0 Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Friday, November 6, 1992 _________________1~ l eIct igttn+ tttl19 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764-0552 Editor in Chief MATTHEW D. RENNIE Opinion Editors YAEL CITRO GEOFFREY EARLE AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan W!~HAT /S OR'CC&NE z3 THE[ LIINEE p F7t4EFnJ -rHE TWO0 CAN SEEM QU'ITE I3LIJRIYAT -IMES. S~O, -l-HEi-P You 01JT7 HERE'S A1 t-i7rL E 7"E -r- FOR IDETEP)INJhG- 7r DiFF?R,NCE t3ETEE v A'TAND O6SCEN~IT Y.. FOR EXAMPLE:" c/2 1fHFE AIMOUNTQOF MONE~JY NAI~oNNl'A WILL MvAKE- OFF -rHIS tOOI S' .. WHUL-E I IAONt4AIS USE. OF 7H-i tM)"DIA !,S' A FORM iOF L= J5P, OKAY>, ThAT CONE W/AS EAVI-.TRY THIS ONE: .JES &EL MVAKING HA r~~ POL rI 1CA L - - _CAREER OUT O ~ -~5~ LENYIrJG- THF, Fj s-r AMNMN is r 6 Unsigned editorials represent a ajority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. FROMTHE AIL Freedom from speech T heMichigan Joumal of Law and Genderforced Ann Arbor artist Carol Jacobsen to remove an exhibit featured in the Union in conjunction with the "Prostitution: from Academia to Activism" symposium last Sunday. This was a reprehensible act of censorship by an organization which should be promoting free speech rather than silencing it. The exhibit, entitled, "pom'im'age'ry: Pictur- ing Prostitutes," was supposedly removed be- cause a number of Journal members claimed that the piece con- - tained video clippings of commercial por- nography. Actu- ally, the initial push to censor . . theexhibitcame Q from a meeting Z ~ s of Journal mem- z. bers and key 3 Pr speakers, in- cluding Univer- 8 sity Law Professor Catherine MacKinnon. The exhibit - which consisted of a series of interviews with prostitutes, business cards from London prostitutes, photographs and a carpet of condoms - was funded by the National Endow- ment for the Arts and Michigan Council for the Arts. It was featured briefly in the Michigan Union Gallery, until the exhibit's sponsors told Jacobsen that certain parts of the exhibit would have to go. Rather than agreeing to the conditions laid out by the Journal, Jacobsen opted to take the whole exhibit down. Members of the Journal implausibly argued that the video portion of the exhibit made some of the speakers and members of the audience fear for their lives. Laura Berger, a second-year law stu- GOP gains grp of While state residents cheered for the sweeping victory of President-elect Bill Clinton, Michigan residents voted in a Republican State House and Senate for the first time in 30 years. In the final State House district, the Republican chal- lenger won by only 13 votes, giving the Republi- cans control of the legislature. Republican control of both the executive and legislative branches of state government will surely mean an expedited implementation of Gov. John Engler's programs and a firestorm of regressive legislation - some- thing Michigan residents can do without. Among the Democratic losers is current Speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives Lewis Dodak (D-Birch Run), contributing to the Repub- lican party's slim margin of 56 to 54. The fact that Republicans ran unopposed in 13 State House districts didn't help the Democratic party's pre- dicament. State Democratic Party Chair Gary Corbin deserves part of the responsibility by not actively recruiting candidates for those districts, preferring to target specific districts. This failure, combined with a highly financed and well-tar- geted Republican campaign-including $150,000 into the Speaker's district alone - paved the way for the Republican's capture of the House. The Democrats lost six House races by less than 1,000 votes. Already, the Michigan chapter of Right to Life predicts that the State House will pass several additional measures restricting abortions. Fore- most on its agenda is the informed consent pro- posal, which would mandate the use of graphic propaganda to deter women from having abor- dent, claimed that Jacobsen added portions to the exhibit which were not seen by the members of the Journal prior to the exhibit's opening. Consequently, the Journal reviewed the exhibit again and sided with those who complained. Per- haps uncoincidentally, many of the symposium's key speakerssuch as MacKinnon,Andrea Dworkin and John Stoltenberg, are outspoken advocates of banning pornography. The great irony is that an exhibit which was intended to provide a voice for prostitutes was censored by a program designed to expose the exploitative nature of prostitution. In fact, two of the artists involved in the project were themselves former prostitutes. The censorship of Jacobsen's exhibit demon- strates the danger of banning pornography. The definition of what constitutes pornography is sub- jective. And when ideologues like MacKinnon are allowed to make this determination, truly worth- while ideas such as the Union exhibit invariably fall victim. While the basest forms of pornography certainly lack intellectual merit, it cannot be banned without endangering truly valuable forms of ex- pression. This disturbing example also reflects the chill- ing trend of silencing dissenting voices within a movement. In this case, a group of powerful femi- nists saw fit to define the limits of what is accept- able within the movement. Those feminists, like Jacobson, who fall subject to this arbitrary deci- sion, have two choices: conform or get out. Feminism is not a monolithic ideology. Rather, it is a movement whose purpose is to empower women -not just women who think a certain way, but all women. Censoring the exhibit did not abol- ish the societal problems which feed the pornogra- phy industry, nor did the infighting between the activists involved