4 - The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, November 2, 1993 bE Lidiigpn Bail 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DUBOW Editor in Chief ANDREW LEVY Editorial Page Editor L. Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. } NEMPLOYED * s .NE ED - -Fo R FOOD r NJE7 Allegations made against AATU are false To the Daily: This is response to a recent article, "AATU founder returns to campus to discuss low-income housing" (10/25/93). The portion of the article that deals with the "recent budget battle" between the Tenants' Union and MSA requires clarification. The allegation made by MSA President Craig Greenberg and MSA Rep. Brent House is that the AATU is financially irresponsible, poorly run, and secretive about its budget, and therefore must be closely supervised in order to receive its MSA funding allocation. This is simply not the case. AATU has always submitted annual reports to MSA regarding both its financial organization and the quality and quantity of its services to students. Furthermore, the accounting firm Plant and Moran provides us with a yearly audit and the results of that audit are made available on a regular basis. Finally, AATU financial books are kept and maintained by the MSA bookkeeper. We would ask that in the future the Daily be more careful in verifying the truthfulness of statements made by interviewees, particularly when those statements are presented as fact. ANN WILSON AATU Board President Clinton is a liberal, so is the Daily To the Daily: Your editorial "Same Old, Same Old" (10/26/93) would have been mediocre (an improvement for you), had you not turned it into an opportunity to Reagan-Bush bash. The piece documented the many atrocities which have already occurred under the Clinton administration, but simply culminated in a plea for President Clinton to steer away from the corrupt ways of Presidents Reagan and Bush. As usual, your editorial was hampered by more than one flaw. True to your form, you further demonstrated your hypocrisy. When discussing the White House's support of Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown, you write: "Did the FBI not know about the possible. conflict of interest issue involving Brown's sizeable investments in two corporations?" Did the Daily not know about the ineptitude of President Clinton last year when it endorsed the former Governor of Arkansas and his ability to appoint cabinet members? You see, President Clinton is running a liberal-Democrat administration. That means plenty of red tape and big government - in essence, many questions and no answers. Remember: A liberal never met a communist he didn't like. SEAN KING LSA junior A mi fn & AIC u that people will have sex, with or without protection, even if you tell them not to do it. It is essential that they be educated and encouraged to protect themselves. To those of you who have chosen to abstain until marriage, your chastity is certainly respected, but please do not force your values upon the world. While high morals may prevent one from contracting AIDS, they are NOT a cure. The cure for AIDS lies solely in the field of medicine, and the only thing we can do to expedite it is to give our deepest support to the researchers who give so much of their time to its discovery. ELAINE NEWMAN LSA sophomore Men disturb women's self~defense classes To the Daily: For the last year I have been training in self-defense and Tae Kwon Do. Training in a martial art has been integral to reclaiming my bodily space and security. More than allowing me to walk around at night or fend off frat boys at parties, it has been a very personal growth process. Every week I am thinking about how I use my body, how to use it more effectively, and how to claim space that is rightly mine. However, I am frustrated and angry about one particular aspect: the room that I train in every week is constantly bombarded by insensitive people. Every week I am left perplexed - it must be obvious that a class is going on because we are all dressed in uniform, using the entire room, and the door is closed. Over and over, my concentration is broken by the traffic of people barging in. Although occasionally a woman enters, the vast majority who enter are men. When told that this space is being used for a class, there are some that look genuinely apologetic, while many make rude remarks. My point is that people, and in particular, men, don't think much about invading the space of women. It seems highly ironic and sadly demonstrative that a space that is meant to be safe for women is so freely violated. AIMEE POMERLEAU RC senior Moeller blew call late in Illinois game To the Daily: The outcome of the Michigan- Illinois football game still sticks in my craw. It rankles me even more after reading articles in various papers and viewing different reports on television. Much was said about how Ricky Powers fumbled the ball which led to the subsequent winning touchdown that lost the game, but most reporters, with the exception of one Ann Arbor News writer, skirted the real issue. This was that the loss falls clearly on Gary Moeller's shoulders and that he should be man enough to accept the blame instead of blabbering, "I'm mad, I'm mad, I'm mad," and Moeller is a highly paid professional who should be able to think on his feet. His only real excuse in this situation might be that he was caught up in the heat of the battle and simply didn't consider the above mentioned possibilities to avert defeat. ROBERT FAIRMAN Ann Arbo4 'Sinners' aren't to blame for AIDS epidemic To the Daily: In response to Jeanette Larner's letter, "Morality can indeed cure AIDS," (11/2/93), I'd just like to give my deepest appreciation and gratitude. You see, your ridiculously simple-minded and unrealistic solution for the AIDS crisis showed you were the epitome of the white, middle-to-upper class, self-righteous witch-hunters that want to blame the world's ills on a few "sinners." Therefore, I'm glad you make * you and your ilk look like naive bible-thumpers. I love the part where you equate the distribution of condoms to teenagers with "giving guns to those who wish to commit murder," Yes, I see the connection between saving a schoolkid's life and killing someone. You're a real asset to the College Republicans - don't let anyone tell you different. The truth: the AIDS-infected homosexuals and drug users you talk about are people you #on't know; they are people you've never met. Just as when you imply in your letter that anyone who disagrees with the College Republicans is a liberal, you also show clearly that you have no understanding whatsoever of anybody but your own deluded self. JOSHUA KLINE LSA senior Terrorist acts more than 'punch in the eye' To the Daily: Due to the latest wave of anti- Israeli letters to the editor (the most recent of them being Katherine Metres' "American and Israeli hit men," 10/29/93) I think a revisiting of history is in order. Metres, in response to Palestinian violence, states, "Do you say about someone who manages to punch her rapist in the eye, is there violence on both sides?" Is slaughtering Israeli Olympic athletes in Munich punching a rapist in the eye? Is murdering a crippled man in a wheelchair by pushing him off the side of a boat punching a rapist in the eye? Is kidnapping a nursery of a kibbutz and smashing one of the babies heads against the wall punching a rapist in the eye? There exists a difference between a terrorist and a freedom fighter. A freedom fighter attacks soldiers and army bases. A terrorist murders innocent civilians. The Palestinian Liberation Organization, the main representative of the Palestinian people, has always had State News denounces Deja Vu ad Recently, The State News has been flooded in controversy surrounding its running of an advertisement for Deja Vu, a nightclub in Lansing fea- turing "Adult entertainment," or put simply, a strip bar. The ad stated that Deja Vu was "ranked #1" by The State News. Many people have expressed out- rage at our decision to run an ad for such an establishment, which they regard as derogatory to women. Go- ing a step further, some also were clude that by doing so, The State News endorsed the pornography in- dustry or, at the very least, ignored the fact that many people object to this form of "entertainment." It is important that The State News clarify its position on this issue. To begin with, The State News did not rank Deja Vu as No. 1 in adult enter- tainment or any entertainment genre. In order for The State News to offi- cially endorse anyone or anything, the editorial board must meet and agree with the premise for Deja Vu's existence. What the Deja Vu ad refers to is an article written in the fall 1991 Wel- come Week issue in which two sports writers gave their opinions on various "adult entertainment" establishments in the East Lansing area. There is an important distinction between this type of article, which reflects only the opinion.of the writer whose name appears on the byline, and an editorial, which always re- 1 4