4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 11, 1996 I$Z lirbguu &dg S42Q. aynard Street Ani 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 refleet the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Dangerous del Rose must sell students' decision to regents NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'It's time for our generation to have a voice on the political scene.' - University Law School alum Harold Ford Jr, a 26-ear-old Democrat from Tennessee, commenting about the meaning of his recent election to Congress JiM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST THIS 5 OK "DON'T MOVE, DON'T-"5CREAM"-POLICY. 9 a t G1 1 VIEWPOINT Searching for a delicate balance O n Nov. 20 and 21, students will elect representatives to the Michigan Student Assembly. In addition, they will get a chance to raise student government fees by more than 100 percent. In three separate ballot proposals, MSA will ask students for for an extra $3.50 per term - $1 per term to support general MSA needs, such as the Budget Priorities Committee's funding of student groups, another $1 per term to pay for individual school governments, such as LSA Student Government, and $1.50 for Project Serve and the Black Volunteer Network. In a best-case scenario, students should vote down the second and third pro- posals, approving only the first increase. If any of these proposals pass, they would go before the University Board of Regents for final approval. Students have the choice, however, to approve any or all of the increases. MSA President Fiona Rose already said she will not support the $6.19 student fee before the regents. If students want fee increases, Rose must not oppose the students' will. Rose's office, along with MSA Vice President Probir Mehta's, is the only student office on campus for which the entire stu- dent body can vote. As such, it is the only position with a mandate to speak for all stu- dents. After years of intense lobbying by past MSA presidents, the regents granted students an official representative to the board - regents bestowed the responsibili- ty upon the MSA president for that very reason. If students choose to increase the fees through ballot referendum, then Rose, as MSA president and as the only student voice at the regents' table, must support that decision. To go against referendum results, and not support the fee increases, would contradict Rose's very purpose. Rose tries to maintain a good relation- ship with the administration and regents - and in honor of that relationship, the regents may accept any recommendation she makes about these fees, regardless of how students vote. However, the office of MSA president would suffer greatly if it were seen to undermine, rather than uphold, the voice of students. Moreover, if the MSA president cannot live up to her duties as student rep- resentative to the Board of Regents, stu- dents and regents should look for another liaison to convey student interests. Students already question the effective- ness of MSA and its budgetary processes. Roughly 10 percent of students care enough to vote in MSA elections as it is - such a move would further diminish student confi- dence in MSA. To argue against the fees before the elec- tion is one thing. To actively misrepresent the voice of students, in case the fees are approved, would be a grave error. If Rose really feels the proposed fees are unreasonable, she should lobby against the increases and educate students on each pro- posal. Raising awareness of the ballot issues should have the added benefit of increased student participation in the MSA elections. If Rose is unsuccessful at this task, perhaps she should work harder next time, rather than threaten to betray a student choice. Hanging from the tower Berkeleycommunity protests Prop. 209 By FIONA ROSE AND PRoBiR MEHTA Tomorrow morning, the University Board Of Regents will ask Provost Lee Bollinger of Dartmouth College to become the 12th president of the University - capping a sometimes controversial, but always well-meaning presi- dential search. The selection having been made, it is seem- ly to reflect on a process derailed midjourney by three newspapers who called the search "a speeding train ... engulfed in secrecy" (The Ann Arbor News, 10/20/96). Lest the voice of students is lost in thevpost-selection shuf- fle, we share our thoughts on the tug-of-war for governance of our school. Both parties - three newspapers on one side, eight regents on the other - aimed for the same end: protection of the public interest. Their methods for achieving this end were different, but not incompatible. One party was unwilling to abandon its "commitment to open govern- ment," while the other was desirous of private interviews allowing discussion of sensi- tive matters. The joint Detroit News, Detroit Free Press, Ann Arbor News lawsuit was brought forth, according to Ann Arbor News editor Ed Petykiewicz, only as a "reluctant last option," seen by the three papers as necessary in the face of "secret interviews." These media seem to view privacy as anathema to open governance. To them, what is best for the - Rose and Mehta are MSA president and vice president. Both are LSA juniors. University is fully scrutinized discussion of candidates' mer- its. On the otherthand, the regents maintain that such a constrained process threatens to dissuade certain would-be candidates. They point to the absurdity of preventing a can- didate from speaking privately with his/her potential boss before the hiring is made. In the eyes of the current board, what is best for the University is a mix of public and private sessions - the former designed to invite questions and input from the people, the latter to provide more candid open and closed meetings would involved students from the start: two able students were selected by the Michigan Student Assembly to serve as full-fledged