Page 14 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1988 STUDENT LIFE M-ulating other SAs? issue Stand New University President James Duderstadt B RYAN TUTAK When the University of Col- orado's Board of Regents voted not t4ivest from South African com- panies at their March meeting, more that 100 students and student gov- einment representatives leaped on the resents' table, crushing it and caus- iNg about $500 in damage. b"There was this rush," Regents' Secretary Bud Arnold said. "People wype chanting and stomping on the taple. We were amazed and dumb- fq nded. It's still kind of a mess." STUDENT governments are notorious for outrageous stunts, and oarsis no exception. The Michigan Student Assembly, which posters t campus with scathing criticisms oche University administration, has pished the tolerance of both the University's Board of Regents and stidents, conservative and liberal aike. MVSA is committed to improving the integrity of the University, as- s pbly leaders say, which often nyans ignoring popular opinion. "I's our job to stand up and tell the regents that they're wrong," said MSA Vice President Susan Over- dorf, an LSA senior. MSA has hardly failed at this. Last January, LSA senior Michael Phihlips, then chair of MS A's Stu- dept Rights Committee, brought a student in a kangaroo outfit wearing a placard reading "justice" when he spoke at the regents' meeting. Phillips said his friend symbol- ized the "kangaroo court" outlined ugler the proposed code of non-aca- demic conduct, which the regents approved last April. After his spech, Phillips said, "There's a lot of people who respect (the regents). I'm not one of them." LATER IN the term, MSA passed a resolution demanding Re- gent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) re- sign because, as Phillips put it, "He is the most homophobic, racist, sexist, paternalistic man that I ever met." But some student governments shun extremist tactics in favor of inoffensive and conservative meth- ods. University of Illinois student government President Peter Hardin said he prefers to negotiate with the board of trustees rather than irritate them. "I don't think we've ever criti- cized our board," he said. "We've taken the approach of working with the administration to solve problems rather than protest. We get more ac- complished in an open conversation over a drink." Colorado's student government, now under moderate leadership, has little choice but to listen to the re- gents, said new Co-President Chris Drummond. "Protests are an effec- tive way to make change," he said. "But we have eight white male re- gents who are Republicans and one white male who is a Democrat. They're not about to listen to protesters." AND FOR all MSA's glam- orous efforts, the code remains intact and Baker is still a regent. Some- times MSA tactics appear to be acts of frustration rather than serious at- tempts to effect change, and Phillips has often expressed bitterness toward the University. "The administration doesn't care about students anymore," Phillips said during a regents' meeting. "They never did in the first place." But the assembly has paid a high price for its verbosity; its con- stituency support is disappearing. Less than seven percent of the Uni- versity's 35,000 students voted for candidates in MSA's last election - the lowest voter turn-out this decade. And the College of Engineering's student government wants.to revamp MSA's constitution. OVERDORF defended MSA's style, saying the assembly must use drastic measures to convey its mes- sage. "We have to advocate student issues strongly," she said. "We don't have enough power to be involved in negotiation." Yet the conciliatory student gov- ernments have more active constit- uencies than MSA does. More than 30 percent of Colorado's 23,000 students voted in last spring's elec- tions. About 12 percent of Illinois' 37,000 students voted in its last election. But moderate student govern- ments, Hardin admitted, often are as unsuccessful as liberal bodies. "Students get dismayed about how long it takes to get results," he said, adding that, after several meetings with the trustees, they still refused to divest from South Africa. THE COLORADO and Illi- nois student governments, unable to affect national and international politics, turned to mundane campus concerns. Drummond said he wants to create a sense of community at Colorado with a computer program listing biographies of students, fac- ulty, and administrators to draw to- gether community members with common interests. Hardin said the Illinois student government's major ongoing project is staffing committees to review academic policies with faculty. The body is working to get emergency We phones on campus and improve the training of campus security, he said. MSA, on the other hand, has condemned apartheid, U.S. interven- tion in Third World countries, and CIA interviews on campus. MSA also has sent representatives to El Salvador to report on human rights violations. "IT'S IMPORTANT to deal with controversial issues such as South Africa, Central America, and military research," MSA