Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Thursday, February 20,1992 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764 - 0552 Editor in Chief MA'ITHIEW D. RENNIE Opinion Editors YAEL CITRO GEOFFREY EARLE AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan . 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. ::~~~.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ..". . . . . . . ... 4............. ~~. 444..::'.1.. . ..... . ... . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . Public hearings turn pnvate MiE 55 A 6- F FOR G-EcOR6-- &41. ''r '' t...,.%"/ tH,4 1 A~4-Y ATesterday's deputization hearings turned out to be just what the protesters claimed they were: a farce. The regents made no more than a token effort to listen to students' views, and were all too eager to dodge legitimate student concerns and sneak away to a more private "public" hearing. The trouble began when students opposed to a r.Sentally deputized police force staged a protest at the Michigan League, where yesterday's hear- i1gs were to be held. The regents entered the meeting to find protesters standing on tables, de- mwanding to be heard, and stayed just long enough to, make a "goodwill effort" to hold the public hearings, which are mandated by law. Actually, they made almost no effort to engage in dialogue yith these students. When David Marable, chair of tom Political Action Committee of the Black Stu- 4ent Union (BSU), asked the regents to meet and ;liscuss the issue, they turned their backs. In reality, the regents had no intention of ever listening to the public. As early as Tuesday after- Apon, at least one administrator acknowledged the regents' plans to move the hearings to the Alumni Center if any disruptions took place. A few minutes after the regents entered the League, Regent Phil Power (D-AnnArbor) read his pre-prepared speech announcing their reasons for leaving. At the hearing, only those signed up to speak and a few members 'of the press were allowed to enter the Alumni Center. The rest of the students were locked outside. What could be further from the spirit of public hearings than to bar the public from entrance? The whole point of apublic hearing is to allow anyone who has an opinion about the issue to speak. The entire scheme of the hearings, as conceived by the administration, was developed to downplay student input. The idea of an advance sign-up list was construed to silence any unruly students who might show up. The list prevented people from coming and denied many their opportunity to speak. What took place inside the hearings was even -more absurd. The regents rebutted the arguments made by students who spoke against deputization. Tiese students were denied the opportunity to respond. When students said what the regents wanted to hear, the regents remained silent. But AIM6 0 they should not have been participating in these types of politics to begin with. The hearings were designed to give the public the opportunity to address the regents, not to give the regents the opportunity to take cheap shots at their rivals. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) belittled the protesters, claiming that they were the same people that protest every issue. In fact, those dem- onstrating were a very diverse bunch and were united in their opposition to deputization. That a regent would lump together all students who have ever been concerned about an issue displays his contempt for student views. Regent Paul Brown (R-Petoskey) twice referred to a survey that indicated some 90 percent of students polled were concerned about campus safety. For some reason, he used this to help justify deputization. The poll Brown should have quoted, however, was the one takenjointly by the Daily, the Michigan Review and Consider magazine, which stated that 52 percent of students polled were opposed to a deputized police force. Only 29.4 percent were in favor. Most disturbing about the entire process was that it made it all too clear that the regents have no respect for student views. Despite a particular regent's electorate, the people who will ultimately be affected by the police are the people who live here - students and the rest of the community. Students beware To the Daily: It is time that the truth be told about the Ann Arbor Committee I to Defend Abortion and Repro- ductive Rights (AACDARR). As a pro-choice student on thisI volatile campus, I can keep silent1 no longer. Rallies on Jan. 22 were interrupted by AACDARR, who I pushed the protestors off the Graduate Library steps, screamed epithets, and prevented the rally from proceeding for over half anI hour. You may wonder why thisj display would disturb a pro- choice woman like myself. I should be glad that the "born- again bigots" were silenced, you might say. But I am outraged at this violent and childish action. This group throws a bad light on the entire pro-choice community and I resent it. It gives us the image of aggressive, inflexible trouble-makers who hunger for the spotlight. But there is a reason