Page 4--The Michigan Daily- Wednesday, March 24,1993 cbe £ iicbiYgwn :3aivg 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Iff R f JosH Dunow Editor in Chief ER1N LIzA EINHIORN OpinionEditor EVE RoZ>Y S'AcK ORTHIS WHOA Y i MEOL)7,FPALO &USr . WHAT- *KACTL'/ ARF ' oc GU}'5p77 ,1 O'/' A A"T LET-AE IN~to2b&c A~'OuT 1o)o H;E'FAN1YHu.4&c KIDIN& AkouNbo tMYS.F - ilm A TV PAfRTICL.4LAR2-Y G-i1iSY THAT t MqOVIE pFRobuCEp&'.. /4161-4T BE N R r I D UN NO, IWAS f _ PL-AYN G-T oy FAR. GAN c-TS rn AN _ . w.X:. IiG f \\-r .o.ii. Unsigned editorials represent the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, signed articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. I PORN 'IM 'AGE'RY New exhibit may make up for past censorship AFTER A GROUP of Law School students tween leftist feminists, detennined to end sys- were accused in October of censoring a temic biases that oppress women, and right-wing film aboutprostitution, disapproval from religious ideologues bent on stamping out evil the public poured in from every side. But Uni- and human sin, is a frightening relationship with versity administrators mayren reatening implications. The have ebbed public criticism issue of pornography has last Wednesday by agreeing brought these two polar ex- to a settlementwiththe Ameri- tremes together in a united ef- can Civil Liberties Union fort to suppress sexual maga- (ACLU). The video tape was zines, videos, and exhibits that pulled from an October Law propagate the exploitation and School symposium entitled denigration of women. These "Prostitution:From Academia forces are gaining haunting to Activism," on the grounds momentum. that it contained footage from Thefallsymposium willhelp commercialpomography.The to expose what happens when out-of-court settlement is not censorship goes too far. Free an official admission of guilt, KRISTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily speech advocatesdo notneces- but by offering to reinstall the censored exhibit sarily support the pornography, nor the publica- at a similar event in the fall, and paying each of tion or distribution of such media, but defenders the five censored artists $3,000, the Law School of freespeechwill never advocatetheviolationof takes positive steps toward correcting past mis- the basic principles of liberty as a means to takes, repress unpopular views. There isno doubtthatthisovertcensorship of In additionto seminars on feminist theory and art is anathema to the inalienable liberties and sexual expression, the new symposium will in- rights guaranteed to people in a democracy, and elude a Bollinger-led public forum to address the Law School Dean Lee Bollinger should have issues of censorship and artistic freedom. This taken a further steps to admit the law students forum will promote discussion of censorship and who removed the exhibit made a grave error. pornography and bring these issues back into the However, the new symposium may reverse the spotlight. The community will have the opportu- negative impact of this mistake and make an nity to see the video "Pom'im'age'ry: Picturing even greater impact on future of free speech on Prostitutes." And the University will have the this campus. opportunity to fulfill its necessary role: to discuss The emerging pro-censorship coalition be- conflict, not to ignore it and run the other way. EHIND CLOCED DOORS MsUsjoins7'U' in violating public right to know. (WEL2, W77 DAVID toRES-H ,4?NA77- PR~O -/ iFFfMUDERER (IN FetoIj bA R~Esi61oUs VIOLENJCE 1s VEF/fy /lip. HA4VE YOU GI1VEN l4tJY Tt-OU&f-T To DEcL.ARit46- YOURSkELiF To 8F o~- soRr f EW MjvESSiAN.j vvi\ ! v til l '~~1~i IM G6 S F1-i, N00,ao t.I r ,JF F , I H Ab NO J/6 EA C4 r, uy's JL'ST No tu, THNfRE WASoA1&CtH Ta C5'fR7N- oTIK 6o- Go N S bER ?3 a Yr Voc'X POSVQ Gn, I HATE -r-,Nirrt',S rOO IATE To {(DFAI-lN6- £v'Tb' 4AATr~.Rs CoNS/t) R MY 'tPOt ECsTy a FIoE/?F 49F 77/F AAIy Pas 1/L Tm 5? r y 'S oH N &O111E~'EL3 Editors' note: Unfortunately, sexual assault has become an issue of statistics. We often see so many numbers, we forget human beings are involved. It is for this reason that the Daily dedicates this space every Wednesday to sexual assault survivors. Some pieces will be signed. Others will not. All of them present real situations from survivors who respond in their own way to assault. Rape story must be told 'over and over~ I'll go through Argo Park first today, I haven't been through there in along time and it's nice to get away from these roads. I'm really glad to be jogging, sometimes I wonder if I ever accomplish things that I set out to do, but obviously I'm getting better. It's really not worth getting depressed about it like I have been. blur and a woman screams, loudand fright- ening, almost angry - but nobody would hear, we're too far away from everything. He's grabbing me- so this is what it feels like, what I'd never thought would happen. Now he's pulling me down and I'm going to die, this is real, this is my life that's ending; I'm falling, everything is going to That scream again, not one, but a million women out there to tear this creep off of me, make me strong, fight him off. N THEIR SEARCH for a new president, the trustees at Michigan State University (MSU) have repeatedly attempted to avoid compli- ance with Michigan's Open Meetings Act. The act, passed in 1976, mandates public bodies - including state colleges and universities-keep