4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 17, 1996 Ute £irbg!3u ?gnIg 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 the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles,.letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Vested interest 'U' must evaluate link to 'secret' societies NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'Cigarette ads objectify the female body and contribute to the Idea of the slim Ideal that Is difficult to live up to.' - Nursing Prof Carol Boyd, the Golden Apple award recipient, commenting on the effects of cigarette ads during her "ideal last lecture " Monday night hI LASSER SHARP AS TOAST COL LECE SPI N6, FASHION SHOWC AS E ERKELE Y, AV STN, ANN AoR CCO /00 'V LETTERS TO THE EDITOR T he University community has a vora- cious appetite for sensationalism - the most recent feast involves the University's so-called "secret societies." Initiated by a widespread e-mail campaign and sustained by the campus' prolific rumor mill, speculations about the Michigan Union tower occupants abound. The discus- sion has led students to question whether such societies should exist - but students should ignore the secret societies' club- house mentality. Instead, students should expend their energy more efficiently by investigating the University's involvement with the groups. The presence of the exclusive Tower Society, which is comprised of three "secret societies," should not be a student concern. Many campus groups are somewhat exclu- sive in nature - take the Greek system. The Greek system, however, maintains the right to exist independently of University regula- tion, because it is 'sanctioned by the Interfraternity Council. Unlike the fraterni- ties and sororities, the Tower Society groups are University-regulated - like all other groups registered with the Michigan Student Assembly. Students' loudest objections stem from the society's monopoly of the Union's upper floors. Historically, the Tower Society has had a hand in Union administration - the group is credited with the building's con- ception and construction. In 1932, the University Board of Regents gave the Tower Society the space that it currently holds. No board has seriously challenged the contract - which indefinitely leases the tower to the society free of rent - since the unanimous 1932 vote. However, several groups on campus have both officially and unofficially con- tracted space - whether the contract is legally binding may be inconsequential when weighed against the groups' historical use of the space. The issue, then, lies in the fact that the Tower Society has exclusive access to the Union tower. Space appropriated for other student organizations - such as MSA's chambers - is not restricted to members only. Since the Union is a tuition-supported University building, leasing space for stu- dent organizations is acceptable only if the rest of the student population is allowed access as well. Despite its best efforts at secrecy, the Tower Society has revealed links with high- level University officers; Associate Dean of Students Frank Cianciola reportedly advis- es the Tower Society groups. While University students should not concern themselves with the groups' membership or activities, they do have a right to know how the associate dean of students budgets his time. If University officials or staff are involved with the groups, they must answer to the student population and reveal what monopolizes their working hours. Officials, such as Cianciola, are here to serve the entire student population - not to protect the interests of a few. The secret societies have very little effect on students' daily lives. In all likeli- hood, few desired tower access until the recent rumors and pseudo-controversy sparked discussion. If some students would like to have a closed clubhouse and play by themselves, that's fine. But the University could spend its resources better than in the groups' com- mitment to secrecy and elitism. Undue influence Politicians should respect judicial independence In a speech last week, Supreme Court Chief Justice William Rehnquist called for a new commitment to judicial indepen- dence. His comments were spurred by a recent controversy involving federal district Judge Harold Baer Jr. of New York. Baer overturned a ruling on a drug case after he came fire from politicians of both parties. While the criticism's impact on the reversal is hard to calculate, the incident is unset- tling. Politicians, and all Americans, should heed the Rehnquist's call to protect the independence of the courts - a corner- stone of American democracy. In the New York decision, Baer ruled that some of the evidence in a drug case was inadmissible in court because it was the product of an improper search by the New York City police. This would have severely weakened the prosecutors' case against the alleged drug dealers. Presumptive GOP nominee Bob Dole (R-Kan.) suggested that Baer should be impeached after the initial decision, and the White House did not rule out the possibility that President Clinton would seek Baer's resignation. Baer reversed his initial ruling. He cited new evi- dence as the main motivation for his deci- sion, but many have speculated that politi- cians' pressure was the key factor in his reversal. Criticism of presidential appointments, including those to the federal bench, are a staple of presidential politics. But this year, the federal judiciary has become an unusu- ally potent issue in the presidential cam- paign. This raises the troubling possibility that politicians will continue to pressure sit- S . .. . ._ ,_ _ ._. - TA.n T - their rulings. These unsavory scenarios would drastically upset the democratic bal- ance that has characterized the United States throughout its history. As Rehnquist mentioned in his speech, Congress has never impeached a