*Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Friday, December 11, 1992 Y' V AI _.7 77 If 1.- ,O Editor in Chief t. ! ; ...: .. . ",IrrM 1,.r -.I~~~ - N, 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764-0552 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. r>\ 14-Y ...... ... .. r i~ i .:" ,; . ; ; . ';} i./'r r1 "ft"") . ,. .("_ ,- I . ["k 3 * f~.f f. ( Holiday tip: buy your books N ext week begins the final exam crunch for those students whose teachers haven't held finals early to get a head start on their holiday sabbatical. Many students have one last chance to buckle down (unless they prefer to squander the weekend on snowball fights). U Many universities have actual study weeks to allow students to prepare for exams. But Uni- versity of Michigan knows better. We have a study day that takes place af- ;ter many professors schedule their exams, which encourages stu- dents to read the mate- rial they were already{ tested on and figure out ,what they did wrong. gE But for those stu- :dents who haven't pre- pared, and for those who haven't yet bought the books, here are some helpful remind- ers: Angell Hall is not the only computing center. Actually, there are several on campus. Those students who haven't figured this out deserve the three-hour wait. There are libraries on campus for studying. Many students may prefer to study while watching CNN, so that they don't miss the media taking pictures of themselves in Somalia. Nevertheless, a quiet, Brokaw-free environment is best. r For those students who prefer some back- ground noise when studying, they might want to try one of the local bars or restaurants. There are less distractions sitting on a barstool at Rick's than in the Law library these days. While 100 drunken youths produce a mere monotone blanket of sound, just two undergrads whispering about Biology in the reading room can drive a person to insanity. For those students who would prefer simply to skip the studying and get on with the holiday plans, here are some other tips: Sleep 14 hours a night to catch up on all the sleep you lost. Go to the Rose Bowl. A top source within the Fleming building pos- tulated that due to some less than stellar Michigan football per- formances, and Wash- ington State's trounc- ing of Washington, there is a decreased demand for University Rose Bowl packages. This year, the Wolver- ines will beat a subpar Huskie team. Use the ride board. Make "The KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily Sure Thing" a reality. Don't take a train. Ever. It will take 17 hours to get to Lansing. This is even worse if you don't intend to go to Lansing. Don't forget to listen to President Bush give another one of his God-awful speeches about our Judeo-Christian values when he lights the National Christmas tree (a mere pagan symbol). Not to worry, though, January 20th is only two months away. This does not mean we don't share those Judeo-Christian values. We love shopping malls. Good luck on exams, and have a great holiday. Go Blue! , .11.E ".11": ,'" :: '.":.:". .:. ..4 ..t":.: : .1 ::.t ::::::1"::.t4. 114.. a :" "::.^: ::.14 :':': i "1'}::':'4:: :'.Y."::::.h .... " 44.4": ; :'::" ::"::ti": ":":::"::::1 ::4 ............... 1':':":":".:':ti4'::'t:":':'.":::".:ti^.:::.......,...........,......1. . ..1.^........... ..1.....1..1. ..t":':t ' :: I f ..4,.... .1. ..1.1.1 ................. ... .1 :.1 : .":: .............. ::.:":.:".:::.41": ".1':: }:': :'::":". " " ".1 " ". ": 41'.41":.4" ". :iti':":":ti'f:titi!titi":': ti"i:': x:ti ti'p':\ ' ": };ti::;:::' :tiff': 'Court ignores Mississippi burden In the 1980's, the Supreme Court steadily eroded women's rights to legal abortion. The regres- sive trend seemed to finally stop with the land- mark Casey decision, in which the Court reaf- firmed the Roe v. Wade precedent, albeit in weak- ened form. Last week, it refused to hear a chal- lenge to Mississippi's restrictive abortion law, sending a signal that it will no longer act as a protector of abortion rights. Mississippi's law requires women to wait 24 hours before having an abortion, supposedly to be informed about abortion and its alternatives. In reality, this allows anti-choice protesters to harass and intimidate women seeking abortions. The Supreme Court upheld a similar Pennsyl- vania law, but hinted that the law was unconstitu- tional only because it did not impose an "undue burden" on women seeking abortions. Trying to have an abortion in Pennsylvania is not the ordeal it is in Mississippi, however. Missis- sippi has only three operational abortion clinics, and many women cannot afford private treatment. . The 24-hour waiting period not only forces women to run the gauntlet of anti-choice fanatics twice, but it restricts abortions to those women who have time, money for lodging, and access to transportation. Married women are barred, in ef- fect, from having an abortion withouttheirhusband's permission. Teenage girls seeking abortions must virtually run away from home if their parents do not approve. The overall effect of the 24-hour waiting period is to subject society's most powerless women to the whim of their husbands and parents. The court's refusal to examine Mississippi's abortion law means that the Court will not consider the actual effect of the waiting period. In other words, the 24-hour wait can never constitute an "undue burden," however severe the burden may be. By stepping away from this case, along with its