4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 9, 1996 Ujhe £diggrn &i g 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 "NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'When a lot of people are coming and going and carrying personal luggage and possessions, it's the prime time for theft. To avoid being a victim of crime, room doors should always be kept locked.' - Department of Public Safety spokesperson Elizabeth Hall 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 JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST RuM S~mh sare House OMA changes would thwart openness B ased on the desires of many state uni- versity leaders, the Michigan House Higher Education Committee approved two bills last week to exempt university presi- dential searches from the Open Meetings Act. The committee also is sponsoring an initiative to deny the public access to docu- ments that search committees gather. The Freedom of Information Act currently allows public access to such documents, but opponents of OMA may gain this foothold by deeming search committees nonpublic whereas governing boards are public. Final approval of any of these three bills would be disastrous, especially for the University. Searches would become less productive - the majority of this community would not have the opportunity to voice its opinion on the final selection, as if they weren't isolat- ed enough from the decision. The measures would further hide presi- dential searches from the University com- munity and Michigan citizens. Proposed OMA revisions would allow the University Board of Regents to meet in secret after a search advisory committee gives the regents five finalists. The five names would be made public and the regents would have to wait until at least 30 days before making a selection. The process would grant the University community nothing but a super- ficial knowledge of the five finalists, pro- viding no opportunities for interaction between the candidates and students and faculty. The measures also would eliminate the chance for the public to examine quali- fications and intentions of the candidates - information that the regents would ascertain in secret. The University would have, at best, a limited view. Moreover, the amendments would Torit 9Mr obscure the University's search committee - which is merely an extension of the regents. The FOIA addendum would exempt the committee from relinquishing requested search documents. Whether or not it direct- ly reports to the citizens of this state, the committee is working on their behalf, and therefore must be accountable to residents. Committee members must design the process by which they develop a pool of candidates in the direct interest of the pub- lic, especially students and faculty. The committee must establish the process as a matter of public record, open for inspection at all levels. Government in all its forms needs to be accountable to the public it serves. The amendments are coun- terintuitive to the fundamental tenets of democracy. Secret searches deny the community par- ticipation. Regents and other administrators have often complained that an open search limits the number and quality of candidates. They claim many qualified administrators would not want to insult the institution at which they are serving by becoming a candi- date for a position outside the institution. However, in the only semi-open search the University has ever conducted - the search that resulted in President-select Lee Bollinger - the four finalists were all extremely well qualified and did not fear ill will from the universities that currently employed them. Holding the search in the open can increase the new president's sup- port - various constituencies have the opportunity to witness and/or participate in* the search process. Public selection gives the president a community mandate. Open searches foster trust. Secret searches instill mistrust. What do the regents have to fear? to safetkY 1 background checks Furthermore, unlike previous legislation that the Supreme Court struck down, the Brady Act does not require states to enact further handgun legislation. Rather, it forces local police to run routine back- ground checks to certify that those purchas- ing guns are eligible to do so. In a ruling to uphold the law last year, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals deemed the bur- den minor, akin to "federally imposed duties of state officers to report missing children or traffic fatalities." While the Supreme Court has been increasingly sym- pathetic to states' rights in recent years, this is a case in which they should clearly sup- port the law as it now stands. However, even if the justices follow the logical course of action, the Brady Act may require more help. As originally written, the provision for the waiting period will expire after five years - at which time a national computerized system is supposed to be in action to perform instant background checks. But current projections predict the computerized system will not be ready in time. Time constraints present a problem only Congress can solve. While members of the National Rifle Association fight to weaken the Brady Act, Congress must take action to extend the viability of the five-day waiting period provision until a national crime computer is established to allow instant background checks. The Brady Act is an effective deterrent - federal officials estimate that its provi- sions have stopped more than 60,000 con- victed criminals from purchasing firearms since its adoption. As an important weapon against crime, the law must not falter, either LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Evaluations are important TO THE DAILY: In my four years here at