sitting judge on the basis of a ruling - the only impeachments have been motivated by criminal activity or ethical lapses. If Dole had carried through on his threat to impeach Baer, and Congress had agreed, it would have constituted an unprecedented strike against judicial independence. The maintenance of judicial indepen- dence is integral to the American system of government. Without a free and indepen- dent judiciary, as specified in Article III of the Constitution, the power of law would be seriously undermined - "the law" could be subverted by popular whims, and there would be no effective checks on the legisla- tive and executive branches. The protection against these undesirable scenarios is basic to the Constitution. Its drafters designed the independent judiciary as a check against fickle and imprudent public opinion. Moreover, the system of checks and bal- ances between the branches is based on the notion of a court system that can counteract the executive and legislative branches with- out fear of undue intimidation. While Dole and Clinton may have dis- agreed with Baer on the basis of sound legal reasoning, their intimidation of the judge was an affront to good legal thinking. Rehnquist was wise to speak up for one of the key tenets of true democracy: judicial independence. The candidates should heed 1~o -.v -1r::,A - ultr+ aeh nd not, A Assault ban protects the innocent TO THE DAILY: I felt the urge to respond to Brian J. Kudary's letter ("Constitution allows arms," 4/9/96) commenting on Jordan Stancil's column "How Could Congress be so ... Dumb?" (3/27/96). There are a few things that I'd like to point out. First of all, the Second Amendment to the Constitution was not written yesterday. It was written in a time when the "right to bear arms" was a much more meaningful and less detri- mental right - a right that was carried on from British law. It surprised me a bit, after reading Kudary's well writ- ten, though biased, letter that he didn't know an important fact: The cases where guns actually served as protection from assault are so rare that they are almost negligible. There are so many instances each year when guns kept as "protection" either end up helping to ren- der a disagreement fatal, or accidentally cause the death of a child who does not know the difference between a plaything and danger. When Kudary stated of gangs and drive-by shootings that "... people who use assault weapons for such a purpose do not generally obtain them through legal means anyway" I had to agree. However, he fails to see that the ban would be just one step toward decreasing the violence and tragedies in this country. If Kudary hon- estly feels the need to "pro- tect himself," I suggest that he buy himself a security system. MICHELLE WILLIAMS LSA FlRST-YEAR STUDENT Columnist offends men TO THE DAILY: I am writing this letter in response to the column by Kate Epstein, "Behind the migraine myth," (4/15/96). As a chronic migraine suffer- er, I find it almost offensive that the author all but denies that males are susceptible to migraines, just as females are. Epstein writes, "I don't know any male migraine suf- ferers" and then bases the rest of the article on a book by Oliver Sacks, titled "Migraine: Revised and Expanded." I have not read the book, but I am willing to bet that grandmother are victims of these headaches. My two sis- ters are fortunately unaffect- ed. As a young child, I had many headaches and went to a number of neurologists. After having a Magnetic Resonance Imaging, going through biofeedback and tak- ing prescribed drugs on a daily basis, the doctors could not seem to find a curable problem. Luckily, my migraines became less severe with age, but every once in a while the headaches come back with a vengeance. At the slightest indication of a headache, I am quick to take a prescribed drug called Darvocet. When this does not work - when I feel almost unbearable, excruciating pain - another prescription, Fiorinal with Codeine, usually solves the problem. I am aware of cer- tain foods that aggravate my "condition" as well as certain weather conditions, certain activities, etc. It is probably true that I will suffer from migraine headaches for the rest of my life. I would like the readers of the Daily to understand that both men and women can get migraine headaches - it is not just a problem for menstruating women. ADAM SCHUFKE LSA SOPHOMORE Rose faces challenges To THE DAILY: Another MSA election has come and gone, and yet again, the vast majority of students on this campus did- n't think the assembly was worth the time it would take them to vote. Surely that is more sad of a commentary on the assembly than the stu- dents, but it is sad nonethe- less. With all the ballots count- ed, we know Fiona Rose shall be leading our student gov- ernment for the next year. I won't say I'm elated by that fact; I campaigned very hard for and was disappointed by the result of Jonathan Freeman's presidential bid. But I'm also not going to wallow in some sort of parti- san despair over the coming months. Rose has a rather unique opportunity before her in the coming months: She can probably take the Michigan Party to heights of power it hasn't known since its cre- ation; alternatively, she could follow the path that she laid out last December, and help to bring an end to the bicker- ing that has plagued the assembly by playing down the importance of parties in Charges of racism are unfounded TO THE DAILY: Julian Vasquez Heilig's letter ("Accountable for racism," 4/15/96) epitomizes what's wrong with the current trend of irresponsible mud- slinging on both ends of the political spectrum. Heilig borrows David Letterman's "Top Ten" format (a sure sign of deep political thinking, no doubt) to chastise the Daily in general and Michael Rosenberg in particular as guilty of "racism." What is entirely absent from