Page 4 -The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, October 9, 1990 Ulbe Sidtgau Bau EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Viewpoint ------+- NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor I -. 4 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed artictes, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. C:.,I C .z:CC*~'.',.. C:C. CCC 'C F rm t h e D a i ly .. Choice? Education proposal doesn' t address problems (rY'Aa' Jo~ i C~&~ ( 67,1A-A vii? .A~ iC IN THE LATEST TELEVISED ADVER- tisements for the Michigan Gubernatorial race, incumbent James Blanchard and challenger Richard Engler boast their continued commitment to education, learning, and academia. ,A cursory glance at their records reveals nothing of the sort. Michigan is currently in the midst of an educational crisis and in dire need of educational reform at all levels. In fact, the state now ranks 36th in the nation in state allocated funds to education. In the past few years, budgeted funds for public education on all levels have been severely cut. On the primary level, attempts have been made to remedy the failing public school system with a "Choice System." This system would allow parents to send their children to the public school of their choice. It would also provide a money voucher to parents wishing to send their children to private schools. Band aid reforms *such as these remedy little and more importantly fail to address the inherent inequities in the present system. On the surface, the voucher system seems to offer new options for those who currently have none; but upon closer examination, the problems with such a system are enormous. The root of the problem is that stu- dents who live in districts where the tax base is low receive less money for education than students who reside in "'wealthier districts. This creates an extremely inequitable opportunity to receive adequate education. Under the "Choice System" these students in poorer districts will end up traveling to the more wealthy districts to attend school. Not only will this system create prob- lems of overcrowding, but also will present logistical difficulties like transportation. In addition to these inadequacies, the system threatens the jobs of those who teach in inadequately funded school systems. Inevitably teachers in schools that lack the funds to provide adequate educational instruction will suffer when students flee to the "better" schools elsewhere As enrollment drops and the need for these teachers decreases lay- offs and unemployment will follow. Also not taken into account is the vast bureaucracy that exists in many school districts which inhibits proper educational expenditures. The calls by Blanchard, Engler and others for "quailty education" are simply attempts to win approval from those who situation is desperate. Dealing with the current crisis in edu- cation necessitates reform in the system by which education funding is allocated. A more.equitable process in this. system will create equity in education which is the ultimate goal. The "Choice System" proposal is merely another stop-gap measure that fails to take into account long-term desires. As long as funds for learning are slashed and misused and the problems of disparity in the current system denied, the future of students in Michigan is grim. . 47 LO7 1 J . v Relief may not be just around the corner on S. University by Glynn Washington True Story. Police recently ticketed a friend of mine $55 for urinating on a public road. When he appealed to the judge on the basis of cultural ignorance (he had been living abroad two days earlier), the judge re- sponded. "Well, you'll learn!!" before slamming the gavel... With this fresh in memory, I staggered down S. University Saturday night - with a few of my closest friends. For some odd reason I felt the urge to find a potty. So I strolled into McDonalds. "Hey buddy, where's the little boy's room?" "We ain't got none." So, with a bit more urgency, I went next door to Little Ceasers. They didn't have one either. But the fellow was kind enough to give us directions to the Brown Jug. I ran (waddled), and it was their that I inet the "Potty Guard." "Yo, man, I gotta use the bathroom!" "NO." "What do you mean no? I gotta use the pot!" "Sorry, you gotta find somewhere else." Washington is an LSA junior and a member of the Daily's Opinion Staff. "Will, your leg do?" He didn't think it funny, and I wasn't in the mood to joke around. I darted out, de- termined to find a bush somewhere. I was just about ready, when I heard the sound of dogs barking in the near vicinity. Noth- ing causes me more fear than genitalia ex- posed in the presence of dogs. So I ran. And screamed. And finally I