4 Page 4 Tuesday, November 4, 1980 The Michigan Daily Who ya gonna vote for?I I was thumbing through my tattered copy of Bartlett's Familiar Quotations the other day, looking for some pithy comments on voting. (You know Bartlett's-the student's faithful friend. It's that big blue book with the tissue- thin pages and gobs of quotes that are just per- fect for padding last-minute papers and making you look well-read.) JUST AS I had expected-Bartlett's, you never let me down-there were about a dozen vote quotes, almost all of, which (not sur- prisingly) came from American statesmen. "Vote early and vote often" was a popular slogan in 1858, William Porcher Miles tells us and Anderson-I've heard more than I care to know from all of them. I have even learned enough about Ed Clark and Barry Commoner and Gus Hall to know not to vote for them. And I know something about Pursell and O'Reilly, Bullard and Barton, Proposal D and Proposal B. I'M TALKING ABOUT the really crucial races, like the heated battles for Drain Com- missioner and Register of Deeds. I'm going to go into the voting booth today and pull levers to elect people I've never heard of to jobs I've never heard of at salaries I probably don't want to hear of. Take the Drain Commissioner, for instance. What the hell does a Drain Commissioner do? And why does he or she have to be elected to do it? Is the Drain Commissioner a major party figure whose personal endorsement is courted by all political hopefuls? I doubt it. When was the last time you saw an ad for a Congressional candidate that read: "Endorsed by President Carter, Senator Riegle, and the Drain Com- missioner"? WOULD A DEMOCRATIC Drain Com- missioner promise "A sewer in every driveway, a sump pump in every basement"? Would a Republican Drain Commissioner see public sewers as welfare sewers? Would a Citizens Party Drain Commissioner-opposed to all types of pollution-outlaw all sewage? I'll tell you one thing a Drain Commissioner ought to do. A Drain Commissioner ought to make sure the long slots in those damn sewer gratings are placed perpendicular to the run of a street. Have you ever caught a bicycle tire in one of those grates? The Drain Commissioner candidates (there are two) talk in marvelous euphemisms, elevating sludge and excrement to a more noble "solid waste." "Solid waste management" is a term you'll hear often. It sounds so corporate. "On-site sewage disposal" is another favorite term. I think it refers to what you do when you're on a camping trip in the woods and there's no Porta-Potty in the area. I WONDER IF there has been much mud- slinging in the Drain Commissioner campaign. As I have said, I don't know anything about the Drain Commissioner candidates. But I do know that I won't vote for Margaret Yorks, the Republican contender. I read one of her ads in the paper on Sunday and was convinced by a quote that she was not the Drain Commissioner for me. She said, "I have and will continue ac- tive opposition to Proposal 'D."' Now I find it laudable that she opposes Proposal D, but I can't tolerate incomplete verbs. (Read the quote without "and will," which is extraneous.) Now you might argue that that is a pretty ar- bitrary way to pick a candidate for Drain Bitticisms By Howard Witt Ih from the "b" column of Page 718. (He, I found after a quick check in my Webster's Biographieal Dictionary, was a Democratic Representative to Congress from South Carolina.) Jimmy Carter is probably hoping that advice still holds in some parts of the coun- try-especially in Democratic Chicago, where the corpses boast the highest voter turnout rate of any special interest group. They had a lot of gumption in those older days of raw democracy. William Marcy Tweed, the Boss of New York's Tammany Hall, snapped in November, 1871, "As long as I count the votes, what are you going to do about it?" Certainly that challenge is apt in these post- Nixonian times. 0. Henry-the author (I think) of that great little story about the wife who cuts her hair and buys a Speidel watchband and the husband who sells his watch and buys a bottle of V05-once said, "A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows." AND THEN THERE was Grover Cleveland-one of those few presidents almost always forgotten when you try to name all the presidents. He said, "Your every voter, as surely as your chief magistrate, exercises a public trust." That quote really makes me uncomfortable. For if voting truly is the exercise of a public trust, then when I enter that booth today, I will be violating my responsibility in the worst possible way: I have not studied all the can- didates and will not make an informed decision. Oh, sure, I know about Carter and Reagan ' n LWODIKO VOE OR. . rnno Commissioner, and I will agree 100 percent. But what choice do I have? Our political system demands that we vote for a Drain Commissioner, and it is our civic duty to pick one. Never mind that we have neither the time