4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 30, 1998 a1je ffidbtuigan Ifg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor 'It's not my inclination to say I'm going because I have all the answers ... I see myself as more of a team person.' - State Rep.-elect John Hansen, on how he views his role in the coming term CHIP CULLENGRINDING THE NIB [MYROAG IV. ?RLJ 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 Power otfe Philip Power worked tirelessly for the 'U' O n Nov. 3, Michigan state citizens voted to oust University Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) from the seat he had occupied in the Fleming Administration Building for 11 years. After such a long tenure on the University Board of Regents, Power has had the opportunity to influence thousands of students' lives and help shape the direction of the University's develop- ment. Not only is his departure detrimental for the board's institutional knowledge, but his history of working with students for stu- dent concerns will be missed. Power's father, Eugene, was elected in 1953 and served on the board for 10 years. Philip Power first took a seat on the board after the death of his wife, Sarah, who was five years into her term. Then-Gov. James Blanchard appointed Power to take the empty seat. In 1990, Power ran for re-elec- tion and dominated the regents' race, in contrast to this year's election when he took only 22 percent of the vote. As an alumnus of the University, Power has had a unique perspective on administrative decisions. Among his most notable work has been increasing the University's use of technology transfer to bring in additional money into the University's coffers. Doing so helped reduce the need for the University to make huge tuition increases. While Homer Neal was interim president, Power took the initiative to rewrite part of the Regents' Bylaws to make it easier for pro- fessors to sell their intellectual property - benefiting both the faculty and the University as a whole. Regent-elect Kathy White stressed the importance of technol- ogy transfer during an endorsement inter- view with The Michigan Daily; Power's work in this area will only help future administrative efforts. Another of Power's greatest attributes, especially over the latter part of his tenure, has been his accessibility. He lives in Ann Arbor and thus can be called on to take on additional duties more easily. His strong relationship with students is unique, espe- cially since the state's regents elections make the students' impact on the decision as to who will control many aspects of their lives incredibly insignificant. Despite his strengths, Power has occa- sionally met with controversy during his days as regent. Relatively soon after his appointment, Power voted in favor of depu- tizing the Department of Public Safety, bringing him head to head with students. In addition, he has been party to the regents' decisions to instate both the Code of Student Conduct and its predecessor, the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities. These controversies mar, to some degree, his otherwise very pro-stu- dent record. Given his broad experience at the University -- as a student and a regent -- Power should remain a part of the University community. Since the last two elections have taken many experienced members of the board of regents, Power's continued contributions would be helpful. His participation on University committees and using his experience with the state Legislature to lobby on behalf of the University would make his contribution to campus an on-going project. Power and his family have left quite an impression on the University's campus. His dedication to making it a better place, despite some bumps along the way, is admirable and should serve as an example to future board members and administrators. 1A1 60 OT ANA~xi 4;A/ * LETTERS TO THE EDITOR At the limit Scbroer leaves the House after six years B ecause of term limits, the state legisla- ture will lose many veteran representa- tives who worked diligently to serve their constituents and improve the overall quality of life in Michigan. Mary Schroer, who served the 53rd District, will leave Lansing next month after being a top advocate for the University and boldly expressing her views for six years. While the political climate in the state Legislature has gradually moved toward the right in the past decade, Schroer has stood by her liberal beliefs. She proposed many bills that were struck down by her conserv- ative colleagues, including a bill that would mandate a parenting education curriculum in public schools. As a member of the House Appropriations Committee, which allo- cates Mfunding to all state entities along with the state Senate and governor, Schroer firmly supported increased fund- ing for higher education. As a former Washtenaw Community College and Eastern Michigan University student, Schroer understood the expense college students endure and worked to keep tuition increases at all state universities and col- leges below the Consumer Price Index. Schroer's quick wit and commitment to liberal causes acted to balance the conserv- ative politics that dominated the Legislature during her tenure. One of her adversaries in Lansing was state Sen. David Jaye (R- Macomb), the relentlessly conservative leg- islator who spearheaded one of two lawsuits challenging the University's race-based admissions. When Jaye, as a representative in 1997, proposed a bill that would provide one-way bus fare out of the state to welfare canvassing the House floor collecting money for a bus ticket sending Jaye out of Michigan. Over the past year, Schroer has been developing a Political Action Committee fund to support state candidates who are against concealed weapons. Because Schroer will be unable to fight the loom- ing threat of concealed weapon legislation as a representative in the