EANEI TODAY Still mild, cloudy; High: 65, Low: 54. TOMORROW Shwes osibe One hundred and one years of editorial freedom W SIDE... Icers melt during opening series. See SPORTSMonday. Vol. CII, No. 21 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Monday, October 28, 1991 - .. Students, profs. criticize KCP cut *by Rob Patton Daily Minority Issues Reporter Students and faculty who have been involved with the King/Chavez/Parks (KCP) Visiting Professor Program are calling Gov. John Engler'sveto of the program from the state higher education budget last week a mistake. The Visiting Professors Program brings minority professors to the University for anywhere from a few days to an entire aca- demic year at the request of individ- ual departments. In the program's four years of existence, the state provided about $90,000 in funding, which was matched by the University and sup- plemented by the departments which requested the professors. It brought about 200 people to the University Program coordinator Julia McAdoo Poole said the program gives students and faculty contact with a variety of people. "It's an exposure thing. You ac- tually have access to these people," she said. "Itabroadens horizons, and forthe students the speakers can be role models. You actually see that people are achieving at this level." Barbara France, an administrative associate at the School of Nursing who has used the program to bring in speakers, agreed with McAdoo Poole that the program benefits the University, and added that the pro- gram educates the visiting profes- sors themselves. "It's a two way street," France said. "They (the visiting professors) get to see what's going on at another college campus, and they're paid for their efforts ... We can share in their expertise and potentially court them as faculty members." France added that she thought the program gave departments a See KCP, Page 2 Rally protests revisionism, Daily I by Melissa Peerless and Bethany Robertson Daily Staff Reporters policies ANTHONY CROLL/Daily Approximately 200 people gathered on the Diag Friday at noon to protest a Holocaust revisionist advertisement run in Thursday's Daily. Arab-Israeli leaders Members of the campus Jewish community ventedtheir outrage at the content of an anti-Semitic Michigan Daily advertisement, and an editorial statement defending its inclusion, at a Diag rally Friday. The ad - which was run on Thursday and paid for by the Center for Open Debate on the Holocaust (CODOH) - argued the re- visionist viewpoint that the events of the Holocaust were widely exaggerated. Speakers at the rally said the ad's claims were ludicrous and hardly warranted a response. "The notion that the Holocaust did not occur is really in many ways beneath our dignity and not worthy of reply," said History Prof. Todd Endelman, who spoke on the history of the revisionist movement. "I would argue that the very assertion is anti-Jewish and racist and has malevolent intent." Revisionist groups, such as CODOH, assert there was no policy at German concentration camps to deliberately kill the inmates. "Revisionists also maintain that the figure of 6 million Jewish deaths is an irresponsible exaggera- tion, and that no execution gas chambers existed in any camp in Europe under German control," ac- cording to the ad. Endelman said views such as those of CODOH have no grounding in historical fact, but rather pro- mote a political agenda that "sanitizes" anti-Semitic sentiment. In order to perpetuate these opin- ions, the group has been forced to adopt accepted "code words," such as revisionism, he said. "They are interested in rehabili- tating the reputation of the Nazi regime and leaders of the Third Reich," Endelman said. The movement also aims to dele- gitimatize the state of Israel, Endelman said. If the tragedies of the Holocaust could be discredited, "then the world will owe the Jews nothing," he said. Joseph Kohane, director of the Hillel Foundation, also spoke about the underlying intent of the revi- sionist ad and movement in general. "Claiming that the Jews made up the Holocaust creates a climate where it can be open season to attack Jews," Kohane said. Although rally participants were upset by the ad's content, many doubted it would cause students to question the accepted interpretation of the Holocaust. "Anyone with a mind shouldn't be convinced by this ad," said LSA sophomore Noah Siegel.."It's based on such a ridiculous premise. To say that all the eyewitnesses are liars is ridiculous." Organizers said Thursday night that they were planning the rally to address revisionism and give a fo- rum for discussion to people af- fected by the ad. But after two con- flicting statements about the ad ap- peared in Friday's paper, the focus of the rally changed to include an at- tack on Daily policies. A statement by the editors on page one said that althoughthey found the content of the ad "offensive and inaccurate," they could not condone the censorship of "unpopular views from our pages merely because they are offensive, or because we disagree with them." Speakers attack advertisement as faulty revisionist history at East Quad forum. See page 3. A conflicting statement from the advertising staff on the back page apologized for the ad and said it was printed "due to an error in the ad placement process." The two staffs operate as sepa- rate entities, and could not reach a concurring decision, Daily Editor in Chief Andrew Gottesman said. "I understand that the business folks don't talk to the editorial folks, but that's no excuse," said graduate student Ken Goldstein, a rally organizer. "I passionately feel about the First Amendment, but you can't cloak yourself in the First Amendment after you make a mistake." Organizer David Glaser, a law student, said the statements in Friday's paper left Daily readers See RALLY, Page 2 'eager~ MADRID, Spain (AP) - Israeli and Arab leaders