University, I have had many great and inspiring professors and graduate student instruc- tors, but I have also had many very bad teachers. I write this not to name any- one, but to tell my fellow stu- dents to really take care when filling out the evaluations at the end of the year. I see too many people hastily filling in bubbles without taking the time to write any real feedback. If you had a good professor, tell him or her what you liked so they will keep working hard. Too many professors get burned out and think of teaching as a burden. Each of my professors and GSIs who have been bad teachers know how I thought they could do better after reading my evalu- ations. Each of my good teachers were told what their best qualities were as a teacher. Every student needs to tell their teachers what they are doing right and how to improve. I have used the Advice magazine before, but I think it needs to expand to include more information and more teachers. I also think we should be able to pick our GSIs when we CRISP, not just "Staff." I am an anthro- pology/zoology major and I am willing to comment on any professor or GSI that I have had as a teacher. Just e- mail me esme@unmich:edu. Also, if you have any information on good and bad classes and teachers, please contact me. Thank you. I expect the most for my time and money; I deserve good teachers. Every student at the University deserves good teachers. LAURA WILSON RC SENIOR DonOrs screened for a variety of maladies Court must keep gun W hen the Brady Bill passed in 1994, it was hailed as a step toward making the country a safer place. By mandating background checks on prospective firearm purchasers, the bill aims to keep guns out of the hands of convicted felons. Now, back- ground checks - the key to the law's effec- tiveness - are under fire in the U.S. Supreme Court. Some state police are tar- geting the checks as an unconstitutional infringement upon the rights of local law enforcement officials. The Court must uphold the act. The Brady Act imposes a waiting period of five business days for the purchase of handguns, during which police must con- duct a background check of prospective buyers. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit are sheriffs from Montana and Arizona, who claim that local police departments should not be "conscripted for a federal crusade." As such, the law's opponents believe the burden imposed upon local police is an infringement upon states' rights to regulate gun sales within their borders. But the arguments against the Brady Act are flawed. The law is necessary no matter how difficult the enforcement. On one level is the matter of differential gun control statutes in various states. While many states currently have background checks or wait- ing periods more stringent than the actual guidelines that the Brady Act prescribes, others do not have specific laws to mandate criminal history screening. The loopholes raise the specter of criminals - who might risk detection in their own state - crossing into states without background checks to illegally purchase firearms. The presence of its donors, as are the recipi- ents of blood, which may save someone's life. The issue here is not about fairness, selfishness or anything of the kind. AIDS, hepatitis, infections or possi- ble exposure to avenues for infections, such as having your teeth cleaned within days of a donation, are all reasons for deferring a donor. While you may not think that epidemiological screen- ing is "fair," it truly is a mechanism that places the public health first and fore- most in deference to the feel- ings of individuals. The prob- lem is that the viruses are sneaky critters and they often elude our attempts to test for them until someone has had the disease for sometimes up to a year. I assure you that the Red Cross could't care less how you answer the questions it asks - other than to deter- mine if you (and thus the blood you are carrying) may have a myriad, of disease agents including - but not limited to - HIV WALT ROBERTS WAYNE STATE MEDICAL SCHOOL No evidence to support implant risks TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to your editorial ("Waving off women," 12/6/96). In particular, you assert that "an overwhelming amount of research has shown that silicone breast implants are dangerous.' Exactly where was this research published, and by whom? To my knowledge, not only is there not an "overwhelming amount of evidence," but there is in fact no scientific evidence estab- lishing a link between sili- cone breast implants and dis- ease. While anecdotal reports of illness blamed on these implants may seem convinc- ing, they are not science. I suggest that in the future you check the facts before making claims about what science has or has not proven. JEFF WITHEY RACKHAM Photo showed Blue at its worst TO THE DAILY: While I myself normally onlv nick vour newsnaner to Weekend, etc. It was what I expected it to be, a lot of reviews of this and that, but I felt the most interesting aspect of it was your photographers' favorites. While I enjoyed viewing the majority of the pictures, the photo chosen by Joe Westrate was inappropriate. Why in the world would I want to look at a picture of Michigan football falling on its face to a rival like Northwestern? When I look at our athlet- ic program I want to be reminded of our successes, not our failures! I felt that the pictures by Warren Zinn and Mark Friedman better exem- plify the great tradition that Michigan athletics has sought to establish. Go Blue! BRENT BARBOUR LSA SOPHOMORE Students should learn bus routes TO THE DAILY: This is in response to a letter that appeared in Thursday's Daily ("U' buses do not serve students' needs" 12/5/96) written by a student