OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 6, 1981 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. XCI, No. 109 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Feiffer * Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board MSA should plead insanity in committee appointment HAVE X ciUP lk) OF O9Hk) IF qOU FIPU9 -TO CM4C6, T5 4bu ° G S1 QI T t1~air T16R . ct5e V HEAVW )f$O 5V CTTA$ C!i A G2 P-RE LEQRTHE TAR koT S~iX'rs 7& A IF COU6TO0 7 STAR 4- , T' 0 T EMPORARY INSANITY is the only excuse the Michigan Student Assembly can plead for its ac- tion Tuesday night. During the MSA meeting last week, David Schaper, who during his 10-year career in University student government has admitted to rigging elections and has been accused of mishandling student funds, volunteered to reorganize and rewrite The MSA Constitution and election code. During their meeting this week, MSA members, well aware of Schaper's controversial past, unanimously approved his suggestion. Why the Assembly would allow Schaper to have a hand in restruc- turing the very election code he has admitted manipulating is a mystery. Throughout his long student gover- nment career, Schaper has been repeatedly accused of unethically manipulating his political opponents. Most recently, some MSA members and fellow justices on the Central Student Judiciary - where Schaper served as chief justice until his resignation in November - have privately suggested that Schaper has played too dominant a role in student government. Some years ago, defending himself against charges that he mismanaged more than $40,000 of student funds as MSA treasurer, Schaper said, "I've fixed elections, I've! screwed people left anc ight, but I never, never tools any mopey." This manwill now help guide M in structuiring future elections and student government politics. The MSA election code desperately eds revision:The document is a mbled patchwork of regulations and les, some of them penciled in, many themneedlessly confusing. But, the oice of candidates for the project. rsel olddaefull considoert.s- True, Schaper probably is more amiliar with the constitution and the election code than any other student on campus. But, there are some qualifications more important than familiarity. And, in some cases, familiarity may be more of a hindran- .c'e than an asset in objectively revising sich documents. Granted, Schaper will not have a tfree hand in reorganizingdthe con- titution and the election code. He will die only one member in a committee of -Wix. Furthermore, all revisions the committee suggests must be approved 'irst by the Assembly as a whole. :. Yet, given Schaper's admitted 50 IF c N ?a STY AOV IT clt5 3 aRUT ©ln o* s sr F(CLO U(L0km Yet another look ai Thoughts on abortion - Round Two: "If you think everybody should have a chance to live, then you should father as many kids as you can - just hire yourself out as a stud," one of my female co-writers at the Daily suggested a few days ago. Questioning the moral precision of my anti-free choice dividual. A person deserving of as much chance to realize that potential as you or I. I HAVE NO problem advocating birth con- trol, even voluntary sterilization-such methods may well prove the only antidotes to an already overcrowded, underfed world. Yet if I were faced with telling a pregnant mother on welfare with ten children already that she couldn't abort the eleventh, I would do so. It is a choice between terminating the existence of one being in order to- ease the hardship of another, and the two do not balan- ce out. This planet may fall far short of Eden, yet once a human being exists, he or she deserves the chance to find out whether the world is tolerable. My belief is hardly scien- tific, but I hope it is just. Coming Apart By Christopher Potter Schaper manipulation of political co-workers and opponents, it is not unimaginable that Schaper would play a very dominant role in the process of rewriting the documents. Schaper has said he plans to make no "substantive" changes in either the constitution or the election code. Rather, he said he is interested only in updating and reorganizing the documents. If this is the case, it might seem there is no real danger that the documents could be manipulated during the revision. But, even the subtlest reworking, the most minor reorganization of paragraphs, the slightest rewording can dramatically change future interpretations of a document. MSA should reconsider its appoin- tment of Schaper to the revision com- mittee. In his place, the Assembly should appoint a student with a certain detachment from student government, whose political history could not possibly color his or her decisions con- cerning the revision of the documents that structure our student government. column of a week ago, she put me the following syllogism: "If you can't deny the fetus in the womb a chance to participate in the world, then by extension how can you deny a sperm the chance to become a fetus?" A LOGICAL ARGUMENT, well put. If, as the Supreme Court has arbitrarily proclaimed, life commences at six months rather than at fertilization, is it any less ar- bitrary for me to contend that life begins at fetilization rather than within the atoms of the sperm itself? Is the act of masturbation any less a taking of a life than an abortion would be? How does one draw a line? One draws it willfully and unscientifically. My opinions on abortion are arbitrary as hell. And so are everybody else's. This fact will never change so long as science and medicine fail to come up with any precise, error-free definition of exactly what life is and when it begins., My belief is that human life commences at the moment of fertilization. An unfertilized egg or a couple of billion sperm swirling aimlessly constitute nothing beyond them- selves; once joined, they become a complete, soon-to-be-conscious being unique in its capabilities and potential-in short, an in- LETTERS TO THE DAILY: abortionq movement. Women have been shafted since the dawn of creation-enslaved, brutalized,: dehumanized in nearly every facet of human existence; and now the most personal