| Wayne 
              State University: Govenors over turn Student Council vote to divest 
              from Israel
 Three articles on the subject, first a background 
              piece, then the victory vote and finally the govenors over turning 
              the vote   Divestment 
              WSU By Shemon SalamThe South End (official student newspaper of WSU)
 26 September 2002
 
 Across the nation, socially conscious students are pushing their 
              respective universities to divest from Israel. The divestment campaign 
              is now beginning at Wayne State University and is sure to bring 
              in a slew of attacks from conservatives, Zionists and defenders 
              of the status quo that this campaign is anti-Semitic.   The notion of the divestment campaign is very simple and precise. 
              It stems from the divestment campaign in the '80s in South Africa. 
              The premise is that because universities divested from South Africa 
              since it was an apartheid state, they should likewise divest from 
              Israel - since it, too, is an apartheid state.   The argument that Israel is an apartheid state is a convincing 
              one, and to those who put the spectra of anti-Semitism to this article, 
              it should be noted that at no point are Jews themselves being criticized, 
              but instead it is the policies of the Israeli Government that are 
              under criticism.   One quick example of how the Israeli Government disenfranchises 
              Israeli-Arab citizens in a similar fashion that Southern states 
              marginalized   African-Americans before the Civil Rights legislations of the 
              1960s is a look at how the state funds child support. This year 
              the Israeli Knesset passed legislation that children whose parents 
              did not serve in the army will receive a 24 percent cut in allowance 
              from the state. Now this piece of legislation largely applies to 
              Arab-citizens who are exempt from military service. Children of 
              Jewish ultra-orthodox parents who do not serve in the military will 
              also receive the cuts, but they are eligible for subsidies, including 
              educational supplements, not available to Palestinian children. 
              Now lets change the names from Arab-citizens to blacks and Jews 
              to whites and look at the reaction. If this was a Black and White 
              issue, it would be branded as racist. So why isn't the same analysis 
              used when it is Arabs? This was the same tactic used by the U.S. 
              government in disempowering African Americans during the passage 
              of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments - give them illusionary rights 
              on paper, but strip them of everything in practice, as it is currently 
              being done with the Palestinian children. Zama Coursen-Neff, counsel 
              to the Children's Rights Division of Human Rights Watch, said, "Palestinian 
              Arab children are the poorest in Israel, with the least access to 
              education. These cuts will disadvantage them even more."   Is it not a tactic of societies in the past been to keep the oppressed 
              population illiterate? Isn't Israel doing exactly this - maintaining 
              a whole generation of Palestinian children who will not be able 
              to defend themselves in the court of law, gain economic independence, 
              and fight for their freedom through peaceful means.   Coming back to divestment, it means in its simplest form: to disinvest. 
              Applying this to Wayne State means pulling out the university's 
              $21,592,000 (a figure that comes right from WSU's financial department) 
              tied to the Israeli economy. This money is the tuition money from 
              the students, which the university in turn invests in American companies 
              that invest in Israel.   It is a simple strategy with a simpler focus - justice.   Locally students at Wayne State have started A.N.S.W.E.R. and 
              a Web site (answerwayne.org), which is a good source of information 
              regarding socially conscious events that are going on at Wayne State, 
              nationally, and in the Metro-Detroit area.  The following months, groups like A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop 
              War and End Racism), and the Arab Student Association will be pressuring 
              the Student Council and the administration to sell all investments 
              tied to the Israeli government.   The campaign has already begun, but its public inauguration so 
              to speak is on Oct. 1, where students will be rallying in front 
              of the Undergraduate Library at 11:30 a.m. The protest will march 
              through campus and eventually drop off a petition signed by students 
              and concerned citizens demanding the university divest from Israel 
              to President Irvin D. Reid in the Faculty Administration Building. 
              Students across the nation are standing up for justice and demanding 
              it from their universities, that they end this racist practice of 
              supporting unjust governments around the world. Hopefully, divesting 
              from Israel will be the first step in fighting injustice on the 
              road to a better world.  
   Student 
              Council votes to divest from Israel By Cheryl Labash, DetroitWorkers World Service Newspaper
 May 1, 2003
 
 The Wayne State University Student Council has demanded that the 
              university divest all funds from and prohibit any transactions with 
              companies that do business in Israel. The 9 to 7 vote resulted from 
              a campaign by the Students Movement for Justice (SMJ), which was 
              kicked off last fall at the beginning of the academic year. The 
              WSU Student Council action appears to be the first time that a resolution 
              proposed by this new movement in solidarity with the Palestinian 
              people has been enacted.  UAW Local 2322 at the University of Massachusetts has passed a 
              resolution supporting divestment and active campaigns to end the 
              illegal Israeli military occupation of Pales tin ian land are growing 
              on many campuses, including the state universities of North Carolina, 
              Massa chu setts, Florida, Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, California, 
              Minnesota, Penn syl vania and Virginia, as well as Col umbia/Barnard, 
              Rutgers, Prince ton, Tufts and Yale. The WSU resolution points out that "Israel was a long-time, 
              close ally" of the racist apartheid regime in South Africa 
              overthrown by the African National Congress. It states, "African 
              Archbishop Desmond Tutu has urged us all to divest from Israel due 
              to its violent and humiliating apartheid policies." In addition to the divest from Israel campaign, the SMJ has led 
              many on-campus demonstrations against the U.S. war on Iraq. Wayne 
              State Uni ver sity has investments in military profiteers like General 
              Electric, Boeing, United Techno logies, Gen eral Motors and Dow 
              Chemical, as well as the hated symbols of globalization, McDonald's 
              and Coca-Cola.  
   
