4 -- The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 15, 1994 cab e £biau &i ilg t 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JESSIE HALLADAY Editor in Chief SAM GOODSTEIN FLINT WAINESS Editorial Page Editors 'I thought that kind of activity died with the beginning of AIDS.' -Maureen Hartford, responding to a question about a recent Daily story on the Mason Hall bathrooms 1 .AG1 ,E RN . '.a-I ^t- ~. A 1t J Hfr -.,4 "Jh 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. i-SI Holocaust revisionism Bogus revisionist ads should not run -+ _ l /, "=., . - (^ J N .. / i? 'OQ '+'/ y I' a V -' r- _.... sf'"'Z' , , 4 f r r .; t , '% . _ _ . .. _ tee.,*--._ , . _ ....----"-_ --- ... 4.7 " S poradically throughout the past two months, advertisements have appeared in this newspaper calling attention to "revi- sionist radio" programs, or other broadcasts that challenge the existence of the Holo- caust. Predictably, these ads are not exclu- sive to The Michigan Daily - they are cropping up on college campuses through- out the nation. The fact that these programs espouse lies, anti-Semitism and hate should go without saying. The Holocaust was real, and there are millions of dead Jews, gypsies, homosexuals and others to attest to the atroci- ties and attempted genocide of Nazi Ger- many. What does not go without saying is the fact that this propaganda has made its way onto the pages of mainstream college newspapers. Before passing judgment on these adver- tisements, a distinction must be drawn be- tween advertisements and opinion/editorial pieces. An op/ed page, specifically the one at this newspaper, is a forum for the commu- nity, a place where different viewpoints are aired ---but the space on the page is not paid for. An advertisement is a commodity, a piece of property, so-to-speak. Business staffs, which are separate from editorial staffs, commonly reject advertisements for a variety of reasons, without justification. It is, of course, the right of the publication to do so, and it is not censorship - nor is it unethical - to reject an ad. With this in mind, the publication of these ads in the Daily, and in other publications throughout the nation, is unacceptable. Holocaust revisionists such as Bradley Smith and Ernst Zundel, the purveyor of these hate-infested "revisionist" radio and television ads, flock to campuses because they believe that editors and publishers of college publications are potential outlets for their views. Their reasoning is that college students are more likely to ignore the facts in the name of rebellion, more likely to place spurious notions of the marketplace of ideas over common sense. Unfortunately, this hap- pens all-too-often. By condemning the running of these ads, are we embracing the notion of absolute truths? No, our eyes are still our only true guides; a forum for any notion, no matter how zany, still our only true goal. But there comes a time when a line needs to be drawn, when the reality of a newspaper's limita- tions must be realized. The Ernst Zundel-sponsored ads are a perfect example. The ads themselves do not seem to be tinged with hate. They merely ask questions, and potential listeners can tune in to decide for themselves about the merits of the program. But this is precisely why the ads are so insidious. The latest one begins with a simple question: "Did Presi- dent Roosevelt know that Pearl Harbor was going to be attacked?" This question falls well within the bounds of historical revi- sionism, which is an accepted field in academia. However, the ad then degener- ates into questions such as, "Did the Ameri- can and British governments 'dream up' the Nazi gas chamber and extermination camp stories ...?" The answer is no. The Holocaust is per- haps the most well-documented crime against humanity in the history of the world. The Nazis were proud of their attempts at genocide, and recorded their horrors -- including the gas chambers - for all the world to see. That is, all the world that wanted to see. On a recent episode of "60 Minutes," Zundel proved that his theories are based on bigotry and lies as he disregarded tapes from Himmler himself admitting the existence of the gas chambers at the Nazi death camps. Holocaust education is finally on the rise across the nation. There is no worse time than the present to begin turning a blind eye to reality. Newspapers across the country need not give credibility to the incredulous. Learn the rules, MSA Dean answers Comm dept. charges To the Daily: Your editorials concerning the Department of Communications contain numerous factual errors and misleading assertions. In "Purging, with tenure," your statement about breaking up the Department is very misleading. There has been no decision to "break up" the Department. An advisory committee with a broad charge will study the final mission and structure of the Department, but by no means will it be restricted to the option of breaking it up. You imply that faculty can be promoted or not at whim. Promotion decisions focus on faculty members' past, present and expected accomplishments in teaching, research and service. The debate about the Department's mission never arose in recent promotion cases. You allege a "purge of popular culture" LS&A. Our support for the study of popular culture through appointments, promotions and resources is clear and will continue. When a candidate for promotion is not successful, we often authorize that the position