4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 17, 1994 abe £idi~rn aai t~g 'I can't see what I'm doing. I'm just trying to sepa- rate 'em.' 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Jessie Halladay Editor in Chief Samuel Goodstein Flint Wainess - The referee, commenting during the Michigan-Penn St. about the difficulty of separating two really big guys Editorial Page Editors 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. Reconfiguring Ski oN IMMINLGe a t: e dilemma over how to restructure Stu- dent Legal Services must be solved and a plan enacted quickly. While agreeing that changes should be made, the Division of Stu- dent Affairs and the Law School have procras- tinated enough already on this issue. It is time that a solution acceptable to the student body, University and Law School be implemented. Last year, discussions began between MSA, Student Affairs and the Law School over revitalizing Student Legal Services (SLS). All parties agree that SLS, which represents stu- dents in on-going litigation free of charge, is a vital student service that needs strengthening. SLS's major problem is one of oversight: currently, SLS's Board of Directors is unable and unqualified to properly run such alegal aid service. The members of the current Board are students, staff of SLS and token representa- tives from the Law School and Student Af- fairs. The composition of the board creates problems of accountability and oversight. It is unaccountable because SLS's staff is basi- cally reporting to themselves and it lacks appropriate oversight because most Board members do not know what they should be asking or doing to effectively run SLS. After splitting SLS's fee from MSA's a year and a half ago, MSA initiated a dialogue about revitalizing SLS - discussing options such as turning daily control over to the Law School. This would have been the ideal place within the University for SLS, for it would be run by the best law scholars in the country. However, the Law School has continued to make it clear that they do not want SLS be- cause its cases are not challenging enough for its faculty or students to benefit from. This position is understandable, but unfortunate. Therefore, since this ideal situation will not be realized, asecondbest plan must beenacted- a complete overhaul of the SLS Board of Directors. First, the staff of SLS should be eliminated from the Board; this will eliminate the percep- tion of SLS having no real accountability for its actions because its staff reports to itself. Next, prominent members of the local Ameri- can Bar Association should serve on the SLS Board. There should be an increased presence of local attorneys, as well as an increased representation of Law School faculty and ad- ministration. Such professionals will provide the expertise necessary to improve the stature of SLS and enhance its services to students. However, the student presence in the govern- ing of SLS cannot be eliminated. Some stu- dents must continue to be appointed by MSA; the MSA Vice President should continue to be a member of the Board. In addition, the other student members should be appointed for two year terms and a greater emphasis should be placed on appointing law students, so turnover and lack of interest or understanding will no longer be characteristics describing the stu- dent board members. Under such a restructur- ing, the day-to-day operation of SLS would remain the same in the short term, but its long term guidance would be improved. Such a new board structure would allow SLS to im- prove its service, increase its use among stu- dents and gain a more prominent position within the University community. Under no circumstances should SLS be- come part of the Division of Student Affairs, like University Health Services, as suggested by some; there are too many issues of confi- dentiality and potential conflicts of interest that would arise from such a structure. Fortu- nately, both MSA and Student Affairs oppose this realignment. SLS is a very valuable resource to students. However, it is currently not operating as effec- tively as a legal service for University of Michigan students ought to. The University must take advantage of the great legal re- sources of the University and the Ann Arbor community to improve this vital service. MSA has been working to enact such a solution; Student Affairs, the Law School and the cur- rent SLS Board should join MSA in working to quickly restructure and improve SLS. Tips for recycling those Daily inserts By MICHAEL NEYLON I've noticed recently the large number of inserts that you have been including in your paper. In the last week alone, there was at least one per dayincluding applications for Discover credit cards and coupons for Domino's pizza. It is understandable that these companies pay you to place their inserts in the paper, and so you are committed to get- ting the material out to stu- dents. Unfortunately, due to the current way the paper is dis- tributed, the inserts can become a major problem. I see many students grab a paper from the bin orpile, hold it upside-down to get rid of the inserts and walk away, leaving the adver- tisements near the bin. With one student, this isn't so bad, but I suggest looking at your distribution sites late in the day, especially those without the bins, such as the Dow building on North Campus. There is literally a pile of inserts hastily discarded by readers of the paper. Although I am ignorant of the janitorial handling of these piles, I wouldn't be sur- prised if much of this paper goes unrecycled. Neylon is a second-year engineering graduate student. Even if the piles are re- cycled, one must then consider the readers who discard the in- serts in a classroom, on a bus, or even in transit across