Page 6-The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 6, 1990 Time for groups, 'U' to begin recycling posters The Palestine Solidarity Committee has built and rebuilt a number of shanties over the past five years. Most shanties, regardless of sponsoring group, habitually endure vandalism. PSC works toward goals by Daily Staff One of the benefits of attending A university as large and as presti- gious as the University of Michi- gan is the presence of a vocal and diverse student body. One of the best ways to express differing mes- sages is through advertising points of view - through posters, chalk on the sidewalks and in classrooms, or a number of other ways. While the messages are important, their means of deliverance causes unnec- essary waste on campus. With the country's reawakening of concern for the environment - especially in light of Earth Day - the University community should be more sensitive to our surround- ings. The waste caused by posting flyers around campus is tremen- dous; the University spends $400,000 a year to clean up posters. The volume of paper accumu- lated on the bulletin boards in the fishbowl alone is unimaginable. The bulletin board is cleaned weekly, but the refuse is thrown away, not recycled. Include all the other boards around campus, includ- ing all the bathroom stalls, all the classrooms, all the kiosks, and all the other places people post, and the result is a disgusting amount of garbage that is not being recycled. If a group is sponsoring an event it finds particularly impor- tant, it will post on the sidewalks. No one cleans these flyers up. They are kicked up or washed away and further harm the environment. This is not to say that student groups should stop advertising their events; promoting and encouraging the exchange of ideas is the most important mission of any univer- sity. But people who publicize events should clean up their own posters responsibly. Ripping down g4reener place givethiem } ' . . .:.:.:...: .. [:: C1:1C41 :.':4.?:f." 1 ' Ys t t .99648 71 ! -::?r;; : -l;.:.1} :"195}11ti4'}"":::44 ""}J:'t :::"} posters takes less time than taping them up, and a group could make a sweep of the campus immediately following their event to make sure their posters are taken down, recy- cled, and not left to be thrown away. Additionally, the University should begin recycling its refuse. In addition to the posters it removes, the University produces unnecessary waste in dorms, cafeterias, class- rooms - essentially all areas of the institution. As landfill space be- comes more scarce and the Univer- sity continues to produce unbeliev- able amounts of garbage, the situa- tion will only continue to get more dire. Though recycling efforts have begun, the University needs to make waste reduction a priority. The environment is something which the world has been abusing for thousands of years. Just in the past few years, people have begun to realize that we cannot take our surroundings for granted if we are to have a healthy planet in the years to come. The campus is a perfect place for students to begin to take action to reverse the trends of a deteriorat- ing environment. There is no rea- son why students shouldn't take an interest. It's very nice to claim to be an environmentalist, but unless actions are put behind the words, the words mean very little. by Judy Ruttenberg December 8, 1987 marked the beginning of the intifada, the Pales- tinian uprising in the Israeli Occu- pied West Bank and Gaza Strip. After 20 years of brutal Israeli mili- tary occupation, an organized and unified movement brought new hope and inspiration to the Palestinian people. The intifada has been a cohesive rallying point for U.S. activists. In- creased media coverage of the daily atrocities committed against Pales- tinians, and the uncompromising in- sistence that the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) is their sole le- gitimate representative, has fostered a new dialogue in the United States. For the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, December, 1985 marked the formation of a local chapter of the Palestine Solidarity Committee (PSC). As a student organization on campus, PSC has sponsored lectures and forums educating people about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. Last year's speakers included Israel Sha- hak, head of the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights; and PLO representative Maha Khoury, who participated in a panel discussion with representatives from the African. National Congress and El Salvador's Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front. Last summer, a group of local ac- tivists participated in a fact-finding delegation to the West Bank and Gaza Strip sponsored by PSC and the Michigan Student Assembly. As part of the delegation, participants established initial sister university ties with the West Bank's Bir Zeit University, as mandated by MSA. Fearing increased student participa- tion in the intifada, Israeli authori- ties closed Birzeit in early 1988, and since then many students and faculty leaders have been jailed. PSC sent two more representa- tives on a national delegation this summer, where they worked to strengthen ties with Bir Zeit. These students will participate in campus educational forums throughout the coming academic year. PSC feels it- is imperative that students be edu- cated about the struggles of Univer- sity students who are oppressed by the U.S.