4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 10, 1994 tIie £kbi~pwluu il II NOTABLE QUOTABLE 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JESSIE HALLADAY Editor in Chief SAM GOODSTEIN FLINT WAINESS Editorial Page Editors 'Good kids screw up occasionally. If ... they were my kids, they would have been playing for me here tonight also.' -IU basketball coach Bobby Knight on the controversy surrounding three Michigan basketballplayers Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Students and regents Students deserve representation on the Board of Regents H i, T't4 PAM. I Ht~', MJAY, '1 lAK THISTHS C-iV... SEX'. SEX(SEX'. HE SEEMS TZEA L'SX.SE ~ 95 bE '. SE~X E~C v 0- c tt 71, V;- a) ,a... PJ iN r +c - m n t n .1 jE i 1 1 V i Last month, the University Board of Re- gents held a meeting to discuss the pros and cons of tuition increases. Speakers in- cluded an economics professor detailing the growing national gap between rich and poor and a state senator discussing the Legislature's possible role in holding down burgeoning tuition rates. One voice was notably absent from the considerations: the voice of students. Since student voices and opinions are ostracized from the current decision-making system at the University, the Board of Regents should adopt a non- voting student regent. In any issue-specific discussion, it is cer- tainly necessary to include experts in that particular field. Moreover, the regents are democratically elected representatives of Michigan taxpayers -which includes most in-state students. However, students are the people most directly affected by decisions made by the Board of Regents. Therefore, students need some medium to access the rules governing them. The best way to ensure this access is through a non-voting student regent. Ideally, this stu- dent would be elected by a majority of student voters. But as the logistics of holding yet another student election are extremely diffi- cult, the president or vice president of MSA should be the one representing students at regents' meetings. Although the low voter- turnout rates in MSAelections give its leaders something far from a mandate, these leaders are currently the only individuals elected by a campus-wide vote that could serve in this capacity. This proposition has been put forth to several regents, as well as to President Duderstadt. While no one will out of hand dismiss the idea, they have expressed reluc- tance to accept it. Their reasoning rests on the assumption that individual constituencies should not be represented at regents' meet- ings. But whether or not one thinks students are an individual constituency, allowing the MSA president or vice president to sit at the regents' table makes sense. If one does consider individual constitu- encies to be problematic, a non-voting stu- dent regent could be considered an expert- hence functioning not as a representative, but as a helpful tool for the regents when consid- ering student issues. Clearly, students are experts when it comes to paying the costs of tuition increases; students are experts when it comes to talking about non-academic con- duct codes that directly influence their lives and actions. In the other camp, there are those that consider "individual constituencies" merely a catch phrase in this debate. Calling for a non-voting student regent doesn't mean that members of all organizations on campus or around the state should be represented at regents' meetings. It simply means that there is one special constituency that does merit representation. In short, that constituency is students, the ones that pay the price of deci- sions made by the Board of Regents. This proposal is far from radical. It would not take an amendment to the Michigan State Constitution. It may not even change how a single regent votes. But it would allow stu- dent voices to be heard where they have been so often ignored. Next time a Board of Regents meeting rolls around, students shouldn't be forced to cram all their concerns and opinions into a helter-skelter public comments session. When amendments to the Code come up for consideration, it should not only be admin- istrators that are allowed to share their expe- riences with the regents. It should be a student representative. This representative would by no means speak for all students or be a panacea for the communicative breakdown that has occurred between students and administrators over the years. But it would be an important first step. HE PAY ATTENTION F Foos. Pop FM. Tao wHA T I-NAVE F~oO. FOD.,cop~ TO SAY.F r0 11 CAND H-E DOESN'TA&SEG.A. SEC-A.,5", N4AVE A OE SE,.E-,E TRA CK MN. SG-. fdt f . Religon and Politics Do Not Mix To the Daily: This letter is inspired by Arnold Lumsdaine's letter, "Killing Fetus is the Same as Killing Infant" (2/2/94); however, it is directed toward any Republicans on campus who espouse a pro-life stance. I agree with most of the principles behind the conservative platform because I am a vehement supporter of individual rights. I believe that every life is an endtunto itself - not the means to another's ends -to be enjoyed by that individual in this lifetime. The only political system in history which puts individual rights and freedom first is capitalism. Behind even the most benevolent-appearing socialist systems is the principle that the rights of the individual can be sacrificed, by the government, to the interests of "society" (or its other members). The conservative platform comes the closest to respecting the individual members of our society