              
                | Text 
                    of Student Resolution "WHEREAS, the Student Council of Wayne State University 
                    has grave misgivings about financing violent ethnic cleansing, 
                    racially directed against millions of occupied Palestinian 
                    civilians, who are both innocent and helpless,  "WHEREAS, those millions of Palestinians suffer long-term 
                    malnutrition, are surrounded by Israeli army bulldozers, tanks, 
                    soldiers, and by jet bombers, all of which have killed thousands 
                    of occupied Palestinians,  "WHEREAS, on Sunday, March 16, 2003, an American college 
                    student, Rachel Corrie, was killed in plain sight, while dressed 
                    in bright orange, while waving, and while shouting at an Israeli 
                    Army bulldozer through a megaphone, by that same Israeli Army 
                    bulldozer, in the Occupied Gaza Strip,  "WHEREAS, that Israeli Army bulldozer ran her over twice, 
                   "WHEREAS, South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu has 
                    urged us all to divest from Israel due to its violent and 
                    humiliating apartheid policies,  "WHEREAS, Israel was a long-time, close ally of White 
                    Apartheid South Africa,  "WHEREAS, the Wayne State University Board of Governors 
                    ("the Board") has knowledge of University investments, 
                    including what governments our University is paying taxes 
                    to by means of investment, and has the authority to seek such 
                    information from its fund managers,  "THEREFORE IT IS RESOLVED, that we ask the Board to 
                    immediately divest (dis-invest) our university from Israel, 
                   "THEREFORE IT IS FURTHER RESOLVED, that we ask the Board 
                    for a report this semester, on its progress in divesting the 
                    University from its investments in Israel, including divestment 
                    from all companies doing business in Israel, and divestment 
                    from all stocks and pension funds which include those companies."
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   WSU 
              Board of Governors voted against divestment  Wonetha Jackson, Editor-in-Chief The South End (official student newspaper of WSU)
 May 5 2003
 
 The Wayne State University Board of Governors unanimously voted 
              down last week Student Council's resolution recommending the university 
              divest funding from companies giving financing support to Israel.  WSU President Irvin Reid said last fall that he would not divest 
              . BOG Chair Paul Massaron said the resolution lacked "non-intellectual 
              dialogue" and is an issue the WSU student body should stay 
              away from.  BOG member Richard Bernstein agreed, while congratulating the 
              board for its swiftness and professionalism on voting against the 
              resolution.  "This kind of distraction during a potentially massive budget 
              cut is not appropriate," Bernstein said. "I feel voting 
              for something like this makes us seem anti-semantic and many people 
              in legislature feel the same way too. In a time of massive potential 
              budget cuts to this university, the one thing you don't want to 
              do is anger the legislature the appropriations committee who's voting 
              on how much money we should receive."  Last month, the Student Council , with a nine-to-seven support, 
              voted to adopt the resolution recommending the university divest 
              from Israeli apartheid. The resolution stated, "the Student 
              Council of WSU has grave misgivings about financing violent ethnic 
              cleansing, racially directed against millions of occupied Palestinian 
              civilians who are both innocent and helpless."  The campaign ,started in fall 2002 by WSU Students Movement for 
              Justice, was one of hundreds operating nationally asking universities 
              to divest funding from business that have investments in Israel.  But WSU student council was the only university in the nation 
              that voted in support of the resolution.  With the university facing rehauling due to budget cuts, Bernstein 
              said even considering a resolution of this manner is contrary to 
              the needs of the student body.  "This resolution shows you how disconnected the Student Council 
              is with the rest of the student body," Bernstein said. "Instead 
              of voting against how the university may have to cut vital programs 
              and resources, they are voting on resolutions that don't matter 
              to the students that go here."  No student tuition dollars are invested. But divestment would 
              hurt student scholarships and special programs, said John Davis, 
              Vice President of Finance and Administration.  Davis said last month it would be difficult for WSU to divest 
              form its investments with dozens of multinational companies, which 
              would mean a considerable financial loss for the university.   But SMJ member Ben Duell said the passing of resolution should 
              at least raise more student and faculty awareness on Israeli-Palestinian 
              conflicts. "Although we do not believe, we'll be able to actually 
              break the Israeli apartheid, we hope this could open dialogue on 
              the issue." 
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