-backed Israeli government. As part of this educational outreach, PSC constructed a shanty on the Diag. It represents the condi- tions under which the Palestinians have been forced to live as a result of Israel's military occupation. It has consistently been the target of racist vandalism. The shanty will continue to stand until the occupation ends and an independent Palestinian state is established. PSC believes peace in the region will come only when the right of all people to self determination is rec- ognized. The first step toward this must be the establishment of an in- dependent Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with East Jerusalem as its capital. Nationally, PSC has a set of principles around which it is united. The first is an opposition to United States intervention in the Middle East. PSC opposes the massive buildup of U.S. military force in the region. This force is used to sup- press the right of the peoples of the region to determine their own des- tinies and take control over their natural resources. PSC calls for an immediate end to all U.S. aid to Israel. $4 billion in U.S. aid per year funds Israel's military expansion and illegal set- tlements in the region, and the buildup of its armaments industry which exports heavily to South Africa, Central America, and throughout Asia, Africa, and Latin America. PSC supports the right of the Palestinian people to self-determina- tion, to return to their homeland, and to establish an independent state. In- cluding their choice of the PLO as their sole legitimate representative. Finally, PSC opposes all forms of racial and religious discrimina- tion. They oppose the Law of Re- turn by which Jewish citizens of any other country can easily attain Israeli citizenship while Palestinians cannot return to Palestine. Ruttenberg is an LSA junior and a former member of the PSC. *0 Despite FBI surveillance LASC continues its struggle Another MIchigan Cash Crop. by the Latin American Solidarity Committee According to the FBI: "The Latin American Solidarity Committee was formed to organize an ongoing committee in solidarity with the oppressed peoples of Latin America; to support their democratic revolutionary and national liberation movements; to support their strug- gles against repressive and authori- tarian regimes; to support the strug- gles to establish truly popular and representative governments, which meet the needs of the people; to in- crease awareness among those around us, of the contemporary realities of Latin America and the role of the United States in perpetuating these realities; and to put pressure on the United States Government in a vari- ety of ways to change its military, political and economic policies vis- a-vis Latin America." [From an FBI document obtained under the Free- dom of Information Act. The docu- ment was dated July 18, 1986, and was sent from the Detroit office to the FBI Director, in Washington, D.C. It was labelled "secret."] That's not a bad description of LASC, although -the reader may be wondering why the FBI keeps tabs on our activities, as well as those of hundreds of groups like us around the country. We like to think it's be- cause LASC is effective at what it does. Part of our job is to educate people, and the FBI's spying seems to have helped us in this regard. Many people did not know that we had a political police force in the United States, and were genuinely shocked to see the FBI's files on LASC's constitutionally protected1 activities. It seems that our govern-) ment's efforts to subvert democracyr around the world have some ramifi-I cations for our own democraticr rights in the U.S. But FBI surveillance has not pre-r vented LASC from becoming one of) the largest and most active politicalr organizations at the University. WeN have used a wide variety of tactics tor achieve our ends, including protests,I lobbying, educational events, elec-c toral action, and fund-raising for sur-s vivors of U.S. aggression in Centralf America.i On campus, for example, suc-t cessful protests have prevented the CIA from recruiting through univer-c sity facilities since 1984. This is af good example of the potential powert of protest against an institution thatI has little legitimacy. The CIA'sr complicity in mass murder and othert human rights abuses, training terror-c ists, and overthrowing democrati-F cally elected governments is welln documented. As a result, they havef often chosen to cancel their inter-c views on campus, in spite of theI complete backing of the University,f simply to avoid any more light be- ing shed on their grisly record. One recruiter canceled his appearance afters LASC promised to photograph then recruits and forward their names to1 the United Nations Commission onv War Crimes.F Other adversaries have proven tod be more stubborn. Carl Pursell, oura U.S. representative for Michigan'st second congressional district, at firstv ignored the thousands of letters ande phone calls he got opposing U.S. intervention in Central America. He 1 tried to ignore the hundreds of people c arrested for civil disobedience at hisr office (that wasn't easy). He didn'th get the message when Ann Arbort voters approved the Central Americac Peace Initiative in 1986. That city1 ballot proposal called for an end to e U.S. intervention in all of Central America, and established a sister city relationship with Juigalpa, Nicaragua. Finally a LASC activist ran against him and took 41% of the vote (including 60% of Ann Arbor), mainly on the issue of Central America. He still supports the ad- ministration, although last May he voted for an amendment that would restrict military aid to El Salvador. The vote was largely symbolic, be- cause the entire bill was overturned shortly thereafter; but perhaps the pressure from LASC and the solidar- ity movement is finally beginning to get to him. Most of LASC's efforts are not confrontational, but educational: films, speakers, leaflets, guerrilla theater, etc. We encourage debate, but it is difficult to get our oppo- nents to publicly defend their ac- tions. The CIA will not debate any- one, as a matter of policy. Carl Pursell has refused to hold a public meeting with his constituents for five years now. We have invited lo- cal news media (Ann Arbor News, Detroit Free Press) to participate in forums on media coverage of Central America many times, but it seems they are aware that their coverage is systematically distorted and they do not wish to make an issue of it. In 1985, after six months of pleading; we finally got the U.S. State De, partment to send a representative to q debate we sponsored. Although the audience was exceedingly polite; their spokesperson did not do very well, and it is doubtful that they will ever send another. LASC is currently working on a boycott of Folger's coffee, which contains Salvadoran beans. An ex- port tax on coffee provides about half of the revenues for the budget of the Salvadoran government. The other half, more than a million dol- lars a day, comes from U.S. taxpay- ers. More than 70,000 civilians have been murdered by the Salvidoran military and related death squads in See LASC, Page 8 r L . . - ' -~ '. ,,,. , : 1 .. . . _ ?' 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