4A , The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 7, 1996 41 (14je it4iottlt a , trdu 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 Bil's chores Clinton to make the grade in his second term NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'I feel privileged to have been offered this singular opportunity to lead one of the nation's most distinguished universities,' -University President-select Lee Bollinger Yuvi KUNIYUKI GROUND ZERO -d J \ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR T uesday, Bill Clinton became the first Democratic president to be re-elected since Franklin Roosevelt. The battle is hardly over; now that Clinton has managed to return to office, he faces several pressing issues - such as the looming bankruptcy of Social Security and much-needed improvement of the Welfare Reform Act - that voters expect him to address. With campaign concerns out of the way, the president must focus on the refor- mation of specific federal policies to carry the nation into the 21st century. Clinton's first priority in his second term should be reforming health care. In his pre- Pious term, Clinton failed to create afford- able health care coverage for every American. Health care must be solved quickly but carefully - the president must take incremental steps to achieve universal coverage. He did make strides toward this goal already by signing the Kennedy- Kassebaum bill, which allows many people to retain their health care coverage after switching jobs. . Moreover, as the baby boomer genera- tion nears retirement, Social Security is increasingly important - millions of elder- ly depend on Social Security and many mkore will need it soon. The secret has been out for some time - Social Security is -on the brink of bankruptcy. By the end of his second term, Clinton should restore the pro- gram's solvency -- in a bipartisan effort. Clinton also will need to focus on sup- plementing welfare. He recently signed the GOP-drafted law to end federal guarantee of cash aid to the poor. The bill shifts more responsibility to the states and sets lifetime caps on work benefits. Yet the bill does not provide many services to the needy, such as job raining, childcare and transportation to work. Clinton signed the act - now he :must deal with the consequences. One [W Clinton will have to put energy into sev- eral other national issues. Clinton is one of the tougher presidents on crime in recent history, from stiffening gun control to increasing money for police officers and prisons. However, the president's work is far from done. Instead of proposing weak, cam- paign-friendly legislation - such as requir- ing teen-agers to pass a drug test in order to receive a driver's license - Clinton needs well thought-out, concrete actions that will address issues like skyrocketing teen-age drug use. Clinton also is expected to work on taxes - in his previous term, he promised a mid- dle-class tax cut that did not appear. He has proposed a program of tax cuts for working families that focus on education and child- rearing. He also proposed tuition scholar- ships for students who succeed in commu- nity colleges. Clinton should take the steps necessary to put these long-awaited pro- grams into action. When not attempting to mend the nation, Clinton is expected to follow through on his foreign-aid plans. Clinton has supported peace or democracy-restoration in areas such as Bosnia, the Middle East, Northern Ireland and Haiti. More than just support, Clinton should actively work on post-war alliances - several countries depend on the United States when trying to craft peace plans. Other topics, from affirmative action to the environment, will continue to vie for the president's attention, giving Clinton a full plate for his second term. He was re-elected on the basis that he can continue the posi- tive work he already has done. He also was re-elected because voters are willing to put their trust in him to mend significant pro- grams like Medicare, instead of blotting them out. Clinton's work is cut out for him. rful mdv hNEoN nWonrdiwnlro m wm ~Clinton's nontraditional role must re-emerge Students to demonstrate for Amnesty To THE DAILY: On Monday, Nov. 11, the campus group of Amnesty International will be kidnap- ping some professors from large lecture and speaking briefly to the class about human rights, human rights abuses and Amnesty. We are also having a cage set up on the Diag, with pris- oners in it, and group mem- bers collecting signatures on human rights-related peti- tions. One of our goals is to educate campus about Amnesty International, an international human rights organization that advocates no form of government, and works to free all prisoners of conscience, to ensure prompt and fair trials for all political prisoners, and to end disap- pearances, torture, extrajudi- cial executions and the death penalty. But we also want to give students an idea of what it's like to live in a country where human rights abuses occur daily. Politically active friends "disappear" or are arrested; your professor who criticized some government policy is found dead in the Arb; your uncle the labor activist begins getting death threats; the police are always giving you speeding tickets, littering tickets, jaywalking tickets, but every time they stop you, they end up ques- tioning you about your room- mate who is in the College Republicans, or your best friend who is in Alianza. This is not to say that there are no human rights abuses in this country, but there are many countries where people live in constant fear of their own government. Sometimes it