4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 24, 1997 cb libtijgu 7uIg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JosH WHITE, Editor in Chief ERIN MARSH Editorial Page Editor NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'There are many people who feel that Act Up hurt itself by so many of us going to work inside ... on the other hand, when you are given the chance to be heard a little better, it's hard to turn down.' - Larry Krame, founder ofAIDS activist group Act Up JiM LASSER A.: 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 DailA FROM THE DAILY Spending for seats Candidates should impose voluntary caps HOWARD! JENNY ALREADY FOR THIS 3fMESTEhR! PAi F HR 15N tI FF °HAWE WuFION 8ILL WONDERFUL?! Free pizza, ice cream coupons and hun- dreds of signs and flyers all over cam- pus characterized Michigan Student Assembly elections last week - costing candidates hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars. On Tuesday, MSA will vote on an amendment to its compiled code that would recall elected representatives who spent more than $500 during elections. The need for some sort of control on campaign spending is obvious, but MSA should not inpose mandatory spending caps on candi- dates. Instead, MSA parties and candidates should voluntarily submit to spending lim- its to prevent student government from becoming a bastion for economically privi- leged students. MSA should not mandate candidates' private finances - doing so would jeopar- dize candidates' right to campaign decision- making. In addition, new candidates do not en joy the same name recognition as incum- bents - often, they spend more to establish their name. A mandatory spending cap would be particularly damaging for them. It is not the assembly's place to impose finan- cial reform for candidates - candidates must initiate it themselves. Implementing a spending cap would be difficult. MSA would have no effective way to determine which campaigns exceeded the limit. While it might be able to monitor party and candidate expenditures, it would have no mechanism to monitor external assistance. For example, candidates could channel funds to friends for the purpose of campaign spending. The cost of an MSA campaign can be prohibitive, threatening to restrict seats on the assembly to students with padded checkbooks. Such a high price tag could prevent able and qualified students from running for MSA and hurt the student body's representation. Budget-conscious students should be able to run for office without draining their bank accounts or run- ning up credit card bills. MSA candidates should agree to a voluntary spending cap to prevent student government from pricing itself beyond most students' means. Financial efficiency plays an important role in MSA's operation. Ann Marie Ellison, chair of the Student Rights Commission, suggested that high-spending candidates do not translate to effective representatives. If a candidate spends thousands of dollars to get elected to the assembly, the same overspend- ing mentality may plague their budgetary decisions -- but student fees, rather than private funds, will be at stake. At the begin- ning of each academic year, the assembly prepares an annual budget that earmarks money for student-group allocations. The Budget Priorities Committee doles out these funds to serve the greatest portion of the University community - a painstaking process that overspending representatives could upset. MSA candidates should show that they are capable of responsibly handling students' fees by limiting the amount they spend on their own campaigns. MSA elections can be a serious financial drain on participants. Tuition and other financial priorities could prevent qualified students from running - weakening the student government system. While MSA should not mandate spending caps, individ- ual candidates should voluntarily prevent themselves from overspending and creating an uneven playing field. aN LETTERS TO' THE EDITOR C efining decency Court must overturn unconstitutional CDA Last week, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments concern- ing the Communications Decency Act. The CDA, which passed Congress early last year, represented the first major challenge to free speech on the Internet. Created to shield children from material deemed "obscene" or patently offensive, the law's vague language immediately attracted criti- cism from the American Civil Liberties Union and various other free-speech advo- cates including millions of computer users worldwide. Last June, the anti-CDA faction triumphed, as a federal court in Philadelphia struck down the law as uncon- stitutional. The law was intended to selectively fil- ter harmful material available to minors on the Internet. Due to the global network's wide-open nature - where anyone with the right equipment can view any file available for public consumption - anything acces- sible to adults is largely accessible to chil- dren. As a result, in banning indecent mate- rial available to children, the CDA indirect- ly took away adults' abilities to view these files - a direct violation of First Amendment rights. Furthermore, the law prescribed severe criminal penalties for anyone found provid- ing "patently offensive" material to the Internet. Lawmakers' failure to adequately describe the terms of "indecency" exposed a large portion of the Internet community to possible criminal charges. Under the strict letter of the law, many meritorious items - from famous artwork to classic literature - fall under the CDA's definition of "obscene." down. Upon appeal by the Clinton Administration, the case now lies in the Supreme Court's hands. The Justices must uphold the earlier ruling and end the CDA's overreaching threat to the Internet. While the CDA