4A -, The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 13, 1997 , I/ Ie mitigan ilailg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan ': .. . Bk a . .._ ., JoSII Wimuf: Editor in Chief ERIN MARSh Editorial Page Editor t'uless othewise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Dayr :s editorial board A//1 other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daili, FROM THE DAILY Candidates on the Web Students learn about issues on new Website NOTABLE QUOTABLE, 'Portrayal of gays and lesbians in the media range from dismal and ignorant to sometimes fairly astute. It's far from perfect, but it's so immensely improved that it makes me feel positive.' - Detroit free Press writer David Lyman, at a gay issues media panel Twsday PURPLE HERRING sfICANSN Fo, CHANGEF I ItL As representative candidates begin their walk down the campaign trail, a new deelopment on the Michigan Student Assembly's Website has added a slight curve to the path. No longer will the candidate with thy.- most ostentatious campaign literature nec- ess ily have the advantage. MSA has recent- ly Utgun providing literature on all candidates on is Website (http://www umich. edu/~vote). No'W,:students are able to access the platforms of each candidate. This new development sh(uld help shift the focus of the election froW the flashiest signs back to the best ideas. TheVWebsite also offers a link to online voting. Alih-ugh the Website should reach out to mndease student participation, MSA should no viminate live forums in which students canctually meet the candidates. ' record 12 percent of the student popu- lati~n voted in the spring election. The onie voting and information should serve as a way to increase the turnout. Candidates will have the opportunity to reach the group of Estudents who do not attend debates or forums, but who may be willing to point and click. Candidates now have the oppor- tunify to create an extension of their image through a different forum than a live or tele- vised speech or debate. The new Website could help eliminate mtxcb of the campaign propaganda by pro- vidig students with a chance to access infbrmation for all candidates equally. Avliability of such information should pla be emphasis back on the ideas rather thant-he artwork and rhetoric. As represen- tatives of the University population, MSA representatives should be selected with con- sideration for their plans and ideology. The ci Name recognition alone does not indicate an intelligent qualification for a vote. Students now have fewer excuses for their apathetic showing in past elections. As a result of the information added to the Website, students do not even have to leave their homes in order to become educated voters - or even to vote, for that matter. For the benefit of those students who take a more active interest in elections, the new Website should not replace opportuni- ties to meet and speak with the candidates. If the assembly wants to mobilize the University and encourage the voting popu- lation, it should not leave old-fashioned debates by the wayside. As the representa- tive board of the student body, MSA has a responsibility to get its views across and meet the constituents it works to represent. By staying in touch with constituents as much as possible, the assembly members should become continually aware of stu- dents' desires and suggestions. The Website development is an exciting expansion with possibilities for the future. Rather than simply updating the informa- tion site at election time, MSA should con- tinually add new developments throughout the year. In addition to campaign platforms at election time, assembly members should take the responsibility to ensure the accessi- bility of information about current progress, projects and even create room for students to provide feedback. Representatives should not simply strive to make themselves known at election time, but at all times. They should take advantage of this new forum and continually strive to maintain contacts with constituents. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The more we have to do, the less we listen O ne ofhlife's lessons as learned i kindergarten, or in listeningt mothers and children at the supermar-. ket: No one talks to hear themsexesv speak. But it feels that way L istening has become the latest cor. dial courtesy to fall by the way- side. Studiously taking in every spoken xword takes too much effort, too much time to have top Especially when tuning out is so much easier. MEGAN* It is a common SCHMPF strategy to PECIII S attend a class E_ CR__ T__N_ purely to make sure nothing impor- tant happens - listen with one ear read the paper with one eye, do the crossword puzzle with one hand And get next to nothing out of the experi- ence except the ability to swagger out of the lecture hall and say you Just weren't listeiing. So much cooler than actually having to admit that you. were paying attention to what was going on. And so much less effort for a brain suffering from lack of sleep and 20 more interesting things to think of Ah, but that's just class, right? Surely we listen when it's really important, like when someone is speaking directly to us. Wrong. What was the person next to you saying'? Exactly. How much, other than talking, can you accomplish during a phone call especially with a portable phone? Exactly again. How many times have you asked someoneva question and keptswalking before you heard the answer -= whether or not they even heard you4 and did answer" Or answered someone else's question incorrectly because you never heard the question"d' It is remarkably inefficient and self- iidulgent to only listen to someone else talk. Busy people get fidgety: What else could I be doing What's happening that I'm missing" What do I still have left to do" a Simply, listening takes time And time is probably the world's most valu- able commodity, because no one - not even the Franklin Planner people - can make more of it In the rush to get three things done