over the "society" as an entity in itself. My question is, why ruin a logical and moral political philosophy by interjecting religion? This is completely unethical and contradictory to the conservative platform's fundamental endorsement of individual rights. Here is why. It is first unethical because the Constitution guarantees separation of church and state. Period. Religion has no place in an American political election so long as the freedom to practice religion is guaranteed-which it is. Of more importance to Republicans should be that preaching Judeo-Christian ethics is contradictory to everything else they stand for. The essence of Judeo- Christianity, after faith, is altruism. Altruism holds that people do not have the right to live for themselves -that it is their moral obligation here on earth to live for others. Altruism, as preached by conservative religious leaders, is the same principle on which the liberals rely when they say an individual should be sacrificed for the' "'common good." To religious conservatives: for yourtown sake, do not use religion to defend democracy and capitalism! Because altruism (as in, indenturing a woman (a human life) to her fetus (only a potential life)) contradicts everything else you stand for, it will only lead you to the frustration of chasing your own tail. JARED M. LEVIN LSA Senior Daily bias apparent To the Daily: Last week Bay Buchanan came to Ann Arbor. In case you don't know, she is the former U.S. treasurer. She received no advance notice in your publication except a one liner in the calendar section. The College Republicans took out a large ad because they are accustomed to your lack of exposure for their events. On the same day a speaker advocating multiculturalism was acclaimed before giving his speech. Who was he? I have no idea, some professor from Harvard. Never heard of him. The day after both speeches, you reported both speeches, the one drawing approximately 500 people, the other 200. Obviously Bay Buchanan, a nationally known speaker, not getting. front-page coverage (or any advance coverage) is a sham as her credentials far exceed this no-name who you herald. You are the only major student paper on campus and you repeatedly use your paper as a bully- pulpit for some people and causes and shaft the rest. Please attempt some fairness in the future, and at the very least forewarn busy students when famous speakers are coming, letting them decide if they want to hear them out. DANIEL MATLOW LSA first-year student When never again' starts to happen "Never again. " As newspaper columns decry the evils of the Nazis, as Holocaust museums open, as "Schindler's List" racks up millions of dollars, these words are spoken freely and frequently. The words have become so commonplace that they have lost their original meaning. It has become another cliche of thenAmerican culture. For while "never again" is uttered from the mouths of people around the country, we are standing by while it happens again. I am, of course, speaking of the Balkan holocaust, a tiresome subject for most people. Stories of the Balkans have long since moved off the newspapers' front page. When it appears on the television, people turn the channel. It is old news. It is happening, we accept it, and we no longer care. We are bored with the slaughter of human beings. We are interested in severed penises. Apathy would be the best word to characterize the current American attitude toward the Balkan holocaust. We see the pictures; living skeletons staring out from behind barbed-wire fences. We hear the stories; about the barbaric rapes, about the mass executions, about the brutal torture. But we look away. We don't want to think about it. It is easy to say "never again," when we are dealing with things in the past, events over which we have no control. It becomes quite difficult, however, when we must act on our proclamations, when we are faced with another holocaust, when it is happening in front of us, when uttering two words is not enough to stop it. I think, then, that it is inappropriate to continue using the words "never again." It is a promise that we have no intention of fulfilling. Instead, let's say what we mean:"Never again ... unless we have to work to make sure it never happens again." Let's quit beating around the bush and pretending that there is nothing we can do. Let's admit to ourselves that we simply do not care enough to stop the murder of a people. I do not blame the politicians for their halfhearted efforts. They merely reflect the feelings of the people. I blame you. I blame myself. I blame every person who doesn't like what is happening, but doesn't do anything to stop it. I blame the silence of the American people for allowing the Balkan Holocaust to continue. I wonder how many of the people who saw "Schindler's List" thought about the bony Muslim faces staring out from behind barbed wire fences in the Serbian concentration camps. I wonder how many of the people who have said, "never again," have thought about the soccer stadiums in Sarajevo, torn up fields full of unmarked graves. Of those people, I wonder how many of them did anything about it. I once asked my grandmother why no one did W. #I Doctar asslsted suiacide ith all the talk about Dr. Jack Kevorkian speaking at spring commencement, the issue that pushed Kevorkian into the limelight - assisted suicide - seems to have taken a back seat. But myriad recent developments have, on a national level, brought new hope to Kevorkian's crusade to legalize doctor-assisted