4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 26, 1996 U$lw £id1igri DuIgQb 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan RONNIE GLASSBERG Editor in Chief ADRIENNE JANNEY ZACHARY M. RAIMI Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority ofthe Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. ROM THE DAILY Vote Michigan Party Rose, Mehta will provide strong leadership NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'it would be beneficial to have them communicating with the administration, because they're on the same level with students.' - Michigan Party member and LSA Rep. Andrew Marcus, discussing the qualifications of the independent ticket for MSA MATr WIMsATF MooIGE's DILEMMA n it ! n 0 0 0 . _ a ET-RT LT TERs TO THE EDITOR very year at this time, legions of candi- 14dates for the Michigan Student Assem- bly ask fellow students for their votes. Some years, the slates for president and vice presi- dent are filled with promising leaders; some years, they are a bunch of quacks. This year has both. Only one team is best suited to lead the assembly: Fiona Rose and Probir Mehta ofthe Michigan Party are the strongest choice for MSA president and vice president. The Michigan Party has dominated the executive offices of MSA for the past few years, mainly because its leaders combine vision with pragmatism. This year's candi- dates provide more of the same. Rose and Mehta plan to dedicate their administration to "student well-being," an all-encompass- ing vision to make student life better. These issues include child care assistance, more student representation on academic andpolicy committees, improved safety and more park- ing. The Michigan Party has best packaged its goals, and its candidates are clearly the only ones who can produce tangible results. Rose, who has worked tirelessly on the assembly for two years, translates her words into action. Among her many accomplish- ments is her recent success in sending an initiative to the ballot that would create fund- ing for child care. In addition, she is fighting for Central Campus commuter parking and working to make tuition and textbooks Se' more affordable. Moreover, Rose has enough backbone for the entire assem- bly. She's tough, she's e,-< hardworking, and she's a leader. No other candidate could repre- sent students better to the assem- bly, administration or regents. While she possesses negotiating skills, Rose will not compromise her constituents' inter- ests. Rose's style, passion, toughness and past record prove that she is able to take a tough-line with the administration, and as she says, not let it "hoodwink" her into unac- ceptable deals. Mehta strongly complements Rose, espe- cially since he is an out-of-state student (Rose is from Michigan) and a minority. In addi- tion, he said his "tenacity and goodwill" allowshimto be an effective coalitionbuilder, an important skill to possess. In his year on MSA, he has gained considerable respect from other members. He has been successful as chair of the Campus Governance Commit- tee, which appoints students to various com- mittees throughout the University. The Michigan Party must carry out the work started this year. Rose must lead cur- rent MSA President Flint Wainess' efforts for health care reform, curriculum commit- tees and other projects to fruition. The team must continue to push for a full non-voting student regent. Meanwhile, they must milk the position of student representative for all it is worth and send a representative to all the regents meetings. It is a challenge, but Rose and Mehta are undoubtedly capable of get- ting the job done. Along with the Michigan Party, five other slates are running to lead the assembly. Of these, independents Geoff Tudisco and Adam Mesh are the worst choice. Armed with the Greek vote and a fleet of campaign manag- ers, neither of the pair has attended an MSA meeting. When asked if they would partici- pate in the administration's summer pro- gram, Leadership 2017, neither Mesh nor Tudisco - nor their campaign manager - had heard of the program. Many complain about incompetence in MSA -Tudisco and Mesh would bring any of the assembly's productivity to a complete halt. The Libertv Party barelv scored better: tended one MSA meeting in 1994. Although he was aware of many of the main election issues, his platform would do little to solve the problems. The platform, based on a uto- pian world of student choice, would render the body ridiculous. Under the Liberty plan, students would have a choice on whether to contribute to the assembly; further, all major decision would go before the students as a referendum. Leadership by referendum is not leadership at all. United People's Coalition vice presiden- tial candidate Johnny Su would make a great addition to the assembly - as a representa- tive. His running mate, presidential candi- date Nora Salas, was unavailable for inter- view. Concerned with minority issues, Su would bring a necessary, and currently underrepresented viewpoint to the assembly. UPC runs an all people of color slate, assert- ing that if whites can represent their minority constituents, people of color can represent whites. While more minority representatives would enrich MSA, a party built on single- minded resistance is not fit to lead the assem- bly. Moreover, Su's even-handed style would crumble at the Board of Regents' table. UPC should present ideas to the assembly, but the party is not suitable for leadership positions. Vice presidential candidate Olga Savic provides the babysitter Students' Party presi- rent dential candidate Jonathan Free- man needs. The party chose its a slate unwisely. Recently, Free- man put himself up for recall as ions chair ofMSA's International Stu- rcb'h dents' Affairs Commission. ' x When the assembly