U OPINION Page 4 Saturday, October 18, 1980 The Michigan Daily tgMiigan tlg Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCI, No. 39 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A way not to get student control of the Union Higgins 3 I T HOSE ASSOCIATED with the Mich- igan Student Assembly some- times seem to treat their powers and. responsibilities, such as they are, the way newborn babies handle those little mobiles that dangle over their cribs: reverence at first, evolving into glee as they discover their ability to manipulate the colorful plastic baubles. The particular infants at issue here are the members of the Permanent In- terviewing Committee, an MSA sub- body. The PIC at the moment is caught up in selecting student representatives to a committee working on the renovation of the Michigan Union. The way PIC has been going about that task has opened its members up to considerable criticism, much of which appears justified. Jeff Lebow, a rejected applicant for a renovation committee position, says his political attitudes cost him the spot. That claim would seem to jibe with the fact that Lebow's credentials indicate that he is highly qualified. He has served as head of the Union Programming Committee and has worked effectively with the Office of Student Services to effect student goals. In short, Lebow knows his way around, and he has developed connec- tions in the administration that would have served the students well. PIC is aiming to stack the renovation committee with student represen- tatives who support exclusive student control of the Union. That may initially appear to be a sound proposal, but the administration wants faculty and alumni control, too, and PIC's hard- line chauvinism may hurt the efforts of students to procure governing positions. Lebow's fault, of course, is that he does not support exclusive student con- trol of the Union. For that reason, his voice would have had some moderation on those of his fellow students and perhaps might have got- ten the administration to consider the student view more openly. Yet, for that same reason, Lebow's application was denied. That's how it is with power, though. Those babies' mobiles can end up looking abused indeed. 4 h , r \ / r s l . \ r A, . Y c . ..,- ~It. YELL ME, DQ4 W AV 6UGH THE~ AtAMUNITION TO LAST US TH ROUC( CEASE-FRS? LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Waffling on hazing incident v ;Qh sure, Ron! And next you'll vote for ERA, right? F ALL THE cheap tricks. Ronald; Reagan, in a panic over his low standing in the polls among the nation's women, has extended an olive branch to those who imagine that women deserve equal rights. For the first time in the history of the American presidential campaign, a major party candidate has promised to appoint a woman to the Supreme Court, should a current justice retire. Reagan is a hypocrite. He has an abominable record and platform on women's issues. He has mouthed pret- ty promises to women ever since he announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination, but never has endorsed the simple addition to the Constitution that would hasten and secure equality: the Equal Rights Amendment. In fact, he has stridently and stupidly opposed it. In pledging to appoint a female high court justice, Reagan has brought the 1980 campaign to a new zenith of two- facedness. The promise is as absurd as one from Simon Legree to emancipate the slaves would have been. What about your record, Ron? Of course, the Republican candidate still says he intends to appoint justices whose views on social matters parallel his own. Good luck to him in finding an educated woman who opposed the ERA. He may have a very difficult time of it. To the Daily: An Open Letter to Harold Shapiro I am outraged and disgusted over the actions of the Michigan ,hockey players and over the waf- fling and lack of ethical leader- ship displayed by the athletic director and the University ad- ministration in the recent, nearly disastrous, hazing of freshman team members. I demand public accountability for the perpetrators of the crimes (contrary to Canham's view, there are actions short of murder that are criminal). Some vague talk about "community service" L ibertarians fo the Daily : The Libertarian Party of Michigan endorses Proposal D, the Tisch Tax Cut Amendment, and is the only political party to endorse this proposal. Liber- tarians feel it is about time to "cut the fat" and waste out of big state government and return' more money to the overburdened taxpayers of Michigan. California's Proposition 13, whichpassed in 1978, was the best thing that ever happened to the California economy. Five hun- dred thousand new jobs were created in the private sector. Unemployment in California dropped below the national average, inflation dropped below the national average, and $14 billion that formerly had gone for taxes was retained by the tax- payers of the state of California annually. And California's $5 billion budget surplus became a $2.5 billion surplus after Proposition 13. Therefore, the "fat" was cut out of California state government, and without harming essential government services. The same thing will occur in simply will not do. Although the athletic department is platitudinously "deploring" it in all the media, it is obvious to me that the department and the University would like nothing better than to hush up this in- cident and to write it off as a "boys-will-be-boys" prank, rather than to hold themselves and the offending players sin- cerely and publicly responsible for a frighteningly ugly oc- currence. Such cover-up itself borders on the criminal. If this had hap- pened in any other context, those responsible would have been locked up. Instead, an attempt endorse .D' Michigan with the passage of the Tisch Amendment, Proposal D. In contrast, Proposals A and C will only reshuffle the tax struc- ture and will not decrease ary taxes whatsoever. In fact, with today's inflation, Proposals A and C will actually be large tax increases within the next