members of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee; and as part of the University's original plan, stu- dents were invited to ask questions of candidates at open town hall meetings. We understand the merits of public participation, and are pleased that the violations of the last search have not been repeated. However, we understand too that high-pro- file candidates face practical repercussions in their present positions, and for this reason, they should be allowed priva- cy in discussing sensitive mat- ters. Last week, students from the University of California at Berkeley stormed their campus to demonstrate against Proposition 209, which bars state institutions from ising affirmative action policies. The proposition is deplorable and Berkeley is now in serious danger of losing valuable students - the admission board must with- lold $1.1 million in scholarships given out b sed on race and ethnicity. Students are doing the right thing by peacefully protest- ipg the passage of a proposition that will only hurt Californians. Berkeley students are entitled to stand up for what they believe - even better, Berkeley faculty, staff and other communi- ty members joined the demonstration against Prop. 209. Students marched through the main campus singing songs of freedom. They stormed the Campanile - berkeley's equivalent to the University's Burton Tower - and then a few students chained themselves to it. Students who could not get to the top of the tower camped out around it. For the most part, students have done an effective job protesting Prop. 209. Only 54 percent of the voting population favored the proposition, which is far from an over- Whelming endorsement. Protesting students have a great deal of support - nearly half the population of California is on their side. These techniques are visible, positive and effective means of demonstration, and they show that students made a choice to take peaceful actions against the proposi- tion. Last week's actions may lead the University of California regents and a majority of the state's voters to reconsider Their abandonment of affirmative action. Other students, however, chose irrespon- sible - and ineffective - tactics. They stole the entire 23,000-copy press run of Without speech, we become immune to our own racism It's winter. Halloween is over, Thanksgiving is coming and the stores have put out the Christmas dec- orations. I even got out my boots when I saw a few flakes of snow Saturday. The windoweAN between me and the snow insulates from the weather along the season comes that false sense of security ADRIENNE from hiding inside JAN NEY heated homes and warm clothes. But on the still-sunny West Coast, The Daily Californian at UC-Berkeley feels no such sense of security. Last week, a group disagreeing with one of the student newspaper's editori- als stole the entire press run of thg paper before most students had their morning doses of espresso. That's 2 3,000 copies. Of course, the editorial was wrong. Yes, I said wrong. The piece supported California's Proposition 209, which aimed to wipe the state colorblind. Uh- huh. Bullhonkey. The University of California's regents shocked colleges across the country last year by adopting an anti4 affirmative action policy. Fortunately, our regents are not so stupid. Apparently, the climate is a little dif- ferent out there. So different that the student newspaper concurred after a 6 to 5 vote of its senior editorial board. I'll take Michigan weather any day. But that's just my opinion. Yes, I said opinion. As it was The Daily Californian's opinion. We're all enti- tied. And we can even write about it. But stealing information away from the public is more wrong than an edi- torial page could ever hope to be. Most of us would have a hard time listening to anyone who insults our intelligence - who won't allow us to read the facts and the analysis. The editorial certainly wouldn't have changed my mind about affirmative action.But then again, I'm informed. The Daily Californian will no change its position. The state will not relax its affirmative action stance. And it's not going to snow in Berkeley. Finally, someone had a better idea. Berkeley students stormed Berkeley's Campanile tower -and six of them chained themselves to it. (Nice touch.) Police made no arrests and local businesses donated food - it was a community effort. And the protesters didn't just criti cize the newspaper. They called for administrators to respond to a list of demands, and for the state to repeal Proposition 209 - and "eject" those who created it, The Daily Californian reported.. (The protesters, lit by their own intensity, also threw a temper tantrum on the way back from the Campanile. They trashed newspaper racks and burned copies of The Daily Californian. Perhaps by the nexi protest, they will have passed the terri- ble twos.) Protesters also focused on free speech. Amen. Instead of taking that right away from others - directly or indirectly - you've got to find a better way to com- municate. You've got to respond, not destroy. The editors of The Daily Cal have had a hard week, I imagine. J empathize with the loss of their last Monday's edition. But I can't help but breathe a sigh of relief that people reacted to that editorial on the form of loud and vocal protest. You've got to speak louder, and bet- ter, than the racists - that's the way to muzzle them. Ah, yes. I said racists. That's the issue here we've all been skirting, isn't it? Racism. . Colorblindness, in my eyes, is racism. And racism isn't a phenomenon for which any of us can shirk responsibil- ity - myself included. A protester called the Campanile an "ivory tower of elitism." I am painfully aware of the position from which I write, insulated from my whiteness in this column space. I am observing from my own ivory'tower. Those who stole newspapers at Berkeley may not