Page 4--The Michigan Daily- Friday, April 10, 1992 f F 4 E it igttn atlg $7 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764-0550 Editor in Chief MATTHEW 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. '{1' .HELDAIL ".1 :h..1Y :.fl. .R....: ."'"'{:{'.4..if. .".Vt.V. .VJ...4.. ....:'::{: i :i.'i"..':{{".....".:1 ,{ :.{1. {.;{ :ti:fi i v: ,.;{;R.R:::"'1''.' 4".' ." 81{;"}t. .." R{.":A': :4Y.;.J ..:Y P."Y Y :ii''' Y.':YY" .:1J:J:. ... 1 .J R .......WN !1 --.__ _. ' , ,." /= 1 yo t(f4,AM1T 7"v #pL j/T ?0OAC yl"..f JEE -v/'z,T OK4t/. 21X712.Lt/6'/ P~k 9ETR HE'S OM14Y L4 -/5 M oG f 4,47-T 80 /5 / ',9 Ltd rIM/IL OFFEL/Z / P,~6O_<0 /r6+ Progressive MSA A week ago, students granted the presidency of the Michigan Student Assembly to the Pro- gressive Party. Ede Fox won by a narrow marginof less than 80 votes, and her party picked up five of the nine delegate seats. The typical low-voter turn- out at the elections and the divided Assembly that Fox will have to face demand that she and her party do some careful planning and rethink their original goals. If she wants, Fox can choose to follow the usual pattern of MSA history: progressives gain power, progressives mess up; conservatives gain power, conservatives do nothing; progressives gain power... During elections, Fox seemed blind to this scenario and appeared all too willing to make MSA a place where delegates vote to adopt uniform stances on international political issues. On the Other hand, Fox can chose to end the vicious cycle of MSAparty politics, and make MSA an effective bi-partisan representative body that serves student needs. We hope she chooses the later. : The first thing Fox must realize is that her election was not a mandate. She deserves con- gratulations, but the new president should be aware that she squeaked into the presidency. Fox should recognize this, and refrain from pushing a radical agenda against a hostile assembly. Rather, she should focus on shaping an agenda with realistic and achievable goals. To shun a bi-partisan effort s to ensure the defeat of any progressive agenda. Only with cooperation - not in-fighting - can : Looking ahead MSA begin to govern effectively. This is not to say Fox must give up her ideals or change her politics. Some of her goals, like her commitment to curb tuition hikes, address specific and current student-body issues. Trying to focus the University on undergraduate education is an- other such issue. Voicing strong opposition to the Ann Arbor Police's growing addiction to tear gas is yet another. Moreover, Fox must construct her relationship with the administration. This relationship is tenu- ous by definition, mainly because of the power dynamics: the administration has all the power, and MSA has none of it. There are two schools of thought regarding this dilemma. One is to protest and scream and yell until the administration ig- nores you (as with the Progressives during deputization). The other is to establish a rapport with the administration until it ignores you (as with Michael Warren during speech code negotiations). Obvi- ously, a combinationof the two is needed, and Fox must use her judgement to decide how to make the method fit the situation. The conflicts Fox will face will be difficult ones, as they have been in the past. But they will not be insurmountable, especially if she acknowl- edges the opportunity she has -the opportunity to make her party the one that turned MSA into a reputable body that accomplished something. If for no other motive than this selfish one, Fox should get cracking. " 4-f ,,,.--- --' _ ~ ITO 6?z'S iPMcHI 6A ti PA/LY '92-.- -, .- Daily far from anti-Semitic; letter misinformed To the Daily: It is difficult to conceive of a letter to the editor with more inaccuracies than "Daily belittles Jewish concerns," (4/3/92) by Bradley Cohn, Richard Fontana, Joseph Paykel, Larry Seegull and Benson Friedman. Apparently the authors - five first-year law students - operate under some false assumptions in their criticisms of the Daily's coverage of a Diag rally opposing Israeli occupation of the so-called Palestinian territories (3/30/92). First, a newspaper's "lead story" appears in the upper right- hand corner of the front page. Just because a story is accompa- nied by a photo with a large sign does not mean it is the lead story if it is placed on the left side of the middle of the page. Secondly, the article at issue is not "the largest article on the page" because in fact four stories on the same page occupy more column inches. The Daily does not believe Zionism is racism as the authors suggest. The publication of the photograph, which displayed a sign stating, "Zionism is racism, down with Zionism," need not imply agreement with the contents of the photograph. If the authors bothered to take the time to read the actual article underneath the photo, they would have discovered that the Daily reporter performed professionally and objectively, sprinkling the article generously with quotations from dissenting pro-Israeli students disagreeing with many of the protesters assertions. Indeed, the Daily's editorial board last term argued in favor of the United States' attempt to repeal the U.N. resolution equating Zionism with racism.' But Cohn, Fontana, Paykel, Seegull and Friedman save their most outrageous comment for last: that "the Daily considers Jews a subservient minority who will tolerate any insult or offense." As a former Editor in Chief of the Daily, a Jew and a Zionist, I urge these men to reconsider