behind all this bad publicity that must be exposed. AACDARR is led by members of the Revolutionary Workers League (RWL). The latter has warped the former to its : AACDARR own agenda, never missing an opportunity to espouse its violent message of socialism and revolu- tion. It follows the tenet of "by whatever means necessary" and that should terrify all of us. It has been used too many times to justify too much bloodshed. The platform of AACDARR may carry some planks that appeal to pro-choice activists: anti-racist, pro-gay, and pro- working-class. But as a former member of this group, I can tell you, the RWL is pushing its own political agenda through the voice of AACDARR. Its tactics are to join a group, gain enough power to set the group's course, then shift the docket to match its own. It drives out the original members with its militancy and in essence destroys the group from within. It advo- cates militant action to fight the injustices of the nation and to bring down the government. Make no mistake, it is the voice of the RWL that you hear when AACDARR is speaking. Its platform was floating around and the confusion was not lost oh the students who had gathered. One student remarked is the RWL that while it was good to have a broad agenda, militant action drives away wider support. Even the pro-lifers saw that "their slander is not a charitable way of making their views known." In short, this group is causing grievous harm to those of us who truly value our right to choose. It makes us look like we are ready to tear the head off of every pro- lifer we see. But we know that the way to win against ignorance is educa- tion. The way to beat the political game that the lifers play is in Congress, in state legislatures, in the newspapers, and, yes, in the streets. We cannot mar our struggle with fists and brutality. This is dirty pool that we must rise above if our movement is going to survive. If you are pro-choice, find another way to voice your opinion. Get in touch with an honest, non-violent organization that has all its cards on the table. The RWL has a hidden, aggres- sive agenda that must be thrown out in the cold where it belongs. Claire Schwartz LSA senior 0 ... despite student protests A message to a bratty Jeff Muir: grow up he demonstrators made their position clear. Scores of students filed into the Michigan League Ballroom energized and eager to show the campus what a fiasco the "public" hearings really were. Representatives from the Black Student Union (BSU), the Progressive People of Color (PPC) and SHIT Happens (Students Halting Insti- tutionalized Terrorism) crowded into the back of the Ballroom. The students stood on and around the regents' table and displayed their anger and frustration. As promised, the demonstrators shut the meeting down. There was really no alternative. Had the regents followed the spirit of Public Act 120, maybe the hearings could have proceeded in the Ballroom. Instead, the hearings were moved to the Alumni Center, where University security wiards locked the general public out. But the regents circumvented the law while pretending the process was sound. If it weren't for the coalition of concerned students, the regents may have been able to convince the student population that the hearings were legitimate. Students should be aware that the efforts to fight deputization were not limited to chanting and bull-horn addresses. Yesterday morning, Rackham Rep. Jeff Hinte formally requested a court injunc- tion asking forthe cancellationofthehearings. The hearing process, Hinte claimed, violated the Free- dom of Information Act (FOIA). Unfortunately, the courts disagreed with Hinte and refused the injunction. Even the current Student Rights Commission, with its non-confrontational poise, tried to negoti- ate with the administration and gain some conces- sions. Despite Michael Warren's "high-level" meet- ings with administrators, the administration didn't give one inch. Last week's chalk-in and anti-deputization shanty were valiant attempts to educate University students and gain support for a battle against a powerful beuraucracy. The chalk washed away, and the shanty was trashed. Every avenue which students have taken has been blocked by bureaucratic inertia or student apathy. The demonstration, which began outside the Michigan League at 3 p.m. yesterday, attracted some 200 people - 195 more than the five stu- dents who spoke in favor of deputization in the privately-held public hearing. Clearly, the stagger- ing difference in numbers had no effect on the regents. The movement against deputization should not be solely a BSU cause. The issue concerns every University student and faculty member. The area surrounded by Rackham, the Modern Languages Building, the Union and the League should have been packed with University community mem- bers. The fiasco will continue this afternoon. Tomor- row morning, after the culmination of less than three hours of private hearings, the regents will, most likely, vote to deputize a police force. Democracy was thwarted