upcoming terms, she is doing her best to make sure others can. When Schroer was elected to the legisla- ture in 1992, she had not yet served in an elected office. Through hard work and per- severance, she learned the ropes of an often complex job. Schroer's dedication to policy began when she was active in the Ann Arbor Parents and Teachers Organization. Her commitment was noticed, and she was hired as a legislative aide to former state Sen. Lana Pollack. Schroer, an Ohio native, understands the concerns and problems of working- and middle-class people. She was forced to drop out of Eastern Michigan University when she became pregnant with twin daughters. Now that her term is about to expire Schroer plans to continue her education and earn a bachelors degree at Eastern Michigan University in January. But Schroer is not abandoning public service altogether. In November, she was elected to the Washtenaw County Community College Board of Trustees. Although it will not be as high profile as her previous job, it will allow her to contin- ue her mission of improving public educa- Name of holiday was misspelled To THE DAILY: I've been reading the Daily since my undergradu- ate days. It has always been a source of amusement and information. Unfortunately, the current Daily staff seems to be too preoccupied with the politically correct spelling of Hawai'i to check any of the other facts in the paper. Reading through the article by Jaimie Winkler entitled "Foreign students to join in holiday," (11/25/98)I couldn't help but notice that Guy Fawkes Day (see American Heritage Dictionary 2nd Collegiate Edition, Webster's 9th New Collegiate Dictionary, etc.) is misspelled as "Guy Faux Day" throughout the article. If the Daily can't find a qualified fact checker to put on the staff, perhaps it should invest in a good dictionary or encyclopedia. Some things you just can't leave to the spell-checker. Go Blue! PETER ANDERSON UNIVERSITY ALUMNUS U' offers sign language this summer To THE DAILY: Last year, the Daily was generous enough to do an article on the rejection of a proposal on offering American Sign Language here at the University. Due to that article, tremendous stu- dent support for this class came crawling out of the woodwork. At the beginning of the semester, I heard that the Daily wanted to do an update on the progress. The agree- ment made by the Dean of Academic Affairs (Dean Lincoln Faller, who has since resigned from the position) and the American Culture department was that the course was going to be offered by Fall 1999, by the American Culture department for Fall 1999, and would ful- fill the four-semester foreign language requirement. I've been working with the new dean of Academic Affairs (Robert Owen and his assistant, Douglas Shapiro) and the American Culture department to make sure that this happens. Recently, I got an update. Owen let me know that they were not able to find a professor to teach and are not offering the class in the fall, as originally promised two years ago. They've had two years to complete their end and this class won't be offered as ini- tiall nr _;nic learning more about this, I will be more than happy to refer them to members of the Hearing Impaired Student Organization, who have been fighting for the privilege and right to learn the third most spoken language in the coun- try. Thank you for your time, and if you have any ques- tions, please don't hesitate to contact me. RACHEL ARFA LSA JUNIOR Animal research is necessary To THE DAILY: Reading the letters section of the Daily on Nov. 24, I was in disbelief at the blatantly inaccurate statements mrade about animal research ("Animal research is problem- atic"). The person who wrote the letter, Tiiu Ruben, has obviously never set foot in a real research lab. And from his statements, he clearly knows nothing about the physiology, immunology and biochemical aspects of any organisms. His first statement was that because animals are incompatible with humans, research based on them is counterproductive. This is wrong. Without getting into too many medical explana- tions, realize that all those therapeutic and preventative drugs out there on the market that have been tested and derived solely on animals, work on humans. How can this be? Well, even mice have enough of the basic cellular and physiologic systems in common with us that drugs that work on them work on us. This applies to drugs ranging from Tylenol to AIDS medications. Ruben also mentions that because animals are studied in artificial environments, the result of experiments are inac- curate because of confound- ing variables. This statement proves to me that Ruben has never set foot in a real lab. Research animals are kept in germ-free environments, drinking purified water, eating bacteria-free food and breath- ing highly filtered air. If this were not done, how could a researcher be sure that the results, especially when doing immunological experiments, were not impacted by some roving virus. The whole rea- son that the environments are artificial is to prevent con- founds - it most certainly does not create them. Ruben goes on to suggest that cell, tissue and organ culture systems can ade- quately replace animal research. For anyone who is curious about the accuracy of this statement, just run it by any professor who does med- ica rrch 2.and dn't be you have any ideas, let the medical community of the world know and they will be oh-so-grateful. KEVIN FAJARDO SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Diplomacy can settle conflict in Iraq To THE DAILY: This is in reply to Joel Haas's letter ("U.S. should not be afraid to attack Iraq," 11/19/98) regarding America's current foreign policy problem child - a man by the name of Saddam Hussein who just happens to sit in power in Iraq. Now as someone who, like the French, would much rather try and find a diplomat- ic avenue in this situation