4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 6, 1997 E , l[irl igtttt tti1 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan . .SC 3. j . Z JosH WHITE Editor in Chief ERIN MARSH Editorial Page Editor Inless 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 Juggling act SACUA reps deserve compensation F or the University's faculty leaders, rep- teach a reduced load of classes. The Office resenting professors and helping guide of the Provost recommends that the chair's administrative decisions can be time-con- department cut his or her workload in half, suming and- financially prohibitive. The but that request is not always fulfilled. In nine members of the faculty's Senate addition, with a reduced classload, the chair Advisory Committee on University Affairs must take a 50-percent pay cut - discour- must deal with the demands of teaching full aging many potential candidates from con- course loads while at the same time spend- sidering the position. The irony of the situ- ing time advising the administration on ation is that while the number of class hours policies and academic matters. SACUA and the pay rate are reduced, the workload representatives recently stated their wish for remains about the same. In order to get the the University to pay them for this work and best faculty members to run for the posi- decrease the number of classes they teach tion, finances must not be a blockade. and the department work they do; adminis- Running for a position should not be based trators should follow their suggestion to on a person's economic capacity, but rather give the faculty leaders the opportunity to on their ability. work for the improvement of faculty, stu- Many other schools, including the dent and administrative relations. University of California system, give their SACUA provides many valuable ser- equivalent of SACUA time and money to vices to the University faculty and commu- represent the faculty's interests. In addition, nity. The committee serves as a liaison funding for SACUA members should come between the faculty and the University's from the University's administration - not central administration, often communicat- the faculty member's department. Funding ing many of the faculty's concerns and ideas SACUA through central administration to the University Board of Regents. In addi- would allow less prominent departments to tion, SACUA serves as a means to connect afford representation that may otherwise be faculty of -different departments, allowing out of their reach - increasing the number an easier exchange of ideas and comparison of potential candidates that can vie for posi- of programs. tions. The committee also benefits students SACUA serves a large portion of the through work to enhance the University's University community - it is important for educational environment. One of SACUA's its members to have the time and motivation recent efforts was work to develop a com- to do their work. To include all qualified prehensive faculty compensation policy, candidates, the University should compen- enabling the University to recruit a strong, sate faculty leaders for their work in devel- diverse pool of professors. As a result, stu- oping curricula and guiding other academic dents receive better class instruction and the initiatives. To build a strong voice for the University's academic reputation is faculty, the University must ensure that time enhanced. and money do not decide the quality of fac- Presently, the SACUA chair is allowed to ulty representation. NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'The important thing is not the cost, but the principle. We believe that the cost of having a diverse student body is worthwhile.' - University Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison, stating the University's commitment to fighting the civil lawsuit brought against it last month PURPLE HERRING 5SR BUT OUR M ARTeRM-5 ARE ON y Y9% LOCKED)YOU OOWQUALFY F~oR S URGEW j ('Al THOUG4, A~f YOUvq TV " o UGxT A3OU)T CON S r RK HY poQs's LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Quarantine School board mist HIV is becoming more prevalent, wide- spread and public. Because the virus affects all age groups, races, sexes and lifestyles, it is bound to walk through the classroom of one school or another. Sadly, it entered a classroom in Portage, Mich., and days later was forced to leave. Andrea Herrera, while later gaining re-admittance to her school, suffered through a painful process that drastically needs adjustment. -HIV-positive children suffer terribly at the :hands of incompetent school officials and ,obsolete policies. School boards nation- wide need to enact plans now, so when sit- uations like these arise, guidelines exist. In June of this year, 9-year-old Andrea was diagnosed as HIV positive. Before the school year began, her mother informed the principle of Woodland Elementary School of Andrea's condition. The principal, acting quickly and confidently, said there would be no problem accommodating Andrea and the matter would be addressed in early September. But the events of early September did not fall according to plan. Three days into the semester, the local board of education panicked and suspended Andrea on a quarantine order. This angered the Herreras, because the school board did g not initially follow its own policy. A board -learing was required for recommendations to the superintendent, who would then decide a course of action. So quickly, but not very qui- etly, the school board started the process that should have commenced during the summer. After the board sent the recommendations to the superintendent, two options existed for consideration: To release Andrea from school -and provide a reasonable alternative - as required by the Education Reform Act - or make the necessary