OPINION Page 4 Wednesday, November 12, 1986 The Michigan Doily Don't call me... I'll call Every once in a while one takes time out to stop and consider what is the most annoying household appliance. The prize, I think, goes to the telephone answering machine. What exactly does one say to these machines when they ask for "your name. D( w time of day, and any message"? The conversation with the machine does not have to come out stilted. But, inevitably, it does. The reason is that half way through the message, the caller realizes he is jabbering away to a machine. The problem could be solved if callers only left their name and the time of day. But most people realize how silly this looks to the person on the receiving end. It sounds like you have called them up to tell them what time it is. They turn on the answering machine and hear, "Dave. This is Ralph. It's 8:53." Gee, thanks, Ralph. One is tempted to call back, "Ralph. This is Dave. It's 9:25." Thus, the inevitable occurs. We make a concerted effort to leave a message. Somehow this never works too well. Most people will say that this is because there is something inherently uncomfortable about talking to machines. I think it goes beyond this, however. The reason talking to an answering machine never works is that we get no feedback. We need someone to respond to what we say. Some persons claim talking to an answering machine is like talking to a wall. But, I contend, that if the wall would nod its head, laugh at our jokes, ask us questions, and say "uhuh" every once in a while, most people would find this a pleasant diversion. In fact, they might even be surprised at how good a conversationalist the wall is. Ideally we would have an answering machine that gives feedback. It would have a built in laugh track and periodically emote an "awesome" or a "Naw. That's too incredible." Every once in a while, it would ask for a clarification to show it is still interested. A generic "what?" would be spoken every few minutes. (This machine may come in handy even when the person receiving the call is home. If he feels particularly bored at some point, he can simply turn on the machine, go make himself a sandwich, and come back. Of course, the person placing the call may take advantage of this machine, and he too may turn his on. This would allow both parties to leave the phone, go make themselves sandwiches while the machines talk to each other, and return to the phone with no one the wiser.) However, these types of feedback- giving machines are a long way off. And until they are invented, answering machines will remain more a nuisance than a convenience. The problem of answering machines is complicated by many factors. Telephones used to be a relatively innocuous way of introducing yourself to someone. That is, until answering machines came along. Try introducing yourself to someone or calling up someone you haven't seen in a very long time. We end up trying to identify ourselves as "the dude in your chemistry discussion" or "the woman who always steps over you in poli. sci. lecture." Conversations like this get doubly complicated with machines. One does not have the feedback of "Oh, yeah. I know you." With answering machine conversations, one would not know where to stop. If the caller does leave a message, one hates to think what he would sound like with nothing to save him from total embarrassment. "Hi. This is-John from your world politics class. I'm the guy who sits two rows back of you and to the left. Glasses, short hair. I spilled Coke on you that one day and I loaned you that piece of paper once. You always look back at me when I cough real hard. Remember me...." After that introduction, the chances of the caller getting to meet this person are somewhere between slim and zero. The frustrations of answering machines go beyond these special instances, however. There are many different answering machines on the market, and they all have different features. For instance, some machines give you 10 tol5 seconds to have your say. Other machines are voice activated and will continue as long as you do. The problem is you don't know which you are speaking to. Suppose you have a very long message, and to play it safe, you say it in 10 seconds. If the machine was, in fact, limited in the amount of time, the person receiving the call will experience incredible frustration as the last and most important sentence will be cut off. However, if the machine could have gone on forever, the receiver will be amused and perhaps confused as to why you are talking as if you are on a Federal Express commercial. Telephone answering machines do have one good feature: they are a you valuable outlet for creativity. People owning these machines can exercise their ingenuity by designing inventive blurbs for callers to hear. Even this good feature, however, can quickly turn sour. : had a friend who would think up originalt messages every week. And this was cute for a while. But it got so that if his friends called and he was home, they expressed disappointment. They hadn't called for him, they wanted to hear this week's message. Pretty soon word got around. For-a good laugh, people should call 769-8990. My friend was then inundated with calls from strangers, asking him to play his answering machine for them. "Hi, Johr. I don't know you, but could you play your answering machine for me?" John finally and rightly decided answering machines were a plague on mankind. The problems with telephone answering machines are getting to be very annoying. And I don't think my frustrations with them are an idle hangup. Others must share my feelings. I think it's time we vent our anger on these machines. We cannot physically destroy them. But next time we get one on the phone, we should make sure to give it a piece of our mind. This may not work well either, though. After all, what do you say to a stupid machine? e antichigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 9 S DOES ROWNALD A&Ik RE-ALLY UNERTAND l JMSCONTROLISSUS ? Vol. XCVII, No. 50 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 I Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. OF COURSE Reform MSA MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEM- howev BLY'S FORUM TO HONOR State thoses Senator Lana Pollack (D-Ann assemb Arbor) and State Rep. Perry for B Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) has been assemb criticized as a political endorse- on it. ment. The assembly should have Eve considered the