Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, November 19, 1991 GIe £irbgtjan Bal1 -,t. 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: Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. Y All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. PC controversy Right and left engage in rhetoric to avoid real issues Tast weekend, a conference titled "The PC speech codes and perceived indoctrinary teachings Lrrame-up: What's Behind the Attack?" met in without risking being labelled a right-wing bigot. AnntArbor to refute the spreading notion that left- Students representing a wide range of political wving thought police control many American uni- philosophies have expressed concern for free veriities. What was really demonstrated by this speech. This is not, as the conference claimed, conference, however, is the manner in which both solely a right-wing attack. sides of the debate use empty rhetoric and catch- If University departments decide to utilize phrases to belittle debate on important campus gender-inclusive language or make attempts to ISSUes. sensitize themselves to the concerns of minorities, 'The term "political correctness" has become this is an appropriate step. Requiring students to do virtually meaningless, due to its overuse and mis- the same is not. use by both conservatives and a national press University administrations must recognize that fixed on exposing the hysteria. By crying wolf, their role is tofacilitate free and open debate, rather same members of the anti-PC movement stigma- than to steer students towards unilaterally-defined tizeelegitimate progressive reforms and trivialize ideological goals. rearcomplaints about censorship on campus. All members of the University community This very overuse, however, enabled speakers should attempt to engage in a more open-minded at last week's forums to dodge questions about debate. The "right" characterizes itself as a group troubling free speech issues. Many panelists sup- of free-thinkers suppressed by le ft-wing thought piorted Michigan's speech code, since struck down, police. The PC conference, in trying to counter this vv'hich limited student expression in an over-broad stereotype, propagated an equally inaccurate ste- ahd highly dangerous manner. Rather than address reotype, that progressives are suppressed by bogus these questions, defenders of political correctness claims of PC made by evil right-wing white males. have lashed out attheir opponents. Panelist Julianne The result is a "controversy" whereby both Malyeaux claimed, "(Anti-PC) is the white males' sides vaguely define "PC" to shield the greatest lh~asp." weakness of their own platforms: the disregard for * o, both sides of the debate have become mired free speech associated with the left, and the sup- ie muck of inflammatory accusations and cheap pression of reform associated with the right. Lagoguery. Rather than dividing into two hos- To achieve free and open debate on campus, we tjamps, each claiming victimization, we need must find a middle ground where we can discuss t iild an atmosphere where all sorts of challeng- both free speech and sensitivity without being ing questions can be aired without being dismissed automatically thrown in with one of two hostile through superficial labels. camps, with the true meaning of our ideas lost 'i Likewise, a student must be allowed to question accordingly. iZo Lrt412'FSON7> - 'l'0 ) LI#-II'VE Sf1") &FraREF -3H-Ag&-rHA7 ' ot H/kv IF- S'A7>4f1 bO S'T7 \ r% F 01 .v{.vr":11:'"T.".;7 1x . "'i":1, : cr.yvt;:ge$r.:;:;;'x'2,rY;.,?4 ; '"2: :: : }:vtiv "'rti "' :ti;'r,'y :}::: L ir ":"::ti ", ;"'"?'r,'.:{::i1f: ?: .. ;..,v ... ". 1 ti 5::'.:"r.{; Q?'"1'":': L 1;}",: ?"'1',.L YA,1'rrt "{. ;fir,:;?' +'!q. 4!:ti":"'":yfi?":iliiti; 9 ?ii;:; ti}::{:«'r"". .": {;:::;:iti;?:":"::, :; {t 11{q,: ::}tit:{Y ":{Y:":\" Y.":11 ":':::titiV.ti1"::"::':":ti . ::1ti1, :S",::.1:: J::: }:: Daily justified i e i t'at: No Dukes Voters elect Edwards, election reveals potential dangers 'EdwinEdwards is Governor ofLouisiana. More middle class that does not play on racial under- inportantly, David Duke is not. On Saturday, 61 tones, will the nation no longer be susceptible to percent of Louisiana's voters cast their ballots in the dangerous appeal of a Duke. fverofEdwards. Although a big step was taken by However, the unity of opinion against bigotry th people of Louisiana and the rest of the nation, transcended state lines. Defeating Duke became an irwould be inappropriate to celebrate this victory issue ofnational interest and paramount importance. unonditionally. From President Bush on down, the people of this SDuke's populist message touched a nerve among country came together and authoritatively defeated .middle-class white Louisianans who harbor re- Duke. sentment against welfare recipients, the majority It is a sad commentary on the American political *'*hom are Black, in this time of recession. system that a person like Duke came so close to 'Though many of their concerns are legitimate, capturing a position of power. Take solace in