have columns, but they have words and intelligence that they did not put to use. Those who protested at Berkeley used their resources well. of Prop. 209. The theft was akin to censor- ship, preventing students from obtaining information from the free press. Berkeley students should stick to protests. The theft was the third major incident in recent memory - The Michigan Daily last year and the University of Pennsylvania's The Daily Pennsylvanian the year before. While most University of Michigan stu- dents, faculty and administrators would fight to uphold affirmative action - including The Daily - stealing newspapers does nothing for the cause except show the fighters to be unintelligent. This is a dis- concerting trend that threatens students right to information. The student body must continue to demonstrate peacefully and positively. Prop. 209 may harm Berkeley's future stu- dent populations, but current students must realize they carry the torch of freedom for their school. They must not extinguish their freedoms with damaging demonstrations. About 20 student activists may be lead- ing the way. On Thursday, these students used campus media to stress their discon- tent, instead of interfering with it. Their views were broadcast on WKLX, the Berkeley radio station, and their message reached a wide variety of students and members of the Berkeley community. Speaking out and sharing information is the best way to support a cause. Selectively blocking the media is the worst way to accomplish these ends. Therefore, they must continue the fight - not only throughout their campus, but throughout the nation. Without protest, other states may copy California's proposi- tion - and other college campuses may mirror the newspaper thefts. Peaceful, positive and sound demonstra- tion is an effective means of clearly com- work best, It is frustrating that The Detroit News, after arguing discussion of the job between that private interviews be candidate and regents. struck from the process, has From a student's point of complained of the mediocrity view, the intention of the of the finalists, calling them newspapers is admirable: Still "B List." On the contrary, we haunted by violations of the feel that the four provosts con- Open Meetings Act in the sidered comprise an "A List" 1987-88 University presiden- of candidates. tial search, they wished to pre- Doomsday predictions vent "personal agendas play- notwithstanding, the open ing too much of a role in the search - though "virgin tern- selection ..."' and to ensure tory" for the Board of Regents that "what is best for the uni- - did not churn out a versity" is decided "on the mediocre 12th president, nor basis of public discussion" was it a "shot in the dark." The (Detroit Free Press, 10/31196). University has in Bollinger a However, the regents have a champion of undergraduate point in that they, as duly elect- education, a defender of intel- ed representatives of the voters, lectual freedom and a friend should have the freedom to con- to public universities. duct a portion of the search out- Nevertheless, we hope that the side the public glare. search for the University's As students, we know well 13th president will strike a the importance of making our better balance between open needs heard in University and closed, inviting participa- decisions. Thus, we seek to tion of the public while allow- have some say in the gover- ing for private discussion of nance of the school we love. sensitive matters between can- In fact, the process in question didates and the board. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Praise for govt, articles TO THE DAILY: With the election over, I believe that there are two people on this campus who deserve thanks from all of us for the wonderful job they did keeping us informed about the election. Laurie Mayk and Jennifer Harvey contributed much time and effort to chasing down candi- dates, writing stories against deadlines and working impossible hours. Thank you for the great job you did. I would also like to thank Dean Bakopoulos for his col- umn about the College Republicans ("Dole is a good man,"1 1/7/96). True, we do not see eye to eye with Dean on virtually any issue, but we do respect his opinions and ideas. To praise our efforts in mobilizing the Republicans the Constitution of this coun- try. Hillary Clinton may have "intelligence and political savvy," but you forget what she doesn't have. That would be an office. The people of this coun- try elect Congress and the president. Then these people appoint officials to do other duties. This process has been evident in the last couple weeks and will be evident even better in the next couple of weeks. We have just fin- ished the election of these individuals, including Clinton. Now in the next cou- ple days, we'll get to see Clinton appoint new cabinet members to replace those leaving. This is a process we should all be familiar with. The president and the author of the editorial obviously are not. Mrs. Clinton has not been elected to any office. I do notrbelieve that she has run for an office since she ran for president of her col- come from? She doesn't have the right. She has been given power where it is unconstitu- tional to give her power. She doesn't have any right to "guide and help implement improvements on the current WRA " It has been said that Republicans hate Hillary because she is a strong woman - this is a lie. Republicans just realize that she has no right to do what she's been doing. The main reason Hillary was hidden was her stark contrast to Elizabeth Dole. Mrs. Dole has just as much "intelli- gence and political savvy" as Mrs. Clinton, but she has actually been appointed to her offices. She gained politi- cal power through her hard work and determination not through her husband. If women's-rights activists want a liberated woman it's Mrs. Dole for gaining power on