at once, listening gets smushed in with doing some- thing, thinking something else and watching yet another something. Distracted by our own little mind- worlds, there's not enough room left to care about what anyone else is saying. But it's worth it Just being there can4 solve problems and absorbinforma- tion 0 i .I and 'U' Conference aims to promote good relations Nurturing the city-university relation- ship was the central theme Wednesday as representatives from two major college towns met to discuss U.S. college town problems. One hundred and five representa- tives from the Chapel Hill, N.C., city gov- ernment business sector and the University of North Carolina traveled to Ann Arbor to meet with members of the city council, local leaders and the University. The culmination of two years of planning, the event sought to provide an opportunity for both sides to glean a new perspective on effective means of addressing concerns in their respective communities. The meeting constitutes a resourceful method of addressing college town concerns and maintaining fundamental cooperation between cities and universities. The relationship of Ann Arbor and the University has for years exemplified a pro- ductive and synergetic city-college associa- tion. The University, for example, belongs to a smafl group of schools nationwide that sends a student representative - MSA pres- ident Mike Nagrant - to city council meet- ings to:lend a student voice to city decisions. In addition, the community has seen several projects materialize from city-university cooperation. The lights illuminating South University Avenue and the Diag, for instance, stem from the efforts of the Campus Safety Task Force, an organization conceived and born from the joint efforts of Ann Arbor mayor Ingrid Sheldon and the Michigan Student Assembly. Sheldon and the University also collaborated to expand the once-congested Main St.-Stadium Blvd. intersection, a corner whose enlargement brought the city onto University land. Though the responsibility of the construc- tion lay with the city, the University readily dents contributed heavily to the traffic. The quality of its city-university rela- tionship makes Ann Arbor an important stop for the UNC representatives, who have traveled to other university towns over the past decade. Their decision to come to town this week reveals that the association between Ann Arbor and the University has become an example to schools nationwide. UNC's interest in Ann Arbor also stems from the southern school's recent acquisi- tion of 1,000 acres of Chapel Hill land detached from the main campus. The school seeks to glean lessons from the University, which faced the same situation 30 years ago with the current-day North Campus region. While providing many answers to the UNC and Chapel Hill representatives, the University also plans to use this opportunity to address its own problems. A proposal to hike city parking meter rates freshly inked, Ann Arbor and the University hold concerns over transportation - specifically, parking and busing. In addition, the issue of zoning and physically distributing an increasingly unwieldy population looms over the heads of the University and city council. The visit pre- sents an unusual opportunity to seek detached outside perspectives and opinions on how to effectively address internal concerns. The visit of the UNC and Chapel Hill representatives allows two prominent. col- lege towns - each of which has confronted the issues of managing a cooperative city- university relationship - to share the wis- dom gleaned from centuries of existence. The meeting proves an practical method of addressing relevant concerns. Other schools should entertain events such as this to forti- fy the quality of college-community rela- tionships and to facilitate city and universi- Students behaved well at Bollingers' TO THE DAILY: The Bollingers' hospitali- ty in welcoming hundreds of' crazed fans to storm their home in Saturday's post-vic- tory celebration was indeed remarkable. And while the frenzied stampede has likely left the Bollingers with a fierce carpet-cleaning bill, the fans demonstrated an admirable sense of respect and restraint while gal livanti- ng through the President's home. Rows and rows of import- ed beer were left untouched in the fridge and one student seemed to be deeply absorbed in a giant tome in the Bollingers' library. Saturday's victory clearly attested to the character of the fans as well as the superi- ority of the football team. I'm just gosh-darn proud to be a Wolverine. JEREMY HORELICK LSA SENIOR Racist policy is harming education TO THE DAILY: Without a set of policies conceived to counteract the institutionalized racism and sexism that continues to exist in American society, this dis- crimmation would result in the virtual elimination of blacks and other minorities from higher education, and women from many fields of' education. Irrefutable evidence of this comes from the universi- ties where affirmative action has already been eliminated. At the University of California at Berkeley Boalt Law School, there is only one incoming black freshman-- who was actually a holdover admit from the year before At UC San Diego and Davis Medical Schools, there are no incoming black freshmen At the University of Texas at Austin, where the Hopwood suit recently eliminated affir- mative action, the numbers of black and Latino students in the graduate schools has dropped dramatically. Last year, there were 3 1 black and 42 Latmo students, while this year there are only four black and 25 Latino students out of a graduating class of 475 No honest person with their eyes open can deny the impact that the national elimination of affirmative action would have on higher education in America - only token num- bers of black and other minority students would be high schools. Schools that have a majority of black and other minority students are more often poor and located in inner cities. It is not unusual for an inner-city school to