Zbe 3idllan Bali MICHAEL ROSENBERG Roses Are Read oesn't it offend you to be called a racist?" a friend asked me this week. Uh, yes, actually. I have been called a lot of names in my lifetime. Most were trivial insults 'the "geek"-"loser"-"dork" variety. is week, protesters have added "racist" to the mix, claiming that The Michigan Daily systematically discriminates against minorities. Well. Having been in charge of this system, I am more than a little insulted by the accusation. But not surprised. There is a certain contin- gent of people on this campus that likes to protest, and a certain contin- St that likes to find fault with a ything and everything in the Daily. When those two forces collide, accusations fly across the Diag. When I saw that the president-elect of the College Republicans was protesting alongside members of Alianza, I realized that we have truly managed to piss everybody off. Or have we? The situation's preposterousness brings its legitimacy into question. Is *ossible for the Daily to hold 'ibera viewpoints," as the aforemen- tioned College GOP man claimed, and also to "censor people of color," as another protester argued? I wonder how many political issues these people agree on. I also wonder if it matters. Calling the Daily a bastion of liberal viewpoints is one thing. Throwing around accusations 'racism is quite another story - that threatens to belittle more serious racial problems. If you accuse a newspaper of institutional racism because of a quote or a cartoon, perceptive people who read that same newspaper are going to raise their eyebrows. And they may raise them again if you accuse a police officer of beating you because of the color of your skin - even if that charge is warranted. veryone has the right to protest, ut not everyone is right to protest. It says something that some people are more concerned with a Daily cartoonist's opposition to affirmative action than the presumptive nominee of the Republican Party's opposition to that same social initiative. And holding that view doesn't make either man a racist. If we are going to define racism as being opposed to affirma- *e action, then are we going to define drug addicts as people who believe marijuana should be legal- ized? Besides, some would note that The Michigan Daily has on numerous occasions come out in support of affirmative action. Should the Daily insist that its columnists and cartoon- ists all share the same political views as its editorial board? I'm not going to waste your time Oking about the steps that have been taken to increase the number of minorities at the Daily. Critics will argue that these steps were not enough - and they may be right. But there is a huge difference between being racist and not doing as much as you can to increase the number of minorities in your workplace. Members of Alianza opposed the ily's use of an anonymous quote in ich a member of their group was alleged to have stolen 8,700 Dailys last week. Fair enough. But now that the accuser has come forward and the accused has been named, will those same protesters try to find out if the thief is in fact a member of their group? Racism is an immense problem in our society, but it is not as dangerous ehreat to our freedom as the triction of speech. Without free public discourse, social progress is impossible, and racism (not to mention sexism and classism and homophobia) cannot be challenged. Without free public discourse, we would have no integration, or voting rights laws, or minimum wage. These social improvements, once the beliefs of a vocal minority, are now accepted # an important and necessary mponents of life in the United States. Come to think of it, without free public discourse, there would be no United States. The freedom to air unpopular views has been more valuable to this country than any social program or Ginsberg, Patti Smith to perform at Hill Auditorium By James Wilson, Daily Books Editor Patti Smith will Join Allen Ginsberg at Hill Auditorium tomorrow nigh' Allen Ginsberg, whose influences range from Bob Dylan to Walt Whitman, captures life and spirituality in his poetry. U.S. is 'beat' in the sense of realizing that the era of American imperialism and prosperity is over. The decline of empire begins and people have to adjust to that." Thus, the proclamations of Ginsberg, Gary Snyder and his other contemporaries have, to some extent, proved true. Ginsberg will give further examples of his politics when he reads his new poem "The Ballad of The Skeletons." It is a rock'n'roll poem that will be publicly set to music for the first time at Hill. The poem is intended to eventually be recorded and released as a single. He was quick, when asked, to trace the origin of music in his poetry. Unlike your typical singing poet, Ginsberg can claim his composing began with lessons from Bob Dylan. "When I started writing songs (in 1968) ... Dylan taught me three-chord blues form ... (laughs) It was.really simple- minded, I didn't know anything about what I was doing except that I liked to sing in the shower like everybody else." Ginsberg went on to compose music for William Blake's "Songs of Innocence and Experience" and eventu- ally to record with such bands as The Clash. The results of this can be found in his CD collection, released last year, titled "Holy Soul Jelly Roll: Poems & Songs 1949-1993." But Ginsberg's work is hardly limited to songs and lyrics. The reading at Hill will demonstrate his prowess at Allen Ginsberg, poet laureate of the Beat Genera- tion, comes to Hill Auditorium April 5 for the third year in a row, to do a benefit reading for Jewel Heart, a Tibetan Buddhist organization. In addition to the reading, Ginsberg will be signing copies of his books (including a newly released edition of "Journals Mid-Fifties 1954-1958") at Shaman Drum Book Shop on April 6. The reading comes at the end of an extensive tour through Europe, where translations of his most recent book, "Cos- mopolitan Greetings," have been published. His tour through sense of distance was most clear. He does not simply trace the movements of the political world in even his most political poetry. "It's more a picture of my own mind, really. You know, I might have sex, politics, meditation, metaphysical stuff, intimate thoughts, worst-case worries about who Iam, how I'll die and how I'm living on my mind ... On the other hand, like any normal person, politics goes through my head." While never completely losing his detachment, Ginsberg is more than willing to give his honest opinion on the state