4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, February 10, 1985 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Stalemate over report broken Vol. XCV, No. 109 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board i Inconsiderate addition OR THE PAST two weeks LSA ,F senior Andrew Boyd has taken his message to the streets. It is a good message, one that everybody should have the opportunity to hear. But he has spread his message in the wrong way. Boyd admitted last week that he was responsible for stuffing extra pages in- to some of the 6,000 copies of Consider magazine distributed around campus. The magazine regularly presents two essays on a topic, but for the issue on U.S. involvement in Nicaragua Boyd decided to add his own essays. The insert, entitled "Consider (Con- sider)," contained articles attributed to American and Nicaraguan officials. Boyd, who spent part of last semester in Nicaragua, said the articles were necessary because "the reality down there is a different reality than is presented here in the U.S." Boyd was in Nicaragua and his views should be heard because so few people have actually seen what is going on there. He should be heard in lectures, printed articles, and any other form of expression he chooses-unless it in- 'fringes, on someone else's right to do the same. Publications must be free to print what they choose to print without fear of censorship or having someone change the context of the cation after it is distributed. publi- Boyd charged that Consider is inef- fective. He said Consider often prints two moderate views which are nearly the same. He said the inserts were justified because the magazine is inef- fective. Whatever the format of Consider, the magazine must be allowed to publish without someone changing its content. Boyd should find more constructive ways to air his views and share his ex- periences in Nicaragua. Boyd has every right to criticize Consider. Every publication is open and should be receptive to criticism. His challenge in which he offers to write an article evaluating Consider's effectiveness is an acceptable form of criticism. Consider Editor Jeff Spinner said he will probably accept the challenge and write about the value of the magazine, and the experience might be beneficial to Consider. Such constructive forms of criticism must be encouraged. Dissent is valuable. People have given their lives in places like Nicaragua and the U.S. to preserve the right to a dissenting opinion. But it must be expressed without stifling someone else's right to free speech. Two wrongs don't make a right. T HE STALEMATE between MSA and the administration over the "Sudarkasa report" looks like it may finally be over. Associate vice-president for academic af- fairs Niara Sudarkasa was commissioned to write a report on minority recruitment and retention when she first came to the Univer- sity last winter. The report was originally scheduled to be completed in November, yet she has been claiming for the last three mon- ths that it was not yet complete. On Wednesday MSA and the Daily filed Freedom of Information Act requests to ob- tain the report. The administration must respond by Tuesday, February 12. MSA, as well as the NAACP, The Council of Minority Concerns, the alumni association, and the Daily, has been trying to obtain a copy of the report by claiming that an issue The Wek in Review of the importance of minority recruitment and retention ought to be discussed in front of the entire University community. In addition, Roderick Linzie, MSA's minority recruitment researcher, claimed that the report calls for increased funding from the state for student financial aid. Such a proposal could affect the entire University financial aid request and so affect a con- siderable number of people. Linzie was per- mitted, along with other MSA officials, to view the report in Sudarkasa's office and therefore was unable to master the full con- tent of the 150 page report. In the meantime, a lawyer who works with the NAACP has assured MSA that the Freedom of Information Act requests must be honored. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers Karen Klein and Amy Mindell, and Daily editors Joseph Kraus, Peter Williams, and Andy Weine. Top o' the Morning If you think 9 a.m. is an early time to attend classes, beware of a proposal afoot in the LSA administration which will make sleeping off a hangover much harder. LSA Associate Dean James Cather on Mon- day presented a proposal to the LSA faculty to move the starting time of LSA classes ahead one half hour. According to Cather, pushing ahead the starting time of classes would alleviate the shortage of classrooms and con- serve energy. "There's a lot of space you're paying to heat and light that you don't use," Cather said. "That is basically just throwing away money." Cather also noted that between 8 and 9 a.m. only 62% of the available class space is used, while between 9 and 4, there are barely enough classrooms for the existing classes. Yet as with many University issues, some students have something different to say on the matter. They complain that eight a.m. classes are just too early, especially for students living on North Campus, who would have to wake as early as seven a.m. "It's tough to get up when you pull a late night studying," said George Dendring, a junior business student who lives in Baits Housing on North Campus. Other students were willing to comply with the change if it would save they money or open more "good" classes. Don't worry too soon, though. If approved, the plan would not go into effect before 1986- 87. There's still time to sleep in. Dismissed from MSA The Michigan Student Assembly removed Minority Affairs