human-; right of all - the right to do as one wants with:', one's body-is being threatened, primarily by: those who don't have the same physical-, emotional risk at stake-men. Fair enough, as far as it goes. It's easy to construe pregnancy as nature's ultimate dit- ty joke on half the population - the man gets the fun while the woman gets the baby. Would that our physiologies could be magically altered or transposed so that men would bear half the children of our race; only then could abortion be approached from a truly shared psyche. I DON'T PRETEND to know the private in- timacies a woman experiences during pregnancy. For some it proves at the very least a nuisance and at most a traumatic, in- trusive agony. Yet, for at least as many others, it is a time of quiet, matchless ec- stacy. If the pro-choice movement were merely one manifestation of universal chauvinist brutality, why do millions of women populate its ranks-not just those whom feminists would label "deluded" housewives, but independent professionals as well? The abortion issue transcends stereotyping, defies pigeonholing its combatants into neat compartments of good or evil. To dismiss it as an offshoot of female servitude is myopic. I don't believe I have ever, even subliminally, approached abortion from a master-slave perspective, as though it were a sanctioned "women's burden." It is everybody's burden. I don't want to play sexual politics-I would like to help save some lives. Christopher Potter is a Daily staff writer. His column appears every Friday * on this page. S+PEAXcII4-sOF MO5 TbA46. There's also the question of abortion as an extension of sexual tyranny. An irate Daily reader asserts that it's easy for me to make moral pronouncements against abortion since my "body and brain will not have to bear the consequences of them." In other words, sexism is the subliminal root of the pro-life Clerical workers must organize To the Daily: The Organizing Committee for Clericals is scheduled to hold a union certification election February 10-13. More than ever in this time of economic crisis all university employees should have real input into crucial budget priority decisions (something faculty are beginning to request), and more than ever they should have equitable con- sideration of work load and value to the institution. In such a time, clerical workers need the protec- tion and power of a union. Disgracefully, in a public university where administrative and faculty salaries surpass those in other Michigan in- stitutions of higher education, clerical workers here are paid less than their unionized peers at Eastern Michigan University, Michigan State University, Washtenaw County Community College, Wayne County Com- munity College, Wayne State University, in the City of Ann Ar- bor, and in the Ann Arbor School System. Toe issue of salary and benefits is a key issue in our present in- flationary economy, but more is at stake in the certification elec- tion: maintenance of jobs in a time of high state unemployment; contracts which will define jobs so as to protect against speed-up and compulsory overtime as staff positions are cut by attrition or other means; better control over working conditions (a recent study reveals that women em- ployed in clerical and sales oc- cupations have "coronary disease rates twice that of other women"-as the result of dead- end jobs, non-supportive bosses, jobs increasingly controlled by technology) ; a grievance procedure with teeth in it; union input into the current University review of job classifications and pay grades; and more influence over state as well as university budget decisions. It has never been easy for unions here. After Michigan Public Act 379 gave public em- ployees the right to union representation and collective bargaining in 1965, the University unlike other state universities, refused to recognize unions until a series of rulings and a strike forced it to agree to bargaining two years later. This policy of delay and denial continued today, as the University takes adverse rulings to higher courts at con- siderable expense. For example, despite rulings by the Michigan Employment Relations Commission in August of 1977 and by Judge Sperka in July of 1980 that Graduate Student Assistants are employees and that the University's refusal to bargain with their union is an unfair labor practice, the Univer- sity has appealed the case. They have also appealed a recent MERC ruling that they engaged in another unfair labor practice in preventing distribution of OCC material in non-working areas of the University. These legal delays are a form of harrassmeng and an attempt to costly and time-consuming to those involved, and they are" destructive of the morale of the graduate assistant and clerical employees of the University. This is not the time for us to be indifferent to the needs and rights of anyone working in this university. We support and urge university-wide support for clerical unionization in the up, coming election. -Buzz Alexander, English; Loreen Barritt, School of Education; Bunyan Bryant, School of Natural Resources;, Ann Marie Coleman, Guild-% House; Don Coleman, Guild .- House; Bob Havert, Office of Ethics and Religion; June.. Howard, English; John Kolars, a: Geography; Tim McCarthey,- Philosophy; Al Meyer, Political- Science; Adrian Piper, Philosophy; Peter Railton, Philosophy; Matthew Rohn, Residential College; Art Schwar- tz, Mathematics; Rebecca Scott, Society .of Fellows; Len Suran-x sky, Center for Afro-American and African Studies; Val Suran- sky, School of Education; Mick Taussig, Anthropology; John Vandermeer, Biology; Alan Wald, English; Thomas Weisshopf, Economics. hr...rv 3 No room for undergrads To the Daily: How many undergrads can find a quiet niche to hole-up in and can read or think or even study? Not many, I would guess, drawing on I think the space of the law library ceiling-which must run up outrageous heating bills that undergrads as well as grads pay-could be diverted into many more floors. Rut. that would be iiriiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii - i, ; : ; .;, ,/; ^ ;, :== : ; U i . t . ! ''' ' , I