help the feminist movement. i State House tions. This bill, which a handful of Democratic legislators blocked last year, is expected to come up for a vote early next year. In addition, many of Engler's proposals that have been stymied by the Democratic House will likely pass. First on the Republican agenda is the stalled crime bill. Previously held up in the House Judiciary Committee by outgoing Chair Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), this bill may re-emerge as an even more restrictive bill that would hack away at civil liberties. Provisions of the new version may include: increases in mandatory sentencing; a de- crease in the state's use of parole; and liberalization of police search procedure that would allow police to enter private homes without knocking, so long as they have a warrant, and would limit police liability for illegal searches, so long as police act in good faith. With Bullard gone, and with a State House likely to take a more narrow view of individual rights, legislation damaging to civil liberties could well be on the way. While the voters rejected a cut-and-cap property tax referendum by a nearly two to one margin, Republican leaders plan to put a new constitutional amendment cutting property taxes - the primary source of school funding--before voters next year. Likewise, Proposal D, the auto insurance re- form package that voters rejected Tuesday, is ex- pected to become law by early next year. With citizens all over the country voting for progressive reform, and with Michigan sending a strong rebuff to the White House - it is ironic that Michigan is moving backward on the state level. e..5'(rrCAN.JIIS MAIPU-LATON RF CONJSIOE/RED AN MiERELY voTEĀ§R S-ru RI ltTY)? f &/MA THAT 0NE'S A 61-F TOUG-HER. NOWY IF YOU R EA L.LY WAN -rA C HA L-E h4-E, TRY~> THIS OWE .. r/Ma Cr1G-N VAI -Y 1 J2 -, )-- IAAU UT W4HEN A S'ACK MP4J V%/RITES A 15--PERSoNt NAR~RATIVE RAP AB'ouY" A~ K/LL ER,7fHE RAP /S' COt4&IDEIEP ?"oL13E FiVE SI-oR I=S 7 CoFLs10-iH UH? JVST BE GD TIPPER GCOR~E W/I-L RE 1r4THE WperE Ho US E- ,NTEr> I'or M'ARI-.YW UY-&N1, ISSUES FORUM Read it, know it, join the debate Free speech: Where to draw the line Carol Jacobsen knows the meaning of censorship. Last Sunday, Jacobsen was asked to remove her art exhibit from the Michigan Union Gallery because people complained that it contained bits of commercial pornography. Recent years have witnessed an unprecedented crusade against freedom of expression in America. From magazines to books, theatre to film, television to music, these challenges are mounted under the banner of a "Cultural War." At the center of this conflict are two competing notions of expression: one that places a premium on the liberty to express one's views and, therefore, tolerates "unsettling" speech, and a second that evaluates expressive conduct on the basis of content and seeks to suppress such speech. In a speech before the National Endowment for the Arts, President Ronald Reagan recognized the impor- tance of artistic freedom and the role of the artist. "Artists have to be brave: thev live in a realm of ideas and expression, and their ideas will often be provocative and unusual. Artists stretch the limits of understanding. They express ideas that are sometimes unpopular. In an atmosphere of liberty, artists and patrons are free to think the unthinkable and create the audacious. They are free to make both horrendous mistakes and glorious celebrations. Where there's liberty, art succeeds. In societies that are not free, art dies." First Amendment rights need to be upheld by Carol Jacobsen What kind of First Amendment Constitutional rights are they teach- ing at the University of Michigan Law School? How could it happen that Law- student organizers of a three-day sym- posium on prostitution, held to launch the new Journal of Gender & Law, could invite seven artists from across the United States to exhibit their works on the subject and then censormthe exhibition because of vague com- plaints that "something in the work was offending someone?" According to Julia Ernst and Laura Berger, two of the symposium orga- nizers, John Stoltenberg, a speaker at the symposium, had complained to Catherine MacKinnon that one of the video works was "pornographic." Ernst made the decision - prior to the start of the symposium - to seize the entire video series, containing the works of five artists. But why was there no dialogue about this decision? As an invited artist and curator of the exhibit, why wasn't I notified? And why wasn't the gallery director in- formed? When I arrived the second day of the symposium, I discovered the miss- ing series and replaced it with a back- up. This was a problem, I was told by Ernst, and I was requested to an- Jacobsen is a video artist. Exhibit caused peop by Laura Berger Recently, the Michigan Journal of Gender & Law sponsored a sym- posium entitled "Prostitution: From Academia to Activism." During the symposium, the Journal members re- moved a video series compiled by local artist Carol Jacobsen from the The reason that the Journal removed the video series was that the invited speakers expressed fear for their personal safety. Michigan Union Gallery. The Michigan Journal of Gender & Law is a student publication which was founded in 1991-1992 to con- front gender inequalities in the law. The Journal reflects an active com- mitment to feminist-legal theory. We hope to present the views of 4egal scholars, social scientists, practitio- ners and others in'the community. Our first volume for publication will nounce to the symposium audience that it was I who had reinstalled the tapes. The ad hoc meeting that occurred next, I am told, was held by MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin, S toltenberg, Eveline Giobbe and Law What does it say about the University of Michigan when an overt act of censorship is allowed to occur through an abuse of power on its campus? students. Again, why was I not in- cluded in that dialogue, given that the decision to close the entire exhibition was made then? Instead, Law stu- dents Ernst, Bryan Wells, David Tees, Susan Toepfer, Ann Kraemer and Berger communicated that decision to me, and I was then prohibited from speaking about it to the audience, out of fear that I might "ruin Andrea Dworkin's speech." What does it say about the Uni- versity of Michigan when an overt act of censorship is allowed to occur through an abuse of power on its campus? And if it could happen here, what does it mean in terms of the condition of academic freedom in institutions of higher education in this country? It certainly tells us something frightening about the threats to de- mocracy occurring in the United States today. What about the fact that most of the works in this exhibit were by women artists dealing with their own views of their own sexuality and sexual freedoms, or lack thereof? And what is the relationship between this inci- dent and the establishment's ongoing war on women? And ultimately, what is the rela- tionship between censorship in the arts, anti-abortion legislation, anti- civil rights rulings, scapegoating of poor women, prostitute women, sexual minorities and people with AIDS, and the labeling of every image of sexual pleasure for anyone other than straight- arrow whitemales as "pornographic?" I list these questions to establish a dialogue. A dialogue that was killed last weekend by the shotgun blast of censorship, even before the sympo- sium began. The University of Michi- gan Law School now has an obliga- tion - and an opportunity - to address these concerns in a public forum. I also want a public apology to the seven censored artists: Paula Allen, Carol Leigh, Veronica Vera, Susanna Aiken, Carlos Aparicio, Randy Bar- bados and myself from theUniversity of Michigan Law School, The Michi- gan Journal of Gender & Law and the individual Law professors and stu- dents who failed to support our First Amendment rights. 0 0 0 le to fear for their safety Stempel fails @.0.'like a rock' O ne week after General Motors ousted Chair- man Robert Stempel and several top execu- tives, the Board of Directors has chosen the re- placement team. John Smale, formerly of Proctor & Gamble, will serve as the new chair, replacing Stempel, with Jack Smith as chief executive. The two appointees, and the executive team of four accompanying them, represent the brain trust re- sponsible for restructuring GM and saving the monstrous corporation from disaster. Early steps taken by the Board of Directors and by Smale's team signify a serious effort, at least in the future, to streamline GM, slash wasteful spending, and eliminate useless white collar positions. The relative hopefulness accompanying the changing of the guard was signaled by an increase in GM stock, up $1.12 the day after Stempel's ouster. With strong effort and wise budget cuts, perhaps GM can prove that Wall Street did not sions. That may be the wrong antidote. The plague ailing the U.S. auto industry isn't just GM's bur- densome size and bureaucracy. The industry's di- minishing competitiveness is due primarily to the lack of incentive to improve automobile technol- ogy. Despite these setbacks, there is some early fa- vorable news. Smith will move GM's nerve center from the ivory tower headquarters in New York City to the Technical Center in Warren. The move is little more than symbolic, but indicates a willingness on Smith's behalf to close the distance between GM executives and GM work- ers. Moreover, Smith served a tour of duty as head of GM's European division, which happens to be the only financial success carrying the GM name- plate. Smith and Smale's installment is the latest in a series of confidence-shaking incidents, beginning sented a view alternative to that which would be advocated by our speakers and panelists during the symposium. Presenting a different viewpoint, al- beit in the forumof an art exhibit, was a valuable aspect of the event to the Journal members. The exhibit opened nine days prior to the symposium. On the exhibit's opening night, Oct. 20, the Journal sponsored a discussion with the art- ist. Approximately 40 people attended he opening, where Jacobsen spoke about her work and views relating to prostitution. Once the symposium itself was underway, the Journal was faced with a difficult situation. TheJournal mem- bers decided to remove a series of videos from the exhibit. These vid- eos were not Jacobsen's work, but rather had been collected by her and added to the exhibit for the days- which overlapped with the sympo- sium. The reason that the Journal re- moved the video series was that.the invited speakers expressed fear for their personal safety. Some speakers ha a~Ittendn trin,~rnnfeeneec whebre Jacobsen's exhibit, and therefore takes no stand regarding its content. Journal members erred in not contacting Jacobsen as promptly as possible re- garding the problems which arose during the symposium. The sympo- sium schedule was altered to allow Jacobsen to comment publicly about the removal of the video series that she had collected. We respect Jacobsen and her work. We are sorry that the difficulties which resulted in our decision arose, and especially sorry that we did not con The symposium and surrounding events were designed to present University students, law school alumnae and commu- nity members with the opportunity to learn about prostitution and the experiences of prostitutes. 6