consequences before before holding the forum. be vie The forum was held to thank Instead Pollack and Bullard for their until af support of higher education. Both made candidates have consistently Baker protected the University's interests from t in Lansing. Had the forum not was h directly preceded an election it forbidd would have been an excellent way or pass for MSA to praise supportive student lawmakers. Pollack In retaliation for MSA's action, consun Debbie Buchholtz, president of the grasper College Republicans, is working to appear remove MSA's tax exempt status Both on the grounds that tax exempt Gaber, organizations can't endorse Assem candidates. According to its Comm constitution, MSA cannot make that the political endorsements. Buchholtz argum argues that since Bullard and appear Pollack funded the forum, along weeks with MSA, it's unlikely that they inhere considered it nonpolitical. She has unwilli a point: in a campaign, candidates a blow don't spend money where they The don't see a political advantage. By status giving the candidates this political celebra advantage a week, and a half legally before, she argues, MSA is in spentc effect endorsing them. sugges Buchholtz's view that MSA is an taxing apolitical organization is overly declin restrictive, however. Though MSA progra should not violate its constitution studen by making endorsements, it would spons lose much of its effectiveness if it ramific did not take political stands. be take Buchholtz says MSA's stands MSAr don't represent her views; they do, credibi s forum er, represent the views of students who voted for the bly members. The best way uchholtz to change the bly would be to run for a seat n the assembly recognized hand that the forum would ,wed as an endorsement. d of postponing the fofum fter the election they merely cosmetic changes. Dean 's posters were removed he tent in which the forum eld and the candiates were den to wear re-election pins out flyers. It's unlikely that ts who stopped by to see k and Bullard, rather than to me free cider and donuts, :d the fact that they were not ing as candidates. h Michael Margolis and John Chair and Vice-Chair of the ably's External Relations ittee, have vigorously denied e forum was political. This ent ignores the fact that any ance by a candidate two before an election is -ntly political. MSA's ingness to admit a blunder is to its credibility. loss of MSA's tax exempt would not be cause for ation and may not be justified . Although the $1000 MSA on a mediator this summer ts that it has money to burn, it would lead either to a e in funding for student .ms or an increase in the it fee. Next time MSA ors a forum the political cations of the action should en into account. Otherwise, may lose more than just its lity. DO E s 1 7 1i 11,+: I AS WELL AS I Do ! NO'S A ttAR I w w -4 -p , l S o i A s t 7 .J DSA takes Reagan's cues Ly jLGUS4I..L..W A) 15 t1 crtae u. Fcwar s In their letter to the Daily ("DSA Clarifies its platform," 10/27/86), the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) respond to Republican Rep. Carl Pursell's despicable Red-baiting of 1986 Congressional candidate Dean Baker by stating that such Red-baiting will give voters the impression that Baker has "some sort of Communist link." The DSA complains that Pursell is attempting to "connect DSA to Soviet expansionism." The Ann Arbor Club of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) condemns Pursell's Red-baiting tactics; such tactics are always used by the capitalist ruling class to divide and weaken the people's forces. However, we object to the implicit suggestion in the DSA letter that being a communist would indeed make one a tool of "Soviet expansionism." The DSA's talk about "Soviet expansionism" and "Soviet totalitarianism" is the same kind of Big Lie anti-communism that Reagan uses to justify his war policies and the need for Star Wars as a counter to the "Soviet threat." The DSA's anti-Sovietism is what one expects from Pursell or Reagan, but not from "democratic socialists." What DSA is attempting to do is identify anti-Sovietism with socialism ideologues. We are left with the riddle, "What is socialist without being socialist?" Answer: the DSA. Socialism means social, that is public, ownership of the major means of production, a planned economy (versus an anarchic one), and the working class as the leading force in society. That is what exists in the Soviet Union and the other members of the socialist community. And any (honest) person who has been to the Soviet Union and recognizes what it's really like will tell you that the Soviet Union is a socialist and not a "totalitarian" state-though it may seem "totalitarian" to those who believe that bankers, corporation owners, financiers and/or their hirelings should rule. The "Soviet threat" is a creation of propaganda. The unilateral Soviet mora - torium on nuclear testing (now in its second year) and Mikhail Gorbachev's proposal at the meeting in Iceland to eliminate all nuclear weapons (and the Reagan Administration's attempts to ignore or obscure these proposals) have exposed the Reaganites before the entire world. The Reagan Administration (and the ruling circles who support it) is now seen as a gang of nuclear madmen seeking war- economy profiteering and first-strike The DSA calls itself "socialist," as is its prerogative. But even where social democratic parties like DSA have been in power for decades, they have never abolished the domination of big capital. They have never established socialism. Under their governments even modest improvements in labor and social conditions are vulnerable to reversal, as current developments in Western Europe graphically show. And one wonders what the DSA thinks about their friend, the "Socialist" president of France, who sank the environmentalist "Rainbow Warrior" ship. The Communist Party USA is very active in the peace and trade union movements and, unlike the DSA, we are very involved in the struggle against racism and for affirmative action. We work in broad coalitions with many forces, some of whom may disagree with us on many points, but we always strive to achieve the greatest unity to defeat the main enemy of the working people, which is currently the Reaganites. (The absurd ravings of the irrelevant pseudo- revolutionary and ultra-left grouping,, which equate Reaganite and anti- Reaganite politicians-usually the work of agents of reactionary government agencies-are not worth responding to.) 4 I I