OPINIO N Page Four Saturday, April 18, 1981 The Michigan Daily 'U'-Nurses talks may be delayed until April 28 Page Nine - Saturday, April 18, 198 DoaTree aFax Recycle Your D Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCI, No.®157 420 Maynard St. Saturday, April18, 1981 Ann Arbor, Ml 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A terror strikes closeto home T wo University students are dead, the vic- tims of senseless violence. The end of classes and a holiday for many have been marred by a tragedy-for no apparent reason two human beings have been shot and killed. The shootings at Bursley come on the heels of violence that has been sweeping the nation. In December, John Lennon was killed-for no ap- parent reason. Less than one month ago, an assassination attempt was made on President Reagan, leaving the President, Press Secretary James Brady, and two security officials woun- ded. Terrifying as the Lennon and Reagan shootings were, however, they seemed somewhat removed from Ann Arbor. It is not un- til such a despicable act occurs in our own backyard-when our friends are the victims of irrational violence-that we can begin to ex- perience the full magnitude of such an outrage. As a result of a gunman's act, we have only memories of the two men. Both were known for their compassion and understanding of others. Ed Siwic, or "Ward" to his family, was described by many people in the dorm as a hard worker. Douglas McGreaham was known for his responsible character. This sense of respon- sibility carried over to his role as a resident ad- viser, when, early Friday morning, he waited in the dorm to make sure it was evacuated. While he was doing this, he was shot and killed. No killings can be justified. But for the relatives and friends of McGreaham and Siwic the lack of any apparent motive must be especially horrible. Two students are dead; the frustrations of this wanton killing raise thousan- ds of questions-most with no answers. We can- not bring the two men back. We can only lament the loss. Trying to make sense of madness By Christopher Potter The man's face is twisted into a driven lunatic's visage of hate. Bathed in sweat, hair askew, his features are those of an ancient, high-boned Flemish grotesquerie straight out of Bosch. Every muscle is taut and straining; the jaw juts forth, open lips curled up and back, spewing out rage at those around him. The eyes blaze at you -- the fury behind them made all the more terrifying by their obvious incomprehension. The veins on his forehead pulse and throb with a protuberance akin to the most hideous movie effect of George Romero or David Cronenberg. His countenance seems the essence of our darkest nightmares of mindless, uncon- trolled passion -- of Yeats' som- nambulant rough beast awakening within ourselves. THE MAN'S photograph came over the Daily's wires a couple of weeks ago, and I still can't get his face out of my mind. A resident of Florida, he had first called police threatening suicide, then, upon officers' arrival at his apar- tment, had opened fire with an arsenal of guns stored at his dwelling. Following a pitdhed battle of several hours, the man was sub- dued and dragged screaming and cursing to a local hospital - his motives as murky and obscure as his actions were corporal and horrifying. One looks at his photo - at that frenzied mindlessness - and one asks why? No answer comes. And now it happens here. The thunder of a gun, two students piteously done to death - ap- parently at random selection. The crime made all the more ob- scene by its impersonal nature - the killer does his deed, then By CHARLES THOMSON Negotiations between striking University nurses and the University may not resume until April 28, accor- ding to a Michigan Employment Relations Council official. Ed Phillips, the labor mediator for MERC in charge of the negotiations, said yesterday that he "has no plans'' to call the parties back to the, bargaining table. He said that the reports he had received from both the nurses' union and the University ad- ministration indicated that there had been "absolutely no movement" in the position of the two parties. HE SAID, HOWEVER, that April 28 would be a "reasonable" estimate for the next round of negotiations, adding that the delay would allow both parties in the negotiations to evaluate their positions. "Right now," he said, "there is no prospect of progress." Talks between the two parties broke off following a 12-hour meeting between union and the University represen- tatives on Wednesday. SPOKESPERSONS FOR BOTH the University and the union said they were prepared to return to negotiations at any time. John Forsyth, Medical Campus Per- sonnel Director, said the University was prepared to return to negotiations at any time "day or night" but that there is "not much point in meeting un- til you have something to talk about." Forsyth added that negotiations had made significant progress, but that there remain "a couple of 'principle' kind of issues. Unless one party changes its principles it's going to be difficult to reach an agreement. I think that's probably why the mediator wants us to think about our positions for a while." Margot Barron, president of the Professional Nurses Council, said that during a membership meeting Thur- sday night, "our people were over- whelmingly in support of the position we've taken." She said the union's position was unchanged and that their negotiating team was ready to return to bargaining "with one hour's notice." Forsyth commented the University was anxious to settle the 12-day strike by registered nurses. "Our objective is to have the thing settled as quickly as possible and to get all of the valuable employees that are out on strike back to work," he said. AP Photo calmly walks back to his dor- mitory room to await the police. HOW MANY LOVES blighted forever by this detached act of absurdism? It's very sen- selessness mocks man's unquen- ched desire to know, to explain the inexplicable; better to die for any reason than for no reason at - all. What does one tell children, grandparents - anybody? Without meaning, there is only silence. One can only weep - then work to somehow prevent such horrors in the future. The mystery remains how to do it. Registration of firearms? Surely. Increased efforts in mental health? Perhaps - though scholars have spent centuries studying and attempting to master the monsters of the id, yet remain no closer to an ultimate solution than they were a thousand years ago. Man's heart of darkness remains palpable and thriving. Perhaps the answer lies in tur- ning not inward but outward, away from our inner demons. Loneliness can kill - It can strike Park Avenue just as easily as Skid Row - anywhere one finds one self with no one to talk to, no one to keep the demons from taking over. Aswe reflect on this sad Easter weekend, we might think about human isolation and the healing effect of human love, both in its spiritual and temporal forms. No one has ever claimed love is a simple, untormenting process; ;yet no one has ever claimed any one of us could live without it. Christopher Potter is a Daily staff writer. LETTERS TOTHE DAILY, Washington grad laments racism To the Daily: As a 1976 graduate of George 'Washington High School in San' Francisco, I was sorry to see that Pauline Craig's recent series ("Racism and the WPOD", Daily, April 9, 10), reflected the long-term development of racial Stupidity amazes To the Daily: I am continually amazed at the level of stupidity your newspaper is able to muster. You seem pleased that women have finally been admitted to The Explorers Club (Daily, April 14), a gang of big game hunter's who get together .to gnash their canines over such species as the . lion, hippopotamus, mountain bear, and yak. I suppose, if it were 1942, you would be upset that women were excluded from the higher echelons of the Gestapo.. Take your heads out from bet- ween your legs. The smaller the club is, the better. -Barry Himmelstein April 14 tensions I saw emerging during my years there. I was among the white minority at GWHS; I witnessed the self- imposed ethnic segregation, and wondered whether American society had progressed from the civil rights break-throughs of the 1960s. I deeply regret that the latest generation of San Fran- cisco youth appears to be showing so little ability to grow beyond the prejudices of those before them. -Steve Hoch, . , April o ftsbCKkAAh, 'itUl GOING 1lb 09E Ici 14AL AI 8~~i 0#,= O/a