nor the interest to research the relative abilities of the the Drain Commissioner can- didates. We've got to vote for one, and by gum, we will. IT'S NOT TOO difficult to understand how. Robert Tisch, author of the notorious Tisch tax cut plan (Proposal D), got elected Shiawassee County Drain Commissioner. Can you imagine campaigning to become Registerof Deeds? Now there's a job that's a real mystery: You can make a pretty good guess about what a Drain Commissioner does, but a Register of Deeds? Maybe if you help an.4 old woman across the street you can report it to the Register of Deeds. The incumbent Register of Deeds has said it will be difficult to find areas in which Register of Deeds spending can be cut because much of the office work is routine. Now there's an un- derstatement. I DON'T KNOW anything about the two can- didates for Register of Deeds. I'll probably employ a sure-fire method of choosing one when I get into the booth: Eeeny, Meeny, Miney, Mo. Washtenaw County Commissioners? Oh, sure. Even the candidates themselves don't seem to know what a Washtenaw County Commissioner is supposed to do. One of them, when asked about the major issues facing the county commissioner, said, "I'll have to cop a plea on that one." Maybe I'll try an old summer camp trick to choose my county commissioners: Hor sengoggling." STATE SUPREME COURT? State Court of Appeals? Circuit Court? District Court? I hope, qualified candidates are running for seats on those august benches, because I sure don't know anything about them. I'll probably vote for the nicest sounding names. With all these mystery races on the ballot, it's not too surprising that fewer and fewer people go to the polls on Election Day each year. Voting for the minor offices is like playing Russian Roulette with a few bullets. You click the lever and hope for the best. And voting for president is like playing with a fully loaded gun. You click the lever and you lose. Howard Witt is the co-editor of the Daily's Opinion Page. His column appears every Tuesday. I 'l . \1 \ , , . I LETTERS TO THE DAILY: ed t ant Mihigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCI, No.53 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Carl Pt To the Daily: We are writing to urge your readers to carefully consider the choices facing us as voters in the 1980 Congressional election. As members of the academic community, we find the future of higher education in the fields of health and social sciences threatened by unprecedented financial challenges, not only at the state level but at the federal level as well. As never before, it is imperative that our interests be represented in Washington by an individual with great sen- sitivity to our immediate and, of- ten, very specific community needs. trsell supportive Carl Pursell, current two-term budget rescissions so Representative from the 2nd Administration and f Congressional District of sure the continuat Michigan, has, over the past four biomedical research, years, demonstrated such sen- grants of the Nation sitivity and responsiveness. As a of Health. He spoke member of the influential House House Floor in sup Appropriations Subcommittee Higher Education Am responsible for health and 1980 which con education funding, and in line to authorization for stc be the third Ranking Minority cial assistance, inclu Member of that subcommittee in loan and college the nextg Congress, he is in a programs. position particularly suited to the He also pressed needs of our area. Government Operatic From his seat on that commit- tee, when it drafte( tee, Congressman Pursell has for a new Depa defended nursing and other Education, to prc health service programs against academic freedom a So today's the election of ought by the fought to in- ion of new and training al Institutes out on the port of the nendments of tain vital udent finan- ding student work-study the House ons Commit- d legislation artment of otect local nd creative prospect of ntervention. s have been i other areas to the State pleased, too, r reasonable al spending ent of clear se constrain- IT'S NOVEMBER 4 at last. Thousands of candidates for public office have for months looked forward to today as the start of political careers that could last a lifetime. Thousands of others have long dreaded today as the possible end of lengthy political careers that shaped the fortunes and destinies of thousands or millions of constituents. The single most striking feature of this election is the small percentage of the electorate that will participate in it.. Fewer and fewer voters have registered during each of the last, several election years; fewer of the registered voters have actually gone to the polls. Unsurprisingly,ran especially low percentage of poor Americans exercise their right to vote. The disturbing fact is that the poor simply don't feel represented by any of the candidates with a shot at the presidency. We can only hope that