4- The Michigan Daily --Wednesday, November 16, 1994 ~Ijr d -gNxIL41vlg I 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. 'If you're not running this term and you haven't signed up for any election work, vultures will be eating your dead carcass. For more details on how this will happen, see me after the meeting.' -Paul Scublinsky to MSA members at the MSA meeting Tuesday night. OuiT R You HEARDW -hi EPj-E ! TC EY WANT -- I- TED STATE 5 CONG R E S cYftOr' Rally in Lansing Legislature must revive sexual assault bill Sexual assault among students, and be tween students and professors is a grow- ing problem on university campuses across the country. In Michigan, unfortunately, our legislature has yet to provide an effective solution. It is for this reason that the Women's Issues Commission of the Michigan Student Assembly is sponsoring a rally to be held at the State Capital in East Lansing on Thursday, November 17. The purpose of the rally is to persuade the Michigan State Senate to pass the Campus Sexual Assault Assistance Bill. The bill would force all public universities in the state to come up with a policy on sexual assault which would include several important provisions to protect victims. Among these, it would man- date that all victims of sexual assault are provided with counseling, literature, and other informative and therapeutic assistance. Addi- tionally, the bill would allow the victims to leave their living environment, classes, or any other situations in which they might come into contact with the assailant, with no academic or financial penalties levied. Provisions in the bill would apply to all students who claim to be victims of sexual assault, regardless ofwhether they choose to name their assailant. The bill, which passed unanimously in the State House of Representatives, is currently being held up in the State Senate by the Sub- committee for Higher Education. Although it takes place on a weekday and therefore conflicts with many students' sched- ules, it is extremely important that all who can attend this important event do so. It is critical that it be made crystal clear to the State Senate that passage of this bill is vital to the security of all university students in this state. Moreover, with the current lame duck ses- sion preceding the inauguration of the new legislature, now is the only chance students will have to get this bill enacted any time soon. If the bill is not passed by the end of this legislative term, it will have to be scratched and reintroduced, repeating an already long and arduous process. A caravan will meet at the Crisler arena on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. to take all interested students to Lansing for the event, which will be held on the steps of the state capital. State Senator Lana Pollack, Senator elect Alma Wheeler Smith, and a survivor of sexual as- sault, will all be speaking. Transportation will be provided for all who need it, however, as there is a limited amount available, all who can provide their own are encouraged to do so. Interested students may contact Emily Berry, one of the event organizers, at 668-4874, for more information. This event could help to influence the safety and security of college students across this state in the near future. It is up to all those who want to see something done about sexual as- sault to make every effort to attend. Vote for the Students' Party for MSA To the Daily: It never ceases to amaze me at the amount of hypoc- risy that the Daily displays. For the fourth straight semes- ter the Daily has decided to endorse the Michigan Party. The ironic part of this endorse- ment is that the Daily has con- tinually criticized the Michi- gan Party and rightly so, on the issue of the Ann Arbor Ten- ants' Union the Michigan Party has used every under- handed dirty politic trick to keep the AATU from getting any form of funding. As the Daily said last year, it is too bad that the Michigan Party hates the AATU but vote for them anyway. This is com- pletely idiotic to support a group of individuals that want to cut student services. The Michigan Party this year alone has cut funding to student groups $12,000. Is this the type of people that we, the student, should have representing us? A party that continually ignores the wishes of the student and cuts funding to their groups. Another thing that I would like to dispute is the issue of experience and credibility. The Students' Party has eight people running for office who are ei- ther on or have served on MSA but the Daily seems to feel that the Michigan Party's three ex- perienced candidates are bet- ter. We have Roger DeRoo who is probably the most experi- enced individual on the assem- bly, Emily Berry who is help- ing to organize the Campus Liberalism is elitism The lesserknown agenda The GOP's plans for a few important fields R eaganomics is one of those catch words. To many, it is a term to be used pejora- tively, summoning visions of income maldistribution and budgetary smoke and mirrors. But to the majority of legislators in the 104th Congress, it is a guidepost, an indi- cator of economic growth and stability. Forget Reaganomics for a moment; forget the political and emotional baggage of the '96 midterm elections. And take a look at some of the less talked about results of the Republican sweep. Education. Soon-to-be Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich has called on the Con- gress to rework student loans, changing the current structure into one where interest would begin accumulating while students are still in school. This would result in immediate Federal savings, but it would also almost surely inflate the cost of student loans 20 to 30 percent. In addition, Nancy