rejected his political maneuver, he resigned from the chair. Freeman claims he found a person better for the job, but his explanation does not defend his antics. Savic expends a lot ofenergy covering for Freeman. She talks passionately about the Students' Party platform - a tuition tax credit, more student representation and in- creased rights for minorities. However, Savic's rhetoric cannot replace action. Be- fore launching into the numerous problems with student health care, Savic and Freeman cited an insurance study the Michigan Party initiated. However, the ticket proposed no real solutions or ideas. The Students' Party is mainly concerned with itself - not with students. If elected, the partisan bickering in the assembly could reach an all-time high. Freeman and Savic are not electable. Wolverine Party presidential candidate Andy Schor deserves an honorable mention. He is honest, thoughtful and hard-working - qualities of an excellent representative. However, the Wolverine Party is underde- veloped. The platform includes some cre- ative ideas, such as merit-based pay bonuses for Graduate Student Instructors and expan- sion of Minority Peer Programs, but it lacks specific plans toput them into action. Coupled with a small electoral base, a Wolverine administration would be significantly less effective than Michigan Party leadership. Despite vice presidential candidate Matt Curin's clean hands in the BPC "non-crisis," he has shown little promise; Curin takes a backseat to Schor. Schor is not strong enough to carry the entire party. MSA has done a lot in recent years to increase its profile and credibility with stu- dents. With difficult issues facing the assem- bly this year, such as health care reform, child care assistance and efforts to increase students' financial aid, leaders must work to maintain and improve credibility. Only the Michigan Party, led by Fiona Rose and Probir Mehta, is equipped to handle the enormous tasks facing the assembly. A vote for them is Budgeting priorities harm MSA TO THE DAILY: I finally saw an intelli- gent comment from a Michigan Student Assembly candidate in the Daily today ("Six tickets filed for MSA pres. election," 3/12/96). This candidate stated that they stood for changing certain student fees from mandatory to voluntary. It seems that all the hypocriti- cal MSA candidates keep talking about lowering student costs while trying to increase student fees. I am for worthy pro- grams such as infant care or health care (once researched properly). But the entire Budget Priorities Committee fiasco has demonstrated that MSA already has too much of the students' money without competent manage- ment. I cringe at the thought of paying out of state fees and having a bunch of juvenile political wannabees play "Big Government" style games with even one cent of my money. let alone over $70,000 of the student body's money! I know that I pay interest on part of that $70,000 per year. It disgusts me to see my student loans increase to enable the MSA another opportunity for a "non-crisis." The MSA establishment must end. They are not spending MSA funds. They are spending parents' money, students' money and my money! CARLO E. HERNANDEZ LSA SENIOR Coverage ignores independent candidates TO THE DAILY: It seems as if time after time, the Daily receives complaints from students about-he parties and politics of the Michigan Student Assembly. Yet our candi- dacy seems to get no coverage, despite represent- ing the students displeasure with the problems of the student government: the gridlock, the bickering, the party posturing and the lack of interest (or general lack of knowledge) on the part of the student body. The goings on in MSA remain a mystery to the majority of the student population, as shown by the horrible turnout of just barely 7 percent of the student body in the last MSA election. Maybe if the students questioned about various issues facing MSA while we are left out of the mix. All we see is that the students that do care are generally fed up with the student government as it is right ntow. We have a homepage on the web at hup://tribeca. ios. com/-transitl/ campaign. html where anyone who wants can contact Geoff Tudisco or Adam Mesh, and see our entire campaign platform. The student government needs an influx of new people to voice their opinions. We want to do something about it, and we would if we were only heard. GEOFF TUDISCO LSA JUNIOR UPC offers fresh ideas for assembly To THE DAILY: Nora Salas. For a majority of the campus this name means nothing. Say Fiona Rose and most will make a connection to the name and a trillion posters plastered around Angell Hall. What's really pathetic is that both are running for the highest position of the University student govern- ment, and one is being cast in the limelight whie the other is fighting the very ideal that has kept her in the dark - racism. Nora Salas has taken all the frustrations, pain and anger of people of color, and packaged it into a platform that finally speaks to their needs. Showing true leadership, Salas, Johnny Su and the entire UPC party have battled institutional racism to form a voice for people of color. I find it disgraceful and a reflection of the campus environment that the United People's Coalition has gotten so little coverage in the Daily. It just goes to show that racism is alive and well at the University. For being a student newspaper, the Daily has made a conscious choice about which students to cover. I guess the United People's Coalition does know what it is talking about! NEERA PARIKH LSA SENIOR Rose and Stalin don't compare TO THE DAILY: Ann Arbor Tenants' Union may be valid. His compari- son of Rose toStalin, ("And people say that Stalin was a political opportunist") however, only serves to undermine his own