decision not to hear an appeal of Guam's abortion law, the Court is indicating a desire to retreat from the abortion battleground. Without question, this represents a considerable improvement over the Court's previous fervor to overturn Roe. Still, the Supreme Court, as the nation's most powerful institution of law, has a responsibility to uphold the civil rights of all Americans. As long as abortion remains legal, the Court cannot turn its back as women are denied control of their bodies - in Mississippi or anywhere else. Never a Daily reporter when you need one? To the Daily: On the morning of Dec. 1, a 27-year-old construction worker lost his life at a University construction site on North Campus. The worker was erecting the structural steel frame for the new Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Building for Aerospace Engineer- ing when he fell approximately 40 feet to the ground. He apparently had been sitting on a steel beam he was installing when the beam, which was allegedly held in place only with C-clamps, started to break free. After the worker fell to the ground, the steel beam - which apparently weighed about 800 pounds - landed on him. The exact cause of the worker's death is not known pending an autopsy. How is it that I know about this tragic incident which oc- curred on the University campus? Unfortunately, I did not read about it in the Daily. I happened to notice a story about the incident in the Ann Arbor News. That the worker was allegedly sitting on an improperly sup- ported steel beam without any back-up safety system raises serious questions about the level of safety at this job site. I guess that still is not enough to warrant a trip from a Daily reporter - all the way up to North Campus. The Daily seems more interested in reporting silly "news" stories from other college campuses. I hope that the Daily will focus its future attention on news which either takes place on the University campus or directly affects the University campus and students. James LaFave Rackham graduate student Bicycle safety issue not yet resolved To the Daily: I would like to clarify something found in yesterday's article "U-M to solicit student input on campus bicycle safety." The Campus Safety Committee (CSC) has not proposed any type of fines, let alone amounts, to be imposed on bikers who ride recklessly. At the moment, the committee is just in the initial stages of gathering information on what the bicycle-safety situation is on campus. After this is done, we will attempt to come up with a long list of possibilities as to what, if anything, should be done about bikes on campus. The suggestions of imposing fines is something that one of the MSA members came up with in a personal conversation with me, and is no way binding on the committee's decisions. Joel Strimling Student Chair CSC Daily should present all sides of an issue To the Daily: I am writing in response to your Issues Forum, "Is military policy on gays, lesbians just?" (12/4/92). I think that a forum should To the Daily: The Daily editorial team writes: 'Spending student dollars to foster a debate is an inherently positive thing.' This is a some- what extreme position. I would have thought the amount of money spent, and the kind of debate fostered would have some relation to an event's inherent positiveness. For example, if student government bankrupted itself bringing speakers to debate "The merits of racism," I person- ally, unlike the Daily, would not find this positive. I agree that there is a critical need for debate of both the' criminal justice system and the routine practice of police brutal- ity. I, however, unlike the Daily, don't believe that torture, beat- ings, extra-judicial killings, mass arrests of Latinos and African Americans and curfews imposed selectively on poor neighborhoods - all documented under Gates' regime in Los Angeles., as the recent Amnesty International report clarifies - can in any way be legitimately defended. Surely a Gates debate continues... + debate on how to end these practices, rather than one which provides a platform for their instigator, would be much more positive. I agree with the Daily that it is unfortunate when some choose to impose their views on others. But- who is really being silenced? I, for one, hardly feel bombarded by the opinions and feelings of the growing list of victims of the', Los Angeles Police Department. It is more than a little ironic that" myself, and the other students " including Ede Fox, who took a stand against UAC's decision to y bring Gates to campus, are now portrayed as silencers. Perhaps all, students could make a concerted effort to ensure that every victim. of the Detroit and Ann Arbor Police Departments are given a $10,000 speaker's fee, and a platform at Hill Auditorium - though such an effort would probably bankrupt more than student government. Mark Buchan Rackham graduate studedt f ..attack on Fox unwarrented. I To the Daily: Do rporters at the Daily have any sense of journalistic integrity? Judging by your hatchet job on Michigan Student Assembly President Ede Fox ("Students: MSA pres. misused title," 12/7/ 92) - I would think not. First of all, there are legitimate reasons for protecting a source that a reporter quotes. They center around whether the source has a legitimate fear of reprisal, such as being fired or killed, or losing access to inside information. If your "RC junior" doesn't have the guts to say