Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 30, 1990 01be Sidjigan Bail EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 CEL G CW D~I c..u . ARTS NEWS OPINION 763 0379 764 0552 747 2814 PHOTO SPORTS WEEKEND 764 0552 747 3336 747 4630 te~aa p sup C IsF_ 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. r , 1 s t Hash Bash cL r~ A(LWE$ t c t c 4 AT I.-- C? ; 9 Wz=1 The courts should allow THE TWO MOST HOTLY-DEBATED free speech issues on campus are the proposed code of non-academic con- duct and possible "time, place and manner" regulations on student protest. Recently, Todd Copeland's academic suspension gave the student body a chance to see how President Duderstadt can use regental bylaw 2.01 to perse- cute students without resorting to a code. Now, he's using his power to grant or deny permits for rallies on the Diag as a substitute for a policy governing demonstrations. Various University officials, in con- sultation with Duderstadt. withdrew permission for the National Orgaization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws to operate a sound system on the Diag at this Sunday's Hash Bash. NORML is contesting the decision in court and the ruling is promised by today. So far, the administration has been long on ex- cuses and short on explanation. The administration claims such a permit constitutes a tacit endorsement of "criminal activity." Unfortunately, til effect of its withdrawal is to destroy the rally's legitimate political focus while leaving lawbreakers unaffected. Education on the April 2 referendum to increase Ann Arbor's pot fine can't take place. The bands and speakers in- vited by NORML won't be heard. What NORML does, among other things, is give a voice to a large group of citizens who wish to oppose an in- crease in the pot fine -- a voice Dud- erstadt is anxious to silence- - Last year, during the months preceding the Hash Bash, University officials denied members of NORML a permit to speak with the excuse that another group had already reserved the Diag for that April 1. NORML had one of its members ask for a permit in the name of a third (unrelated) campus organization and the permit was granted. Why? President Duderstadt and the regents don't like it when events like this draw statewide publicity because it makes them look like bad administra- tors. It gets harder to beg for money from corporations, alumni, and the legislature. Their multimillion dollar private police force turns into a big joke. They want a drug-free, a shanty- ROTC NORML's Diag rally free, and most of all a hippy-free Diag. Their job is easiest when the University projects a clean-cut middle American image - diverse but not too diverse, liberal but not radical, innovative but not imaginative. The Diag should be like a well kept suburban lawn, an- nouncing to the world its cleanliness and orthodoxy. Hence the desire for a "controllable alternative site" like the Coliseum, or preferably Ypsilanti. Hash Bash Go to the rally LIGHTi-UP TIME IS SUNDAY AT noon; and everyone should go re- gardless of the court's decision. The rally will feature nationally known speakers such as Don Fielder, Jack Herar, Ed Rosenthal, and Jim Marshall. Provided NORML wins its court battle, Captain Dave and the Psychedelic Lounge Cats and the Soul Assassins have offered to play. Red Fly Nation, a Kentucky band taking a "hemp tour" of the Midwest, will also be featured. The politics of the rally will focus on the evils of the drug war in gen- eral and the problems with pro- posal B in particular. A high turnout will be an em- barrassment for city hall and Presi- dent Duderstadt, and sends a mes- sage to the nation that the citizens of Ann Arbor are unwilling to tol- erate further intrusion on their right to decide what substances they may consume. protesters are easier to control if no one from NORML is up there with a mega- phone spreading dangerous ideas. Taking away their sound equipment is the easiest way to shut them up. Re- gardless of whether NORML wins its court hearing, the University's action can't help but create an atmosphere of uncertainty and intimidation on the Diag. Such an atmosphere harms open discourse, and should be resisted by all students, regardless of their views on the $5 pot law. t r r . 'a t 40 / ~~/. :7. ,. ~ e:~ Readers respond to 'Forget the Holocaust' letter 0 -.- Editor's note: On Tuesday, the Daily printed a letter which advocated forget- ting the Holocaust ("Forget the Holo- caust," 3/27/90) and was signed "Ira Goldstein." The letter turned out to be a forgery, and the perpetrator called the Daily to apologize for his actions, though he refused to disclose his identity. The Daily generally will not print anonymous letters, and will encourage the prosecu- tion of those who lie about their identity. Responses to the letter have been edited to remove mention of Mr. Goldstein. Don't forget victims To the Daily: The author, in "Forget the Holocaust" (3/27/90), was so kind as to concede that there was a Holocaust in Europe, many people across the nation have theorized quite the contrary. However, the author's sensibility stops there. As an attendee of the Holocaust confer- ence and as a Jew, I found his letter ex- tremely insensitive. By asserting such generalizations such as, "Jews think that they're