had a noble purpose - protecting children from material they may not developmentally be ready to handle - its authors clearly overstepped their man- date. Besides the violation of first amend- ment rights, the CDA empowered the United States government to act as a censor for a global network that thrives on its free- dom. The law also failed to account for the various levels of protection that already exist. Foremost among these factors is parental responsibility. Just as parents mon- itor television programs and literature for obscene content, they should also oversee their children's cyberspace travels. Ideally, this should involve active parental partici- pation, exploring the Internet along with children. However, while that option is not always feasible, various 'parental control access' programs exist for the sole purpose of blocking access to sites containing indecent material. Using these programs - with names like SurfWatch and Net Nanny - allows parents to keep their children away from indecent material, even when they cannot provide direct supervision. Given these layers of protection, plus numerous anti-pornography laws already in existence, the CDA is an unnecessary and dangerous piece of legislation. The Supreme Court should overturn the CDA on the grounds that it violates citizens' MSA dollars replace issues TO THE DAILY: In response to MSA cam- paign spending: I havehpaid for my first two years here through grunt labor and must say that I am truly disgusted that so much money is thrown away on colored paper and pizza slices. I have never campaigned, but wouldn't even as little as $50 buy enough flyers? Strangely, despite the can- didates' enormous spending- there remains the ubiquitous rhetoric about reducing MSA waste. It is difficult for me to believe that these people who drop $500 campaigning and staple multiple copies of the same flier on every bulletin board know very much about waste. Second, to argue against spending limits is not idealis- tic. In governmental elec- tions, it'sebeen shown that the candidate who spends more usually wins and I doubt it is different here. Yes, a limit may slightly harm democra- cy, but realize that the lack of a limit is of much greater detriment. Without a cap the dollar dominates the issues. And though a new party may have more difficulty than an established party, winning is by normeans impossible (understand that less than 1 0 percent of the students voted for the "invincible" establish- ment). Furthermore, when extravagant candidates bom bard the students with names, the election becomes a recog- nition circus. Come on cyn- ics, we are college students, appeal to our intellect and trust us to respond. Lastly, as a bleeding heart, I must respond to David Taub's letter ("Mumia guilty and should be execut- ed." 3/21/97), for it contains dangerous misconceptions about capital punishment. To begin with, since 1976, when capital punish- ment returned, the murder rate has remained constant while executions have increased. Additionally, a whopping 1 percent of police chiefs believe it is the best deterrent to violence. As far as the statistics show, sanc- tioned killing has not deterred a single murder. And murderers are human beings like you, Taub, not monsters. Yes, they need much professional help and perhaps may never be cured or released. but that does not mean they deserve death or ought never think or commu- nicate again. There is mch more data on the World Wide Web about capital punish- ment and Mumia's case too; perhaps it would be enlight- ening to all. aware of the existence of pornography, that is no rea- son to give the subject uch an in-depth review. There are so many other topics that could be highlighted, but instead you have chosen to sink to the lowestcommon denominator and act like a piece of tabloid journalism. Shame on you, Daily, shame on you. CRAIG BARKER LSA FIRST-YEAR STUDENT Protests give Playboy more attention TO THE DAILY: Every year it is the same thing. People protest Playboy coming to the campus because it is demeaning to women. Why are these peo- ple protesting Playboy? There would be no Playboy if there were no models out there posing for Playboy. Shouldn't these protesters be out there trying to educate these women not to put them- selves in the magazines' The more they protest, the more attention it brings to Playboy and makes more people want to look and par- ticipate. It is not getting across the message they are fighting for. The women are exploiting themselves. No one is putting a gun to their heads telling them to do this. They are doing this on their own free will and if the pro- testers want them to stop then educate them, not protest the magazine. As you see, the spokeswoman said that they are getting great publicity from the protesters. So think about it. DANTE BAILEY ITD CONSULTANT P roponents wrong about death penalty TO THE DAILY: I would like to respond to David Taub's letter to the edi- tor (Mumia guilty and should be executed" 321/97). It seems Taub may be unsure and a bit confused about the effectiveness of the death penalty. He first says that "There will be times when innocent people will be wrongly executed" but later states that "If you don't mur- der anyone you don't have to worry about being executed" Taub's clear three-step argument toward promoting the death penalty seemed to be based on the assumption that the death penalty serves between crime prevention and the death penalty. I wonder what would lead Taub to believe that the pun- ishment of convicted crimi- nals has such a great effect on the rest of the population, when every effort is made to remove prisoners from the rest of the population. Prisons are often situated in isolated or remote locations. Efforts are made to separate prisoners from family, friends