seems that every where we go on cam- pus, someone wants some- thing, wants us to give money to a bucket drive, or take their leaflet, or sign their petition. And sometimes all we want is to be left alone, not to worry about impris- oned political activists thou- sands of miles away. But as we are always being told, it is an increasing global world, and we all suffer for human rights abuses that take place anywhere. We cannot expect to have well paying jobs in this country when the United States sells weapons to gov- ernments that imprison their own labor activists and allow multinational corporations to pay workers a few dollars a day. Refugees do not come to the United States because they don't love their own countrv. they come seeking refuge from the terrible things that their own govern- ment has or has threatened to do to them. And too often, these governments are sup- ported by the United States. Practically, justiceafor anyone cannot be built on the exploitation of another. And as citizens of a rich and pow- erful country that is more accountable to its own citi- zens than many, we have a responsibility to be aware of what is going on in the world, and how we can and do affect it. Once we are aware, it is our choice what to do with that knowledge. We at Amnesty would ask that you would use that knowledge to help guarantee human rights to all humans, no matter how far from Ann Arbor they are. ABBY SCHLAFF SCHOOL OF NURSING Consult your maps TO THE DAILY: Apparently, some of your reporters need to look at a map. The article in Monday's Daily ("Dole stumps in Brighton as part of 'victory' tour," 11/4/96) concerning Dole's campaign stop in Brighton stated that Brighton is a "small town about 30 minutes west of Ann Arbor." In fact, Brighton is almost directly north of Ann Arbor, and I can make it from cen- tral campus to the first Brighton exit in about 15 minutes. Trust me, I do it every day. BRIAN MADDEN ENGINEERING SENIOR 'U childcare will reduce other costs To THE DAILY: I found Rebecca Ewing's views on child care to be remarkably short-sighted ("Paying for others' mis- takes," 10/23/96). While it is true that peo- ple need to take responsibili- ty for their own actions, and that in a perfect world no one would be forced to pay for the mistakes of others, the situation here is more com- plex than Ewing seems to believe. If the University does not provide child-care, we, as members of the community, will still incur costs. If a stu- dent cannot stay at the University because he or she has to stay home and take care of a child, then we lose the contribution that that per- son could have made as an educated member of society. If the child is put into a com- promising situation, and does not receive the care that she deserves, then we as society must later face an adult that has not had a healthy upbringing. A person who has a child before they can support it financially has made a mis- take. However, we at the University should recognize the courage it takes for the single parent to try and go beyond that mistake by going to school. A University education will better the life of the par- ent, the child, and society in general. Institutes of higher learn- ing (especially those support- ed by state money) are and must be open to everyone, not just those who have never made a mistake. JOSHUA TURNER LAW SCHOOL Gender bias misquote is corrected TO THE DAILY: Despite my request to check back with me if I were quoted, the reporter who wrote the article on gender bias failed to do so, and I was thus misquoted in the Daily ("Gender biases may exist in evaluations," 11/5/96). Here is what I intended to communicate: Across campuses in the United States, the average student ratings of women fac- ulty members average at least as high as those of male fac- ulty members, perhaps a little higher. Students tend to achieve more when they feel that teachers have a personal interest in their learning. One of the major factors in student-rating scales is a "warmth" factor that includes items in student learning. The factor is related positively, both to student achievement and to ratings of teaching effectiveness. Women faculty members tend to be rated higher than men on the "warmth" factor. One can, however, be cold and impersonal, and be effec- tive. There is no one style that is effective for all students, all teachers and all courses. Although cold, imperson- al teachers may be rated overall as high or low depending on other charac- teristics, female teachers who are cold and impersonal tend to receive lower student rat- ings than comparable male teachers. HILBERT J. MCKEACHIE PROF. OF PSYCHOLOGY MARSH MADNESS4 Frankly, my dears, we must give a damn jE lection '96 coverage was a pretty flashy affair - it seemed every- one was jumping on the high-tech zippy graphic bandwagon. Since the 1992 elections, television newcomers MSNBC and new CNN affiliates gave us more TV coverage choice this year than ever before, and the multimedia con- nections snagged a new generation of information consumers - the 'Net surfers. Even old tradi- ERIN tional networks MARSH like CBS made election coverage into a video game. Viewers were treated to a virtual reali- ty-type backdrop as Harry Smith pointed to maps that weren't really there and explained graphs he couldn' see. All he needed was a disco ball an some platform shoes and he could've had himself a rave. MSNBC gave the "torn-between my-TV-and-my-hard-drive" groupies lots of pretty graphics that were, for the most part, unintelligible: "So, let me get this straight: The red is up by some number of - are those votes or