4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 15, 1994 aIite Skbijuu i uirg 'People have developed an auditory intelligence. They listen to Dylan and Cobain on the radio... exactly where my work is being censored.' - Noted Beat poet Allen Ginsberg on the FCC banning his work from radio airwaves 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JessieHalladay Editor in Chief Samuel Goodstein Flint Wainess 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. Vote Michigan Parlty PEC1A-L 4 TEAHEA95ANT *sPEcLL..* 99t- > CAM' / KURT 'N( o M yTON(U' oc now/I (-" As the debate over funding for the Ann bor Tenants' Union (AATU) fades from the purview of the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) and into the hands of stu- dents, in the shape of a ballot question, MSA should enter an era of good feeling, of sorts. While there are three parties slating candi- dates for tomorrow's MSA election, where 15 representatives will be chosen, neither the Michigan, Students' nor Wolverine parties have salient issue differences of concern to students. In large part, all three parties agree that campus safety, the desire for a non-voting student regent and flaws with the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities (the Code) highlight the agenda - and the parties gener- ally agree on the solutions. In prior MSA elections, the parties often were a microcosm of national electoral forces, with a Progressive Party and Conservative Coalition each es- pousing ideological agendas. Today, ideology is a non-issue; expertise is the key. Only a party that has experienced, knowledgeable leaders with the political savvy and expertise to deal with the administration and campus issues will be able to make strides in reforming the code, and to a lesser degree improving campus safety and student representation. For this reason, we endorse THE MICHIGAN PARTY. The Michigan Party is far from flawless, to be sure. However, they have returned credibil- ity and respect to MSA, and have focused attention on important issues. While the Stu- dents' Party has a generally laudable platform, and no doubt the will to carry it out, they simply lack the experience and credibility of MichiganParty leaders. Time and againMichi- gan Party leaders have demonstrated that they have a firm grip on the intricacies of the code, and the pragmatism necessary to chip away at it. Furthermore, they have made important strides to increase campus safety (the four new lights on Washtenaw, for instance, were due in large part to Michigan Party candidate Andrew Wright), as well as awareness of same, and have shown a willingness to put in the time to master issues like the Code and the Diag Policy. Finally, they have increased student represen- tation in Lansing by hiring a professional lob- byist to represent student concerns. Simply put: to vote the Michigan Party out of office now is to risk jeopardizing the small, but im- portant, steps student leaders have taken vis-a- vis the administration. There are a few caveats to our endorsement. The first is based upon the understanding that opposition is a healthy thing. With this in mind, we recommend voting for DANTE STELLA in LSA, DEVON BODOH in the Business School and BRIAN ELLIOT in the College of Engineering, all members of The Students' Party. These men promise to provide healthy opposition to Michigan Party rule, and have proven to be effective watchdogs for student concerns. Furthermore, we recommend AN- GELA KELIC, Independent candidate in the College of Engineering. A hard-working in- cumbent, she has done important work on the campus safety issue and on items of concern to her constituency on North Campus. While the political debate may not be as heated as in years past, the issues that concern today's MSA are as, or more, important than any in recent memory. Tackling these issues will require organization and expertise-quali- ties that the Michigan Party can boast to have. While the Students' Party has some good can- didates, and the Wolverine Party has a platform that is hardly objectionable, the Michigan Party deserves a mandate to continue their reforms. Cast your ballot for the Michigan Party on Tuesday or Wednesday. -", I , 1 , 1 SECTION NON- GOTEE SECTION - f !11A NWROC not a true women's organization To the Daily: For the benefit of first-year students and those not follow- ing campus politics, I would like to examine the National Women's Rights Organizing Coalition (NWROC) a bit more closely. Recently, Jodi Masley, the putative head of NWROC, wrote a letter en- couraging women to join her organization and to "fight." There are two things people should know about NWROC. First, despite the name, it is not a women's organization. Bluntly, they arejust left-wing crazies who, every once in a while, organizesomething having to do with women's rights. You may know them best by their calls to "smash the fascists" and for "no free speech for fascists." Much of NWROC's agenda (and fund- ing) is determined by the Revo- lutionary Workers' League. an equally anti-Constitution, anti- human rights group. In the stu- dent elections last winter, NWROC ran on a platform that advocated overthrow of the re- gents and "student/worker tri- bunals instead of the Code." Don't get suckered by their rhetoric. Much of their recent activity has been centered around recruiting, using women's issues as a device. Second, this group wants to take away the