integrity and credibility. His implica- tion is clear: He believes that Fiona Rose has the capacity to rule as a tyrant would. Hardy says that he "(does) not want to see her control- ling and manipulating the entire process," but to compare an MSA candidate to a man who condoned the deaths of millions of his own people is utterly absurd. If nothing else, I am led to believe that Hardy is harboring a sizable personal grudge against Rose. I would urge any of you who are no longer consider- ing this candidate on the basis of Hardy's letter to examine his gross bias. Instead, as I think Hardy wisely suggests that we do, challenge Rose - and other MSA hopefuls - on their past performances and commitment to student issues before deciding whether or not they will get your vote. LINDSAY SMITH RC JUNIOR Fisher is the cause of 'M' basketball troubles To THE DAILY Five years. The best talent in the Big Ten, perhaps in the nation. No Big Ten titles, no national championships. What is the problem with Michigan's basketball team? Coach Steve Fisher. Basketball is a game requiring both physical and mental dimensions. The playersause theirtathletic ability and skill to provide the physical talent. However, the athletes can only provide some of the mental skills, the rest of which should be provided by the coach (i.e., preparation and motivation). Fisher has proven that he is unable to do this, and therefore he is an incompe- tent basketball coach. (I will admit, he has a great recruiting touch.) I came to the University dreaming that I would see a national championship. I road tripped to New Orleans that year only to see this dream slip away when Chris Webber called an unavail- able timeout. Is it ironic that this past weekend, against Texas, my senior year as a Wolverines basketball fan ended the same way as my first year did? No, it isn't. Apparently THE ERASABLE PEN It's time to sign that lease are you ready for the results? t's March in Ann Arbor: there's still snow on the ground, our leases are all signed for next year, and we're damn sick of wherever we're living. Your options for next year will prob- ably look some- thing like this: Living in thex., dorm. Livinginthe dorm is much like living in Tokyo: You pay incred- ible sums of money for an in- credibly small space. One cool thing is that some- JEAN one else will take TWENGE care of that nasty- looking ring of scum in your toilet. Another cool thing is you're never in want of company - even if you have a single, there's always lots of people to bother down the hall (read: complain to, write your papers for you, make small talk with, etc.). Of course, these are the same people who will have a party with 50 of their closest alcoholic friends the night before your psych final. Advantages: You don't have to cook the food. Disadvantages: The food tastes like store-brand cat food, and your choices are usually Mystery Stew (i.e., cooked store-brand cat food) or Mystery Stew f1: The Sequel (cold store-brand cat food). Then there is the dining halln, favorite ofmy dorm in college: Roast Steamship. (I am not making this up. Basically, it looked,like an over- cooked slabof British beef. You gotta watch out for those mad steamships.) Living in an apartment with roommates. When you get sick of living in the dorm, it's time to gather up your closest dorm friends, find an apartment, and discover soon after- ward that you hate them. In his book "Entry-Level Life," Dan Zevin enumerates the types of room-. mates: the Psycho Freak, the Animal, the Anal-Retentive and the Fornica- tor. I've always thought the worst form of Anal-Retentive is not only a roommate who cleans everything compulsively, but thensbegins to re- 4 semble your mother when she guilt trips you for not doing the cleaning yourself. The Animal is the sloppy opposite: "Apparentlyraised by wolves," Zevin writes, "the Animal is unaccustomed to such highly evolved skills as bath- ing, doing laundry, and eating with utensils." The Fornicator, on the other hand, leaves behind a trail of various oils, catalogs wrapped in brown paper, candles, whips, chains, and lubricated gerbils. Advantages: You might not have to take out a loan to pay the rent. Disadvantages: You might get evicted because your roommate for- gets to pay his share of the rent. Living alone. When my parents came to visit me at my apartment for Thanksgiving, my mom misread a partially obscured book title: "Howq to Survive Living Alone," she read. I pulled the Dilbert book off the floor -"You Won't Survive by Your Wits Alone." Needless to say, Mom was a little worried about my surviving on my own. I don't think it's that bad - between going to the library and fend- ing off the claws of my perpetually hyper cat, I don't have time to be lonely. The best part is the cleaning.~ - I may not have someone to share it, but I can now wipe the counter only when I think it's dirty, and not when my roommate sees an imagi- nary speck of dust and yells at me for not wiping the counter. Living alone also helps your social life in strange ways - for instance your friends will never again hear the magic words "Can you call back later? I'm on the, other line." Advantages: Everything is yours. Disadvantages: This includes the entire rent check. If you have enough money left to buy food, it's probably' only enough to buy Ramen Noodles or, even better, Roast Steamship. Living at home with your par- ents. If you must go this route, at least insist that they throw out the .pink" canopy bed in your room they bought you when you were eight. This has similar advantages to liv- ing in the dorm - the ring in the toilet, your dirty glasses and your unmade bed will magically disap- pear through no effort ofyourown. If you're lucky, your parents are also better cooks than the dorm cafeteria n I In. I 19 .r ., p 1I