came to a little booth with campus security people in it (You know - the ones they want to give guns Donalds." Big beads of sweat poured down m agony-ridden face, "I - have - to - use - the - bathroom..." The idiot took great enjoyment in re- fusing me entry, and by that time I had to go so bad I could almost taste it. I knew that if I didn't find a place soon, I was go- ing either lose consciousness, explode, or ruin a cool pair of jeans. The place was crawling with police, all of them ready to hand me a $55 dollar ticket for breakir the urination law. I darted out, determined to find a bush somewhere. I was just about ready, when I heard the sound of dogs barking in the near vicinity. Nothing causes me more fear than genitalia exposed in the presence of dogs. to). I pounded on the door. "Augghh! I gotta use the bathroom!" "What?" "I GOTTA USE THE BATHROOM!!" "What's yer name?" "I GOTTA PEE! !" "Sorry, we don't got no public re- strooms here, mebbe you should try Mc- What to do?0 What to do? With time running out, I hit upon a plan. I pulled down my pants and assumed a Gothic pose. Relief came quickly, but pigeons kept landing on my arm. So the next time you pass an odd look- ing fountain, perhaps you shouldn't play in the water. t ivism Universities must respect IN THE LATEST PHASE OF THE. increase in student protest sweeping the nation this Fall, students at the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) have just concluded a sit-in that effectively elosed the university for 11 days. Once again, the catalyst was a university administration and its inensitivity towards the needs of students. Once again, both this insensitivity and the student response stiggest stark parallels with the situation in Ann Arbor. Long before UDC's students moved into action, its administration had been igporing student concerns. Though the campus had no university child-care3 facilities and no Afro-American studies department, its administration was pouring massive funds into the athletic department. Then, last month, the ad- ministrators' reinforced their commit- ment to UDC's cosmetic image rather than the quality of its education by allo- cating $1.6 million to "renovate" the school library in preparation for an art ekhibition. On Sept. 26, students decided to lake action in protest. Hundreds streamed into the main administration building, staged a sit-in, and initiated a boycott of all classes. The impressive unity of the protest gave the administration little option but 10 listen, and respond, to student con- kems. - Last Sunday a tentative settlement was reached. The students gained in- icreased library hours, an allocation of funds towards child-care facilities, and ,a guarantee of increased classes in Afro-American studies. They also student wishes forced the resignation of the Athletic Director, and a commitment to the re- organization of the department; three other administrators also resigned, in- cluding the chair of the board. Finally, they won a complete amnesty for all student and faculty protestors. University administrators must be accountable to the students whose in- terest they are meant to represent. Stu- dents at UDC have shown that with effective and unified protest, such ac- countability need not be begged for, but can be demanded. Our own administration is preparing to invest $35 million to improve air- conditioning in laboratories, yet there is no Chicano Studies Department, no full Latino Studies Department, and wholly inadequate child-care facilities. The University is preparing to invest $5 million in a deputized police force, against the wishes of a vast many stu- dents, and yet ignore measures such as increased lighting, safewalk services and education which are proven to in- crease safety. President Duderstadt has dismissed student demonstration as "basically theater." Regent Philip Power has said that "Ceaseless repetition of a chant is not a particularly enhancing way to make a comment." But events at UDC prove them wrong. If students, deprived of any democratic say, shout loud and long enough with a unified voice, they de- mand respect. Universities should be run to provide students with the educa- tion they need, not to pander to the aesthetic desires of bureaucrats. Rush criticism ill-founded To the Daily: I am writing this letter in response to Mike Molitor's review in the 9/26/90 edi- tion of the Daily. In that particular issue, Mr. Molitor wrote a review of the new Rush album, Chronicles, that not only showed a tremendous lack of information about the band, but also showed his musically ignorant opinion, which was not wanted or appreciated by many music fans. I am therefore writing this letter more as an editorial reply than simply an