Page 4--The Michigan Daily- Friday, September 6, 1991 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan ANDREW K. GOTTESMAN Editor in Chief STEPHEN HENDERSON Opinion Editor 111-11 a . ; , : , Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. f - All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. .. .... .;r}{;"{';;SYR{ 1111-1 {{"'{": "}:";"S:{{fi7:'C":fi:{{":" :4'":41nv'. .vTd:: vJ.". :vr."r.". vr."Jr.: "."rr."r vrr.".:"r.". r.:v .".vr ..{r. };r:. {;. . v:. ..{{ ..{,{{{.:":x,{{ {:'{ "'rlx.,v."Jr w "r."r v . r r .vJ". "."r." v "r v ""; MINOR4'r4 ::{.. o}:{ 'r' .rr "r. r rr.. .L":::. :%$.. .r...A.{7Xr. .{{{4' .::{ fi:: .rr v::"v "r . ,:. ?r4:}%:%':e:"... r.. r.:. :{"}};": { ' {"5; :"YY}:4}::.".-}'"."nrr"a" " .. J.. ."'r .:1 .".{. r.. {:..4,.: ."'?. : J.vrJ:r1."A.v ,rr}d . .u.r . } .vJ.: . r.. ..:. . J. .{.. r.. ,J . J. " v vr. Yr" 7{r."r"rr yr . 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' '"'J:: ::::r: }:YJ {T'.1 ' .... ! :............... .. {: i' .riJ21.'i.........J.......................n..........r.1'i.. ......:titiY 4t....'..."..4.......... _........t... F F:"t!;s'4Y" vi'ati :r : ? ?f, r"'; J":tiA j¢_:::S C:'¢ :i:.;.i;"::.: ? ..........:%: ::i::",: ::;:;:r3: :":v::.. ":i:{'$Yi:":":}:"'r."'ti'. ; ;;;:r . ." 1';:;" ;"""" """ "" °i itiC+'''"' :k: " ":;p,: r; "-" ;a.:"'" : T ...... s........... 'Se.....r.~..,.,.,.},Jr;.:1Y:sy% ...}T:$s'"'}rr. % '.' v_"34..hRv..J "X'^.'{.s,",.:3 ",y.,a' S}.;s,' {:.t}.?:.xvr::Y i ..,. i.+.X 1////1////l///////N! iJt{iii.... ..iri..i,.rii .i.ri riiiyi if /1/////f/!/!//.+l. Distribution credits University should offer students more academic leeway IWEALY, 1THE 5VPREN[COAET / pwSNLLYj 1'M IOWYM6 5wRA.DOUMrt CIL RICt i~xlpR 'A ttempting to offer students a broad, liberal education is certainly a goal worthy of en- couragement and support. The University of Michigan, in its attempt to offer such a quality education, created the distribution credit guide- lines that all undergraduates are required to follow. On the surface, a system that demands a certain number of credits from each of the broad fields of study would seem to expose students to a variety of topics "in a way that enables each student to achieve breadth of understanding in several fields of study and depth in one or two" (from the 1991- 92 LS&A Bulletin). And when students arrive at the University, they expect to be able to explore their personal interests while receiving a liberal and vocational education. Our distribution system, however, does not allow such exploration. Suppose a physics concen- trator wishes to practice and improve his or her skills as a creative writer, or an electrical engineer harbors a particular fascination with U.S. history. Underthe current system, students can only choose from the most basic classes offered in other con- centrations to fulfill distribution credits. After pre-requisites, concentration require- ments, and these basic distribution classes, little or no room remains for satisfying personal academic curiosity. The hypothetical physics student would be dis- couraged from pursuing his extra-professional ar- tistic goals. The electrical engineer could not sat- isfactorily quench his or her desire to learn more about U.S. history. What should be a part of any undergraduate experience - the students' explo- ration of their personal academic interests - is sadly left neglected in either case. This can be changed forthe betterin any number of ways. Advanced placement credit could be used for distribution. The University could permit stu- dents to obtain minor concentrations, as other schools do. Or the distribution credit requirements could be halved, leaving 15 or more credits to be filled as the student sees fit. Whatever system is used, the number of classes that do not satisfy distribution requirements should be reduced. The goal of reform is not to allow the scientist to avoid the humanities courses, nor to allow the artists to avoid the science classes. It is simply to offer greater latitude for the scientist who loves to paint or the artist who loves biology. Ensuring that students' academic interests are fulfilled should be as high apriority as guaranteeing the abstract idea of a broad, liberal education. The University is obligated, in this instance, to recog- nize the wants of its student population. I "l-" WIetlands Bush's proposal courts environmental disaster f he gets his way, George Bush- who continu- ally promised to preserve the nation's wetlands during his 1988 campaign - will destroy 30 million acres' worth of the little that