Heilig's 10 points isnany substantive charge of racism whatsoever. He uses the words "racism" and "racist" repeatedly, but gives not the smallest proof that the Daily can be said to, in his words, "demean and misrepresent people of color." He claims that the Daily has "continual- ly censored us," but provides no examples. He states that "(y)our newspaper has deeply offended me; you are racist," then asks that Rosenberg, et al, "face the truth" But that is precisely the problem. In the view of Heilig, it suffices to bring a charge of "racism" in order to find the accused guilty. For him, apparently, there is a single, monolithic truth: The Daily is racist, and no sup- port or explication of that statement is necessary. He claims that there is "a very large contingent of stu- dents that finds fault with the Daily - very large." Now that is brilliant! Cite no fig- ures, give no criteria for what constitutes "large," and make an accusation so ridiculously broad that it can't be denied. Indeed, Heilig is correct. Lots of folks probably do "find fault" with the Daily; I know that I often do. But how that substantiates his empty charge of racism escapes me. Unfortunately, Heilig's "thinking" is not an isolated case. It is shared by at least a few hundred members of this community. Certainly, those who have publicly supported the cowardly theft of 8,000 newspapers are "sure" that the Daily is "racist." What seems to elude them is that no thoughtful person on this campus is going to accept such charges without specifics and supporting evi- dence. On the "strength" of letters like that of Heilig's, I cannot help but grow increas- ingly skeptical of the oft- repeated but as of yet empty epithets being used to justify what, to my thinking, was a childish, but nonetheless criminal, act of thuggery. Do the ends justify the means? In this case, it's LA~ST-DnCH4 APPEAL If you re going to the Brown Jug, take Flint or Sam along he Brown Jug is brown on the out- side and brown on the inside. It'1s brown on the top and brown on the bottom. Brown! The air in the Brown Jug is filled with smoke The Brown Jug has coffee, and it has nachos. It's hard to put a fingcer on what it is that makes peo- ple love the Jug. It's hard to JORDAN describe the STANCIL crowd. You Can't really make any generalizations. Just the other day, I - believe it or not - was at the Jug for lunch. Three guys wearing hard hats came in from one of the many, many. many, many, many construction sites. Two of them sat together on one side of the booth while the other went to the more-than- adequate restroom. The waitress came up and, seeinwo guys on one side of the booth, apparently couldn't resist a bit of bawdy humor. "You two on a date?" she asked. "You wanna get in the middle?" retorted one of the guys. "Yeah! We'll show you all about a date!" said the other. The big, bearded man alone at the next booth was in the middle of hi second pitcher and the first volume of Gibbon's Decline and Fall. He was not on a date. The Jug is an eraser of differences. Just as immigrants came to this coun- try and agreed to put aside their differ- ences and become Americans, people go to the Jug and agree to put aside their tdifferences and eat greasy food together. I like to go the Jug a lot, whicl means I have put aside my differences so many times and with so many dif- ferent types of people that now I essentially have no non-Jug identity. Usually, I go to the Jug with Sam Goodstein. (I like to drop his name whenever I can because he's a famous politician, and how many of you know famous politicians?) In fact, it was Sam who first introduced me to the Jug as not just a building, a mere phys- ical structure, but as something Higher. Much Higher. At that time, we were living in Carriage House. In our apartment at least, the place lived up to its name. I mean, we didn't even buy a garbage pail until late November. In a very carefree manner, we threw all our garbage outside our door. This wasn't a problem, because gradually most of it would just blow away. 4 Besides living in physical squalor, we also lived in a kind of deep moral squalor due to the fact that one of our other roommates was Flint Wainess. Now, Flint, also a famous politician, is a good guy and all, but let's just say that I saw enough scandal every week in that apartment to sink ANY future political plans Flint might have. Not that I would stand in the way of mean- ingful health care reform, but I am not above blackmail. On the other hand, Flint saw enough of what can only be described as my utter patheticness to sink ANY future marital plans I might have. And I can't afford blackmail. I saw the Jug as a holy place, a kind of foil to the physical and mental squalor which characterized that par- ticular year. In the Jug, everything becomes clear and right. That's still how it is. It's because the Jug experience is a timeless ritual that doesn't change. You go in, sit down, and you get coffee. The coffeeais served with a glass of ice water, and you can tell that the water was kind of warm when they put it in there, because the ice melts really fast. You also get two containers of half and half, and in the coffee cup is a spoon. As part of the Jug's total quality management program, the waitresse4 leave you quite alone. No one threat- ens you. No one comes up andl describes some type of "special" with a bunch of food words you've never heard of. There's a time for that type of thing, but at the Jug everything's always the same. You don't need to ask the waitress what a reuben is. This means that you can think at the Jug. There aren't many places, at leas for students, on this campus where thinking goes on. This is not a contem- plative place. It's a busy place. It's a place for work. The libraries aren't for thinking. They're for reading and working. Only the Jug is for thinking. It's I 01 0 I I