0 Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 4, 1991 Jibe £4torbau 1aiIA -1 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 747-2814 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. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. . . . P.'..r.. *,.......r. .4..*...p...r:...r.*.l.S .f..V::..... r :...... J.J.. ... . :....:::.. r I .}........ :.: "::::""v ........:.: .........:......................... . . . . 11V AA 1-6JIOx-fL unrtft),o)( frMeF, 9o-77-1 pE5/i' A/ 1716 W14-L Al fAI st2 1-0 Re p'Ltqc J Ljt(-&E LLIPO GWi-rH THe.J(4S-rcr- Co//1a KNWS r H E-M0 r f} ~&vLiT" S xI--__ ScN tcr i :" .'. .: .. . CMM§)T 7rz l i7 --- ---, -------- .1 11 "1 .1 UAW boycott Weekend protests address Hudson's anti-union policies O verThanksgiving weekend, the biggest shop- ping weekend of the year, the United Auto Workers (UAW) picketed Hudson's department stores across the state and urged a boycott of Hudson's products for its refusal to recognize the Westland Hudson's employees vote to unionize and to protest the undo pressure Hudson's has put on workers who are active in unionizing other Hudson's locations. Hudson's egregious conduct necessitates full support of the UAW-led boycott. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has ordered the company to start bargaining with union representatives, but Hudson's has refused. Hudson's is contesting this decision and hoping it will be overturned. Eighteen months ago, the Westland store voted tounionize, but Hudson's has refused to recognize the union since the vote. Hudson's claims that this is a one-store issue, and that an across-the- board boycott is unjust. But employees at several stores claim company-spon- sored intimidation has kept them from joining a union. Hudson's desperately wants to keep its employees from enjoying the right to collective bargaining. Employees claim Hudson's has mistreated them by the useof restrictive pensionplans and increasing sales quotas. By refusing to abide by the decision of the NLRB, Hudson's has admitted that it is willing to do what it takes to keep unions out of it's stores. Unions provide workers with a unified voice that allows them to petition for fair wages, decent insurance, pension plans, and other demands. By denying workers their right to unionize, Hudson's has effectively silenced that voice. The UAW led boycott calls on consumers to reject Hudson's labor practices and purchase holiday gifts elsewhere. This boycott should be supported until Hudson's amends its despicable practices and recognizes the Westland union. 7_J~ \ -> -< ,N\s ._----. ,' 0 {"r :":1L:W:": xxt r {"rm.rr}xWr"rx":."}rx">-"rrrr rrr 1 em x r :fyp,+. . } yy"c" {":".".Yr WhY. Y :.111hr :h. h1.J. J.YV'. "A1Y..} . r. "".. , "h1Y11"::. 1'hY":J:'hW ' .W:.YV: r:":'.YY, L.W.. Y .hW"r.4 r: "LLWryW + h1 1 Ow l 9 9m 91 Rs 9 SK I "V:: r Y4V11,.,........ Y.V. ..hr"h.. J R . '" "r. r. 'ra. h:." .: Jh'rhr:.W. nhrnW ""v.. . h....... . "..Y..... , I hV WJ.1 "}} Y VVr: r1RV "rr":".Y,.,, ,.1. MOSS "V " f v. ". "."rh"J.v vx" v, J h 1 J".W: ". r. "h.h h :1'"1:":1Y' .1. r I Living wills New act allows patients and families to exercise their rights Hospitals nationwide are now required by the Federal Patient Self-Determination Act, passed in November 1990, to ask all admitted patients if they have a living will, and to provide living will materials to those patients over 18 who lack one. This is a giant step toward affirming every person's right to determine under what conditions they would not want their lives to be artificially sustained. The living will and the health-care proxy are the best methods by which the sick can plan for their future hospital care, in case the conditions prevent them from making clear decisions on their own. The living will explicitly states when they wish to be removed from life support. These conditions have been known to include persistent vegetative state with no foreseeable recovery, coma, inability to relate to the outside world, and so on. The health- care proxy, on the other hand, assigns a person - usually a spouse or close family member - to make the decisions concerning the patient's treat- ment, and removes culpability from the individual should the patient die. Less than 20 percent of Americans have some form of living will. A major reason for this is that many Americans do not wish to think about death in advance, if ever. * Bush too libi Reactionary policies key new ca s the presidential campaign swings into full gear, the first signs of dissent within President Bush's own party are emerging. Today in Louisiana, David Duke is expected to announce his intention to seek the Republican nomination for president in a number of Southern primaries. Next Tuesday, political commentator Pat Buchanan is expected to join the Republican race. While it is encouraging to see that the president will not run unopposed in these primaries, these candidates are products of a distinct retreat to reactionary politics among many Republican voters. Duke, a former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, has made a career of campaigning in Loui- siana. In the past three years, he has run success- fully for the Louisiana House of Representatives, and unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate and Loui- siana