however frustrating it may seem to get, I am actually a little frightened by the tone of Haas's letter. It reflects an atti- tude that is much more dan- gerous to both sides than try- ing to seek a workable diplo- matic pathway. That attitude might be described as "trigger happiness." We should always seek an excuse not to use that massive miliary machine that we possess rather than contin- ue a rather unintelligent but distinctly American foreign policy version of the temper tantrum - in relative terms, we are a young nation, and sometimes we act like it. Admittedly, Saddam's behavior is frustrating, even for the diplomatic corps. Further, I don't think that anyone didn't expect him to "play," if you will, with the situation in which he finds himself. He demands, as we know, that the sanctions against Iraq be rescinded. The United States' demands are that we get to monitor and inspect possible weapons manufacturing areas in Iraq. Well, Saddam won't let us see everything, and we have not been satisfied enough to lift those sanctions. It's a painfully slow diplomatic effort, yes, with both sides wanting the last word and both sides trying to exercise control of international poli- cy in their own favor. I may be an optimist, but I think that even this hill can be climbed somehow, and we now have to work on the "somehow." I personally will not toler- ate the "line in the sand" behavior that Haas purports. I will not give up in the face of seeming utter frustration, and I refuse to fire a weapon until there is sufficient justifica- tion, which does not include a Middle Eastern leader who is simply being what most Americans might call a jerk. I do not make the decisions to fire, but I do know that firing withn,,hi;,, nc,.. .,,ha Dealing with the new school activist p rotesters and activists are playing dirty these days. They're out in the streets and in your face, flouting the unwritten rules of decency that had for years accompanied public protest. Back in the good old days, the tac* tics of special interest groups centered almost solely around discourse as protesters armed themselves with only facts, reason and logic to win public support. But > :"::"". tat ws o scoo modern protester has a new weapon: explicit gore. When Dr. Jack SUNTE Kevorkian's video- HUNTER tape of the lit' ' Ht t euthanasia of 'u' 3 Thomas Youk aired on CBS's "60 Minutes" last week, the pro-assisted suicide movement's vanguard activist enrolled in the new school of activism, using graphic and explicit images to gain public support for his cause. D Death's calculated spectacle achieved part of its purpose: Americans who sat riveted to their television sets that night were consumed by emotion at the sight of the terminally ill patient's death. But Jack is not alone in his use of graphic media to persuade the public. Almost immediately after the broad- cast of the Thomas Youk euthanasia, the Urban Family Council, a pro-fa ly group, demanded that CBS and it Philadelphia affiliate KYW-TV air an 83-second videotape of a doctor per- forming a partial-birth abortion. If these activists get their way, Americans watching prime-time tele- vision will soon be assaulted with explicit images of the late-term abor- tion procedure as the group continues its crusade. And let's face it: Just about any kind of medical procedure 741 abortion or not - is guaranteed to turn America's stomach. Even during a trip to Boston last week, I was appalled to see protesters on highways and in teeming shopping areas displaying images of the oozing corpse of a furless mink, with nothing other than the word "fur" printed on the sign. Other protesters held posters with crisp pictures of purple aborted fetuses slathered in blood and amniot- ic f lu i d . t 'd "Abortion," the signs simply read. Though each of these campaigns may ignite controversy over a different topic, all of them have one common thread: None of them make any effort to appeal to America's intellect. Instead, they bypass America's head and go straight for its stomach with grisly images. Such gruesome pictures are rarel pleasant and are invariably disturbing, but gory images and shock tactics don't provide a sound basis for deci- sion-making. Activists - including Kevorkian - must be more responsi- ble in their campaigning by presenting balanced, reasonable arguments and leaving the carnage in morgues and hospitals, where it belongs. No one can deny the power of graphic images in swaying public opinion. Just look at how incense Americans have become over video tapes of nursing home abuse and police brutality. Though the video- tapes in no way change the facts underlying the issues, they can cause the public to simmer with emotion -- and to forget to look at issues rational- ly. Activists know this; that's why they use the tactic. For example, a proposal - that was eventually killed - floated through, the legislature about a year ago that would have required medical profes- sionals to show graphic photographs of abortions to mothers considering the procedure. Much of the reason the bill died is that legislators saw it as a shameless attempt to use a fleeting moment of emotion to influence a decision that would affect the rest of a woman's life. If abortion opponents want women to refuse abortions, they should convince the women - no* scare them. What's at issue here is not the morality or ethics underlying abortion, the fur trade or assisted suicide, but the means many activists use to secure our support. It appears that the various propagandists would much rather have our support than our thorough belief in the causes they champion. And this is dangerous. If we make laws or change protocol* based on temporary torrents of emo- tion and later realize that our decisions were irrational, we have little means of rectification. Once laws have been enacted, they are next to impossible to repeal. If activists must come at us with