remains. The ecological consequences of such a move would be catastrophic. The 150 million acres of wetlands still leftin the United States have been dubbed "America's fainforest." Home to numerous endangered species of animal and plant life, their destruction could eradicate entire ecosystems that depend upon the muck and peat-based soils which make wetlands unique. Bush's current proposal would revise standards set by his own administration in 1989 to protect huge swaths of land that were being bulldozed into oblivion. In Illinois, for example - where the State Department of Conservation has made an initial estimate of what the new proposal would mean - preliminary field work suggests that 608,000 of the state's 932,000 currently protected acres will be thrown open to development. Much of that land is wooded bottom land that is home to 40 percent of the endangered bird species which migrate through the state. The prognosis elsewhere is similarly dire. Bot- tomlands in the Mississippi Delta, 500,000 pri- vately-owned acres in Florida's Everglades, and between 400,000 and 800,000 acres in Maryland would no longer be protected. Wetlands through- out the Midwest- including Michigan, which has lost 71 percent of the wetlands that once made the state a unique ecological haven - would also be destroyed. Preserving what Bush - in a stunning display of scientific ignorance -has referred to as "small' puddles" is not only important because our natural resources serve as a playground for millions of people. Destroying wetlands would also eliminate countless plant species which could potentially contribute to still unknown cures or relief for human diseases from cancer to the common cold. There is still time to save the wetlands. Bush's initiative provides for public comment time from now until October. Ann Arbor's environmental groups -- including the Ecology Center, the Rainforest Action Movement, and the local chap- ter of the Sierra Club - must contribute to a national campaign allowing Bush to read our lips: "Save the wetlands." MSA seeks fiscal reform To the Daily: The University Board of Regents approved a $6.27 mandatory student fee for the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) on July 19. This amount, proposed by the MSA executive officers, represents a 7.4 percent decrease in last year's $6.77 fee. My party, the Conservative Coalition, ran on a platform of pursuing fiscal responsibility for MSA, a goal most students know has not been achieved in the past. Previous administra- tions had put MSA in debt by $80,000 and squandered student funds on fact-finding missions to Israel and Central America. We came into office to find that MSA kept no financial records at its office. This budget proposal is going to change things at MSA. It is designed to provide students with the same services at a lower cost, with more account- ability and less frivolity. The part of the proposal that has caused the most controversy is the suggestion that we decrease the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union (AATU) budget by 50 percent, or roughly $24,000. Last year's budget pro- vided AATU with funding for six times the amount of work hours the organization claimed to be billing. Our proposal suggests funding four times as much. If the proposal passes, the AATU will have to make some decisions about how to spend its money. It may not be able to afford to publish a newsletter with anti-war poems and information about how to get involved in the "Recall Engler" campaign. Or, the AATU staff may not be able to give itself a 10 percent raise, as it did last April. MSA will certainly insist that the organization not operate without a working board of directors,'which it has nothad for years. In short, the AATU must become fiscally responsible and stick to providing a student service, not a political platform. Perhaps the most important aspect of the budget proposal is the hiring of an MSA accountant who would keep the books for MSA, Student Legal Services (SLS) and the AATU. Such a movewould ensure that these organizations remain fiscally sound and responsible. It would also take a huge burden off these organizations so they could concentrate fully on providing students with the very best service. This proposed budget is an important step on the way to legitimacy for MSA. After a disastrous year, MSA is beginning to gain credibility with both the University administration and the student body. We have a long way to go, but this budget helps send us on our way. James Green MSA President LSA senior