Page 4-The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 13, 1990 EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor 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. University Closures R ce v4(SL, AE: FiCE OF COM UNh. W ~'PLAN WORKD!i-- YOU ARC=NOWA.)FK 1~AY 50 1~(Sis T LAST L)AY FCOMUNISR iO OyoWILL Palestinians are denied academic freedom . . I T_ "Universities will remain closed." -Text of a closure notice THE EDUCATION MINISTRY OF THE Israeli Civil Administration recently issued yet another three month closure notice to Birzeit University, a Palestinian institution with which the Michigan Student Assembly has established sister-university ties. Birzeit has been closed by such orders since January 1988. This denial of the Palestinians' right to education has not been limited to the university level. Throughout the course of the Intifada, the Israeli authorities have closed every public, private, and United Nations Relief Works Agency (UNRWA) school in the West Bank-from kindergartens through the secondary level-for prolonged periods of time. The closures mean that no classes or meetings of any kind can take place on campus. In addition, off- campus class meetings as small as three students and one faculty member are illegal and punishable by imprisonment, interrogation, and torture. Use of university libraries, laboratories, and other research facilities is also forbidden. The Israeli authorities attempt to justify this complete disregard for international law by saying that Palestinian schools and universities are "centers of unrest" (Jerusalem Post, 9/9/88). This justification would be untenable even if Israeli "security concerns" were sincere: like their counterparts in occupied Palestine, university campuses in the United States have been centers of protest throughout their history; but even during the most tu- multuous and violent periods of campus unrest, the closure of every university by the U.S. government would be universally condemned and resisted. But the Israeli security argument is not sincere, as evidenced by the banning of small off-campus classes, on campus research by university faculty, kindergarten activities, and other measures which cannot possibly be justified under the security pretense. The real reasons that Palestinian universities are closed are much more insidious. issued by the Israeli Civil Administration The mass closure of schools is first and foremost a form of collective punishment. According to the Jerusalem Post, the authorities of the military occupation have closed schools and universities because "The matter is perceived to be an effective means of pressuring the population, the effectiveness of which increases as time passes" (6/14/88). The closures also represent an attack on universities as independent Palestinian institutions, which, like all such institutions, are rightly seen as a threat to continued Israeli domination. The lack of ed- ucational opportunities increases Palestinian dependency on Israel for high technology and professionals. International condemnation of its actions has forced the occupying authorities to consider reopening Palestinian universities. However, it is important to stress that the threat to Palestinian academic freedom does not end with the mere reopening of the universities. In the process of reopening small institutions such as An-Najah National Intermediate Community College, the Israeli authorities have attempted to reimpose restrictions mandated under military order 854-an illegal Israeli amendment to Jordanian law which was "frozen" in 1982 after widespread protestations from both Palestinian and international educational institutions. Military order 854's measures in- clude restricting universities to teaching only "authorized subjects" with authorized materials, and requiring universities to receive permission from the authorities for any curriculum or enrollment changes. In addition, the univer- sities are held responsible for any protests, meetings, or exhibitions of a political nature which occur on campus, or within its vicinity. The Israeli authorities' violations of Palestinian academic freedom and other fundamental human rights must be vigorously resisted until these rights are fully restored. t t 1 i , r/ 01 DM~ 'Keeping in touch' is an important part of college life. By Adam Miller Hey, I'm a new sports writer. What then you wonder, am I doing here? I know most of you won't relate to this, but it's a story that needs telling anyway. Last weekend, after my first two days of classes, as a first year student, I went home. I live not too far from here, my house's pool was just about to close and some of my old high school friends were coming by to swim. It all sounded like a good idea. I come from a small high school, our graduating class was 43, and I liked the idea of seeing my old classmates "one last time." This get together, however, was quite different from what I expected. It was there that I heard the news about Monica (not her real name). Everyone in Miller is a first-year student and a member of the Daily Sports Staf.. our class had wondered about her all summer, since she was an ordinarily bright, out-going person and had drifted into total seclusion. As it turned out, Monica was sick. Seriously sick. And she was trying to hide her illness from everyone else. When I heard the news, through the grapevine, so to speak, I was at first shocked . thinking. Now that we've left high school and are in college, what do we do with the past four years? As first year students are we "stuck in the middle" between the 614 and the new? What if one of your old classmates became ill or had some other trauma? Would you know about it? Would you care? 