Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 22, 1990 Cokely film sparks controversy 9 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports " b fi i by Ruth Littmann Daily Staff Writer One month after Steve Cokely's visit caused heated student debate on campus, a video-tape featuring the Black activist sparked controversy in East Quad. The tape, titled "A Discussion on Political Zionism," covered a lecture by Cokely, an independent Black re- searcher who equates political Zion- ism with racism. Members of the Black Student Union, a sponsor of the event, said they revere Cokely as a human rights activist, while other students claim he is dangerously anti-semitic. BSU sponsored the event with the Palestinian Solidarity Commit- tee (PSC), and ABENG, the minor- ity council in East Quad. During a forum after the video, Black, Palestinian, Jewish, and other students exchanged angry words against and in defense of Cokely's historical analysis of Zionism. In the video, Cokely said Theodore Herzl - who founded the first World Zionist Congress in 1897 - gained financial support for Zionism from the Rothschilds, a Eu- ropean family of wealthy Jewish bankers. "The Rothschilds were the fi- nances of those who were bringing on political Zionism," Cokely said. "Those who have the purse strings have the power." These political Zionists and racist institutions such as the British colo- nial government used their power to "kill people of color and take the land," Cokely said, referring to Palestine and areas of Africa. "If Herzl is for Zionism," asked Cokely, "is Zionism racism? Damn right!" BSU members agreed with Cokely that the Bible didn't grant the promised land to today's Jews, but to their ancestors, some of 'If Herzi is for Zionism, is Zionism racism? Damn right!' - Steve Cokely whom were Black. Racists ignore the Black ancestry of Jews by chang- ing the name "Shem" - which refers to the Black elder son of Noah - to "Semite," Cokely said in the film. "It's important for students to discuss the use of lies in the support of the state of Israel," BSU members said, and agreed with Cokely that "if Israel was a colonist organization, it was a white supremacist endeavor." But not everyone in attendance was convinced by Cokely's argu- ments. "It's a real tragedy that Steve Cokely as a Black leader and as a public speaker mixes about 90 per- cent radical political perspective and bonafide political analysis with about ten percent anti-semitic, para- noid fantasy," said University gradu- ate and WCBN radio talk show host Des Preston. "Cokely clearly made statements about Judaism as being a religion that was made up," said RC first- year student, Matthew Stein. "I don't see how [BSU] members can hide behind the belief that this was just about Zionism." BSU members declined to com- ment after the speech. Homeless question accuracy DETROIT (AP) - Word passed among the homeless people that census takers were trying to count them, but in the grim streets of De- troit's Cass Corridor, some didn't see the point. "They ain't helping anybody," said William Jackson, crouched by a fire in a rubble strewn lot in the in- ner city neighborhood of gutted houses and boarded-up businesses. "What do we get? Nothing," Jackson said. "There's got to be somebody care about us, because we're human beings. We've got to have some jobs. We want to work." But he said he didn't expect that. What he expected was that the cen- sus teams and news teams would leave the boarded-up neighborhood. And, he said, "I'll be here tomor- or census row." The national homeless count be- gan at 6 p.m. Tuesday. In Michigan, 526 shelter night census workers set out with lists of 523 soup kitchens, churches, alleys and abandoned build- ings likely to hold homeless. The count stayed until midnight. At 2 am., census workers serarched the streets and at 4 a.m. yesterday, they sat in cars waiting for homeless to emerge from abandoned buildings. They didn't always welcome cen- sus takers. One team withdrew form a Salvation Army Shelter in Ann Arbor at the manager's request, and was asked to complete its count later, regional spokesperson Jerry Blocker said. The nationwide results will be announced in 1991. COURSE Continued from Page 1 don't want to take it, so they don't learn (the language) at all," he said. Rubina Yeh, a current MAC member and Art School senior, said the requirement is "good for now, but a change away from a eurocentric focus for all classes is more impor- tant." The president of theLAsian Amer- ican Association, LSA junior Lawrence Wu, agreed the requirement should be passed. "A lot of people come to the University of Michigan from different backgrounds. "Coming to this kind of diverse community, people won't be aware about different ethnic backgrounds," Wu said. This is something any stu- dent coming out of Michigan should have." CODE Continued from Page 1 Duderstadt's use of the bylaw raised a new concern for opponents of the code. They said if the president al- ready has the power to discipline students, he does not need any more authority. "There's no reason for a code," said Jennifer Van Valey, a Michigan Student Assembly member and LSA sophomore. "Right now (Duderstadt) can en- act 2.01 in a case of an emer- :iuts and Bolts by Judd Winick BAD PART aUNS OANYONE FOR * A HU5TL E? Y DIP - - Lr O F' A i 11 0lFe/° lffG//OeQCde 6 ite, 4W aa~'o~r a4 c fa,&t 6tt .. - AAA ... . v HOW Wf- T O -)M& eoN ________ ANO ma NOW TW bp CI N AE K4 TA4Mi'W MABirRTRA :2 n- Nx tt1 IYt I DE . M4" JO MAM C MOw WE DU f(flq 7 IF OF DIF-T Ca) EAND CNAIN-5MoKF- ruER.S, You "AN tNtY E A ZLEf"I t KAfYGE. LOATc H... J1 RR. 