arrangements to accom- Zandled HIV case Either way, the board should have made a decision before school began. By waiting until Andrea began school, suspending and then re-admitting her, the school board ignored all terms of confidentiality. The mat- ter rapidly progressed from a personal health issue to a matter of public information. At school and in her hometown, Andrea will never be looked at in the same way. Even if the children didn't understand why AIDS and HIV awareness programs were taught only to Andrea's class or why she was suspended and quarantined, the parents understood all too well. Andrea's mother, now in the process of suing the Portage Board of Education, maintains that the board's poor handling of its policies nearly isolated Andrea from her friends. While the board eventually acted the child's favor by allowing her to return to school, the damage is done. Even though a change in school policy will not help Andrea's situation, it can pre- vent future problems. HIV and AIDS are growing among younger populations and will touch the lives of almost everyone in some way. Understanding and education are vital when dealing with a situation such as Andrea's. The classroom provides the per- fect environment to teach children impor- tant facts, encourage an understanding and foster acceptance. Unfortunately, Andrea and her classmates are a step behind. Due to the poor judgment of the Portage Board of Education, this matter only carried mes- sages of fear, ignorance and confusion. Cases like this require sensitivity and patience, but above all privacy. The board of education must realize its errors and create a policy that will foster education and keep in mind the best interests of the children for College was misidentified in story TO THE DAILY: When writing articles about schools and colleges, it helps a lot to know the names and the differences. In your article "Alumni Visit Art School's Changes" (11/397), you consistently refer to the "School of Art and Architecture," which in fact no longer exists. Currently, the College of Architecture and Urban Planning and the School of Art and Design reside in the Art and Architecture building. There is io more relationship between the programs other than being neighbors and sharing certain facilities. It's bad enough we're sequestered away onl North Campus. shad- owed by the engineers. You could at least write an informed piece and help us to preserve our identities. JOSH KEOUGH COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING Administrators are invited to North Campus TO THE DAILY: Family Housing Residents' Council will be meetingwith MSA President Mike Nagrant, Vice President Olga Savic and representa- tives from the North Campus Nursing center on Nov. 13. The primary purpose of this historic meeting will be the preservation of the North Campus Nursing Clinic as an important University health care provider. To this end, Residents' Council would like to extend an open invitation to President Lee Bollinger, Provost Nancy Cantor and reporters from The Michigan Daily to attend this meeting. President Bollinger's and Provost Cantor's attendance at this meeting would be a significant good faith demon- stration on the part of the administration. It is our sin- cerest hope that this invita- tion and its significance are not overlooked or ignored by this administration. CARLOS HERNANDE FORD FAMILY HOUSING RESIDENTS' COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE A 'thank you' to Bollinger and Goss was a great game and I had a lot of fun, and I give President Bollinger and Mr. Goss a lot of credit for mak- ing lemons into lemonade. I appreciate their kind gesture. TAMI TARNOW LSA FIRST-YEAR STUDENT Headline was grammatically incorrect TO THE DAILY: Daily staff reporter Peter Romer-Friedman and the Daily news editors should be emi nent ly embarrassed about the blatant grammatical mis- takes in the article, '"U' holds less class days than other col- leges nationwide," (I 1 497). The title should read "'UJ' holds fewer class days ...." This mistake is repeated throughout the article. According to Lyn Dupre in "Bugs in Writing," "the word fewer' denotes a reduc- tion in the number of a given collection of individual items; less' denotes a reduction in the amount of a given stuff." Days are items, not stuff. You should be even more embarrassed that it is an engineer pointing out your mistake. WILLIAM WALSH COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Affirmative action is not perfect TO THE DAILY: I've heard the debateover affirmative action's merits and demerits go back and forth over the past few years, hearing the same arguments every time. What many peo- ple don't realize is that affir- mative action was originally established through executive order in 1964 by President Lyndon B. Johnson and merely required thatathere be no discrimination for govern- ment contracts based on race. I'll make it simple: Diversity is good, but prefer- ences or discrimination based on the color of one's skin is bad. Therefore, affirmative action as we know it today is bad. Affirmative action is great in principle but fails in its implementation. That is where changes need to be made. Now I've got to stay up all night to make sure BAMN doesn't burn my house down! AARON BROOKS ENGINEERING SENIOR Cartoon was ever got to press. What the hell were people thinking when they decided to run the caricature of a slant-eyed Jiang humbly mouthing the old Charlie Chan mantra, "So sorry? That whole early conception and perception of Asian Americans was a tremendous factor in allowing Congress to approve atrocities like the Japanese internment camps and the Chinese Exclusion Act. The cartoon carelessly impinges on a dark and crip- pling history that is the sub- ject of tears, not laughter. Yuki Kuniyuki should have