4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 17, 1998 c1Ie Bdifigunt Eui g 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 'I'm not a rock group.' 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 Affirmed Study supports 'U"s admissions policy he controversial issue of racial and eth- nic diversity has demanded attention at the University for decades. The adminsitra- tion's use of affirmative action in admis- sions decisions played an integral role in creating one of the most diverse college campuses in the nation. The University ,community benefits from the effects of affirmative action - the interaction of numerous cultures and a variety of different backgrounds results in an extremely rich 'learning environment, both in and out of the classroom. It has and continues to be a long, hard fight for student activists and University officials like President Lee Bollinger to convince the nation that affir- mative action is essential to maintaining diversity and academic strength in higher education. A recent study conducted by former Harvard University President Derek Bok and former Princeton University President William Bowen shows that the University's administrators have been right all along in its support of affirmative action. A book profiling their study, "Shape of the River," is being released in the midst of the lawsuits against the University's College of Literature, Science and the Arts and the Law School. The lawsuits object to the administration's use of race and ethnic background as a factor, among many, in admissions decisions. The authors, both affirmative action advocates, analyzed the academic records of 45,000 students of all races who entered 28 highly selective colleges and universities that employed affirmative action policies, noting their performance and achievements. They found the African American graduates from the schools obtained more profession- al degrees despite lower average test scores and grades. These graduates were nearly twice as likely as African American gradu- ates from other schools to get advanced degrees and several times more likely to get degrees in law, business and medicine. They also became more active than the white stu- dents in social services, politics and in com- munity services. Anti-affirmative action activists argue that admitting minority students to presti- gious colleges and universities under the auspices of affirmative action puts them at an academic and social disadvantage since the usual standards of admission are low- ered. University admissions officers mea- sure academic achievement by the Scholastic Aptitude Test and the American College Test, but studies have shown that such tests are biased against women and minorities - placing them at a disadvan- tage and casting a shadow insufficiency on them. If the University focused solely on test results and GPAs, they would miss many of the more qualitative measures of a potential students' worth. The University takes race into account as a contributing factor when making admissions decisions - enhancing the entire campus's educa- tional experience. Further, to deny many under-qualified students the opportunity to attend the University would deny them the chance to prove themselves in the face of a significant challenge. As the study suggests, when pre- sented with this opportunity, many of affir- mative actions beneficiaries proved to excel. The study's results not only show that the University is correct in its use of affirma- tive action, but also shows that high test scores do not imply superior intelligence. They simply indicate good test-taking skills. As the study suggests, it is the hands- on application of classroom learning that matters in the end. Quantitative student- asessment methods may aid in admission to higher education institutions, but they do not necessarily help with the applications of knowledge and skills needed for a success- ful career and contribution to society. - Democractic candidate for the 53rd District state House of Representatives seat John Hansen, on how to distinguish him from the band Hanson A LooK BACK MATT WLMs ATT }" I \\ - This cartoon originally ran in the March 28, 1998 Daily. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Voice your vote Students should take part in political process Airbags do not protect women and children To THE DAILY: The article "DOT plan may make air bags safer for kids" (9/14/98) brought tears to my eyes. There is absolutely no excuse for the senseless deaths of over 65 children because of air bags. These "safety precau- tions" that only protect the adult male population are just one example of how our soci- ety is still sex and age biased Air bags should never have been installed into vehicles unless they could protect all occupants. Women and chil- dren ride in cars everyday - yet the article states that "cur- rent federal rules require that they only protect belted and unbelted male dummies" If car companies