twenty four months. Two years ago the Headlee Amendment-intended to give us (the taxpayers) some relief-was passed. Once the state Congress got their hands on it, however, the Headlee Amendment was "watered down" until it offered no tax breaks at all. The Tisch Amendment, specifically worded to keep it out of the deceitful han- ds of these people, will not allow this to happen. If you are a truly concernced taxpayer, you will vote for Proposal D, the Tisch Tax Cut Amendment, and against Proposals A and C on November 4. This may be our last chance to reduce the tremendous burden of taxation we face as taxpayers in the state of Michigan. -Dr. James Hurrell October 15 has been made, predictably, to discredit Mr. Krahnke, the Markley Resident Adviser (Ann Arbor News, 16 October), whose version I am far more inclined to believe than that of either the perpetrators or the victims, all of whom have a vested interest in down-playing the incident. A 19-year-old kid, who has the 'dubious distinction of having made the team, is not about to jeopardize his standing among his newly acquired teammates or his omnipotent athletic depar- tment for the sake of putting a stop once and for all to the brutality and systematic humiliation which characterize hazing. Chances are the victim himself will be joining in lustily next year when a new crop of players arrives on the scene. Thus is idiocy perpetuated. My 11-year-old son is an avid Michigan hockey fan, and has recently joined the Ann Arbor Amateur Hockey Association with the hope one day of being able to play with the Michigan team. He read the report of this disgraceful incident in two newspapers, and was appalled and bewildered. Will he be shameful devoting his young enthusiasm in the next few years to an ambition to join an irresponsible athletic department which blithely recruits and then does not super- vise ignorant juveniles who don't know the difference between "testing the strength and en- durance" of a team member and indulging their own sadism, and whose directors tacitly condone their actions by protecting them and by putting success at the ticket office above the safety and integrity of their teams? What a fine display of values and true excellence for the alumni who support and send their children to Michigan ! If the University does not require these people to take full public responsibility for their ac- tions, they will have learned nothing from all of this. And I, for one, will cease to support Michigan athletics. I simply could not bring myself to cheer for a team which, without a qualm, engages in such bestiality. Shame on them all, and shame on the University! -Gerlinde Findlay-Lindy, October 179 Racism, fascism neglected P R e " .i o N l, I ; i ''rt 1 , r : n , ( j. t i Sy i ,p(; j' i fr I On competent prosecution To the Daily: It was all quite amazing that the Thursday, October 9 Daily editorial "France's Jews Under Fire" appeared on the same page as the letter to the editor entitled "On Politics and Memory." I use the term "amazing" because as the Daily printed that letter, it once again failed to do its homework. The editorial failed to take into account not only the resurgence in recent years of European Fascism, but also the overt racist philosophy of the groups and organizations on the right in Europe. Instead, the editors ended on this note: Let's "investigate" the Palestine Liberation.Organization in order to see whether it is "inspiring" right wing terrorist activity in Europe. To this I reply, What do the editors know or have to say about the history of these groups by themselves? Do not the editors realize that these groups have as their targets not only Jews (Zionist.-and non-Zionist alike) but alsoimmigrant groups such as Blacks and South Asians (Great Britain), Algerians (France), and Turks and ERA is econ To the Daily: How can politicians seeking iipi nn in Nnvprm hpr withdrawu Palestinians (Germany)? No, I don't believe that the editors have any idea of where these groups are coming from politically or whom their proclaimed enemies are. Perhaps for us Nor- thamericans the most frightening aspect of this sort of journalism is that it neglects racism here at home. The Ku Klux Klan has seen quite a resurgence in the past few years, and its use of the term an- ti-semitism applies not only to Jews but to Arab-Americans as well. Recent attacks on Afro- Americans have increased to the point that no one can ignore the Klan any longer. What will the Daily have to say when the KKK unleashes itself against American Jews? Will more allusions be made to , the Palestinians? Perhaps then the Klan will be examined in the con- -text of U.S. society. Pulling the red herring of the PLO in front of its readers, the Daily successfully neglects the issues of racism and fascism in the world today, and this is a disservice to everyone. -Louis Head October 15 1omic issue tribution is recognized by .. guarantee of equal rights in the Constitution. j mm To the Daily: I am writing in response to County Prosecuting Attorney William Delhey's comments in your paper regarding the Ann Arbor killings (Daily, Oct. 4). Prosecutor Delhey stated that "girls" who drove around at night land who lived in apartment complexes were in danger of being followed home and mur- dered. The prosecutor's solution is that "girls" should stay home on Saturday nights. Maybe Prosecutor Delhey does not realize that if young women are in danger, we are all in danger. The solution for violent crimes is not for us all to stay someone could commit murder in Washtenaw County without worrying too much about the con- sequences. Our society would be better protected by competent prosecution of rapists and mur- ders than it is by the overzealous prosecution of University football ticket scalpers. Our tax dollars would be better used by prosecutions of rapists, con- sumer frauds, larcenists, and major criminals than ticket scalpers, welfare mothers, and other petty criminals whose suc- cessful convictions make the prosecutor's statistics look very good.l *1* - d.- --