receive as little as one-third of the funding per student as their suburban counterparts. Affirmative action pro- grams at universities and col- leges are necessary to coun- teract this social deficiency and inequality in primary education. It is only through building a new mass, mili- tant, integrated civil rights movement that we will be able to on the one hand save affirmative action for those children who have already been through this separate and unequal school system, and on the other to fight for quality and equal primary education for all children. JESSICA CURTIN LSA SENIOR 'U' must be mindful of lawsuit costs TO THE DAILY: I am writing to comment on the most recent of many asinine statements and poli- cies in respect to the affirma- tive action lawsuit against the University. The Daily recently reported that Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison plans to fight the lawsuit "at any cost" (11 t5/97). Harrison was quot- ed as saying that "the impor- tant thing is not the cost, but the principle." So, here we have a public official who is supposedly accountable -- at least indirectly - to the citi- zens of Michigan essentially saying that cost is not impor- tant. This attitude is perfectly indicative of the University administration's inability to comprehend one simple fact: The University is a public institution, accountable to the public, and funded by tax dol- lars. The University, despite the belief of the administra- tion, is not the Vatican, or some autonomous entity within a nation that is not accountable to the Constitution The administra- tion seems to feel that it can set up its own rules (i e , the Code), determine its own val ues (i e , affirmative action), spend millions of dollars on anything it wishes, and do whatever the hell it feels like with no regard to any laws that might prohibit it from doing so It is, simply stated, the arrogance of academia in its purest form H arrison's recent com- ment dust confirms that. He and the University adminis- tration plan to spend millions of dollars to preserve a very questionable and shoddy pol- a time when the costs out- weigh the benefits. But Iarrison evidently believes that the policy of affirmative action is so special that it must be protected "at any cost," as if the world would spin off toward the sun tomorrow without it! Please! So, to the administration I say this: You're sacrificing the ends for the means. Sure, diversity is part of a good edu- cation, but so are faculty and resources. ven if you support affirmative action wholeheart- edly, it makes sense to defend it only to a certain point, and then move on. But to say that cost is irrelevant is completely irresponsible and arrogant. Let's not forget whose money this is, anyway. GREGORY HILLSON LSA JUNIOR Stop the 'spamming' TO THE DAILY: This is an open letter to all the frustrated e-mail users out there who are recipients of the recent and seemingly never-ending "spam." It is an unfortunate fact, but if I wanted to remove myself this monstrous and annoying spam list, I would be forced to be disconnected from real mailings that I want to read that are relevant to my studies in public health Instead of getting angry at the whole throng of innocent people who are the uninten- tional recipients of the spam list, however, I delete the unwanted messages from my inbox I do not read them I choose not to get angry at the spain and '"flame" my cry of "take me off the listt" to the world I choose not to blame the victims of spam and thereby continue the spam cycle The thousands of e-mail users who receive a spain message of "take me of the list"' have no way of doing so You must contact the computer administrator of your department if you want off your department's e-mail list If you want to help pre- vent the spreading of spam, then do not reply to the thou- sands of University affiliates who are stuck on the lists i'hlis only adds to the vicious cycle of the spain I make a conscious effort not to "reply to all " I do not wish to add to the junk mail of thousands of University students I do not wish to get them all angry at me Instead of flaming my frustrations to all of them, I only reply to the one person who began or continued the spamming. "Spammmg" is not toler- ated by informed and ethical e-mail users If you don't like r 0 " M To digest and remember what was said takes effort and prioritizing those words above all else Active listening nvolves hearing information, process- ing it and offering a response that fur- thers the conversation instead of "What?" or rephrasing what the other person said Active listening is a lost art True, the ability to tune out the unin- teresting or irrelevant comes with the ability to accomplish something when it's impossible to just get up and leave This is certainly a valuable skill in cer- tainly situations Unfortunately, it's also uncontrollable It's not just dull lectures, it's discussion sections of fewer than 20 people It's one-on-one meetings It's important lectures of reuew sessions It's speeches outside of classes And suddenly, you have no clue what anyone is saying because the words are going in one ear and out the other This is dangerous And sad Why don't we listen to each other" It is pompous to decide that another person's words and thoughts we've decided our brain cells could be more gainfully employed figuring out what to do that night or how to tackle a major project We've already decided that our minutiae which could almost always wait is more interesting and important than what someone else found intriguing enough to mention out loud That's an amazingly arrogant com- mentary Pay attention to a conversation and count the number, of times people interrupt each other Mid-sentence, mid-thought Voices get louder and faster Surely our point is better than whatever anyone else is saying, surely our i fe is more fascinating than theirs That's an astonishingly disrespectful commentary When someone devotes the time and reger to ti,,inv ,, i-.. e hndat 0 0 0