can not test new products for all peo- ple, then they should not be installed at all. Only when the death tally reaches an extreme high will car manu- facturers realize that the pop- ulation consists of others besides adult males. LISA MCANUFF LSA SOPHOMORE Half-Shekel campaign supports illegal acts To THE DAILY: Although I am not Jewish, I always assumed the maize- and-blue buttons I see on cam- pus representing donations to the Half-Shekel campaign were a good thing. After all, we all support charitable ges- tures towards those less fortu- nate than ourselves, and I com- mend the "helping hand" the campaign lends to homeless shelters and hunger programs. But I was quite angered and disturbed reading the Daily's coverage of the Half-Shekel campaign ("3-year-old Half- Shekel campaign kicks off again," 9/14/98). The reason? The campaign "helps Jews from North Africa and Russia emigrate to Israel" ... this sounds very innocent to the uninformed, but the fact is Israel is an overcrowded state, and many of these "immi- grants" move to settlements in the West Bank. These settle- ments are illegal by U.N. dec- laration, international law and according to the new tribunal in The Hague, which makes settlement of occupied territo- ries a war crime. Thousands of Palestinians have been ousted from the homes their families have owned for centuries to make room for these settlers. Jewish Appeal claim to be pro- moting "tikun olan" - mean- ing "repairing the world" - when they are supporting internationally condemned activity and waging what amounts to an assault on a last- ing Mideast peace? I fully sup- port charitable causes, but am disgusted at piggybacking sup- port of an illegal and unethical practice onto those causes. SALADIN AHMED LSA SENIOR The 'U' has a responsibility to consider background To THE DAILY: Any public institution has the right - moreover, the responsibility - to "better" the community they serve. This responsibility includes attempting to break the cycle of poverty, hunger, crime and' despair that exists within that community by providing real and viable alternatives to those suffering from these hardships. In the case of the University, that community is the world; the opportunity we can provide is an education. We must con- tinue to afford all individuals an equal chance at hope. WhatIamsaying, then, is that admissions standards at this institution should be allowed and expected, (much like life), to take into account more than grades and test scores. They should review individual circumstance and decide whether or not admis- sion to the University would be likely to enable the indi- vidual in question to better himself. I am not advocating admission based solely on the grounds of race, gender, reli- gion or any of the other polit- ically correct buzzwords. I am instead suggesting that we reward individuals' suc- cess in life at least as richly as their success in academia. After all, who is the true victim The daughter of a middle-class suburbanite who is forced to choose from a handful of fine institutions? Or is it the young man who had to raise his siblings because his father left and his mother had to work 16 hours every day to make ends meet? Would you like to be the one to tell this man that he hasno future because he wasn't able to devote enough time to his studies? More importantly, would you deem his experi- ence and "life" achievements to be less important than the ability to drop an egg from a building without it breaking? I think not. Granted, the egg test is important - we'd never have explored the surface of Mars without it 1iRut until we~ live Article did not give the whole story To THE DAILY: I'd like to suggest a novel idea: The Michigan Daily should actually inform readers about what's going on in the world so they can make informed judgements about various issues Case in point: the September 14 article on The United Jewish Appeal Half-Shekel Campaign ("?3- year-old Half-Shekel campaign kicks off again"). In it, we read that a portion of half of the donations to this organization "helps Jews in places like North Africa and Russia emi- grate to Israel." The article doesn't comment on this state- ment, a quote from a member of the organization. We don't learn that many immigrants to Israel are provided with subsi- dized housing by the Israeli government in occupied Palestinian territory like the West Bank. We don't learn that these settlements are illegal under international law - the Fourth Geneva Convention, which Israel signed, prohibits population transfer from an occupying country to occupied territories. We don't learn anything of the depth of suffering that these (armed) settlements planted in their midst causes to Palestinians. These settle- ments are very often created on Israeli "state land" confis- cated from Palestinians by home demolitions and other military actions and available only to Jews. The idea that the Half-Shekel Campaign's actions (including admirable ones