4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 8, 1994 (The3ibi tt i1g 'We are liberating our beautiful land. Tell Serbs in America it is their duty to send us money for the church.' -Branko Grujic, Mayor of the 'ethnically cleansed' city Zvornik, Bosnia- Herzegovina as quoted inyesterday's-ew York Times 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JESSIE HALLADAY Editor in Chief SAM GooDSTIN FuNT WAINESS Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. wise compromise Take Back the Night march to include men i f 7N f r WeiL..MR,'PEoPLES ... . 4r-r ZporA C, t T 1 NT C-',K - H(C.> JAIL i The Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape I(AACAR) took a great first step Sunday when it agreed to allow men to participate in at least part of the annual Take Back the Night march. For 14 years only women could par- ticipate in the march. But no longer. Hope- fully, AACAR's decision to make the Take Back the Night vigil march gender inclusive will begin promoting the interdependence 'that is necessary to stop sexual violence. It is crucial for two important reasons. First, men, like women, must play an important part in stopping rapes. Not allowing men to par- ticipate in the march, the heart of Take Back the Night, is synonymous to telling men they play an unimportant part in stranger rape prevention and can do little to mitigate the rape culture - in short, it is synonymous to saying empowerment requires women only. And, of course, the purpose of this march is empowerment - empowerment in the sense that this is one night where both men and women will not be attacked. These people are united by a common cause-rape preven- tion. Following the rape of a male which occurred under the West Engineering Arch during Spring Break, the University commu- nity was awakened by a rude shock. No matter how much more prevalent rape of women is to rape of men, men are raped, sometimes bru- tally. Disallowing men to participate in this empowerment march is a snub to those men who have also been victims of sexual assault. We believe that the purpose of any sort of protest march is to assemble people of all races, sexes, nationalities and religions, and allow them to proclaim their disgust at a particular unjust thing or event. The Take Back the Night march, in part, is a protest march; it is protesting against a major rip in the fabric of our society known as sexual assault. But we recognize that for many women Take Back the Night is more than a political statement, it is literally the only night of the year that they feel safe walking in the street. This is why we can understand the compromise that maintains the march as women only for the majority of the time. We all hold a common interest in ridding our nation of rape, regardless of our indi- vidual genders. Rape doesn't just affect the victim; it affects us all. Simply consider your reactions if you'd just learned that your sister, mother or grandmother was raped. All people who have an interest in ending rape must be allowed to participate in the march. No single group of people can halt incidences of rape on its own. To end rape, a collective effort must be made by all people of all backgrounds. No one can be segregated from the fight. Fortu- nately, the AACAR has realized this fact and has agreed to allow men to march for the last 10 minutes. All Take Back the Night events are to be held on April 9. All people are invited - women and men. Please attend! Let the Uni- versity community's voice be heard through- out the nation, proclaiming that sexual assault has no place in our midst. We encourage all to participate in the march. In this way, women and men together may march sexual violence off this campus and out of our society. r° 2Kt L 1' tL.I'' I-I- New MSA.Cityr retionship New MSA liaison to forge better ties with City Council Elementary education needs more creativity To the Daily: I am pleased that Michigan has begun to push the issue of education to the front of the agenda. But I am disgusted that the debate has focused on "how to fund the schools," and not, "how to make them better." Granted, schools need money to exist and to run, but why continue to fund programs that prove to be a failure. Why continue to purchase textbooks that are used for memorization rather than for applying a lesson to everyday events? And why continue to pay for unnecessary paperwork, which is time consuming and costly? The issue should not be funding and it should not be schools of choice. Why avoid the problem when we are given the opportunity to fix it. We can improve the curriculum by making education fun and exciting. In the high schools let's make learning practical, with members of the business and civic communities teaching studentsabout accounting, marketing, business and government. In addition, certain curriculum besides government and driver's education should be mandatory. Elementary education should be creative. Take students to the zoo and have them count the animals and spell their names. As teachers give students "report cards," the students should do the same to their teachers. There should be several teacher, administrator and school evaluations done by the students. Lastly, parents need to get involved with their child's education. They need to do homework together and have a genuine concern and interest as to what their child learns. Let's get back on track and start thinking about our future and the future of the next generation. DANIEL CHERRIN LSA junior To the Daily: The undersigned strongly condemn the massacre that took place in Hebron, the occupied West Bank, on Friday, Feb. 25, 1994, which resulted in the killing of 48 Palestinians, and the subsequent killing of 30 others by Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). We mourn the loss of life that has occurred in Hebron and in other Palestinian communities in the days since