The Daily encour- ages responses from its readers. Letters should be 150 words or less and include the author's name, year in school and phone number. They can be mailed to. The Michigan Daily, * 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor 48109. Or they can be sent via MTS to: The Michi- gan Daily Letters to the Editor. The Daily does not alter the content of letters, but reserves the right to edit for style and space consider- ations. If you have questions or com- ments, you should call Stephen Henderson at 764- 0552. .......t.d... Dalyimet4 he ........,...ii mrOw t:i fl ::::....::. Where to party? U-Club, Nectarine are both making it harder T he recent transformation of the Nectarine Ballroom effectively removes one of the last clubs or bars in Ann Arbor permitting under-21 patrons. For the first time in memory, students are returning to a campus largely devoid of collective places to dance and frolic. Nonetheless - and as those "in the know" will attest - students are still going to party. Clashing with growing calls to regulate frater- nities - and especially their legendary drinking sessions -changes at the Nectarine and elsewhere practically compel Greek organizations to supply most of the campus' recreational needs. This, in turn, increases the possibility that these already image-tarred organizations will either condone or inadvertently host illegal activities. It also grants them extreme power to dictate the nature of the University's social life. There are potential alternatives to this party vacuum. The University Club, which has been horribly mismanaged for years, could actually be a nice place. But instead of demonstrating the imagi- nation necessary to make it one, the University has barred all alcohol from the site. Much like the management at the Nectarine, the University apparently feels that the solution to underage drinking is either to bar 18 to 20-year olds or, alternately, bar booze. While these represent easier solutions, they also represent lazier ones. Surely a University managing a one half billion dollar endowment, 25,000 employees, and 38,000 students can devise a system that will simultaneously serve alcohol and serve it legally. If this is too much for the University to handle, perhaps they could sell the U-Club to a private firm. The University has relinquished control of various food services in the Michigan Union to private firms; if necessary, they could do the same thing with the U-Club. The bottom line is not who runs such a facility, but making sure that it runs in a way that will serve all students, whatever their age. The alternative could be worse than the proposed cure: more illegal drinking, practiced under less supervision, yielding potentially disastrous results. ' y:T~'a ''"${}::$,.'r";:$;'?2r. 'y}"". r V. SS,:Q^': .'J. ~ te A l. Ar 3"" rr~ 'J. Better seats, bigger headache.V by David Lane The Michigan Athletic Department wants to raise student enthusiasm at its basketball games, so Interim Athletic Director Jack Weidenbach and men's basketball coach Steve Fisher have moved student season ticket holders to behind the team benches. Congratulations, the Athletic Department has finally taken a step to benefit the students and to increase fan spirit at basketball games. Too bad they didn't stop there. The rest of the new basketball season ticket policy shows the athletic department's total lack of consideration toward those students who are loyal Michigan basketball fans. It creates more hassles for the students than we past. Instead of the usual week-long sign-up period for students interested in buying season tickets, students are now given one day in which to register for tickets. The one day devoted to registration starts at midnight, Monday moming, Oct. 14. Students who want to be guaran- admission seats? Most students barely get to football games on time. If it is freezing cold outside, or better yet, if it is snowing, students can no longer go straight into Crisler Arena. Now they will have to wait in lines outside, braving the elements. Many students will stay at home. "Midnight Madness" on Oct. Only half of the students will be given seats in the blue section behind the team benches; the other half will have their regular seats in the gold section behind the basket. Nuts and Bolts IFIRST DAY BACK... by Judd Winick IMAtLE a0J m Fr iAN 1V..4 r:NAME4 I ~ $914 cy STS GCk YC1 I . C ~ teed one of the 4,000 seats available to students must show 14, the non-transferable voucher cards, and the thought of waiting in the fra-n'.n nalA to a t ntn