future elections will change that. We are faced with yet another disturbing possibility in today's premier contest; that Ronald Reagan will fail to win a majority of the popular vote, and yet will come up with a victory through the Electoral College system. - It has not happened since 1888 that a candidate took office without a plurality of the electorate behind him; perhaps we have begun to think of the College as a mere formality. It is nothing of the kind, and we only hope that the unfortunate paradox the current system makes possible does not show its head today. It had to happen sometime that the Electoral College controversy would come to the fore again; perhaps the spectre of Ronald Reagan will frighten the nation's legislators into reassessing the College's worth. education Michigan in Lansing nurtured the development of legislative skills and statesmanship so important in maximizing effectiveness with fellow federal legislators. He has found, to our satisfaction, a fair balance in representing the national and local interest in education and health with the inevitable benefits that can ac- crue to our own academic com- munity. He has listened to our views and counsel and, in turn; sought our professional expertise in the drafting of legislation. In fostering such two-way ex- changes, he offers opportunity for personal input in federal decision-making and has en- couraged in return responsible advocacy on our part. Despite his busy Congressional committee schedule, he has found time to personally follow through on sup port for our University programs in competing for federal grants. Carl Pursell has earned our confidence and we respectfully urge our fellow citizens to join us in supporting him November 4. -Beatrice Kalisch, Ph.D., RN William Kelley, MD We all must sacrifice To the Daily: Like every other student at the University, I have been constan- tly reminded that Proposal D would result in higher tuition, discontinuation of financial aid, and the elimination of a number of University programs and ser- vices. Accordingly, I had decided to vote against Proposal D on November 4. However, a recent letter from Marc Breakstone of the Michigan Student Assembly has had a profound effect on my opinion. In his message he states that passage of proposal D may tax fraternities and sororities out of existence. Even though Proposal D will cause hardships, I think that we all have to make sacrifices for the good of society. Who knows? Perhaps every dark cloud does have a silver lining. -John Kennedy Clyde McQueen October 30 genius against the escalating federal i His bipartisan effort recognized in several of equal importance of Michigan. We arep with his concern for restraints on feder and the establishme priorities within thos ts. His service to the State of Pursell not a leader PTP review inflammatory The Daily's choices: President: Congress: (D) Jimmy Carter (D) Kathleen O'Reilly Prosecuting A ttorney: Eliza- beth Schwartz (D) Sheriff: Tom Minick (R) County Commissioners 9th District: Meri Lou Murray (D) To the Dail*S: The breakdown of the Power Center sound system marred the opening night of Mr. R. and Mr. H. to an embarrassing degree. Nobody could be more sorry about this than the Professional Theatre Program staff, especially when subsequent per- formances-and the audience response-clearly demonstrated that the show itself was perhaps not as hopeless as it was made to terests and tastes reflecting a broad spectrum of audiences in both the University and the community. 2) Best of Broadway is only one of PTP's many functions. 3) The Best of Broadway series has been maintained over the years because it consistently yields a profit which contributes significantly to such programs as Guest Artists, Special Attrac- tions, fellowships, and, last but To the Daily: I can't believe what I'm seeing in your Sunday (October 26) paper! A huge advertisement for Rep. Carl Pursell, where he boasts about displaying "real leadership", on women's rights! It's almost pitiful. Pursell says that real leadership constitutes his vote for the Equal Rights Amendment extension. There was leadership in the Republican par- ty for the ERA, but it sure didn't come from Rep. Pursell. He NEVER testified before the Republican platform committee on the ERA, unlike many of his colleagues. And then he has the nerve to The most shocking thing is that Carl Pursell has yet to sign the House Fair Employment Prac- tices Agreement. The most recent issue of Common Cause Magazine describes thisrvolun- tary agreement, which protects Capitol Hill employees from discrimination based on sex, age, 4 race, religion, marital status, etc., because they are not protec- ted by the 1964 Civil Rights Act or other basic legislation: If Carl Pursell is such a leader on women's rights, why won't he sign a voluntary agreement giving equal rights to his em- ployees? Carl Pursel clearl need State Representative: Bullard (D) Perry i