Friday and extend our condolences to the families of those killed. Prime Minister Rabin's claim that this was "the deranged action of a lunatic individual" is simply not true. Baruch Goldstein was a radical member of the extremist Kahane organization and a local leader of the Kach movement represented in the Israeli Parliament; both groups advocate the expulsion of all Arabs from Palestine and the use of force to accomplish this task. Dr. Goldstein was not insane. Nor was he alone in his actions or in his blatantly racist, anti-Arab fundamentalist ideology-- a direct extension of the overt anti-Arab sentiments flourishing in Israeli society. This society arms settlers and gives them the right to fire on unarmed Palestinians. It has tolerated violence by Israelis against Arabs while cracking down severely on Arab protests. Palestinians as a group are denied human and national rights and instead are stereotyped as irrational terrorists or religious fundamentalists, conveniently invalidating their legitimate claims to their historical homeland. Israeli society has fostered attacks on the humanity of Arabs, their lives and property by consistently failing to condemn the violence perpetrated against Arabs living under 46 years of military occupation. Israeli society has not confronted this racism because it has not had to pay its price. While several UN resolutions have been passed condemning Israel for its continued occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and its human rights violations, they have gone unheeded by Israel, and the international community has not taken any steps to implement them. We believe that there is an immediate need to send an International peacekeeping force to the Occupied Territory to ensure the safety of the Palestinian population, both from the Israeli settlers and the soldiers of the Israeli Defense Force. We demand that the Israeli authorities immediately disarm the settlers, permanently halt new settlement construction and begin to dismantle them, in the interests of a just and lasting peace. A thorough investigation must be conducted into the events in Hebron. Specifically we wish to know why an armed settler was allowed to enter the mosque; why soldiers stationed in and around the mosque did not intervene to stop a shooting spree that reportedly lasted several minutes during which the gunman was able reload his weapon at least 3 times (he changed 4 magazines) and throw 3 grenades into the crowd; and how many other settlers or soldiers were involved in the mass murders (Palestinian survivors of the massacre have testified that Goldstein was not the only man shooting at them). Finally, in light of the continuing violence in the aftermath of the massacre we demand that the Israeli military halt the killing of Palestinians under the guise of "controlling the riots" and adhere to all international laws and conventions regarding treatment of inhabitants under occupation. Events such as the massacre will continue to occur as long as the Palestinian people are denied their legitimate right to self- determination and a sovereign Palestinian state. Israel, armed and financed by the US, receives up to $6 billion in US tax payers' money, interest free, every year to fuel this injustice. Israel must be made to heed calls from the world community to conform with international law and end its military occupation of Palestine, in the interests of a just and lasting peace. ARAB-AMERICAN STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION In the aftermath of the Hebron massacre Generadional struggles revealed in songs of old In the back of one of my rarely used dresser drawers lies my secret shame - 10 tapes labeled "High School Experiences (1984-1989)." I go there in search of memories -4 some snippet of a song I heard long ago at an awkward high school dance or blaring from the windows of my old 1978 Oldsmobile Cutlass Cruiser station wagon, long gone to scrap metal. (As my brother put it when he finally inherited it, "Fake wood paneling drives women wild.") I hadn't listened to these tapes in a few years, and I popped them into m tape player only to discover that I had forgotten what insipid drivel most '80s music was. Had I actually liked this saccharine-sweet ear candy at one point in my life? I guess I had, but then I hadn't really discovered any music that truly spoke to me until I turned on my Walkman one summer day in 1992 to find that my favorite "Best of the '80s and today!" station in Chicago had changed its format t "alternative rock." What had once been underground "campus rock" had hit the big time, and Michael Bolton didn't have a chance with me once I heard Pearl Jam, TheThe and Matthew Sweet. Last week I touched on the larger concerns that our generation (Generation X; the 13th generation) have had to deal with throughout ou lives. But there are a lot of things out there in pop culture and social life that haven't been addressed by the mainstream press-alternative music is just the least among them. Though it has not been mentioned much, we are the first U.S. generation this century which has notbeen drafted to fight in a war. Unless you count the six brief weeks of the Gulf War, the United States has not been at war at any point in our conscious memory (if you're a little older, you might be able to remember Vietnam, but probably not much.) As Kurt Vonnegut has said, we all need "puberty rites" to pass into adulthood, and "ordinarily history will provide you with one, which is a war."Weneverhad puberty rites or really anything to challenge u - and trying to find MTV on the new cable system doesn't count. On the other hand, we were forced to grow up fast in an adult world of divorce and mothers working to make ends meet. Though we haven't fought a war(or perhaps because we haven't) we saw enough harsh reality as children to give our music and writing a decidedly