decision-making meetings accessible to the public. But MSU last week revealed its most recent attempt to side step this law -manipu- lating a specific clause that allows apublic body to privately review applications at an applicant's request. While the trustees' creativity is duly noted, they do not have the right to subvert a law that clearly and expressly applies to them. In addition, this disregard for the public's right to know sets a dangerous precedent that our Uni- versity will only be too happy to follow. While the MSU trustees acknowledge this clause does not allow them to determine quali- fications or make judgements regarding candi- dates, they maintain they have the right to deliberate and label applications as "strong" or "weak." Obviously, regardless of what they want to call it, labeling applicants in such a manner is equivalent to making judgements. The point of the Open Meetings Act is to keep public bodies accountable not only for their decisions, but also for the way those deci- sions are made. Unfortunately, state public uni- versity administrators deem themselves above this law. Our University disregarded the Act most notably in 1988 when it subverted the entire selection process that resulted in the hiring of University President James Duderstadt. Even though the University has been challenged in court for its behavior, the regents have continued to disobey the law with the subsequent hiring of VicePresident for Student Affairs Maureen Hart- ford. MSU's attempt to ignore the act is not as blatant as the University's, but if the actions go unchecked they may fuel the regents' case when it goes to the Michigan Supreme Court in April. Throughout its search for a new president, MSU has continually echoed the complaints of ourUniversitythattheOpenMeetings Actmakes finding top applicants difficult. Republicans in Lansing have responded to these complaints by introducinglegislationto exemptpublic colleges and universities from the Open Meetings Act, Although there may be some validity to MSU's fear that the lack of privacy drives potential applicants away, the public's right to know su- persedes this concern. Furthermore, the Open Meetings Act does not require the entire process be made public, but only once the list has been narrowed down to serious candidates. Whether or not the trustees want to admit that they are bending the law beyond its breaking point, they cannot deny they are blatantly break- ing the spirit of it. They have made it clear that they don'tlikethe OpenMeetings Act and will do anything in their power to ignore it. They cannot continue to refuse the public its right to know about the selection process. I've been so down on myself lately and it's scary to find myself thinking that life is not worth living.But anyway, now I'm jog- ging and I feel great. It's so peaceful here, it's impossible to let things bother me. Concentrate on for- ward motion. Maybe someday I'll be good. There's someone fishing - what a differ- ent lifestyle than mine, but we both enjoy the same things, getting out here with na- ture and quiet. It's odd that there aren't more people, considering that it's almost noon. Oh my god, he's just standing there with his pants open. Maybe he didn't real- ize that I was here, just turn around and get out of here, pretend I didn't see, I suppose I should pick up the pace a little, it's not too hard, maybe I should jog at this pace all the time. But why do men do that? It's not the first time and it just doesn't make sense to me. Oh my god, he's beside me, there's a end like this, I'm going to die. No! Damn it, I'm not going to let this happen. You shit, I've got a life that you can't take away. That scream again, notone, butamillion women out there to tear this creep offof me, make me strong, fight him off. If he has a knife, it's going to cut into me - I can feel it cutting into my side. No, I'm not going to let it happen, I'm going to survive - I'm the one who's screaming, screaming be- cause it gives me control, because he has to defend himself against it. All the shit that I've ever taken from all the bastards in this world that has been burning inside of me is like a torch that I'm shoving in his face. You asshole, you made a mistake if you thought that you could hurt me when all you have is this thing that you don't know what to do with while I've got a life an no piece of shit like you is going to take it away from me. Get your dirty hands off of my face, that's not a scream that you can stop. He's off of me, oh my god, just run, go faster, why can't I run faster, he could still get me, I'm not going to let him. Look back, keep on running, but the street is so far away, I'm not going to make it, I can't breathe. No, I'm going to make it,I'm going togetoutofthis,I'm going to live,-finally some cars. Am I alive? Yes, slow down, I don'tneedtostopacar,justkeep insight,go to that store. "Can I use your phone? I need to call the police," as if I'd rehearsed it, it seems so unreal, it even looks like a toy1.hone. 911. Like a story I'm telling, I tell it over and over. They listen and they look so shocked. But I'm okay. I'm alive. Oh my god, I'm so afraid. No, I can't go outside, he's still out there. SEXUAL ASSAULTS REPORTED TO SAPAC IN 1993: 31* Involving penetration: 17 No penetration: 5 Acquaintance: 21 Stranger: 0 On Campus: 1 Reported to police: 6 * No additional information available for