last night. Students who really care about the University and the Ann Arbor community will make the regents aware of their views before the deputization issue blows away in the wind. To the Daily:, I want to express the disgust, anger and sorrow I felt upon reading the article pertaining to the resignation of Amy Polk (2/5/ 92). Polk cites in particular an article published in The Michigan Review by Jeff Muir entitled "Is Amy Polk as dumb as she looks?" as an example of the hostile environment that led her to resign. Muir's response to Polk's resignation ("I would simply say I think your emotional comments tonight don't hold a lot of weight.") inspired disgust first. It is a bratty retort to a resignation inspired by bratty behavior and a bratty newspaper article. Second, the content of Muir's response reflects a belief far too prevalent in our society. This is what inspired anger and sorrow in me. Muir's comment suggests that "emotion" (yeah, stuff like anger, sorrow, disgust...) somehow reduces the legitimacy or authen- ticity of one's words. In this instance, I'd say the suggestion on Muir's part smacks of sexism. "Emotion" or "emotionality" are states often associated with women. The denigration of "emotionality" goes hand in hand with the denigration of women, in which Muir obviously gladly participates, considering he glombed on so readily to the sort of cliche that led him to wonder if Polk was "as dumb as she looks." I feel anger because this sort of denigration continues to be accepted and perpetuated. I feel sorrow because the rift between mind and body that relegates "feeling" to a lesser place continues to thrive. This attitude is injurious not only to those it targets (such as Polk has been by Muir), but to those who partici- pate in its continuation. In short, Jeff Muir, please grow up, stop being a brat, deal with your fear of emotion and of women and stop acting out your arrested development in the public sphere. Please heal. Kingii Hinterland Film Projection Service the poor also suffer in Michigan 0 In his State of the Union Ad- dress, George Bush announced proudly that communism died this year. Such a premature eulogy sug- gests that the education president needs to hit the political science textbooks a little harder. It may be understandable that he could overlook the ex- isteTnce of a little ccu itry like Cutu, even if it is geographically right next door, but it's remark- able that hecould also write a na- i C Elizabeth Cole tive to that of their parents, the president had some explaining to do. So he fell back on the face- saving boastof themanbadly beaten in a fist fight. Yeah, we look bad, but you shoulda seen the other guy. The crumbling inner cities of America tell another story, sug- gesting that the decades-long standoff with the Soviets may be the first foreign war waged sub- stantially on American soil. In what were once thriving American cities, the poor and the homeless now live amid boarded-up and abandoned businesses and homes. They bear grim witness to the real cost of decades of government policies which privileged the production of implements of destruction over that of the goods necessary to assure the well-being of its citizens and their children. Several articles in the Detroit Free Press last weekend documented the analogous situation in the former Soviet republics. The authors ar- gued that there was the government's safety net of price in Michigan under John Engler. In St. Petersburg, the new poor stand in the wintery streets trying to sell meager possessions to passers- by. A poignant Free Press photo- graph shows a woman offering her brassieres for sale. In Moscow, hu- miliated people scavenging for food in a garbage dump refused to give their names to reporters. Surely, these Russians are the brothers and sisters of those Detroit residents who stand by the highway holding signs that announce that they are willing to work for food, or who offer to clean the windshields of motorists stopped in traffic in hopes that they will be compen- sated with a dollar or two. The American news media treats Russian poverty as a symptom of the moral weakness ofthe people or of the political bankruptcy of their system of government without casting a similarly judgemental eye on the poverty and starvation in this country. It serves as an accomplice to the Bush administration's efforts to divert national attention toforeign 0 IDeputization hearings will be held today from 4 to 5p.m. at the Michigan Union Ballroom. Nuts and Bolts Wf4AT$ Wfll4Au.LnAT t4OiSE '(ooIN ,MEN Off mVEv of NaT? ITHE EArn. o1 /, GDUA11wLOH3U5 AN ATo H1 C0tIWR1(F> T ) {L o!?J sr :Z. AW 7HE.Y Tr1 H L-0ATis. by Judd Winick saRcPUIT, ar.MIEP tion of China's stature out of the historical record. But the president is not an uneducated man. He proclaimed communism dead for the rhetorical power of the announcement. The "death" he spoke of referred to the dramatic transformation of the po- litical and economic systems of the republics that were formerly the Soviet Union, hailed by his admin-