expressing his frustration with the University bus sys- tem. At first glance, it seemed the typical confusion that comes with being a fresh- man. But, no. This was writ- ten by an Engineering senior who should know better. He should know better thanto run late to a 9 a.m. bus to catch a 9 a.m. class. Five Bursley-Baits buses passed him empty at 9 a.m. because the passenger traffic at that time of day is going from those dorms into Central Campus. Later in the day traffic goes the other way. He waited 14 minutes for door-to-door service rather than hop on one of those empty buses, get off at the Pierpont Commons and get to his class in a four-minute walk. But obviously, he's not the only one who hasn't fig- ured this out, because his bus is so crowded he has to stand. I have been driving a bus almost forever and can say with some certainty that there is no certainty. We get held up by trucks backing into loading docks, by passengers needing directions or help with strollers and kids, by yet another student running fran- tically toward an already-late bus. I would encourage. Richard Hofer to try to leave for class a little earlier and maybe engineer a remote- control device that would make pthe world run a littl COMMuQMY CHEST A2, a bastion - of nornality? noticed something the last time was home. They're normal, the people there. If you're wondering whether 'm implying that you people aren't nora - you're right. No offense. What the hell are you talking about, mw;. Janney? Really, the first time I came to Ann Arbor, I thought it was Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Ann Arborites are a little, well, scary. Take a super- market. Any super- market. (No, ADRIENNE Meijer's does not JANNEY count.) Walk in. Look around. What do you see? Uh-huh. I told you. Like, how come the Kroger in Ann Arbor doesn't stock kosher marshmal lows - and the Kroger in Toledo, Ohio does? Compare the Jewish popu- lations of both cities. Ann Arbor's per- centage is much higher. What's wrong with these people? Oh, and it's Christmas time. So every locale, home and abroad, has the obligatory tinsel and mistletoe (don't get caught by that stuff - it's very dangerous, I can tell you, especially at parties) and red ribbons. And the high- ly obligatory, guilt-motivated, blue and-white Happy Hanukkah trinkets. When I first arrived here, I was grateful that store clerks and clas mates didn't bombard me with Christmas spirit. Now it gets on my nerves. It's fake. Ann Arbor is trying to deny she's really a Michigander. She doesn't even say "pop." A soda? You mean a club soda? You want some baking soda? What's a lollipop, sucker? Put your palm up and show me where you're from, stranger. Sure, I'd like to live in PC-land, bi not with a bunch of fools who are veg- etarians but eat chicken but don't eat eggs but wear leather. Get an identity. Take the grocery store in Lambertville, Mich., a satellite of Toledo. (Lambertville boasts multiple banks and gas stations, though she has only one real grocery store.) Lambertville, Mich. - home of nor- mality. OK, sort of. But at least you. get a normal variance. Lambertvilli (I like that) look at me like I'm weir I want to stand up on the checkout and announce, "No, really, I'm one of you. I just went away to college. I was born around here, really. My mother lives here. Please don't lynch me -" You see, they notice that even though I'm in jeans and a sweater, my jewelry is a little too carefully chosen, my apparel a little too engineered, my makeup a shade too dark, my sneake a little too pink. I certainly don't look like a farm girl. Teen-agers, of course, look primped wherever you are. But at their age, it's OK to spend two hours doing your hair in the morning. After all, you're still developing your outer self-concept, where letter jackets and brand-new sneakers are signs of status. Although I am at home here, the Ann Arbor crowd is intimidating, with i hard lines and hard tans and hard-co diversity. At home, they wear the Teamsters logo across the back of their shiny jackets instead of the Reeses logoystretched across their nonexistent chests. They carry pocketbooks, brief- cases and lunchboxes instead of over- priced, slightly useless backpacks. At home they work hard all day. Here they work out and party hard. Ann Arborites, particularly studen strive to get noticed. Black hair, blac lipstick, black combat boots, black trench coat. Flared jeans, long hair, nose ring, ugly '70s shirt. Blue jeans, button-up plaid, expensive wristwatch, leather shoes, flat-top haircut. Do you shave your legs or are you a lipstick feminist? Are you a dedicated con- formist or a certified freak? Guess what. There are more wherev- er that came from. There are at least 10 copies of you, whoever you are. So I guess we haven't figured out inside well enough yet to drop the outside. Of course, Ann Arbor has a hierar- chy of high maintenance. Seniors can always spot the freshmen. In September, a recently graduated friend of mine made the 10-minute trek to my apartment, bombarded by strange looks. When she arrived, she said, "I'd forgotten about the freshmen, the on who don't know that in Ann Arbor y can go outside with your hair wet and whatever is in the bottom of your clos- et." (Actually, I dare not brave the bot- tomn of my closet. I think it would swallow me whole. Tangent over.) The seniors, liberated by their proximity to TO THE DAILY: I am presently a medical student at Wayne State University. I have been actively involved in cancer medicine for several years before deciding to attend medical school. Many cancer patients have surgery as part of their cancer treatments and require large volumes of blood by today's standards. These patients include AIDS patients. Believe me, the Red I