governorship. Throughout all of these campaigns, he has promoted fundamentally racist policies under the guise of "equal rights for all." These so-called "equal rights" include the end of employment and education affirmative action policies and "welfare reform" that would disproportionately hurt Blacks. Buchanan, on the other hand, does not have a past in the Ku Klux Klan. His name does not carry the stigma of Duke's. But his belief in similar policies for"equality" has led observers to dub him "David Duke without the hood." This comparison There are signs, however, that this sentiment is changing. There have been increasing numbers of people who are purchasing graveyard plots earlier, as well as those executing earlier wills and life insurance policies. To complement this trend, people should plan forthe possibility of falling into a coma or vegetative state due to some unfortunate accident, and make sure that hospitals and their loved ones are instructed on what steps to take if there is little hope for recovery. Living wills can help to avoid situations like the ones in which Nancy Cruzan and Christine Busalacchi found themselves. It took five years for the family of Nancy Cruzan, rendered comatose from a car accident, to be finally removed from life support. Most recently, the father of Christine Busalacchi was permitted to have his now 21-year- old daughter to be removed from life support after her 1987 car accident, leaving her in a vegetative state. People can now affirm their right to execute an advance health care directive by having the ma- terials given to them when they are admitted to a hospital for any reason. This enables people to be informed of their rights, so they have the true freedom to decide for themselves how their lives should be run. eral ndidates' platforms is not without merit. Last year Buchanan received a great deal of publicity for a series of anti-Semitic remarks that appeared in his syndicated column. He has con- sistently advocated the termination of need-based welfare programs, appealingto the same group of voters targeted by Duke. These voters, once silent, are now responding to campaign tactics used by more "traditional" Republicans in the 1988 and 1990 races, with advertisments that were blatantly racist. President Bush's infamous 1988 "Willie Horton" campaign advertisement deserves its bad reputa- tion for legitimizing the use of racial undertones to win votes. Jesse Helms, in his 1990 Senate campaign, ran an advertisement that blamed minorities for mounting unemployment in the recession-plagued state. Meanwhile, Duke and Buchanan are trying to portray these "establishment" candidates as too moderate. With some analysts predicting that Buchanan will capture up to 35 percent of the vote in New Hampshire, it is likely that these hateful policies will gain attention on national television at the Republican National Convention next August. Unless a credible candidate emerges for this party, the Republicans will continue to suggest 19th century solutions for 21st century problems. Ad not logical To the Daily: The defense of the Daily's decision to print the malicious Oct. 24 advertisement appears to be founded on two key points: 1. The Daily has the constitu- tional right to print such and advertisement. 2. The Daily, as well as all newspapers, have a duty to print the controversial, in addition to the more traditional points of view. The advertisement in question is not controversial. It is just plain malicious slander. Controversial opinions are so called because they challenge the existing dogma. But even controversial opinions have, at least, some semblance of a logically derived argument and a modicum of No debate To the Daily: Is there really any case to be debated on whether the Holocaust happened? It is certainly beyond compre- hension that less than fifty years ago, 6 million innocent people - men, women and children, friends, neighbors, doctors, students, enough people to fill Michigan Stadium 55 times - died at the hands of the Nazis simply because they were Jewish. However, it happened. We must never forget. Claiming that it's not true - that all docu- mented evidence is propaganda and lies - insults the intelligence of the University community. Responding to these claims creates and fuels this "contro- versy." There simply is no debate. Let us not pretend there is some question about historical fact by filling the pages of the Daily with discussion. This "debate" belongs in the National Enquirer, not in our student newspaper. Jeff Marx third-year Music School credibility. Not gainsay, not bull, but credibility. If some other neo-Nazi zipper- head placed an add which claimed Afro-Americans are intellectually inferior, would you print it? If some idiot from the Flat Earth Society placed an add which claimed the space programs of the U.S. and U.S.S.R. were and are hoaxes, would you print it? The answer (I hope) to both questions is no. Neither of these points of view have any credibil- ity. Such garbage, including the Oct. 24 advertisement, does not belong in this or any other newspaper, or anything period for that matter. Yes, it may have been legal for the Daily to print the adver- tisement. But was it wise to do so? I think not. Journalists are rightly protected by the