her/his opinion in public, then you shouldn't print the quote, just as you don't print unsigned letters. Secondly, balance in a story involves more than merely getting" quotes from people with different, opinions on a subject. It requires getting the whole story in the first. place. If 150 students, faculty and staff signed the petition, was Foxy-, the only one identified by title? { Certainly not. The convention 2 here at the university is that such' titles are for identification , purposes only. That your story leI these facts out is highly irrespon-2I, sible. It seems clear that the reporter was not reporting, but attacking. We should expect betted from our paper. Hunter Van Valkenbur*l MSA Vice Presiden __ ___ U.N. must lead 'New World Order' he on-going tragedies in Bosnia-Hercegovina T and Somalia have dragged a reluctant United States into the post-Cold War world. Predictions that the U.S. military would no longer be needed to fight bloody and extended wars, but would instead be needed to address regional and humani- tarian crises have proved correct. As thousands of U.S. troops hit the Somalian beach and the U.N. Security Council meets to discuss action against Serbia, the responsibility of the United States and the United Nations is becoming clear: the protec- tion of the world's citizens against both natural and manufactured disasters. Since the Soviet Union's collapse, there has been much talk about how the United States should not be the world's beat cop. Certainly, the United States hasn't the moral authority to do so. But the international community came together to form the United Nations to serve as an international arbiter, as well as the watchdog of human rights and the coordinator of humanitarian missions. Before the Cold War thaw, the United Nations remained impotent as the United States, the Soviet Jnion and China vetoed crucial U.N. actions. U.N. General Secretaries Javier Perez de Cuellar and Boutros Boutros-Ghali guided the United Nations to fill portions of the post-Cold War ,,4,v~ 1nmm A e n rPoiilt the Tniti-d ANntinnc' Nations cannot send peacekeeping or peacemaking forces without the approval of the interested parties or host government. Moreover, U.N. peacekeeping or peacemaking missions should be only the last resort. Regional organizations - such as the League of Arab Na- tions, NATO, the Organization of American States or the European Community - should act to solve problems in their spheres of influence before call- ing for the use of U.N. resources. When such attempts fail, as in Bosnia-Hercegovina, the United Nations ought to take action. The United Nations could employ powerful tools - such as boycotts, embargoes and sanctions - to coerce governments who violate the human rights Helsinki agreement or the sovereign rights of another state into abiding by accepted standards of behavior. Naturally, the United Nations would be unable to complete these duties without the help of the United States, still the wealthiest and most power- ful nation in the world. The United States should make its forces and hardware available to for U.N. use. Unfortunately, Uncle Sam has a history of not participating in U.N. missions because of its reluc- tance to place U.S. troops under U.N. command. To maximize the efficiency of the United Nations and to rneatir i ntnrnntinnnl rPennncihilitit-cthic nrlirv Heidi Smith's essay and the two pieces by Representative Patricia Schroeder (D-Colo.). All of these are well done and provide insight to this controversy. However, I only see one piece - the Colin Powell letter - supporting the policy. It can be argued that the DoD policy is also offered as support for itself, but I submit that the policy should be considered an exhibit and not an opinion. Because the policy is the center of the debate, I think the only purpose of its inclusion is to inform readers, not to persuade them. I do not know how I feel about this issue, as I agree with several arguments on both sides. It is readers like me who need to see an unbiased presentation of the controversy so that we can critically examine our own views. I hope that, in the future, the Daily will strive towards this goal. Allen Oh Engineering senior Daily shows poor taste To the Daily: Why is the Daily writing about Deja Vu? It has nothing to do with the University and is not even in Ann Arbor. I found this article extremely offensive and revolting, especially the first paragraph which was not only because they are also selling thei(m bodies but for visual sexual entertainment not physical. These type of places are filthy, disgust- I ing and further contribute to the objectification of women. Nancy Walk SA seniC .* Senior says good-bye : .s to North Campus : To the Daily: I figured that everyone else wrote a letter to the Daily this semester, so I might as well too. This is dedicated to all those undergraduate engineers still out there.It is a poem entitled, "Good-- bye North Campus." After four and a half years I leave North Campus for good. Can you say "no more classes?" ' I think I could. I know north too well, s A I've seen every inch of this place;. still I wouldn't recognize a dean if one punched me in the face. Those tables in the Dow Library are a little high I think, north is a college campus with nowhere to go for a drink. 4 I never got a 4.0, maybe next time I can hack. See ya later North Campus, it'll be a while before I'm back.s, Jon AlleG" Engineering senior ''4 4