'Now that we've all reached that great plateau we call college, do we entirely abosorb ourselves with our 'new lives' and blow-off the ones that we had before?' You see, I had been critically ill last summer and had initially tried to hide my disease. Once I re-contacted my friends I was pleasantly surprised and cheered by their support. I only wish that Monica had allowed us the same opportunity.. Not that I mean to bore all of you with my my mushy story, but this did get me Now that we've all reached that great plateau we call college, do we entirely abz sorb ourselves with our 'new lives' add blow-off the ones that we had before? Or, is there someway, in between fifty pages of Homer and 102 Calculus problems, to keep in touch with our 'old lives' and old' friends'? I don't know if it's possible, bul I for one am willing to try. PSC delegation defenses under attack ... The University of Michigan needs to respona "Everyone has the right to education... higher education shall be equally accessible to all on the basis of merit." -Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 26 To the Editor: Let's hope David Levin and Luis Vazquez never become statisticians. All issues aside, backing any argument with number-game logic (PSC delegates answers critics, Sept. 11th) amounts to an intellectually immature argument at best. It is laughable to compare the amount of U.S. money sent to Israel to that of MSA's funding of this "delegation." I don't want to jump to any conclu- sions, but I think the U.S. annual budget is a wee bit larger then that of the MSA summer budget. At best, any comparison is completely skewed. In addition, the U.S. government has different responsibilities, priorities and obligations.I know some may find it hard to believe, but MSA doesn't run the coun- try. I highly doubt the U.S. would send 10% of its budget on a single biased fact- finding delegation. To assume that Israel spends its entire U.S. aid package on se- curing the occupied territory is indicative of the bias held by both "delegates". It is rather embarrassing that one can receive a masters degree from the Univer- sity of Michigan and have such a poor un- derstanding of simple math. Jonathan Greenberg University Alum Still skeptical To the Daily: David Levin and Luis Vazquez, in their Daily article ("PSC delegates answer crit- ics", Daily 9/11), argue that condemna- tions of their delegation are "dubious in content" and premature. The justification they propose is essen- tially that the U.S. government spends $15 per taxpayer on Israel every year. The relationship between U.S. government spending and MSA spending never having been elucidated, I find this justification highly suspect. Levin and Vazquez have neglected the fact that the University of Michigan, in general, and the MSA, specifically, are not international organizations and do not have a foreign policy, and therefore should not be financing junkets to foreign nations. They further suggest that the cost of this trip breaks down to .6 cents per speech. To this I respond that it is not the cost of the trip or the value of a speech that matters as much as the principle of financing trips for student representatives. Daniel Weiner Don't like what, you see ? Tell our readers what you think. Write to the Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard Street, or send your letters via MTS to "Michigan Daily." " R THE LONG-TERM CLOSURE OF Palestinian universities challenges academics everywhere to defend the universal right to education and academic freedom. This challenge has been answered by universities across the globe that have opposed the Israeli state's violation of these fundamental rights. At the University, this opposition has been led by the Palestine Solidarity Committee and the Michigan Student Assembly, which deserve commendations for their efforts to establish sister-university relations in the region. The severity of the situation, however, requires increased involvement by every facet of the University. The recent extension of Birzeit University's closure should be vigorously condemned by MSA and all other student governmental bodies, the Senate Advisory Committee for University Affairs (SACUA), the regents, and President Duderstadt. Each of these authorities should ties. In addition, they should send these messages to Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir, President Bush, and Fawaz Kamal, the head of the Education Ministry for the Occupied Territories. Solidarity statements should be sent to Birzeit University as well. University bodies should also take additional steps in the struggle to secure academic freedom. The sister-university relationship established by MSA should be expanded to include faculty links through SACUA and, additionally, formal administrative ties. These measures defend both humanitarian and self-interested sentiments. 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