known better. Maybe he thought that as an Asian American, it was okay to draw on racially stereotypical insults to get a laugh.. If so. then why stop there? Hell, might as well throw in the buck teeth and the Confucian proverbs to boot. Inea time when race rela- tions are strained over offen- sive vandalism and affirma- tive action, it is extremely disturbing to watch the cam- pus paper propagate the same subtle and insidious forms of oppression that tore this nation apart in the past. JAY IM LAw SCHOOL A letter to 'M' coach Lloyd Carr TO THE DAILY: I'm writing to you as a proud Michigan Wolverine and a proud trumpeter in the Michigan Marching Band. The reason I'm writing to you is a rather simple one: The marching band will not be joining you and the M' men in State College this Saturday. However, there isn't one band member who wouldn't love to be there cheering on the blue legions. This is obviously a situation we all wish were different for such a big game. My one desire and hope is that you share this with your team just to let them know how much we all would love to be there as they battle Penn State. Please let them know that every time they score a touchdown or a field goal and, strangely, the glorious chorus of "The Victors" is not heard, or every time the defense stops PSU on third down and the team doesn't hear the intimi- dating notes of "Temptation," we actually are there - in spirit, if not in person. Whenever the team needs a "Let's Go Blue!" to push them onward or, again, the ultimate motivator of "The Victors," let it be that they find and hear it, whether it comes from the sideline, the huddle or even silently,internally, from deep within the heart of every proud Wolverine on the field. Just In the 'off-years' elections lose their sparkle and the public W hat a difference a year can make. A year ago, we were basking in afterglow and predictions. Sure, t country had just elected the first t t e r m Democratic president since the New Deal, but the Republicans had held Congress. Wasn't it going to be fascinating to see what would happen? Bob Dole was MEGAN cracking jokes SCHIMPF and Bill Clinton PRESCRIPTIONS was partying. Politics was interesting and exciting A year later, cynicism is back in style and apathy doesn't begin to describe what happened Tuesday. Theiads and propaganda are cliche enough during "big" elections, when we're asked to ponder what would h@ pen if they held an election and no one came, or told we should rock the vote, We're given guilt complexes about wha our ancestors went through to give us the privilege to vote in a democratic society and how we're throwing that away. But during an offyear election like 1997, they're bitterly ironic in their truthfulness. This was the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, wh makes it election day. But in stark c trast to last year, no one noticed. True, there were some major elec tions in other states and cities - New Jersey, Virginia and New York City among them - but the vast majority of people in the country either didn't know, didn't care or both. And inci- dentally, a vast majority is supposedly what it takes to win an election. Even my planner, which is thou " ful enough to remind me whT Professional Secretaries' Day and National Boss's Day are, didn't bother to mark election day as anything other than Tuesday, Nov. 4. I didn't vote, and I follow politics enough to subscribe to "George." What's even worse is that I'm not lds- ing sleep over the fact that I didn't voe. It shouldn't matter that there weren't flashy parties or rock-video comn: cials or town meetings on televis hosted by trustworthy anchors. But there wasn't much on the ballot, and I didn't even remember until about 10 days ago that I should have gotten an absentee ballot. I have other things to do. No one really gets upset this year that they missed the polls. That they lost their voice, regardless of how effective it really is in the whole scheme of things. Whatever - it's odd-numbered year, right? Nothi r really important happens. Voting, admittedly, is a challenge for most students, who are either not yet registered or who are registered at home. And off-year elections - pr- ticularly those following a presiden'tial election - are notorious for poor turnout across the electorate. That doesn't make it right not to vote. There's no extremely rational reasg to vote for presidentdand skip loc elections, which made up most of Tuesday's ballots. Local officials affect daily life much more than presidents do. From a political science standpoint, one vote means much more in a local election because the. voter pool-is smaller in the first place, and because fewer people will turn out. It's hard to avoid a presidential elec- tion, whichmakes it easier to reme ber to vote. MTV, public service announcements and even campaigns themselves plead with voters to get. to the polls for presidential or gubernato- rial elections. Not so for off-year elections. Sure, newspapers printed voter guides this year, but not nearly as many as last year. It was harder to find election coverage this year, which is partly the fault of the all-encompassing media, but also p ly due to the public, which didn demand more coverage than it got. There goes voter education out the window. No coverage of the issues, still, but none for the horse race either. Because it was more like the old mare in the pasture than a race. Why we do regard voting as inher- ently more valuable in an "important" election? Shouldn't they all be impor- tant? Why do we feel more guilt ab* being a lazy voter in an even-num- bered year? Still, the lowest turnout ever came to the polls last year, even when there was a presidential race, along with Senate, House, state-level and local elections. It's not just the perceiyed importance of the race, it seems - it's