their statement. The Daily is far from anti-Semitic. At times, half of the students who work at the Daily are Jewish. There is a-strong chance the photographer who developed the photograph at issue is a Jew and the person who designed the layout of that front page is Jewish. Four of the last five Daily Editors in Chief are Jewish. Although the Daily may at times offend its Jewish readers, it does provide one of the best outlets on campus for enlightened discussion of Jewish and Israeli issues - both on its news and editorial pages and in its offices. Noah Finkel First-year law student Wash MSA's mouth out with soap From the ridiculous to the sublime. At last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting, LSA lRep. Michael Oduro introduced a "resolution to promote mature and disciplined behavior during Michigan Student Assembly meetings." The reso- lution would restrict members' rights to speak at MSA meetings when they "used obscene or de- grading epithets," and was inspired by the boxing match/circus that developed when adelegatecalled a constituent a bitch. This resolution probably violates the U.S. Constitution, the MSA constitu- tion, Robert's Rules of Order, and even the club- house rules that children everywhere use to protect the cherished right of emotional dissent. An alternative resolution, sponsored by MSA Rep. Andrew Mutch deserves praise. The resolu- tion reaffirms MSA's commitment to the First Amendment for even its own members. Such re- solve is refreshing in light of the administration's decision to delay the process of adopting an alter- native to the University's interim speech code, as well as the Oduro resolution. The Mutch proposal was voted up as Oduro's went down in flames. The Oduro resolution would have caused an offender to "... (temporarily give) up the right to be recognized to speak by the chair as a member ofthe Assembly during an Assembly meeting." For ex- ample: the constituents of say, the School of Public Health, would have no one to represent them, because the one Public Health representative may be in the "penalty box" for slandering Corey Hill's mother. Perhaps that is what MSA really needs: a penalty box for stupid resolutions and members dedicated to self-serving ends. Including both the Steering Committee and the general MSA debate on both bills, the debate took at least an hour. While MSA was discovering what level ofmaturity should be enforced, real issues get put off, and infantile levels of maturity were ex- posed. John Locke proposed thatin government, "ma- jority rule, minority rights." In exchange for ac- cepting the decision of the majority, the minority was allowed to be heard. More than just parties To the Daily: This is written in response to the article by Matt Adler. Not only is the concept of the self- hating Greek offensive and rude, it suggests that anyone in the Greek system with morals is automatically a member of this fictitious group. The fact is that this campus is almost a quarter Greek. With that large group there is a wide variety of both people and houses - most of which do not conform to the stereotypical image of a fraternity man or sorority woman. It is therefore entirely possible to frequent such "PC" locals as Ashley's and local coffee shops and still enjoy being part of the Greek system. As to why these "seemingly anti-Greek people" join fraterni- ties and sororities, it is not just to "enjoya good party once in a while." The Greek system has proven to be a training ground for the best and brightest universites like this one have to offer. The list of former presidents, CEO's, inventors and other influential Greeks is simply amazing. Only a non-Greek would view the Greek experience solely as a series of parties. The real experience is one of friendship, support and brotherhood.. Next time Mr. Adler decides to create a self-hating group, maybe he should consider Daily Opinion writers. Oh, I'm sorry, they don't need to hate them- selves with all the people on campus that already do! Robert Broad Engineering junior Preach abstinence To the Daily: I applaud Howard Scully's letter (3/27/92) which advocates sexual abstinence. In a world plagued AIDS and STDs, Mr. Scully and his compadres seem to have the situation well in hand. Eric Bauman Rackham Graduate Student Pro-poi, anti booze? To the Daily: Why does the Daily publish recipies for hash brownies and editorials in favor of legalizing pot while it won't publish cigarette or liquor ads? How does this make sense? David Hansen First-year law student Council: don't abuse 9-2 majority }:V::":{"4;{"} 1 .i :{ti "" {":{, "{ti{' .A'ri:"'.V '":{{":":":{1 .4 :A...... .{..".Y....' iv 1. ..h. ..L";{1"........1":".4 'i:".V'":'i:{4.... .'1 'V: '.1V " . J.1 ..1h ..1.4 :'r. ..h. ..44 " .:1..4'.11th :"..1 iI II ..1 L. I TS"T: lT {t :.V:... ..4::::.".LV.1V:.441" " :.i4. 1411":::: ".:":.:".h1"::::.1V.h":.Y":.1":...r1V:4':: 11.......1:.1':.1 V: ......................'..'