said yesterday they were eager to begin historic Middle East peace talks. The conference, the first face-to- face meeting between Israel and all its Arab neighbors in more than 40 years, is scheduled to begin Wednesday in this Spanish capital under intense security. "What we know is that without negotiations we will never have peace," said Israeli Prime Minister 0 tor peai Yitzhak Shamir, head of the Israeli team. "Therefore, we are happy to start negotiations." In Syria- Isracf's most impla- cable enemy - President Hafez Assad said in a televised interview, "We do not seek destruction. Rather, we want a comprehensive and just peace." Yet the dispute over the possible influence of a Palestinian delegate who may have ties to the PLO lingered. cc talks IsraeliDefense Minister Moshe Arens accused Palestinians of "a de- liberate attempt ... to scuttle the negotiations" following last week's claim by the Palestine dele- gate Saeb Erekat that the Palestinian-Jordanian team was rep- resenting the Palestine Liberation Organization. Secretary of State James Baker said no one should go into the conference believing that it alone will create peace in the Middle East. .OSU editors fired over by Gwen Shaffer Daily Higher Education Reporter Six editors were fired and three others resigned from the Ohio State University student newspaper, the Daily Lantern, after a policy of prior review was voted into effect on Friday by a School of Journalism faculty committee. The six editors were fired on the grounds that they refused to pro- duce today's issue of the paper. The newspaper had been publish- ing under protest since the first week of the term. The editors felt their constitutional right to free- dom of the press had been threatened by an informal policy which said that the faculty advisor could pull any copy that she or he deemed "potentially libelous." The new policy states that the faculty advisor will read all copy before it is published. In addition, if there is a dispute between the edi- tors and the faculty advisor as to whether something is libelous, a lawyer will be called in to make the Japanesi TOKYO (AP) - The conserva- tive governing party chose elder state official Kiichi Miyazawa as its president yesterday, guaranteeing he will become prime minister in a process widely criticized for being controlled by party kingmakers. Miyazawa is expected to give Japan a tougher voice in dealings with the United States and other n.m . nn R... . :. manr rnl:-rv ohnnape final decision and determine if the story should run at all. The Lantern, which is the third largest college newspaper in the country, has a circulation of 35,000, and is a laboratory paper for the School of Journalism. The majority 'I can't in any good conscience say I could come in here and give 100 percent to the paper now' - Debra Baker Former editor in chief OSU Lantern of reporters work at the newspaper as part of a curriculum requirement. Debra Baker, the recently re- signed editor in chief of the Lantern, said she could not continue to work in a situation where anything controversial could be censored. "I can't in any good conscience say I could come in here and give 100 percent to the paper now," she said. City Editor Kristin Beard also resigned from her position follow- ing Friday's decision, but said it was a hard choice. "I was planning to stay as an obligation to the reporters. But in Friday's meeting the faculty seemed to express a lot of distrust in the student newspaper and there was just a lack of support," she said. Beard said that although she has lost her official voice at the Lantern, she is not finished fighting the decision. "I'm definitely not giving up. I may not have an internal voice, but I can certainly voice my opinion to the faculty and to the students on the paper," Beard said. "It means too much to me to walk away." Yet other newspaper editors said they chose to stay in order to im- prove the paper rather than abandon it. Neal Harvener, the Lantern arts and entertainment editor and one of three editors staying at the paper, said he feels he would do more harm dispute than good if he resigned at this point. "Although I respect the other editors' decision, our primary pur- pose is to serve our readers," he said. Harvener said the issue is a com- plex and emotional one for students at the paper. "It has been difficult because the issues are important but nebulous in matter," he said. Faculty advisor Mary Webster said some reporters were upset when the editors began publishing under protest because they agreed with the school's policy while oth- ers support the editors' decision to resign. "It's my understanding that stu- dents in the journalism classes are having a byline strike or are refusing to read copy," she said. Beard and Baker said they will push to make the Lantern an inde- pendent publication. "I know it will become indepen- dent, it's just a matter of time," Beard said. officials back when top leaders of the Liberal Democrats switched support from Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu to Miyazawa, who has held most im- portant Cabinet posts in a 40-year career. Kaifu was an obscure politician when he was chosen to lead the party two years ago after senior politicians - including Miyazawa, whn was then finance minister - candidates. Miyazawa is likely to giv a stronger voice internation speaks fluent English and is as an expert pol- icy-maker with a good grasp of economics. At a news conference im- mediately after} Miyawaza One of his first tasks as prime ve Japan minister will be playing host to ally. He President Bush, who will briefly s known visit Japan next month. Miyazawa said he wanted to issue a joint decla- ration detailing how the two na- tions could promote world peace. Miyazawa indicated he might be e a tough negotiating partner, saying he wanted to "speak freely and de- t.._-- n - .. ....; s _. .::f r