fundamental American right of freedom of speech. Not only do they advo- cate violence against those who they disagree with, but flyers last year bragged about putting someone in the hospital at a rally they attended. Plainly, this infantile and immature politi- cal ideology can only be harm- ful. In fact, during a discussion I had at FestiFall, an NWROC member told me that because I disagreed with the group, she believed it was appropriate to commit violence against me. Maybe they'll come after me because I wrote this...I'mquak- ing in my boots. NWROC's actions in the Jennifer Ireland case are valu- able. However, the group as a whole doesn't seem to reflect the values of women (or any- one, for that matter). It is good to have them on campus, though, because they bring the ever-important issue of civil liberties for all to a focus. To that end, a new organization is forming, called the Students' Civil Liberties Watch (SCLW). Our goals: to reprimand mo- rons who call for an abridge- ment of civil liberties, to sup- port the privacy rights of women, and to enforce and monitor thedrights of all stu- dents, including lesbians, bi- sexuals, and gay men, within the University and our com- munity. If you're interested, watch for flyers or email -Civ.Lib @um.cc.umich.edu." Ethan Kirschner LSA Student "Baby killers" and Southern culture It was a heart wrenching story: two little boys, strapped securely in their car seats, stolen away from their sobbing mother in a caracking out- side Union. South Carolina. What happened next was even more heart wrenching: Susan Smith, the boys' mother, confessed to killing Michael,# 3 years, and Alex, 14 months. Yet aside from its shocking end- ing. Smith's story is familiar- a tale of marriage and motherhood, lost opportunities and failing finances that has been lived by young Southern women for decades. Voted "friendliest female" in the Class of 89, Smith smiles out from her graduation picture with styled hair and careful makeup. She was an honors student and a member of the Math Club, apparently bound for a bright future. Yet by 1990 she was working as a cashier in a Winn-Dixie supermar- ket; the news reports give no hint of why this bright young woman did not attend college. By the next year, she had other concerns: two months pregnant, she married David Smith, the assistant manager at the Winn- Dixie where she worked. Michael was born seven months later, and was soon joined by brother Alex. But all was not well in the happy family; Susan and David filed for divorce in September. At 23, Su- san Smith was the divorced single parent of two young children. She was also deeply in debt. Her job as a secretary at a textile plant paid her $1,096 a month, but her basic expenses added up to $1,284. She still owed money to the doctor who delivered Alex, and even David's child support payments could not bridge the gap between her earn- ings and the money it took to raise two children. Yet there was hope on the hori- zon: still young and attractive, she started dating Tom Findlay, the son of the owner of the plant where she worked. But the boss' son was still uncertain about Susan - he wasn't sure he could handle the responsi- bilities of Smith's ready-made fam- ily. Smith had other troubles in her past - a father who committed sui- cide when she was 8, and several of her own suicide attempts. Yet Findlay's letter, written a week be- fore the boys' disappearance, pro- vides the only clear motive in the case. Susan had found the knight in shining armor who could provide for her, and her children were an ob- stacle. We will never know what went through Susan Smith's mind the night she drove through the woods for hours, the night when she watched her children sink to the bottom of a murky lake to theiradeaths. But it is clear that she felt trapped. At least by the definition of a Small Southern Christian town, she had done everything right. Not a high- powered career woman, she met an attractive man, married him when she discovered she was pregnant, and tried to be a good mother to two children. When the marriage didn't work out, as marriages between 20- year-olds often do not, she looked to a new man to support herself and her children. Susan -and ultimately her chil- dren - fell victim to the culture that raised them. Think about how differ- ent this story would be if Susan had gone to college, if she hadn't worked at a classically low-paying female job, if her child care expenses didn't eat up almost a third of her monthly salary. Smith saw no way out except through a man with money - a man who, understandably, wasn't sure he mildi he an mnctant father to twxn Administration Speaker Gingrich takes office AATU referendum Vote YES on Question A, NO on Question B i E This semester's MSA election ballot con tains more than the traditional choice of student candidates -this week, students will vote on a referendum for the Ann Arbor Ten- ants Union (AATU). This vote clearly holds tremendous impor- tance for students, MSA and the campus at large. The AATU, which last year received $23,000 from MSA, saw its funding for this year drastically cut to a mere $2000 by the current MSA leadership. As this allotment would not even cover the AATU's operating expenses through the outcome of this week's referendum, the AATU continually asked MSA for more funding and an ounce of fair- ness, only to be squarely denied. As a result, the AATU has turned to charging students - its major constituency - a blanket fee to use its once-gratuitous services. Supporters of the AATU correctly point out that this organization, the only organiza- tion not affiliated with the University to offer students advice on off-campus housing and the landlords that manage such housing, de- serves more money than the average student organization. Simply put, the AATU's ser- vices are not matched by any other organiza- tion on campus. Perhaps more importantly, these services are vital to all students. Opponents - who believe that the Univer- sity offers the same services through the Off- Campus Housing Authority and Student Le- gal Services -currently own a majority in the Assembly, and have been able to successfully pass substantial funding cuts for the Tenants Union. Central to their reasoning is the belief .L.. A AM k~Alraei~ ;n~t nrv~c nizations on campus. The result: a $20,000 budget shortfall for the AATU. This page believes that students need a resource on campus that provides adequate advice and information concerning off-cam- pus housing. This resource must help students in signing leases, retrieving security deposits and dealing with landlords. Without such a resource, students are without an advocate in their search for off-campus housing. This ser- vice is a necessity - although exactly who provides the service is irrelevant. To date, this page has simply not been persuaded that, apart from the services of the AATU, other organi- zations sufficiently provide this resource. In this light, we recommend that students vote YES on Question A on the MSA ballot this week. This proposal will increase the MSA fee paid for through tuition by 25 cents, effec- tive next semester. All of the increased funding generated through this new mechanism will be allotted specifically to the AATU. The AATU is an invaluable, and presently unmatched, resource for all students, and this increase in the MSA fee is more than justified to help fund this organization. We recommend that students vote NO on Question B. This question, which would in- crease the same MSA fee by 18 cents to be directed to the general reserve fund, is irrel- evant - MSA has continually voted down motions to reopen this reserve fund, and any increase in this fund will not go to the AATLU. We urge students to consider the impor- tance of this referendum, and vote accordingly. Just think - when your security deposit is not salaries are out of control ITo the Daily: It isn't reasonable that administrative salaries not only outpace faculty and staff salaries, but that they con- tinue to rise out of control while tuition costs skyrocket. How naddening that the VP for University relations, Walter Harrison, prefers to raise the salaries of full pro- fessors to match those of the bureaucracy, than to cut back on administrative excesses. If departments can tighten their belts on services, then so can the administration. I'd ratherhave lowertuition costs and a slimmer, trimmer ad- ministration. Do they really need the plush offices of Wolverine towers, a fortress' like the Fleming Building and salaries six times that of my parents? The University of Michi- gan is a fine university, but can we still considerate a pub- lic university? How much do students and parents, mostly citizens of the state of Michi- gan, have in determining the salaries of this University's public administration. Are they working for us, or do we merely give them a means by which to buy more Mercedes? Alan Crowley Rackham graduate student Nice column, To the Daily: After the overwhelming Republican victories in the elec- tions last Tuesday, I sit here pondering the leaders and plans of the Republican party for the 104th Congress. What do I see? I see Newt Gingrich as Speaker of the House. A man who has over and over again declared American civilization to be the "greatest" and "most unique" in the history of the human race. A man who believes America needs to "renew itself' be re- turning to what it was prior to the 1960s. We are left to believe that, for Gingrich, such horrid liberal action such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the first Earth Day in 1970 (just to name a couple of landmark events in this nation's progress) are con- sidered to be detrimental. If only we could return to that wonderful time, the 1950s, they heyday of the Cold War and the "separate-but-equal" doctrine! Who is there back up Gingrich? How about Bob Dole, Jesse Helms, Bob Packwood, Strom Thurmond, just to name some. So Newt Gingrich is the man who engineered, effec- tively, the platform of the GOP, the so-called "Contract with America." Looking into this "Contract" we find that it calls for: 1) cutting social spending from the Crime Bill which passed the 103rd Congress; 2) cuts in welfare, Medicare and other entitlements; 3) increases in defense spending; 4) a with- drawal of all United States troops now under the United Nations command (effectively leading to a tremendous loss in the U.N.'s ability to keep peace internationally); and the list goes on. Policies which, in sum, will serve to increase the already growing domestic gap between the rich and the poor, increase the national deficit with mili- tary spending (remember the 1980s?) and isolate us from the international community. Is that what we, the Ameri- can people, authorized? And, if so, is that what we want? Andre Verani LSA Senior S I AATU is valuable service for students *1 m