D'uke's solution is misguided, and he comes with Saturday's results, but do not lose sight of the to6'much baggage. Only when the federal govern- larger problem. Just because justice was served in ent devises a comprehensive program to address Louisiana doesn't necessarily mean that it will financial woes of the increasingly impoverished triumph in the end. Cambodia U.N. concessions to murderous Khmer Rouge should end To the Daily: I just wanted to send you a line saying that I am in full support of your actions. Although I absolutely deny what CODOH stands for and everything they said in the ad, I not only agree that you had a right to print it, but that it served a very useful purpose on this campus. I believe that Americans are steadily losing our Constitutional rights, but it is the citizens that are doing it. After the ad was pub- lished, I saw many flyers saying, "No free speech for fascists!" But if we let this go through without a fight, it will be extremely easy to take away all of our other rights if someone disagrees with what we feel. The ad brought this issue out into the open, and I desperately hope that many others have started to notice what we are doing to our rights. I want to thank you for the service you provided to this campus. Joe Corrado Engineering first-year student Policing thoughts To the Daily: Ned Merrick made some serious accusations last week. "If they pulled calendars off the shelf because they weren't selling, that's okay. But I think if they took them off the shelves because of pressure from liberal feminist groups, then that's a form of censorship and a violation of First Amendment rights." Merrick wants to distinguish between the healthy workings of a free market and the threat to democracy posed by consumer, action. If we grew up watching TV, we know one thing: however pointless your life may be, you are worth the value of your dollar. Consumer boycotting is where capitalism and activism meet. Nothing could be simpler and less offensive. If you don't like it, don't buy it. If you don't like looking at it in the store where you shop, tell the manager how you feel. Before you take any public action, do consider that the more effective your action is, the more .hostility, fear and willful misun- derstanding you will generate on this campus. According to the Daily, "several customers voiced their opinions of the calendar, but not actual complaints." Merrick, in a move characteristic of debate at the University, translates "several customers" voicing opinions into "liberal feminist groups" exerting pressure. It's the Michigan Review Thesaurus: political- minded woman = man-hating, canon-bashing separatist. Who's policing whose thoughts now? Gina Hausknecht Rackham graduate student Iowa massacre To the Daily: I was shocked by the the killing event that occurred on the campus of the University of Iowa last Friday. Being one of the many students from the People's Republic of China, I feel deeply sorry for those who lost their lives in this tragedy and stand with their family members. Lucky enough to enjoy the great educational conditions in this country, I think we should feel grateful to the American people as much as to the 1.1 billion Chinese people a home. Pursuing academic excellence can only be a means for returning what we owe to society rather than solely raising the self-esteem of our own. Such achievement can only be judged by society but not by a single academic honor. Anyone who can have his or her own judgment should con- demn this crime. I hope the image of great academic achievement and hard working spirit of the Chinese students here will not be tarnished by this single event and that such and event will never happen again. Ming Shan graduate student School of Public Health Poor coverage To the Daily: As a resident and student of North Campus, I was disturbed by the Daily's feature, "Northern Exposure:What Goes On Inside the Buildings of North Campus" (11/15/91). How could the author forget to include all the numerous schools other than Engineering that exist on North Campus? He should have named his article "What goes on inside the engineering buildings," for it would have been more accurate. He excluded the School of Music, the Art &Architecture School, and the new-and- improved North Campus Com- mons to name a few. If one takes the bus from North Campus, the engineering buildings are the last thing you happen to run into if on a "Big Adventure" through North Campus. Nor did the author mention Baits, Bursley and Northwood Housing which also exist on North Campus. Really! Like the engineering buildings need more P.R. Kyra Gaunt School of Music *1 Write the Daily! uring the mid 1970s the Khmer Rouge, under the leadership of Pol Pot, murdered over one million Cambodians.The slaughter, which became {n as the "killing fields," was part of an attempt violently impose agrarian-based communism :,.