cam- pus. The inserts left here have a less likely chance of being re- cycled, and give a 'dirty' look to the classrooms, especially for classes late in the day. Thus, I ask that you rethink the way you handle these in- serts. I can think of several ideas off the top of my head: Encourage potential in- sert advertisers to advertise in the paper itself. From my ob- servations, the Daily itself gets discarded in recycle bins better than the inserts. Thus, the additional one or two pages would still be recycled, and will probably catch more eyes than the inserts. Discourage the use of non-recyclable material. Last week, there was an Eddie Bauer advertisement made from glossy paper, whichris gener- ally not recyclable or does not recycle well. These inserts, be- cause of their thickness and of the lack of interest in the adver- tiser, created even a larger pile near the distribution points than other inserts. ® Separate the inserts from the paper. That is, have two piles of materials available at each distribution point: the pa- per itself, and the inserts. If someone is really interested in the inserts, he or she will take one, and it will not go to waste. With this method, one can also distribute a smaller number of the inserts than the paper. N Place recycling bins near distribution points. Al- though this is already done in a few places (the EECS lobby, for example), it is not consis- tent through the University, and doing so would help solve the problem. Make inserts less frequent. Do we really need the same set of Domino's coupons twice a week? Do I need to apply for a credit card twice a month? Common sense should easily answer that. Finally, a suggestion to all readers of the Daily: don't leave the inserts behind, and then recycle the unwanted inserts at your earliest opportunity. This takes almost no extra work, and can help solve the problem as well. To my knowledge, none of these solutions would require large investments, but only use current resources to a better advantage. Unfortunately, the Univer- sity does churn through paper quickly, so every little bit of recycling that one can do (in- cluding the Daily) can help. Would I emulate' Miep Gies.? I'd like to think I would be one of them. One of the few. I wish I knew for sure. Miep Gies asked a standing room only crowd at Rackham last week not to call her a hero. She was the woman who sheltered Anne Frank's family in the years they hid from the Nazis in Amsterdam. At great per- sonal risk, she brought them food, supplies and news from the outside world. She was the one who gathered the pages of Anne's diary and later turned them over to the murdered girl's father. "Some people call me a hero," she said, after receiving the University'sWallenberg medal. "But my story is a story of very ordinary people in extraordinarytimes ....those in hiding were the brave ones." See me as your equal, she said, for you would have done the same as me. I'd like to say I agree with her- that I would have done the same - but I do not know for sure. I've asked myself that since 1990, the year I went to Poland. Just smelling the air in Auschwitz, Birkenau, Treblinka and Majdonek can make you shiver. Piles of human hair, collected shoes and charred bones rotting in Nazi ovens can make you ill. Butmore shocking than the camps are the peaceful neighborhoods that surround them. There are rows and rows of houses filled with people who clearly knew the extent of the tyranny, yet did nothing. Either they approved (it was only Jews andcrimi- nals, after all), they didn't care or they were scared into silence. No matter how evil the Nazis may have been, the reality is this: they could not have killed so manz without con- sent of the majority. I hope that fear was the general response of the masses because how could I live believing that thousands of people could be so collectively hateful? So people like Gies give me hope. Not everyone sat back and allowed innocent people to die. She took two families into her home and hid them. The King of Denmark refused to make only Jews wears badges. He put one on himself.' Raoul Wallenberg, a University alum and the Swedish diplomat for whom the Wallenberg medal is named, saved thousands of Jews by issuing false passports, writing vi- sas, pulling people off death trains and calling them Swedes. And there were hundreds of oth- ers: people like the woman who took my mother (an infant) into her home and cared for her while my grandfa- ther slaved in Auschwitz and my grandmother disappeared. The stories give me hope for hu- manity but make me fear myself. I've never lived near adeath camp, or been in a position to save a family that was about to be killed. But I cannot say I haven't turned my back on suffering. When that man approached me that night in Washington, with that little girl in his arms - she was asleep - why didn't I just give him cab fare to go the shelter? That was all he wanted. Why didn't I at least think to hand him my pass for the metro? Why did I spend weeks writing articles about millions dying in Rwanda, but never once write a check? Why do I waste so much energy, food, water, money, when so many others could use what I just throw away? When it comes to the Holocaust, the Jewish mantra is Never Again. Never Again will we allow such hate 0 a. " .: . ... rte. .. . ' , Killing Amendment 2 C olorado's Amendment 2 is dead - at last. Passed by aslimmargin by Colorado voters in November 1992, this notorious ar- ticle of voter initiative was finally struckdown by the Colorado State Supreme Court last week. The initiative sought to nullify the gay civil rights ordinances of Denver, Boulder and Aspen - a hotbed of liberalism amidst the pervasive populism of the West - which were instituted by these localities to ensure that gays and