editorial. First off, I would like to stress the fact that I am NOT a diehard Rush fanatic. I am simply a music lover who has a wide variety of tastes, of which Rush is in- cluded. I would like to address certain points of Molitor's review which were particularly distressing. First, Molitor claims Rush's earlier material "does get a bit ridiculous. The all- too-frequent stops and starts make some of the songs...just plain annoying." They do?! Perhaps the author does not understand the complexity of the music to which he refers. But everyone is entitled to their own opinion. The problem I have is that Molitor then refers to the pre-Neil Peart days as "just as loud and as stupid as most...heavy metal". Then, when Neil does join the band, all of the sudden bassist Geddy Lee doesn't "like or under- stand Peart's lyrics." This moronic statement implies that the only thing Neil Peart brought to Rush was some interesting lyrics.-However, it was Peart's rhythmic genius that brought those "ridiculous" and "annoying" stops and starts to the band (those stops and starts, by the way, became Rush's trade- mark, and have a lot to do with their pop- ularity today). On the one hand, Molitor is praising Neil Peart for his lyrics, and on the other hand, he is telling us how annoying old Rush music is. All the while, he is lead- ing us to believe Mr. Molitor did not re- ally think about what he was saving. Is he changes and intricacies as the old. It is not as apparent to the surface listener (such as Mr. Molitor), but it's there. Rush fans as a whole are not pop mu- sic fans, so just because Rush is getting a lot of airtime does not mean their music is getting any better. Maybe for those who like Pop music it is, but then most Pop fans cannot appreciate Rush music. One final note: when Mr. Molitor tries to tell us that Rush music now is not the same as older material, just remember the quote at the end of Exit Stage Left by bassist Geddy Lee: "after all, we haven't changed, everyone else has." Jeffrey Gordon Show sensitivity in captions To the Daily: We have noticed a certain discrepancy in the ideals represented in the editorial policies of The Michgan Daily and the re- cent tone of the captions. The Opinion Page expresses concern for many different oppressed groups, both close to home and far away. The captions, and sometimes the choice of pictures, ex- press no respect for their human subjects. The trauma of hospitalization is of questionable taste for a human interest photo. On the second page of the Sept. 29 issue, a photograph showing a man being loaded into an ambulance was run with a caption suggesting that he had "a little too much to drink." With no accompanying story, and no real reason for the photo at all, the Daily connected the man's face with the implica- tion that he is a problem drinker. There are many medical conditions that could appear similar to inebriation, and a paramedic's opinion is not a confirmed diagnosis. To fill space next to a movie review, a still was run with a caption comparing a deity to a Disney character. To advertise Griddes, a photgraph of a food line was used. The root of oppression of is ridicule and dehumanization. Not respecting a man's privacy, an unfamiliar religion, or Expulsion for fliers? To the Daily: I hope and pray that I speak for the vast majority of European Americans on this campus in saying that I am shocked, ap- palled, nauseated, and heartsick at the re- cent distribution of a scurrilous racist flier depicting Nelson Mandela as secretly lust-@ ing after white women (in the time-dis- honored tradition of stirring up racial/sexual paranoia used with such tragic efficacy by the KKK and Adolf Hitler). The perpetrators of this crime of fo- menting race-hatred - for it is no less than a crime - should, if caught, be pun- ished at the very least by permanent ex- pulsion from the University. This might serve as an object lesson for any other sick* and twisted hate-mongers out there in the University population. Racial slander should be made as punishable as personal slander or libel. But beyond this, I am sickened at the thought that this disease of virulent racism - an index of total, willful ignorance and psychopathology - has infected anyone who qualifies for admission to Yale or the University - or indeed any other college or university. What does this say about the educational level, prevailing attitudes, or psychiatric health of our general popu- lation? I shudder to imagine. We European Americans must do all we can to stand in solidarity with our African American brothers and sisters in containing and rooting out this vital dis- ease before it spreads any further. Thomas I. Ellis, Ph.D. (F O DY NO i IN MWPwiN GI AN1MORE ? t 1 "3 }