be filled in the same field of inquiry. You cite statistics on promotion rates in our three divisions. By adding to these statistics instances of assistant professors who were not recommended for promotion by their departments, the difference in promotion rates between the natural sciences and the social sciences and humanity largely disappears. The remaining overall differences Think of other standardized test biases To the Daily: Ms. Twenge, you seem to have hit on some very interesting points about the SAT. However, before you crucify ETS for writing a biased test perhaps you should consider more carefully the real reasons why women, minorities and the poor do statitically worse on the SAT. Areas with more money can afford better schools with better college prep programs. School districts with less money are not as capable at producing students who are well prepared for entrance exams. Also, because many of America's minorities are flv r-rrarnantA n nil. are about five percentage points, not evidence of significant differences in promotion rates. Your second editorial, "Chaos in the Comm. dept." refers to a "multimillion dollar lab ... collecting dust." The appearance of such a fanciful member is a mystery, and is a vast overestimate of space renovation cost. The only dust involved is from current work to convert the space into a Laboratory for Mass Communications Research. As to Shira Orion's appointment, to recruit faculty to the University, we must often try to find employment for their partners, through teaching, research or administrative appointments or by working with a search firm to find non-academic employment. Ms. Orion was qualified for admission to the Law School and well-qualified for the TA position. Law School students are appointed as TAs in other courses in the College, so this appointment set no precedent. TAs are used regularly in her assigned course, so a commitment of new resources was not required. Her performance as a TA was very positive. The tuition waiver and stipend were guided by the GEO contract and were the same compensation other non- resident TAs receive. The appointment was neither unusual nor unethical. We have tried to build a Communication department comparable in quality to all LSA departments. In the mid-1980s we decided to expand tenure-track faculty and in 1990 to seek an outside chair, with the full backing of the Department faculty. We anticipated that children to schools that may not be as good at preparing students for SAT type tests. Lastly, concerningwomen, I have seen documentaries on "60 Minutes," and "20/20" that are showing that as early as elementary school, female students may experience a form of sexual bias from their teachers (male and female). This reasoning would place the blame on an imperfect world where, hopefully, everyday people everywhere are taking steps to correct the problems of racial, sexual and economic inequality. That is why we have scholarships directed towards minorities, the poor and women. Until such a time when we are truly equal, Universities must use the best tools available to determine who is the best and the brightest. tenure-track faculty would grow as the new chair led efforts to produce a plan to shape the Department's future. Unfortunately, these efforts failed to produce a plan with broad support. This failure was an important factor in Prof. Malamuth's decision to leave. The Department has not been micromanaged. We asked for a planning document (required of all units) that would guide important investments in faculty and programs. Despite several years of trying, the Department could not produce such a plan. This fact, coupled with governance problems and the absence of senior leadership by faculty, led me to appoint an interim chair from outside the Department. A faculty advisory committee, with Departmental representation, will advise me and our Executive Committeedabout the future mission and organization of the Department. Given its current state, I seen no alternative. You characterize Prof. Malamuth's work as being about "pornography, not communication." His work is very much about communication, in this case about the links between the content of messages transmitted through mass communications and dispositions toward sexual violence against women. Your trivializing characterization of work that addresses an issue of major importance in society was the last in a long list of mistaken facts and judgements that made your editorials a sad example of the editorial art. EIE GOWDENBERG Dean of LSA When they are dead, we wil be free To the Daily: They say Kurt Cobain is the spokesperson of our generation. They also say he is, or was, the first of our generation to "burn out" instead of fading away in the tradition of Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin from the Sixties. They being the New York Times, MTV and anyone else who claims to be a spokesperson of Generation X, or whatever it is. If that is true, and I think it is, I welcome the future. Soon, those people that so many worship, ie. Eddie Vedder, Evan Dando, Juliana Hatfield, the ugly guy from the Spin Doctors, etc., will be dead. And when they are, we will be free. Goodbye... Twas the weeks before graduation And all throughout the 'U' Not a regent was raising tuition Believe it or not - it's true! All of the seniors were restless Tossing and turning in their beds While visions of high-paying jobs Danced provokingly through their heads. Many thought about their futures The road soon to be taken Others (like myself) wax nostalgic About the women they have foresaken. So gather around, boys and girls Prepare to be dazzled by my wit If you would rather be reading something else For you I have two words: tough shit It all began in Mary Markley A naive, skinny kid from the West Befriended by Hadas & Feiglin & Bittens He was soon put to the test. He met a girl with hair of gold (Heather S.) Whose breasts he was thrilled to touch But in a month he got the pink slip "From now on," she said, "you're going dutch." 