suicide. The most important developments came from the Michigan judiciary, where three recent court decisions have ruled the state law banning assisted suicide unconstitutional - mainly on technical grounds. However, Kevorkian's new tactic, a ballot drive that would let Michigan voters decide whether or not phy- sician-assisted suicide should be legal, is also an important development for those who believe individuals should have the ultimate control over their own bodies. The question of assisted suicide is a his- torical one, and it has taken on increased significance with Dr. Kevorkian's appear- ance on the national scene. In response, and as a clear rebuke to the practices of the doctor, the Michigan Legislature, in 1992, passed a law banning all physician-assisted suicides. The debate has raged on, however, from hospitals to courtrooms to voters' minds. After being convicted on several occasions, and serving weeks in jail, Kevorkian is still pressing his cause. And while several appeals courts have invali- dated the law based on technicalities, mul- tiple judges have also added that any sweep- ing statewide law criminalizing doctor-as- sisted suicide would be unconstitutional. The message is clear - the law banning physician-assisted suicide in Michigan should be revoked. But beyond the message of the courts is the message of ordinary Americans that are forced to die without dignity. Terminally ill patients know no personal dignity. Individuals should have the inalienable right to live and die with this dignity if they so desire. This is the most vital decision a person can make, and the people of Michigan should be able to make this decision without the interference of the courts. Furthermore, physicians should be able to offer their patients all available options in treating disease without fearing a meddling legislature. In cases arising every day in the hundreds of hospitals in Michigan, patients and their families desire to end the suffering of the terminally ill patient. Whether they accomplish this through means of active euthanasia (such as the tactics employed by Kevorkian) or more commonly passive eu- thanasia in which medical necessities are gradually withheld from the dying patient,' they are all exercising the right to die with dignity. This right should be legal in the state of Michigan, and indeed in the entire country. This debate is often characterized as one not about rights, but about questions of abuse. Naysayers like to claim that once assisted suicide is legalized, people will make split decisions to end their lives - decisions that can never be reversed. But the fact is that doctor-assisted suicide doesn't occur until after extensive discussion with the patient and his or her family. And the patient can, at any time, even on the death bed, stop the process. Individual decisions must ultimately rest with the individual. Now is the time for a final decision - the state's voters should decide on the legiti- macy of physician-assisted suicide in a ref- erendum on the November ballot. The Michi- gan Legislature must recognize that their current ban on physician assisted suicide is illegitimate and infringes upon the rights of Statistics that don't tell the truth- By JILL CORRAL Jason Dandy's "Viewpoint" (2/8/94) accuses SAPAC of wrongly ignoring men. He points out some specific exclusionary policies that SAPAC enforces, saying that the center devalidates or fails to address the needs of (violence against) men, then goes on to argue that women's needs for such services are overhyped or exaggerated. Men are raped too. Dandy says that if he were raped, and called the center's crisis phone-line for counseling, he would prefer to speak to a man. The truth is that more women are sexually violated than are men, due to biology, power differentials and other societal factors. I agree that male volunteers should be allowed to counsel as well, but in fewer numbers than females. This is not an issue of gndreaitv or violent acts perpetrated by men against women is equal to or less than the frequency of violent acts perpetrated by women against men." I would very, much like to know how and by whom this study was done. In using statistics, say, compiled by police, legal, or social institutions, one must consider how and under what guidelines they are compiled. Take the fact that in 1994, over 20 states do not legally recognize marital rape as a crime (in Michigan until June 1988); once a woman and man legalize their relationship, she instantly has less rights than he does. These violent acts thus go unreported as they are legally or otherwise "non-events"- data is systematically erased. By conservative estimates, in the United States 3,000 women are killed each year by their husbands, lovers or fn,;f i k(thp: F T expressed over the Michigan husband who literally hammered his wife to death in her dental office three weeks ago. Women's experiences are systematically erased from the public consciousness. Women's experiences, from being chattel to not having the right to vote, have historically been seen as those of a minority, and therefore not terribly urgent. What is not recognized is not quantified, Mr. Dandy. Dandy says that SAPAC leaves grave omissions (regarding the male side of domestic violence and sexualassault) in its official statements of cause and function, and that the responsibility for this falls on the person who "misunderstood ... certain statements and translated them into what is supposed to be fact." Mr. Dandy seems to thnktatS APA 0 F I ,:,