chairman Randy McDuffie last week in connection with his mismanagement of the International Cultures Weekend. McDuffie was charged with misrepresentation of facts surrounding the event, disobeying a direct executive or- der, and a lack of professionalism with the event. McDuffie apparently claimed to have secured funds from groups which never agreed to support the weekend. He rented a luxury automobile for a speaker, and when told to return it and use a student's car, ren- ted a second car. He also did very little adver- tising for the event. The vote was 13 to 4 for the removal of Mc- Duffie from his appointed position. The four who cast dissenting votes felt that the discussion held was not fair to McDuffie, and althugh he was in fact guilty of the charges, it was not right to try someone in a circus-type atmosphere. McDuffie said that the discussion was a "kangeroo (court) at its best" but he would not appeal the decision or run for MSA again. Due to mismanagement the event could cost MSA up to $8,000. MSA budgeted $1,000 or less for the event. Consider insert Sometimes there is more to consider than even Consider considers. So claims Andrew Boyd-alias Capt. John Early. This week, the non-partisan campus publication contained more than its usual consideration. In an at- tempt to give students more to think about, LSA senior Andrew Boyd stuffed 1000 copies of an insert he printed into the magazine's issue on American intervention in Nicaragua. Boyd lived in Nicaragua for part of last semester, and felt that Consider's two-opinion structure was both limiting and biased in favor of American gain in that country. He wanted to give students the Nicaraguan viewpoint to think about. The reality down there is a different reality than is presented in the U.S.," Boyd. ex- plained. Before Boyd's admission, many students believed that the Michigan Students Assem- bly leaders were at fault. At the last MSA meeting, member Steve Linowes accused another MSA member, Schnoufer, of printing up the inserts. Steve Kaplan, MSA vice- president, said the MSA as a group had nothing to do with the incident. Jeff Spinner, Consider's Editor-in-Chief, explained that his magazine does not attempt to represent every viewpoint. He accepted Boyd's concern is a legitimate one, but voiced anger at his method of presenting his opinion. "Wasn't there a better way to do it," Spinner asked. Boyd challenged Spinner to a Consider issue on the magazine's value; Spinner said he would gladly accept the challenge, but he must first consult his staff. 4 4 °z Aid troubles UST WHEN it looks like the state government is respondng to the needs of university students, the federal government casts a shadow of foom over those students' hopes. If a proposal submitted to Congress by President Ronald Reagan is passed, the more than 460,000 students now eligible for Guaranteed Student Loans would be barred from receiving them in the future. The proposal, which is part of Reagan's 1986 budget, would restrict loans to families earning less than $32,500 a year. Included in the president's package is a proposal to put a $4,000 limit on the amount a single student can receive in loans and grants in one year. Students whose families earn more than $25,000 annually would be restricted from Pell Grants, which provide up to $1,900 a year. With the recent threats posed to lower- middle class families by the economic situation of the country, cuts in finan- cial aid funding must not be tolerated. More than 5 million college and university students receive federal aid each year. Guaranteed Student Loans alone last year amounted to $7 billion for 3.3 million students. This constitutes a major investment by the federal government in education, an area worthy of invest- ment which should not be jeopardized by the administration's shallow at- tempts to save money. There are other areas of the federal government which must be attacked before educational aid falls beneath the Reagan Ad- ministration's budgetary axe. Sinclair coLLE 1At'4Ns oj lba JRUA ThS ri 6jETPNO INcATs MAA MOWT ANMVO SEDUE 'pN~ou.aZ ll I s.O o Mwafl ~NcHM 'FEE ON TE yGK4Y.. Clop!N'r 1TE 4U1TCANf I(1l W FqW W~kI~ j W~WW RLN7T Eo i ; j ! ti ! t } I! ?; I t !j ., + *ftqw 4" ' . I Letters Cartoon exemplifies lack of knowledge i FARM commuLNrns To the Daily : The political cartoon by Bering in the Hanuary 31 issue of the Daily depicting an Israeli tank leaving a destroyed Lebanon in its dust, exemplifies the lack of knowledge and editorial ex- perience the Daily continually exhibits. This picture is a gross misrepresentation of facts and is yet another example of the Even a basic knowledge of recent Middle Eastern history will demonstrate the Daily's ignorance. In 1975, the PLO aided by 30,000 Syrian troops entered Lebanon directly causing a bloody civil war between Muslim and Christian factions. In ad- dition to the tremendous destruc- tion to Beirut, the war drove ap- proximately one million Lebanese from their homes, and tempted to drive the PLO terrorists out of Southern Lebanon. The IDF never waged an attack on West Bierut but only on PLO strongholds, while en- couraging the evacuation of civilians from these areas. Once the civilians were freed from the PLO's hold, the Israeli government provided more than two million dollars in relief aid. In addition, a tremendous tial losses, or remain only to b bombarded by anti-Israeli sen- timents. The Daily's political cartoon is just another example of the media's blatant disregard for the Israeli position. Where was the Daily when the PLO caused the Lebanese civil war, or during the countless PLO attacks on the in- nocent civilians? Instead of blin- dly attacking the Israeli position, . 1 SMALL 'FARMExV I