Kassenbaum, who will be a key player in formulating education policy next year, has criticized the direct student loan program pioneered by the president, and has questioned the importance of provisions for handicapped and retarded children in educa- tion legislation. Welfare. The welfare debate has suddenly lurched to the far right. Some Republicans want to impose strict time limits on welfare, ignoring the fact that the most comprehensive studies of Aid to Families with Dependent Children show that if you offer unwed moth- ers jobs with health benefits, they will join the workforce. Other prominent Republicans are advanc- ing the radical notion that even young mothers willing to work should no longer be entitled to benefits. Missouri Republican James Talent takes it a step further, and has sponsored a bill that would permanently deny benefits to all children with unmarried mothers under the age of 26. Around 3.5 million children would be impacted by such a move. Tobacco. Democratic Henry Waxman, who currently chairs the Health and Environment subcommittee, has spent many years aggres- sively investigating the tobacco industry, and has turned up startling evidence of shreddings, untruths and deceptions. Waxman is likely to be replaced by Virginia Republican Thomas Bliley Jr., who vows to end such investiga- tions, noting that he doesn't think "we need any more legislation regulating tobacco." The environment. The end of the last Congress saw the death of mining reform - at the hands of a Republican filibuster. Now, it is certain that for at least two more years, industries can dig up Federal property - for free. Moreover, polluter- pays laws stand to be weakened, and the Endan- gered Species Act could find itself endangered. And clean water reform, which had bipartisan support a few years ago, has now fallen to partisan bickering. With a Republican Congress, that is sure to remain. Fortunately, Rhode Island Repub- lican John Chafee is the ranking member of the Senate Environment Committee, and he has never been just a Republican rubber stamp. Foreign policy. In all likelihood, the rock- ribbed conservative Jesse Helms will take the leadership post in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Helms has advocated rethinking whether Russia deserves foreign aid, and would swiftly expand NATO to Russia's border - moves that almost all foreign policy analysts agree would antagonize hardliners in Russia, and cause the Yeltsin government to shift away from reform. Republican leaders also seem bent on reducing contributions to the World Bank, cutting back the Agency for Interna- tional Development, bringing back Star Wars, holding up the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and taking a hawkish stand in North Korea. To the Daily: The letter written by Prof. Mel Williams in the Nov.' 1 edition of the Daily is replete with the usual failed socialist- liberal bilge. Mr. Williams seems to think that Clinton's low approval rating is a result of being "associated with the low in classes." I would sub- mit that Clinton suffers from an association with the low in moral integrity, honesty and competence. The man simply refuses to listen to the voters, and bulls ahead with his so- cialist agenda. 60's liberalism has been tried, has failed mis- erably and has been soundly and dramatically rejected by the people of this great coun- try. Ever increasing numbers of people are opting for less government, less taxing and spending, and stronger en- forcement of our laws - con- servative cornerstones for years. People are fed up with the excuses, the dependence on government to solve prob- lems, the lack of responsibil- ity. Anyone who can't hearthe conservative rumblings of the voters (such as, oh, Democratic congressmen, must have their ears, along with the rest of their head, buried in the sand. I'm sure Prof. Williams and his liberal cadre feel they know what's best for the unwashed masses; their intellectual elit- ism surely superior to our silly "democratic elections." Will- iams implies that the people have been duped by Republi- can candidates; the politicians preying on their simple minded fears and prejudices. This sim- ply is not true. We, the voters, do not need Prof. Williams to explain to us what we really want, to cut through all this high-falutin' speechifyin' and translate down to all us simple- tons the underlying truth (Democrat good Republican bad, presumably). As for Rush Limbaugh - the man warrants a little criti- cism, granted, but the attacks that Mr.Williams makes on him and all conservatives are nothing less than irresponsible. Conservatives do not have a secret agenda to keep minori- ties and the impoverished down. We do not attack these groups, nor do we look down upon them. Conservatives wish to help the poor rise above their lot; to promote equality. It's just that we have different ideas on how to go about reaching these goals. It's conservatives who believe in true equality; that all men are created equal, that each has an individual re- sponsibility and that each must live with the consequences of his or her actions; reactionary views, indeed. Though I dis- agree with President Clinton's policies, I don't doubt for a second that his intentions are honorable. As the saying goes, however, "the road to hell is paved with government inter- vening policies," or something like that. I would expect this same courtesy from Prof. Wil- liams, but apparently he feels that conservative policy is "wrong" and only liberals, such as him, are "correct." The American voters are embracing conservatism in record numbers. And, despite Mr. Williams' wishes, I'm sure, we still live in a democ- racy, where the will of the majority is done. On Nov. 8, the