.............;":{ ,}:;{":{": ;ti :";ti :"::::":{"i;{'::.414:"'.4W::.11"::rV::::.iV:.V:::::.. ".V::4.....:"::':'. :".hV:.4":.44V.V::.V....,................4:.4V:: .. I hearby resign. as chm*r of the SRC s a result of last Monday's City Council elec- on, Democrats won in four of the five wards. This increases the Democratic majority to 9-2, the largest a single party has held in the council's history. Democrats have said that their party's landslide victory is a sign of voter approval of the Democrat-dominated council. This amounts to an unlikely assertion. The Democratic victories were more of a result of the individual races. Moreover, the Democrats should not view the election as a signal to proceed half- cocked with a partisan agenda, and should instead focus onthe bi-partisan cooperation the city needs. Such an overwhelming Democratic majority, has left Peter Fink and Kirk Dodge, the only Republicans left on the council, virtually power- less. They have said that their goal now is only to get the Democrats to at least include them when making decisions. Peter Fink, regarding the major- ity, has claimed that "Basically, they can do what- ever they want now." Republicans have complained for a long time that since they are a weak minority on the council, they have often been disregarded by the Demo- crats when council decisions are made. This hap- pened in several cases last year, when the Demo- crats held a still powerful 8-3 majority. Republi- cans complained that the Democrats proposed the 1991-92 city budget and allowed the early retire- ment of City Attorney L. Bruce Laidlaw without accepting Republican input. Council Democrats should be wary of viewing their victory as a mandate to dominate the council, especially considering the way in which it was achieved. In every ward the voter turnout was extremely low, and in no cases did the Democrats win a landslide victory. Some races were extremely close, such as the 3rd-Ward race, where Democrat Bob Grady beat Republican Joe O'Neal by only 58 votes. The only party truly lacking in popular support was the Libertarian party, where Tim Schrodel received only 29 votes in the 2nd Ward. This is not to say that the Republicans are helping to encourage party communication. Demo- crats have repeatedly complained that Republi- cans hold few seats on the council, their primary goal is to make the Democrats look bad. Council Democrat Bob Eckstein had previously stated that what Republicans normally try to do is try to politicize an issue and not look at the real facts. The primary Republican goal, claims Eckstein, is to make Democrats look disorganized. Both parties should recognize that this type of behavior will prevent the council from making real progress. by Michael Warren Since September, the Student Rights Commission (SRC) of the Michigan Student Assembly has been fighting the unconstitutional speech and conduct code which bars discriminatory speech and conduct. In January the SRC issued a 42-page report which condemned the code as an unconstitutional infringement of the First Amend- ment. We noted that only unfettered free speech can further self-government and protect politically unpopular messages. We affirmed our rejection of hateful ideas, including racism, but recognized that free speech helps expose the bankruptcy of such ideas. fMter lengthy negotiations, Maureen Hartford, vice president of student affairs - the "point person" for the University - accepted an SRC proposal which would have replaced the code with one which preserves stu- dents' rights while regulating discriminatory personal and property injury, as well as verbal threats. Walter Harrison, vice presi- dent of University relationsand Hartford assured us that such a compromise would be adopted. more input from faculty, staff, and students of color. He noted that some Arican-American staff and students had read a news story regarding the SRC's efforts, and told him that they felt they were shut out of the process. Although this position may seem reasonable, the SRC understands such posturing as the end of the process for altering the code and a betrayal of trust. First, the University's professed concern regarding African-American input is disingenuous. Neither the original speech code, struck down by a court as unconstitutional, nor the current code were created with student input. More revealing, during recent hearings regarding deputization, hundreds of African Americans protested and begged that the University speak with them. The University responded by locking them out of the hearings. Second, most of the com- plaints Harrison cites arose from within the administration. Yet, this speech code only effects students, not faculty or staff. Third, the Daily has been covering this issue; the SRC received only a few negative reactions, while many more supportive ones. vote, alone, is a mandate for the abandonment of the code. Sixth, all parties in the recent MSA election opposed the code.; Seventh, even the Daily opposes the code. Eighth, the SRC is open to all students. We strongly encouraged all interested students to join the SRC. Unfortunately we did not have persons of color, yet we personally invited many to join us and contacted, via mail, over 50 minority student groups. Minority leaders were recently quoted as opposing speech codes. Ninth, the SRC distributed 2,000 flyers describing the SRC Report, and sponsored dorm forums and a debate to discuss the issue. Tenth, the SRC conceded all demands made by the University. Eleventh, further "input," in University-talk is a code word for delay and turning their back on students. Repeatedly when the University states it needs more "input," it is the kiss of death for any project. The University uses such posturing to hide its true deci- sions. Twelfth, if a year's worth of research, time, meetings, MSA votes, student referendum, reports, student outreach and press support Nuts and Bolts (FiSo. WtiATD. 50, THE WA75T O GOoHOME. YKN6W? SHE SAYS "NC?, NOTi ON 'iIE FIR~ST PA!E.'" o m - by Judd Winick = WAS GoN To r u Go "t. ' U .. N 0