negative bent. Just compare the love-and-happiness pop of the '80s (Madonna singing "Star Light, Star Bright" or Rick Astley crooning"Togetherforever, and never apart") to the dark reality of Pearl Jam ("Daddy didn't give attention/To the fact that Mommy didn't care /Jeremy spoke in class today.") To those of you who don't know the song, Jeremy "spoke" by blowing his head off during class. Alternative music is a little more cautious about love, a little less trusting of relationships - just like the kids who listen to it. We might have swallowed all of the stuff about loving forever when we were in junior high and high school, but now we are more likely to agree with Counting Crows: "Every time she sneezes I believe it's love / and Oh lord, I'm not ready fo' this sort of thing ..." We also approach relationships quite differently from older Americans, who experienced the transitions of the feminist movement and who weren't allowed in the dorm room (or even the dorm) of a member of the opposite sex. Most of us were born after the watershed of the feminist movement (about 1968-1971), an the object of our infatuation is likely to be the girl who lives two doors down from us and we see in the bathroom every morning, not the guy we caught a glance of from afar. Having grown up on "Free to Be You and Me," women of our oI } Today, when problems such as assault, inadequate lighting and noise violations trouble both University students and the year- long residents of Ann Arbor, the Michigan Student Assembly and the Ann Arbor City Council can come together to confront real problems of concern to both. In the past, communication lines between MSA and the City Council have been poor. However, the adversarial and confrontational relationship of the muddied past has hopefully been left behind, symbolized by Andrew Wright's (the newly appointed MSA liaison to city council) recent discussions with the City Council. His visit was much needed, for it reopened the lines of communication between councilmembers and MSA representatives. It is an absolute must that the City Council take into consideration the concerns of stu- dents. Council members must be responsible and cognizant of student concerns and inter- ests because students are an important part of the Ann Arbor community, and deserve rep- resentation. At the same time, City Council members understandably focus the crux of their attention on voters. With the passage of the pro-student VINE initiative in November of 1992, City Council elections now occur during the school year - students must uti- lize this newly-found opportunity to demand representation. Wright and MSA can play a vital role in this student awakening, and Wright has a few good ideas to start with: to improve lighting along Washtenaw Avenue by changing the lights from amber to white lighting (sur- rounding housing areas and the athletic cam- pus); to rethink zoning laws related to frater- nities, sororities, family status and occupancy; to cooperate with the city on maintaining the Rock at its current home in George Washing- ton Park; and to open lines of bilateral com- munication between MSA and the city on all issues concerning the University community Mayor Ingrid B. Sheldon was pleased with Wright's overtures and on March 2, she spoke to MSA - encouraging students to take responsibility for themselves, but also adding that the city council would help when- ever possible. Concerning the issue of inad- equate lighting, Sheldon said that funding for improved lighting would be expensive, but that proportional funding from City Council and the University would improve the lights -- making the streets safer for students and residents. In the past, violentncrimes, muggings and rapes have caused students to push for and demand better street lighting. Little ac- tion was taken until now - now there is an arrangement in the planning stages to fund the new lights. Sheldon also encouraged students to work together with Ann Arbor residents to find a "peace zone" in response to noise violations and other disagreements between students and non -student neighbors. In response to the Rock, Sheldon advised students not to renew old fights: "Have your fun, do it in a reason- able manner, and go on." Sheldon said that Wright's visit to City Council has renewed the lines of communi- cation and that Council members and MSA representatives need to keep in touch to ad- dress issues of mutual concern. MSA Presi- dent Craig Greenberg concluded the meet- ing: "We look forward to strengthening our relationship." MSA should be congratulated on taking the initiative to work with City Council. Mayor Sheldon should be applauded in her effort to take the concerns of students seriously. MSA needs to continue to work with the city in tackling the problems that confront the University campus. The joint cooperation of MSA and City Council offi- cials is a much needed reconciliation, for it brings together two very important political groups that have much to accomplish. Windsor, Ontario review severely flawed To the Daily: A critique of Windsor made your list of Spring Break get-aways recently (2/ 3/94). I would have let your writer's litany of errors pass, except that they show a fundamental misunderstanding of things Windsorian, Ontarian and Canadian. Sorry, but the Anyway, they don't meet you at the toll. You pay on the U.S. side first. Wherever did you hear Windsor's "reputation for having the best Chinese restaurants in North America?" better than Toronto's (with five China towns), or San Francisco's? You talk of strip bars. You say that "the truly unique feature of Windsor, though, is its liberal drinking laws," but that "for some ludicrous Canadian reason, once the clock strikes one ... the bars and clubs close..." In both cases, the wrong - jurisdiction is identified. It's Ontario which sets the drinking age at 19. Province- it