the only ones who have suffered," the author proves his inability to deal in- telligently with the Holocaust and addi- tionally insults an entire people. The Jews have been singled out and persecuted since the Biblical times and even today they cannot escape hostility, specifically with the threats of anti-Semitic pogroms in the Soviet Union. Yet, Hitler's mass, sys- temized extermination of six million Jews is clearly the greatest disaster ever to befall the Jews. How can statements such as the author's aid the Jews in overcoming any lingering insecurities from their past or cope with a dangerously uncertain future? It is exactly the author's attitude which fosters anti-Semitism. Letters such as his serve no purpose except to belittle the tragedy of the Holocaust. His insults, such as unnecessarily labeling the pamphlet quotation referring to the six million Jews who died as "pompously arrogant," show the author's unwillingness to acknowledge the conference's validity. Of course, nowhere in the author's letter does he mention his attendance at the conference, which may account for his unfounded apa- thy and blatant stupidity regarding the Holocaust. Susan M. Chagrin LSA senior Not the first time To the Daily: I contacted Ira Goldstein, and he informed me that the Daily never contacted him to verify if he was, indeed, the author of the letter in question. In addi- tion, Goldstein is an Engineering sopho- more, not an LSA junior as the Daily printed. This is not the first time that the Daily has printed apocryphal letters. Remember the recent "Carl Pursell" letter regarding Central America, which was, in fact, writ- ten by Dean Baker? In that incident, at least, the Daily contacted. Pursell, but when he denied writing the letter, the Daily printed it anyway. Debbie K. Schlussel LSA senior Letter is inaccurate To the Daily: tragically. More serious than the author's calling the conference arrogant is his statement that "Jews think that they're the only ones who have sufferred." I ask how the author can claim to speak for a religous group of millions of people worldwide. Just because the Conference on the Holocaust did not acknowledge the perse- cution of Russians under Stalin, Chinese under Mao, Armenians, or Cambodians does not mean that Jews do not acknowl- edge their sufferring. In the context of the conference, the persecution of Jews by the Nazis, other persecutioins were simply not mentioned. The author's most critical flaw is his assertation that Jews are doing to the Palestinians what Hitler did to the Jews. This statement is similar to saying that Christians are responsible for the massacre of 6 million Jews during the Holocaust. I do not defend the persecution of the Pales- tinian people, but I insist that their perse- cution be blamed on the Israeli govern- ment instead of on all Jews. The fact that the Israeli government is comprised of Jews does not give the author the right to connect the entire religous group with the actions of a political entity. I believe that the author owes the Jew- ish community an apology for his accusa- tion that we are murderers. In the future, if the Michigan Daily wishes to print anti- Israel letters that inspire thought, it should make sure that they maintain a political orientation without crossing the line of anti-Semitism. Harold Hilborn LSA junior Holocaust is symbol To the Daily: In response to the letter, "Forget the Holocaust" (3/26/90), the author is an id- iot. At first, he sounded intelligent enough, realizing that mankind should not dwell on past differences and violations commited by one group to another. He is correct on that point: an individual must not be condemned due only to his family's faults, nor should a child be punished for the parent's evils. However, this is not an act of forgetting: this is accepting human beings for what they are, and putting blame where it belongs. Simply disregard- ing the Holocaust and moving on has no positive consequences, except for creating a mind-frame in which the world seems to be free of any ethnic, religious, racial, etc. hostilities and biases. The point of remembering the Holo- caust is not to pretend that only Jews were ever persecuted throughout history, and is definitely not to instill a guilt complex in non-Jews and hope that they pamper us. The point is that all mankind learn a les- son of its evils. You propose that because not enough attention is paid to other mas- sacres, then the Holocaust should not get any attention either. Well, sir, you're wrong: not enough attention is paid to those tragedies not because they are deemed less important, but because the groups most affected by them are not do- ing enough to remind us of those past hor- rors. So the emphasis placed on the Holo- caust is not to deny other genocides, but rather, a symbol of the evil that mankind is able to inflict upon itself. The Holocaust must not be forgotten, but neither should any other tragedies. Let the Holocaust serve the purpose of sym- holizing what evils hnmns are canbh1e of by the Holocaust continue to, as the au- thor suggests, "recognize and learn" from it, they would make a mistake to in any way detract from the Holocaust and the impact it had upon an entire people. The Holocaust was one of the most horrificl expressions of the violent