'TE, Cori l by Bill Watterson gency..." Van Valey said. Because the bylaw is not designed to be used unless the circumstances are serious, the president takes a "risk" by using it, she explained. With a code, there would be no risk; punishing students for their non-academic behavior would become legitimate, she said. Duderstadt has said he feels stu- dents would support a code of non- academic conduct if they were more informed about the issue. The student body has not been polled on their feelings about a non- academic code of conduct since win- ter of 1988 when MSA put the ques- tion on its winter election ballot. At the time, a majority of students op- posed the Code. Last Tuesday, the Assembly ap- proved a similar referendum for the April MSA elections which would ask students whether they approve of a code. Duderstadt said last month that he would not take steps to develop a code this term and students and fac- ulty members would be consulted before a code was implemented. MANDELA Continued from page 1 schedules before we know when he's coming," he said. "Everybody in the country is try- ing to get Nelson Mandela to come and speak," said Jay Hershenson, vice chancellor of the City Univer- sity of New York which also awarded an honorary degree in ab- stentia to Mandela. Hershenson said he would "be delighted" if Mandela visited his university. The University is approaching the issue quietly, said Walter Harri- son, director of University Rela- tions. "We'd be honored to have (Mandela) come, but we're not going to enter some kind of sweepstakes to get him." DAILY CLASSI FIEDS Windham Hill Jazz Recording Artist The performers, who are influenced by a global array of musical and cultrual styles, translate classical jazz pieces to the quartet format - a skill which is butressed by abundant improvisational verve. By rerouting the streams of modem jazz, bebop, bluegrass, Indian and world music, and 20th century claosicism, the Turtle Island String Quartet seeks to map its own musical landscapse. Bush ensures Polish borders WASHINGTON - President Bush told Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki yesterday his country's borders must not be altered, by the reunification of Germany. Bush delivered his assurance at a sun-splashed ceremony at the White House welcoming Poland's first non-communist prime minister since the Second World War. At the top of the agenda are Poland's fears that a reunified Germany might try to claim territory ceded to Poland by Germany after the Second World War. Moreover, Poland wants a greater role than it has been granted in international discussions about German reunification. Bush played down disagreement over Polish participation in unifica- tion talks. "We're really not that far apart," he told one reporter. Bush was applauded by hundreds of people attending the welcoming when he declared, "In any decisions affecting the fate of Poland, Poland must have a voice." Romania accuses Hungary of inciting ethnic tensions BUCHAREST, Romania - The provisional government accused Hungary yesterday of inciting tensions between Romanians and ethnic Hungarians that led to bloody street battles this week in Transylvania. In a strongly worded statement released to news media, it charged Hungarian officialdom with "propagandistic actions... that present Transylvania as a Hungarian component." Clashes between the Romanian majority and Hungarian minority left several people injured yesterday in the Transylvanian town of Tirgu Mures, scene of Tuesday night's bloodletting that killed at least six peo- ple and and injured about 300. Tanks cordoned off all highways into the city of 165,000 northwest of Bucharest and patrolled downtown, where the pitched battles Tuesday fea- tured men swinging scythes surging into crowds to beat other men. Tirgu Mires was reported quiet last night. Judge refuses to subpoena Reagan's 'unessential' diary WASHINGTON - The judge in John Poindexter's Iran-Contra trial reversed himself yesterday, saying that former President Reagan does not have to produce diary entries sought by his one-time national security ad-- viser. U.S. District Court Judge Harold Greene issued the ruling as the jury began watching eight hours of videotaped testimony by Reagan. Greene had ordered Reagan to turn over the diary, but said after reading the three dozen entries sought by Poindexter that the material was not "essential to the achievement of justice in this case." Poindexter said he needed the excerpts because Reagan, in his taped tes- timony, "professed a total inability to recall" the diversion of Iran arms sale proceeds to the Nicaraguan Contras and a 1985 Hawk missile ship- ment. Poindexter is charged with five felony charges of conspiracy, making false statements and obstructing Congress in connection with the Iran- Contra affair. Clean air amendment fails WASHINGTON - The Senate turned back a third attempt to strengthen the compromise clean air bill yesterday, defeating a proposal supporters said would close "loopholes" in the battle against urban smog. Opponents argued the amendment, which lost on a 53-46 vote, would burden too many small businesses with expensive pollution controls and require unnecessary federal involvement in urban air pollution plans. The vote marked the third unsuccessful attempt by a group of senators, mainly from urban areas with the dirtiest air, to add tougher environmen- tal controls to a compromise bill worked out between Senate leaders and the White House. The proposal would have preserved the federal government's authority to impose air pollution reduction plans if states and local officials failed to act. EXTRAS No beer means no firefighters SKANDIA, Mich. - Firefighters in an Upper Peninsula community quit after leaders from area townships, fighting for control of the depart- ment, threatened to ban beer drinking in the fire hall. The Skandia-West Branch volunteer fire department had been pretty much running itself before township officials tried to take over and pro- hibit beer. Les Johnson, chief of the Skandia-West Branch Fire Department, who resigned Tuesday night along with most of the 21 firefighters, said volun- teer fire departments commonly have beer around for social activities. "We've operated for 26 years with no problems," said Johnson, chief for the last 11 years. "They've made a big issue of that (beer). They've even called the Liquor Commission on us." Larry Merrill, deputy executive director of the Michigan Townships, said yesterday, "Because of a lack of ongoing fire activity, the volunteer fire departments tend to become more of a social club." The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $28.00 in-town and $39 out-of-town, for fall only $18.00 in-town and $22.00 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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