4 He then met Flam & 'Chelle & Parker & Ellis & Powers The female friends he so did seek They told him why he wasn't getting girls "Jeremy," they said, "you're just a geek." So he spoke to Ron Meisler & Dan Berkove The guys who got all the "chicks" "It's easy," they explained, "just get 'em drunk And tell them you work at Rick's. My problems would be over if I rushed, he thought A fraternity would be the key But as Cary Latimer would help to illustrate This is by no means a guarantee. "Cut your hair," said Matt Suskin "Learn your sports," said Wish and Vandrielm, "What I think you really need," advised Goldsmith, "Is a low-fat, protein packed meal" He fell in love with Liorr Kierkut But then he tumbled off the horse Once again, he searched for advice Who could get him back on course? He found some solace in his friend Brad Miller The man he admired the most "Read books," he said, "you'll expand your head And to the ladies you will soon be host." He was Grateful for his friend Ar "Jeremy," he said, "you're one desperate dude." "I agree,"said Kush, "he hates to ski And does things in the nude." So he bought himself a Firmflex Tried slicking back his hair He even played with the "alternative" look But the women - they didn't care. "Smoke a bowl," said Arash "Get a job," said Topopo Ian said, "Let's get some wings." But then, out of the blue, his dreams came true, the doorbell rang - "Cha-ching!" Now, Ronit! now, Rachael! now, Marcy and Heather! (They told him that his body was as light as a feather) On, Aela! on, Heather F.! on, Robin and Amy! (On whom I always had a big crush- can you really blame me?) He went out with Andee Weissman But soon, she was calling him "Satan' And Jeremy, now done, was back to square one Once again masturbatin'. So while we're watching Cathy What's-Her-Name Give us her little shpiel About shonnine malls and men's F] I 0 0 disturbing trend became apparent dur- n g Tuesday night's MSA meeting -MSA leaders are more concerned with their own political agendas than the representation of the community. The controversy began over three weeks ago when supporters of the Ann Arbor Ten- ants' Union (AATU) came to an MSA meet- ing to speak of their concerns. MSA was considering withdrawing the tenants' union's funding, and they desired to defend their organization. After 30 minutes of debate, then MSA President Craig Greenberg an- nounced the end of constituent's time, and the meeting proceeded without further com- ment from AATU constituents. Amidst an immediate outcry by Assembly proponents of the AATU, Greenberg then quickly ended the meeting and the issue dis- sipated for the time being. Three weeks later, on Tuesday night, new President JulieNeenan attempted to endspeak- ers' minutes again after 30 minutes. How- ever, who should protest but former President Craig Greenberg, who claimed that anyone who read the MSA Compiled Code - the student government's operatingrules-would realize that speakers' minutes were actually 60 minutes and not the 30 minutes he had allowed just two meetings earlier. Clearly, constituent's time was as long as was politi- cally expedient for Greenberg. The Assembly treated Greenberg's com- ment as a joke and erupted in laughter. Sym- bolically, MSA was also laughing at student concerns and its own ineptness for several explicit reasons. their own rules and operating procedures. The Compiled Code directly states that speakers' minutes are to last for 60 minutes. During the AATU debate controversy, then, not only did the President and Vice Presi- dent of the Assembly disregard MSA rules, but all other Assembly members who did not protest the decision were equally at fault. There is no reason for this blatant ignorance of the rules. Moreover, the excuses of the Assembly members are weak at best, and it appears that Greenberg's action was a blatant abuse of power. True, he has the authority to run MSA meetings, but during the AATU debate, he structured the meeting around his own ideo- logical beliefs. It was disheartening to see Greenberg-and the rest of the Assembly- simply laugh off this abuse at Tuesday's meeting. Constituent's time is designed to facilitate communication between MSA-the student government -and the community. By sim- ply invalidating speakers' minutes, the As- sembly is essentially telling the community they do not play an important role in MSA. Thus, representation by Assembly members and student access to MSA is hindered. When the student government on campus is not representative and accessible to all, questions of legitimacy inevitably arise. Finally, the new leadership of President Julie Neenan and Vice President Jacob Stern must also be criticized. They too did not comprehend MSA rules, and were corrected by a former Assembly member in the process. While they have the opportunity to institute important change in MSA and on campus, 0 0 I I