percentage points? - and the blues of - is that Minnesota or Montana? - are down because voters didn't under stand the issues. I can't even under- stand the damn graph! Clarity! Clarity! Please!" CNN ran an ESPN, "The Bottom Line"-type system for giving state-by- state results for the Senate and House races, ballot proposals and presidential percentage breakdowns. It wasn't exactly as much fun as waiting for col- lege football scores, but it was still a pretty good system. And bar-bet cheer. ing was still possible: "Go Rivers! Wooo hoo! You owe me 50 bucks, Kirk!" Election '96 coverage matched the presidential race itself - flashy cam- paigns, pretty pictures and lots of sleight-of-hand-type tricks. For all of the bells and whistles and zippity-do- dah coverage, though, nobody showed up at the polls to show their apprecia- tion. Election Day in other countries i usually a national holiday and usual required some kind of civil war to secure voting rights. In the United States, we can't even get the majority of the voting age population to stand in a line and check some boxes. How sad. The U.S. presidential election drew only 49 percent of the voting-age pop- ulation to the polls. That low showing is abysmal, but not surprising. National statistics for the 18- to 24 year-old population tend to be a little better, but not by much. 1 have to wonder if political activism will be as cool among the 20-somethings once N ow that President Clinton is firmly reseated in the White House, his elec- tion-year political schemes must come to an end. One of the most important campaign tactics to ditch - hiding his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton, from the spotlight. During the 1992 campaign and beginning of the president's term, she played a major rile and contributed greatly to his adminis- tration. To save face for her husband's knmnistration, she has subdued her politi- cl activity. A woman of her intellect should be free to live up to her potential. The first lady had an important part in The beginning of the first term of the admin- istration. In 1993, the president appointed her chairperson of the Task Force on National Health Care Reform. From this position, she led a 19-month study to deter- 'mine how to reform health care best to ensure that citizens receive the help they need. In doing so, she transcended the tra- ditional role of first lady - from compan- ion to co-pilot. She also favored sensible welfare reform. Last summer, the president signed the Welfare Reform Act into law, a bill that she originally opposed. To avoid election- year media badgering, the White House presented a less vocal and more complacent Hillary Clinton with the hope that the whole situation would blow over. The Democrats tried to cover their backs politi- vally and unfortunately, Hillary Clinton's voic was subdued as a result. which most presidential spouses contented themselves. In many ways, the political experts molded her into the "first house- wife." But Hillary Clinton is capable of much more - her intelligence and political savvy back up the claim. She is a strong political leader and a role model for women in poli- tics. Evidence of her positive impact appears at many levels, including Ann Arbor's "Friends of Hillary" club - the largest chapter in the country. Shoving her aside to downplay her strength and determination is a damaging signal to send to up-and-coming female politicians. Women who look up to Clinton to see her ideals and beliefs are getting the message that women are to be repressed when they present politically risky ideas. The president and his political strategists must allow Hillary Clinton the political exposure she deserves. With the upcoming changes to welfare, the first lady would be a good choice to guide and help implement improvements on the current WRA. With experience as chair of Arkansas' Education Standards Committee, she also offers her ability to guide the president's education reform efforts. She would prove to be a strong asset to her husband's administration - again. Hillary Clinton must be allowed to work for Americans - like her husband. The White House should cultivate her position a a role model for women. Her ideas and the 'Choose or Lose' bus runs out of gas. 4 Lately, its become very hip to take an active interest in politics, but I have to wonder if political activism will be as cool among the 20-somethings once the "Choose or Lose" bus runs out of gas. MTV stirred up a visible, loud drive for young voter registration, but I don't know if anyone caught on that there are better reasons than Tabith Soren and "Rock the Vote" to take a interest. Once MTV abandons its self- serving campaign; will young voter activism halt, too? No more snazzy rock star commercials, no more free T- shirts and bumper stickers, no more like, ah, "you hear it first, dude" updates. What will we do? Here's anidea - let's take an inter- est for ourselves. Not for colorful graphics, not for glib political analysts and certainly not for Tabitha Soren4 but for tangible issues and the small matter of our future. The state of California dropped the ball - voters there succumbed to Republican Gov. Pete Wilson's nation- al temper tantrum over affirmative action and voted Proposition 209 into reality. In doing so, they voted affir- mative action out of California. The fight for affirmative action is worth more attention than 20 "Choose oM Lose" buses - but all those who pro- claimed their dedication to saving affirmative action in California some- how let their votes wander away. A CNN news report predicted a "record showing" in the state of