oppression and: racism the world has ever experienced.: There is no reason for those who suffered to "forgive" (asthe letter advocates) a gov- ernment which persecuted an entire group and slaughtered millions of its people. Forgiveness inherently implies a com- prehension of the motives of the as- saulters, and a recognition that their ac- tions were, although regrettable, in some way understandable as well. The Nazi lead- ers deserve no such forgiveness. Their ac- tions, like most which oppress free will and expression, should be denounced at ev-, ery opportunity. Only when we recognize, the pure brutality of such acts can we ef- fectively prevent their recurrence in the fu- ture. But, if we were to forgive or forget the suffering of the past peoples, we would only weaken our resolve to ensure, that anguish of this magnitude is never again bestowed upon any people. Ultimately, then, remembering and even reliving the pain of the past is the best way to ensure against the pain of the future. The author is thus quite mistaken when writing that, "in order for change, one must shed old experiences." This only encourages change for the worst, perhaps even an actual return to past suffering. For if the Holocaust had one remotely positive aspect, it is that its occurrence, if properly respected, ensures change for the better, and allows the entire world to say, "never again." 0 'U' should boot discriminatory group from campus IN RECENT WEEKS THE UNIVERSI- lies of California at Northridge and .Wisconsin have hardened their stance against the openly discriminatory poli- ces of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) against gay men and lesbians. At Northridge, they have suc- ceeded in kicking the group off cam- pus. At Wisconsin, the faculty senate voted for similar action with a two to one majority, only to see it overturned by the University regents. Such action not only increases awareness of insti- tutionalized prejudice, but it also high- lights the contradiction between Michi- gan's stated objectives of not tolerating discrimination on campus, and the continued presence of ROTC. It is true that ROTC allows many low-income students a chance of a uni- versity education that would otherwise not be financially viable. But this is merely evidence of the deficiencies of the American university system rather than any philanthropy on the part of ROTC. It is only in the U.S., Canada, and South Africa that tuition fees are not paid by the government; in a society where education would be accessible to all, rather than to the economically privileged alone, any decision to join ROTC could be made on the merits of the organization itself, rather than on the scale of its bribes. Of course indi- vidual members of ROTC, faced with the spiralling financial costs of educa- tion, and the pressures this entails, cannot be held responsible for institu- tionalized failings. It is true that ROTC has a high in- take of minority students. However, this does not come from any deep- rooted principles, as the group's dis- crimination against gay men and les- bians shows. Traditionally, the armed forces have opened their doors to mi- norities; they have consistently been al- lowed the right to be patriotic, the right to die for their country. However, the right to return from war to an equal standard of living and an equal pay has been harder to come by. ROTC's discrimination underpins everything else the group does. What- ever opportunities it provides, what- ever charity work it does is built on basic principles of intolerance and ho- mophobia. There should be no place for ROTC on campus, and any student activities which showcase ROTC's dis- crimination should be supported. Michael Krauss 'LSA firstyear student 'U' students should learn to use the IBMs To the Daily: I am writing this letter from the Angell Hall Computing center, on an IBM PS/2 computer fitted with Microsoft Word. Other IBMs around me sit idle gathering dust, while about 15 feet away I see peo- ple waiting in lines. Lines for Macintosh computers, and lines for printing out stuff written on Macs. My point is that every time I come here I see tons of students waiting in lines for Macs, while they simply ignore the idle IBMs sitting right under their noses. Don't any of them realize that they would save a lot of time by learning to use the Angell Hall IBMs (which are configured with Microsoft Word, a word processor which is easily learned, especially by stu- dents at the college level)? They pay for these computers in their tuition, yet they don't use them. Ever since this lab has opened I have used the IBMs. And let me inform the general public that when I have needed to write those last-minute papers and letters, I have never waited a single minute for a computer or the laser printer here. (I might add that the laser printer puts out some fine looking text, which I feel looks better than the Apple Laserwriter.) So I guess what I am trying to say is "Hey, Michigan students, are you idiots? Why do you constantly wait in lines for up to hours when you don't need to? You all are almost as dumb as Pavlov's dogs." Okay, for your own sake, take the "Ron Kim IBM challenge." Why don't you grab an IBM manual or talk to a enter consultant while von re waiting in line I I /S ./ I I