$be Cambodian people. { ,This holocaust came to an end in 1978 when the m4Mle's Republic of Vietnam, fearing what the lner Rouge might do next, invaded Cambodia .' established the government of Prime Minister " Sen. Since that time, Cambodia has been "9Qaged in a civil war between the government and 4 ous guerilla factions. y turrently, the United Nations has taken control :dfMe situation in Cambodia. The General Assembly -has- established the Supreme National Council (SNC), a provisional government composed of the four major factions in Cambodia. U.N. peace- keeping forces recently arrived in the capital of Phnom Penh in order to oversee the provisional government, and prepare for democratic elections. 'This plan sounds sensible, but there is one glaring problem. One of the four factions in the SNC is the Khmer Rouge. The position of the U.N. and President Bush is that, in order to keep the Khmer Rouge out of power, they had to be part of the provisional government, and forced to compete against the other government factions at the ballot This policy poses some serious problems. Firstly, the Khmer Rouge has not abandoned its attempts to take control of Cambodia through military means. The regime has used the support of China and Thailand to create one of the largest fighting forces in Southeast Asia. As recently as last week, reports from western diplomats confirmed that the Khmer Rouge has violated disarmament agreements by hiding enor- mous caches of troops and weapons in rural Cambodia. Another problem with the U.N. plan is that it gives the Khmer Rouge the chance to take power through political manipulation. Mere mention of the Khmer Rouge inspires fear in the hearts of Cambodians. The regime has proven that it can seize power in Cambodian villages without even firing a shot. This is the type of intimidation which the Khmer Rouge could easily use to turn an election in their favor. The formation of the SNC has caused a power vacuum in Cambodia which the Khmer Rouge is poised to fill. Thirteen years of civil war has devastated the Cambodian infrastructure. This will undoubtedly make it difficult for the U.N. to effec- tively monitor elections throughout Cambodia's vast rural landscape. The U.N. must stop making concessions to the Khmer Rouge, and enforce a disarmament between the waring factions. Moreover, if peace and de- mocracy are to be restored to this war-torn country, the U.N. must use all of its available resources to ensure quick and fair elections in Cambodia. ..v..crr"w sv.'} vflf..fl",r+.Vyy.:W.% ;{:%. . } StV};'. fl"lf.Vl."V1.y '.. ..ri't;r::r" k1}r{ 'r'' ' * '..{,'}r ''. .fr ti~r-:i; ..t.'} n"6 Tr:. ~. .. vr Dr. Death and the politics of care by Elizabeth Cole After the first woman's death, Jack Kevorkian posed for a photograph with his suicide machine. The set up had the amateurish look of a gruesome science fair project. Inverted bottles hung from a small rack, poised to dispense a long drink of sleep and death through the IV tubing that snaked ominously onto the table beneath the apparatus. The media had a great deal of interest in the design and mechanism of the device. As though it were Frankenstein's monster, the reporters wanted to know where Dr. Death got the component parts. What drugs did it adminis- ter? How did the patient activate the lethal process? Other methods of suicide are carried out clandestinely; the act is deviant, its performance, lonely and furtive. In contrast , the machine, administered by a physician, embodies the belief that human dignity dictates a right and end with a finger on the release of an IV tube. The machine draws our attention to the act of suicide and away from the decision making process that preceded any contract with "Dr. Death." Why is it that only their roles, some women may feel that death would be welcome. At the same time, women may fear that taking their own lives would devastate the very families whom they hope to spare the burden of their illness. Terminal illness The policies of political and corporate America treat the work of care, and by exten- sion the women who do this work, as invis- ible. women have sought out the neat and painless death in the company of their families that Kevorkian offers as an alternative to chronic or terminal illness? American women are still the primary care takers of the generations. This burden has only been intensified by advances in medicine which offer extended life spans without necessarily extending the quality of that life. As daughters and again as mothers, the roles that women assume during the course of their presents wives and mothers, used to weighing their decisions on the scale of care, with an insoluble moral dilemma. Socially sanctioned suicide, administered in the clinics Kevorkian proposes, would appear to offer women a way out of this conflict, a practical and dignified solution to the problem of human suffering. Who in our society will provide care to the families of women whose incessant, debilitat- ing pain prevents them from i w Nuts and Bolts "[HE STRN tGxST STORE( r'1 f Hc AS 'to E T mE KNA1'Pw 0OFAu. -koJ ANtIMALS, F;M8tHaa s .ILIFOrCIE I S A L.F,hIaEANIHAI. II LI hTpJ m'FQrd ON, A.L.F,.HT I TOF-HN Y OO - _,..lN by Judd Winick SBOOWE FORGOT bOBO. 01 i