people spoke loud and clear, and they sent a new, conservative Congress to Washington --yet another nail into the coffin of government gone awry, the legacy of the 60s liberalism. Michael Judson LSA sophomore Sexual Assault rally and many other extremely qualified indi- viduals. As to the Michigan Party adding credibility to MSA, that's ridiculous, election results still languish around nine percent af- ter three terms of the Michigan Party in office and the adminis- tration still thinks we're a joke. The Michigan Party also has repeatedly gone back on it's compromises whether they are with the AATU or with the lob- byist. The lobbyist was meant to be a student or someone who had just graduated as agreed on by Craig Greenberg, Brian KightDevon Bodoh and Conan Smith. Instead MSA hired some age old person to represent the youthful students here at UM. The Michigan Party alsowanted to have closed meetings to talk about the lobbyist. I personally had to argue with Andrew Wright for an hour to open up the meetings. The Students' Party has shown its leadership in a variety of different ways bringing mi- norities into MSA, helping to organize the Campus Sexual Assault rally, fighting for stu- dent groups and student rights. All the Michigan Party has brought to MSA is gridlock and the same past MSA problems in adifferentform. Vote forchange, vote for the Students' Party! Jonathan Freeman LSA candidate for MSA Vote YES on AATU funding proposal To the Daily: The AATU is a student service that provides educa- tion and counseling concern- ing renting and the landlord/ tenant relationship. Cur- rently, we offer free phone counseling, free personal counseling and free informa- tion pamphlets to students, but this may not last long. MSA has cut funding to the AATU, and we may haveto start charg- ing students for our services. We don't want to charge stu- dents, so we are putting the decision into students' hands. Proposal 1 on the referendum during the MSA election is one way that students can help the AATU help them. Pro- posal 1 would raise the student fee by a mere 25 cents for the sole purpose of funding AATU services to students. VoteYES on Proposal 1 and save the AATU. Race, IQ,j genetics and the' New York Thnesi The Bell Curve, by R. Herrnstein and C. Murray, recycles an old pseudosciencethis time with ashal- lowness surprising even for conser- vatives. But what an enormous pub- lic fanfare - glowing reviews in the New York Times, cover stories in national newsmagazines, inter- views on all major PBS talk shows. True, all the subsequent op-eds have been negative, but the critics get the editorial page, while the purveyors of this balderdash are treated to the front page of the NYT Magazine one Sunday and the NYT Book Review the next. The book's key claim, the one creating all the stir, is that scores on IQ tests are partially determined by genes. This idea is usually sup- ported by identical twin studies. These studies were discredited long ago, and the only new twin informa- tion cited is the famous Minnesota Twin study in which damn near everything was found to be deter- mined by genes - even political affiliation. Admittedly, after the last elections it is a hopeful idea that a eugenics program might reduce the number of rabid Republicans. But hopeful ideas are not science. Reducing the birth rate of Republi- cans is not likely to reduce their influence - damn. The most negative impact of this book is likely to come from its assertion that the difference in IQ scores between blacks and whites is largely due to genetics. No new theory or data types are presented to bolster this wild assertion. The view of almost all contemporary biolo- gists is that the notion of black and white races is a social construction in the first place, and that any differ- ence between the two groups con- cerning something as complicated as cognitive ability is almost cer- tainly not attributable to genetic ef- fects. But the conservative warriors who write The Bell Curve are unswayed by counterevidence. Sev- eral studies in which black and white children were raised in similar envi- ronments and no difference was found in their IQ scores or, fre- quently, the blacks actually scored higher, are virtually ignored. The mode of argument of Herrnstein and Murray is seductive for the innocent. It is based on "the weight of the evidence." That is, no one study, no key observation, no critical experiment stands as testi- mony to their thesis. Consequently, a large number of studies, all saying more or less the same thing, are cited as cumulatively arriving at the truth. Since, by their own assess- ment, the authors choose to concern themselves with the literature writ- ten by people who believe in their results in the first place (the "classi- cists" according to their introduc-4 tion), it would be rather surprising to find the weight of the evidence as anything other than what they ex- pected in the first place. It's like trying to prove there are ghosts by asking the people who believe in ghosts if they saw any last year. Yet the critics may have fo- cused on the wrong thing. As a piece of scholarship this book is rather silly - on this there is little debate. But as a political tract it has served its purpose already. Why was it given lavish front page cover- age in one of the country's agenda- setting newspapers? The corporate media seem to find it appealing that the very large problems of inequal- ity in this country might be due to4 something inherent. With this in mind, the critical question is not about The Bell Curve per se -that is relatively open and shut. The ques- tion is why did the media decide to make it an issue again? Would they 0. '--I "F I Il r Kimberly Freese LSA junior m