some reports FROM SCROOGE TO SANTA Election spirit brings cure for Michigan children NASA's endeavors benefit To the Daily: ozone layer, you are learning I am responding to your about a problem that was editorial "Budget Cuts; Pres. discovered and is now holds up his end of 'sacri- continuously monitored by a fice' bargain" (3/10/93) that satellite. criticized NASA as a The commercial commu- government agency which nications satellites that receives "countless govem- enable the global exchange ment funding that never of information are a direct seemed to produce anything outgrowth of pioneering meaningful". Obviously you NASA efforts. The vast are not aware of the extraor- majority of international dinary range of benefits that telephone calls are carried by have resulted from the space a satellite as well as most program at the current cost domestic and international of only 1 percent of the television coverage. If you federal budget. enjoy CNN live from The explosion of Moscow and the Olympic scientific knowledge about telecasts from Barcelona, you the solar system and universe are directly benefiting from since the dawn of the Space the space program. Age is certainly one of the Hurricanes used to kill greatest achievements of this hundreds of people. Thanks century. The adventure of to the warnings received this exploration has been an from satellites, even the most inspiration to millions, ferocious storms now take a Pulsars, supernovas, Martian far smaller toll. deserts and spectacular lunar The microcircuit technol- mountain ranges were ogy that forms the heart of unknown a generation ago. computers, car engine Now they are available to controllers and thousands of anyone who can read a other devices was originally magazine or take an under- developed to fill the need for graduate science class. a compact and reliable If you are concerned computer that could fit in an about the destruction of the the nation Apollo spacecraft The microcircuit is the source of the multi-billion dollar electronics, computer and telecommunications industries and their millions of jobs. This is but one example of how the technological demands of space exploration force the growth of technology, which then diffuses through the rest of the economy. Monitoring equipment used in hospital ntensive care units was derived from the biomedical instrumenta- tion originally invented for astronautical applications. Thousands of lives are saved annually by the use of these Space Age devices. Last fall the Daily endorsed for president a candidate who promised to invest in America's future. The money that has been spent on NASA has been an extraordinarily good investment, funding of one of the most exciting- endeavors of our time. Kenneth Katz Rackham student Daily headline seems misleading To the Daily: This letter is in response to an article you recently published titled"Anti-abortion protesters shoot doctor outside Florida clinic (3/11/93).dYou are incorrect to * ht such a title.Agroupofpeople did not shoot Dr. Gun. One person did and he, hopefully, will be punished for doing so. Mr. Griffin (the criminal in this case) did somethin that only a person who proas "pro-choice" could logically agree with. He took thelifeof one person for the sake of creating an environment that is more convenient for himself. The murder was not easy for him or he would have done it years ago. But out of his raging anger caused by fear (a lack of understanding) and confusion, he found the action necessary. Fortunately, actions suchar. Griffins are against the law. Unfortu- 4 nately, actions that society coerces women into doing (ie.-abortion), in which the result is 100 percent s_ to Mr. Griffin's, are legal. SEASONAL SPIRITS HAVE descended on Michigan politics - the election season, that is. With the 1994 gubernatorial race only a year away, Gov. John Engler, Michigan's very own Ebenezer Scrooge, has exhibited sus- picious signs that he may have been visited in the night-notby the ghost of Christmas past, but the y ghostofelectionfuture. Like Scrooge, our governor has: awoken a changed man, de- termined to prove he is not the ogre his political record has shown him to be. Thelatestevidenceofthisa change is the plan he intro- duced last week regarding r health care for Michigan's Enger doctor despite extreme illness. Thisleads to more serious illness and trips to emergency rooms. Furthennore, this plan addresses one of the largest problems with Michigan's welfare sys- tem: the fact that it acts as a "disincentive" to adults who wish to obtain jobs. Currently, em- ployed adults areineligible for Medicaid, even if their jobs offer no health insurance. Therefore, many choose not to work rather thanlose cover- age for themselves and their children. Under Engler's proposal, families earning less than $18,000 perfamily ofthreeor$30,000 perfamily of six would still be eligible for government insurance. This would allow parents to obtain jobs without feaiing outrageous debt should their children become ill. This proposal, which only addresses the needs of young children and limits coverage to families Micheal Nemec SNR&E Alumnus Protesters missing point, issue not labor-management To the Daily: I read with skepticism Yet the grievance, filed by the Anerican Federation of now, however, no evidence, or even accusation, has been argue with such a statement, we at least can note that it fails