External Relations Committee Chair Zach Kittrie said. "The vast majority of students otherwise would not think about them." But LSA graduate Tobin Smith said addressing non-campus issues is pointless. "Resolutions are a piece of paper that don't mean a whole hell of a lot if you don't have stu- dents backing them," he said. Kittrie said apathy about student government is a universal problem, adding that credibility does not rise and fall with politics but depends on the services the body provides. "Student governments become legitimate by doing things that stu- dents want them to do," he said. "Ultimately, students don't care how their government comes out politi- cally. Students want to see services. They want as much as they can for their money." COLORADO'S student gov- ernment, funded by an annual $270 student fee, offers free student legal services, funds a hospital for stu- dents, sponsors social activities on campus, and operates a recycling center. The government also con- tributes to the student newspaper and student radio station. Illinois' student government, charging students one dollar per term, publishes a magazine that rates classes and funds a student interest lobbying group. MSA, charging seven dollars per term, provides students with Advice magazine, which rates classes; funds the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, which offers free counseling about landlord-tenant rights; funds the free Student Legal Services; and offers low-cost health insurance. Student publications and social activities are administered by other campus groups. Unqualified., insensitive, and ignorant "We will look back years from now and say that Jim Duderstadt did more for student activism in the '80s and '90s than Vietnam did in the '60s and Richard Nixon in the '70s." -Rackham Rep. Corey Dolgon 1WELCOME TO MICHIGAN During the year Housing Division will provide you with food service in your residence halls. Your lease provides two meals a day, except on Sunday when only one meal is served. This is the traditional ENTREE plan! Need more than two meals a day? Then sign up for ENTREE'PLUS and get: " Breakfast without sacrificing lunch or dinner! " Snacks at our three snack bars at a 10% discount! * FREE guest passes! Just complete the contract you received with, your Housing lease, and return it to the Entree Office, 100 Student Activities Building, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 and your ENTREE PLUS will be ready to use when you arrive in the fall! -19 Communism Not dead yet "The University administration doesn't like Stalin, they just like his methods." -Rackham Rep. Gus Teschke Regent Deane Most hated regent, with Regent Neal Baker Nielsen (R-Brighton) a close second (R-Ann Arbor) "He is the most homophobic, rac- ist, sexist, paternalistic person I ever met. This man is working to take away students' rights." -MSA President Michael Phillips University's code Opposed because students didn't of non-academic vote on it conduct "MSA should use every resource to force the repeal of the code. MSA should use every resource to restore students' democratic rights." -MSA President Michael Phillips Central Opposes state terrorism Intelligence "The CIA commits terroristic and Agency illegal acts. They could be con- victed under the principles of the Nueremberg trials. It's our moral and legal obligation to oppose the CIA." -Rackham Rep. Gus Teschke Public Interest Supports the environmental Research Group organization In Michigan "MSA has always lacked the good (PIRG IM) organizational leadership that stays around year after year. PIR- GIM has that." -Rackham Rep. Corey Dolgon Honorary Opposed degrees given to Jeane Degrees Kirkpatrick, Ferdinand Marcos, and the Shah of Iran "The degrees have a useful func- tion - to recognize great people. Most of the University community doesn't think these people are great - this is an anti-democratic selection in operation." -Rackham Rep. Gus Teschke Campus Security Opposes deputization "Armed campus security would be to students as the U.S. Cavalry was to Native Americans." -Music School Rep. Marni Rachmiel Marijuana law Supports $5 fine for possession "Any community efforts to repeal the law are misguided and should be redirected toward real prob- lems like homelessness and housing." -Rackham Rep. Corey Dolgon Housing MSA funds the Ann Arbor Tenants Union "Since the University guarantees housing to students only for their first year at school, and the hous- ing market in Ann Arbor is so tight, it's important for students to know their rights in a tenant- landlord relationship. -AATU Member Claudia Green Tuition Lobbies state legislatures for in- creased funding and wants the University administration to freeze tuition "Their justification for raising tuition is not getting adequate money from the state. They know they will only get a one percent increase. But that gives them an excuse to raise tuition." -MSA Vice President Susan Overdorf r--- ------ --- -- -- --1 I Automation is I I Earn Extra 1 I CASH FASTER I 1 While You Relax! 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