lesbians would be guaranteed the same basic rights the state's heterosexual population possesses. The state is appealing the State Supreme Court's ruling, meaning that the newly emerging moderates of the U.S. Supreme Court will have an opportunity to give the states some direction on this very contentious issue - that of democratically- passed voter initiatives designed to take away certain rights or legal protections accorded to certain segments of the populace, in this case homosexuals, who demand the protective umbrella of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Last year, the same Colorado State Su- preme Court issued an injunction against Amendment 2, ruling that it needed to hear further argumentation of the issue, but that at the time the voter initiative placed the state's gay and lesbians in harm's way - "in clear andpresent danger." Some critics of the amend- ment, pushed on the ballot by a state "family values" group, correctly suggested that the initiative was a deplorable act of mob rule - that of an intolerant majority denying equal rights to a minority long denied basic civil rights in housing, education and employment. (Just last school year, the University Board of Regents votedtoamendRegents' Bylaw 14.06, adding homosexuals to the list of groups that the University cannot discriminate against.) The proponents of the amendment, on the other hand, defended Amendment 2 as a necessary step to roll back liberals' tendency to grant "special rights" to minority groups. Moreover, Colorado's religious right argued that the state should not recognize a so-called group of "ho- mosexuals" - individuals who, they argued, chose to embrace a homosexual lifestyle - and should not be rewarded for their choice of a repulsive, irreligious, sexually promiscuous lifestyle. And anyway, they asserted, gays and lesbians in Colorado were not the victims of hate crimes and did not suffer discrimination at the hands of homophobes - ignoring the actual statistical evidence refuting that claim. In 1992, anti-gay violence was on the rise nationally, as gays found themselves trans- fixed in the crosshairs of the powerful radical right, led by the likes of Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Now, in 1994, anti-gay voter initiatives across the county further threaten the safety and security of gay and lesbian Americans. Statewide voter initiatives like Amendment 2 are dangerous, especially when the advocates of such amendments to state constitutions sug- gests that cities and other municipalities like Aspen have overstepped social and legal mo- res. Rather, Aspen, New York City and Ann Arbor are on the correct side of this culture war - by embracing the norms of a tolerant civil society that proscribes discrimination and pre- vents violence. Enter into pass/fail with care To the Daily: Your editorial (10/3/94) ad- vocating the pass/fail (p/f) op- tion and an extension of the deadline deserves a few fol- low-up comments. While this option can be a "viable alterna- tive," as you suggest, students should exercise caution in their use of the p/f designation. Foreign language courseworkis probably the aca- demic area where most of the p/f elections occur. Unfortu- nately, many students who elect their early language course work on a pass/fail ba- sis, discover that they are put- ting in the minimal amount of effort in order to "pass" ("C-" level). By the time students elect the fourth-semester lan- guage course, their back- grounds are simply not strong enough to "pass," even under the pass/fail designation. Three "pass"s followed by a "fail" does not a good transcript make. As a result, many coun- selors rightly urge students to ing a "C"). Consequently, it is not unheard of for admissions officers to re-compute student grade point averages, convert- ing p/f grades to "C"s. Even if this actual computation does not occur, the admissions of- ficer may be left with a nega- tive impression: why did the student expect to do so (possi- bly) "poorly" in this class? I strongly urge students to discuss the use of the p/f option with an academic counselor, particularly when considering any introductory course, a for- eign language course, or a pre- requisite to a concentration (courses for a concentration are not allowed as p/f courses). One setting in which a p/f designa- tion is quite understandable is when a student takes an inter- mediate or upper-level course in an area outside his or her specialty - a course that sounds interesting, but may re- quire previous coursework in the field for the top grade. David Burkam U of M Faculty and Academic Advisor Issues, not political name ch!. orApnvzp member of the endorsing orga- nization. For instance, since Ms. Rivers is endorsed by Michigan N.O.W., she must be a card-carrying member. Put another way, since John Schall also has an endorsement from the Police Officers Associa- tion of Michigan and the Washtenaw County Deputy Sheriff's Association, he must be a police officer in his spare time. To Mr. Kramer's credit, he tried to address a couple issues. However, in selectively choos- ing locally glorified issues (i.e. abortion), he glosses over is- sues like health care reform, social spending, taxes, the list goes on and on. People are tired of political name calling and partisan fear tactics, so let's cut to the chase. For anybody that follows politics, the 13th Congressional District race boils down to one thing span- ning every issue, conservative ideals versus liberal ideals, with little or no room in the middle. Calling Mr. Schall ultra any- thing is only trying to take the focus off the real issues (the same could be said concerning Lynn Rivers). Chances are that if you have a liberal political philosophy, you will eagerly vote forMs. Rivers. If you have I