Constitu- tion. However, they must exercise judgement and not hide behind or abuse these rights. It is most sad that the editors of the Daily saw fit to reduce the intellectual level of their publica- tion to that of the Weckly World News. I can only hope it is but a. temporary aberration. Stuart Weinstein LSA postdoctoral fellow Enough, already! To the Daily: Enough is enough! Let the issue die already. Every time I've come across a Daily in what seems like the last month or so, there's invariably a letter or two condemning or supporting (mostly condemning) the Daily for it's decision to run the Holocaust Revisionist advertise- ment a few weeks ago. I for one have heard enough from you people. Fine, we all understand all the viewpoints from both sides. I tend to agree that it was a bad decision on the Daily's part, but the debate has gotten ridiculous. You are beating a dead horse. Forget about it. It's in the past. And the issue has certainly been given enough attention already. Let it die. Dan Sibthorp Engineering senior Think again, Daily To the Daily: Terrible editorial, another Daily disaster. Sorry, but kicking ROTC off campus doesn't solve any problems but it does hurt an even greater number of students in the process. Why don't you ask Congress to make the changes? We can't do a damn thing about it and kicking us out won't change that fact. Trying to cure the disease of intolerance and not the .symptoms (ROTC policy) may actually achieve something. Andrew Mutch Engineering sophomore CC is petty To the Daily: We were walking through Angell Hall early on the first morning of the MSA elections and saw one of the Conservative Coalition's (CC) campaign fliers which stated, "Exterminate the Radicals." So, CC, since you've offered us death by your hand, we challenge you to stand by your word. Come on, we dare you! We think that it's pathetic that CC has nothing better to do than to make idle, violent threats. Now we know what you mean when you say, "We Deliver." If you delivered anything, it was pettiness, complacency, and ignorance. Ben Sandier LSA junior Monya Schmidt LSA junior 0 0 ":"x":":"}}Y."} ":":4}:":"}:?xfii":"}'~:?'r1'fi:"}}Y":"}:"}'"};""?}:{"}' "' ."' } :4}xr,.;.;n ,r.}"{.;?;";";"""""hy;~h. '"'r}'1'{ .}~". Jxr,14:~ ,.v:; ;r.".,wrJ ~}v !.. .:..:. r ,h.. . t..J. ..Y.1.. 1 J} . r.. ..'$:. ." . r: i$: rr. fi 1.}' ," ""r r1.. .r~. F.. JJ .r .JS r "ra v.Y h1Y.v..r. . .J.ik"" . r r Y.. r: " ". r.. r: ." . r S . '. "vR t' ..v.1.. J. r. {{,, . ,f N' Jrr L + .J :.} "rr........1 r.Y."sY.w.v ." :i"". . r} : v "r . ra:." v~r ."r NJ { "}' "x" . : ::::::::.......... y ."r ."r . hr ". SJr:: "rr'v:J r r ."p,~ ,r .:rR...r.. h. ":"}.. ~.. J:1M ". }}: OY" ?} .' " " f ~r r'. P v'J r. a . . a .... :.:............... . rxr.".... a.:Sv:"::: ."r:1"a"Jrr." }. Jr:."}r arv },.e.,J. r . a: "$ r . r' Ji' v J.. J . J' J " f .fJ ...................:..:........Yr................. J. ~ ..:v :h...5:": r{r,"Sk"... ~ r' . :...1r.:,. "" ...1.{r:' " h f " v. " "r " YJ " ..1.... .. Y ':.?1. ...."..~~ .. r}:"Y:-0h t'JiJ.4k~.}k"}.'y'."¢ J .f~?:f Zionist Day celebrates state of Israel by John Blow For nearly three years now, I have been a co-chair of Tagar, and each year we have held Proud to Be a Zionist Day, and submit- ted a letter to the Daily by way of announcement and explanation. Who knows, perhaps this year we'll have a first and the Daily will actually print it. I have puzzled for a long time over how best to explain our support for Israel in a manner which everyone could understand, what it is to feel exhilaration at Israel's achievements, to share in the sorrow of each tragedy, to marvel even at her very existence. There is a sense of awe here, in a nation which has faced so many wars and would be annihilators, and yet which has come out of it all without giving up her own sense of moral right, and her own commitment to peace. Throughout history the Jews November 1945, when hundreds of Jews were slaughtered in a wave of pogroms in Libya: shopkeepers burned alive in their stores, beaten to death, still others thrown from rooftops and and historic right to the land of their forefathers, to the land where they have maintained a continuous presence for over 2,000 years. It is the belief that the Jews are entitled to a sover- There is a sense of awe here, in a nation which has faced so many wars and would be annihilators, and yet which has come out of it all without giving up her own sense of moral right, and her own commitment to peace. 0 I balconies. And it was not so long ago, that day in June, when 254 travellers from the holy land were taken hostage. The non-Jews were released, and 96 Jews separated out for massacre. But there was one major difference this time, for the year was 1976, not 1942, and the place was Entebbe, Uganda, not a Euronean Rheno. This time there eign nation alongside all other nations, that the Jewish people. must take their own destiny into their own hands. Today, we commemorate Proud to Be a Zionist Day, a day to stand up andsbe counted, Jews and non-Jews, secular and religious, liberals and conserva- tives. It is a day to express our mutual pride, admiration and nnnart Nuts and Bolts C H R (S 0 U Y O U N G L L A ? WITHA F~C. 4P,ANp IAMMO TO 1IAEL4ANTL. 11CE To ANT AONELA i>KICK SOME fUtrr by Judd Winick M .t +arNiM 7HaTsr