- nates the headlines, grinding poverty takes its toll in the streets. The infant mortality rate among the city's Blacks is higher than Jamaica's, and there are more deaths per thousand than anywhere in the world except Sri Lanka. 7. New York The state Supreme Court upholds the right to beg. 8. Michigan While Michael Moore's film Roger and Me, which shows how plant closings have devastated the city of Flint, is drawing crowds across the country, Chrysler closes the Jefferson Avenue Assembly Plant, the last auto plant in Detroit. 9. Michigan Law-and-order Gov. James Blanchard announces plans to have the National Guard bulldoze suspected crack houses in Detroit. Mayor Coleman Young, who prowls the city in one of his two quarter- million dollar armored cars with a com- plement of 18 Uzi-toting bodyguards, says he approves. Though state crime rates are down, the number of prisoners 12. Poland Strikes break out at five coal mines after Solidarity announces it is backing the government's IMF-approved restructur- ing plan. The strikers refuse to let Soli- darity leaders into the mines, saying the union has sold workers down the river. 13. Romania Protestors rally and raid government of- fices when the National Salvation Front, which .includes members of Ceausescu's old cabinet, announces that it will run as a party in spring elections it is organiz- ing. 14. Turkey On January 13, Turkey begins a month- long damming-up of the Euphrates, which flows into Syria and provides elec- tical power there. Turkey accuses Syria of supporting Kurd separatists, 28 of whom were killed in a November, pogrom conducted bythe Turkish mili- tary. Turkey is the fourth-ranking recip- ient of U.S. aid. 15. Somalia The human rights group Africa Watch releases a report entitled, ,'Somalia: A Government at War with its Own Peo- ple," which says that 50,000 civilians have been killed by U.S.-backed army and security forces in the last 19 months. 16. Mozambique The World Bank announces aid cuts as it diverts funds to Eastern Europe. Per capita income is $150 a year, among the lowest in the world, as the country is ravaged by South African-backed Renamo terrorists, who have killed some 900,000 and forced 750,000 to flee their homes. 17. South Africa Despite continuing martial law, no po- litical prisoners being released, the ban- ning of opposition parties, and the whole structure of oppression of Blacks by whites being left in place, De Klerk is being praised for reforming apartheid away by contemplating the release of Nelson Mandela. 18. Yemen North and South Yemen give amnesty to all political prisoners and begin work on a unity constitution. 19. Kashmir The ill-thought partitioning of the Bri- tish raj forty years ago left Muslim Kashmir under Indian rule, a time-bomb that has now gone off. Opposing self-de- termination, the Indian governemt calls a curfew and fires on peaceful demonstra- tors, killing scores.. 20. Punjab A series of general strike days called by Sikh students paralyze the province. The students demand the release of political prisoners before May elections. The gov- I 22. Azerbaijan Militant Azerbaijani nationalists join forces with a local communist party that's tired of being a satellite of Moscow in trying to purge the region of Armeni- ans and to secede. The threat of the sec- ond brings in the Red Army. 23. Burma The military government bars oppostion candidate Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi from elections which were called after last year's pro-democracy protests. 24. Hong Kong Britain vows to continue repatriating all refugees (so-called boat people) when they arrive, although it will not take holders of British passports into the U.K. after China takes control of Hong Kong. Most of the refugees are from In- donesia - not Vietnam. liantly," but it turns out to be a hoax. The Khmers are fighting the Viet- namese-installed government. Depending on how you count, the war is 15, 19, or 25 years old - the longest-running of the century. This after-effect of French colonialism and U.S. destabilization has killed 2.5 million. on the island of Bougainville, where an Australian-owned copper and gold mine is threatened. The Australians have not paid the $12 billion in copensation they owe on the mine. 27. El Salvador The military is found responsible for the murder of six Jesuit priests, their cook, and her daughter; Congress responds by continuing to provide $1.5 million in aid a day. 25. Cambodia 26. Papua New Guinea The Khmer Rouge claims the second The governemt announces an all-out mil- city, Battambang, is "burning bril- itary offensive to put down secessionists 0