and community members. Prisoners and criminals are portrayed in the news and films as people who should be feared, forgotten and done away with and certainly not to be learned from. I agree with Taub and hope we would promote a society based on thinking, learning and communication, rather than murder. However, 1 do not see the death penalty as a deterrent; nor do I see a basis for his argument. KRISTEN MCKEE UNIVERSITY LECTURER Playboy is an 'art form TO THE DAILY: I am disgusted with the number of women I've met who despise Playboy. How many of them have even looked through one? Read any articles? Compared Playboy to other magazines such as Penthouse or Hustler'? Playboy is much more tasteful; the others are focused on body parts only, and sometimes show no faces. These are the types of magazines that truly objectify women. Playboy can even be looked at as an art form, though I agree many people do not do so - it includes tasteful photographs of the female body, no different than a nude art book sitting on someone's coffee table. It is also filled with informative articles on safe sex, sex in general and some are even non-sex oriented! Interviews, literary work (some of Stephen King's short stories were published for the first time in Playboy). I don't view it as blunt pornography. Also, I've always been under the impression that my body is my own and I will do with it what I please - be that posing for a magazine fully clothed or completely nude, or playing football on a sunny afternoon. It is my choice. Soehad I taken an inter- view for Playboy, posed and been chosen to be in their "Women of the Big Ten" issue, I would say to all the protesters out there, "Hey If you don't want to see it, don't Hypocrisy and the recruiting game rule college athletics W hen one of my friends applied to another Big Ten school as a recruited football player, his applica- tion form had "athlete" stamped on it in red ink. Right from the beginning, the distinction had been made. During the last two weeks, we ..~ have learned thatg "athlete" carries a different mind- set in addition to a different set of application MEGAN guidelines. SCHIMPF Following the RF(SC jl admission by men's basketball coach Steve Fisher of two minor NCAA violations, a num- ber of allegations have emerged about cash gifts to players, expensive sport utility vehicles driven by athletes and activities at a party several players and( a recruit attended last February. Many of these accusations have come from deep within the shadows of Detroit-area basketball and perhaps not all of them are true. In the least, each one should be regarded with a healthy sense of disbelief, but still with a desire to find the truth. Because once you get past the legal and NCAA ramifications of what could happen as a result, truth is what is being ignored. Cash and automobile gifts are not illegal to anyone but the NCAA. But witnesses who say marijuana and alco- hol were present at a party where underage athletes and a recruit were partying with strippers raise legal issues as well. Condemn them if you will, but in the end, this party was not strikingly dif- ferent than those attended by colleg students across the country. Condemn someone instead for not telling the truth. No one would even have known were it not for a car crash that hap- pened early the next morning, pointing loudly to the realization that athletes lead a different existence than the majority of University students. Part of this is encouraged- unknowingly, perhaps - by the stu- dents and boosters who are now decry ing the violations and the lifestyle ath- letes lead. Fans demand winning teams, especially of programs with a tradition like Michigan. The way to have winning teams is to have top- rated players. The way to have top- rated players is to recruit them away from the tens of other programs who dangle sample jerseys, winning tradi- tions, recruiting trips, coaching visits and fancy facilities before high scho players' eyes, all the while whispering sweet nothings in their ears. This hap- pens across the country. And this is only what NCAA rules permit. To simultaneously criticize a team for not winning and for the presence of over-eager boosters and questionable activities is slightly hypocritical. This is not to condone the secrets of recruit- ing in Division I athletics. This is merely to say it happens, and it hap pens to different degrees deep withi some very proud programs. And this is not to condone the behavior of athletes. This is to con- done what they are not doing, which is following the rules and telling the truth. It is these simple things - ones learned in kindergarten - that are being forgotten. College basketball and football today are worth billions of dollars, which the players see very little. But i is still not inappropriate to say playing Division I athletics comes with an unsigned, but understood, contract - you play basketball, we'll provide the opportunity and the facilities. Except no one read the fine print - where the rules hide. The allegations now coming to light about the basketball team cast a dis- turbing glow because each one seems to be the opposite of what the playe4 are saying. The most recent, an account of the party the night of the accident, directly contradicts most of the University's internal report of the incident. Again, do not take anything in this story at face value - consider the stakes for everyone depending on what they say happened that night. The idea that the players lied to the University is what we should be mo concerned about. Because then th players are not only setting their own NCAA rules, they are setting their. own moral rules about respect for authority and honesty. They have exploited the opportunities given them _anitin h_ mnafie hp cnnd v I