like supporting battered womens organizations and the homeless) can altogether be described as working for "tikun olam" (repairing the world) is doubtful, given the situation that settlements in occupied territories perpetu- ates. Unfortunately, the Daily doesn't give us the facts about the situation (which is openly discussed within Israel itself, among other countries). I hope that this article doesn't represent a pattern for the Daily's perfor- mance this year. AARON STARK LSA JUNIOR Beware of chalking the Diag benches To THE DAILY: A message to any and all campus groups: Whatever your political statement or service may be, go ahead and chalk it wherever you want. But beware the consequences Baseball, alive and kicking, ! offers honor amid scandal T his past Friday, the results of th Clinton-Lewinsky investigation spurted career-destroying carnage alt over the Internet. Lives were ruined. Dreams wer destroyed. A few hours spent leering at the car wreck prompt- ed me to grab the remote control.a Instead of reveling over D.C.'s drama or fretting about the nation's disin- tegrating stan- dards, I did theE M mature thing. ELDRIDGE I watched base- t 'ImA ball. 'iI)Ni 'The Cubs played the Brewers. I should have been dis- mayed that the Cubs, a team I love, lost 1-11; instead I felt an instant wave of relief. The game did its job. It was immedi- ate diversion from hateful event* America was still linear, content, sensi- ble. I'd never contend that any sport is, important enough to solely balance out the drudgery of a badly pained nation - but at times like these, a little bit of a good thing can go a long way. Baseball remains the only sport I've ever followed with genuine affection. Few moments in life will match the undiluted joy I knew in the fall of '87, when Frank Tanana capped the regular season with a 1-0 complete-gan shutout againstthe Blue Jays, bringin the Tigers the American League East title. The game had me hooked. I knew I'd never leave,. The world has ,been breaking my heart ever since. But this summer, life got good again, right when baseball was needed most. Pastel-shaded, slow-motion, Roy- Hobbsian fantasies poured over network news and front-page headlines. Recently, there have been moments when the game has seemed not just inspiring, but, welldownrightmythic. My conversion came during a two-. game series between the Tigers and the: Cubs. Tiger Stadium surely has seen better times, but for two muggy nights in June, the stands had an echo of grandeur. Crowds surged to 30,000 - a dro in the bucket at Coors Field or Yanke Stadium, but a major turnout for the hobbled Detroit team. Better yet, we were drawn by play- ers like Kerry Wood, Sammy Sosa and Bobby Higginson - not by Beanie Babies or free ball caps. When Sosa hit home runs both nights, partisan allegiances dropped, and he fielded ovations comparable to . any he'd receive in Chicago. Later, when Ma Anderson made his major league debut, the crowd roared for the highly touted reliever. The Tigers won both games, but on a certain level, the results didn't matter. I watch baseball like I read a book; studiously, the field as text, multiple stories playing out simultaneously as I try to take in as many details as possi- ble, and the pleasure of seeing the Cubs and Tigers play each other - the two teams of my adolescence, teams I nev expected to go face to face in my life- time - was enough. I now feel sheepish for having bashed interleague play. ' Someday Tiger Stadium will be laid to rest. I wasn't there in '84 and I wasn't there in '87. But I will be able to say I was there to see Sosa hit two home, runs, and I was there when, Anderson threwdhis first pitch in the majors. It was the highlight of a summer that included several other ventures to Tiger Stadium, my first trip to Wrigley Field and a Mets-Cardinals double-header in sold-out Shea Stadium. Arl''it goes without saying that the season unfolded beforethe Homeric backdrop of the Mark McGwire- Sammy Sosa home run chase, a story heaped with so many superlatives that all comments about it become instant cliches, an apple-pie epic centered i* two historic, Midwestern baseball cities. Their gee-whiz humility falls straight. out of an old Frank Capra movie; they're a Walt Whitman poem. Not to mention David Wells's perfect game. Not to mention the continued bril- liance of Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux. Not to mention the Mets-Cubs wil card chase. Not to mention the Yankees' torrential success. It will still take years to heal the sores. of the 1994 strike. No quantity of home runs or Yankee victories will make the owners seem any less greedy, the play- pre. anv, lace cplfih nr the amp wa nv, laos A ncient civilizations thought of political science as the mother of all sciences. In light of the importance of the upcoming elections, it seems that to a degree, that is true. On Tuesday, Geoffrey Fieger, the Democratic candidate in the Michigan guber- natorial race, visited the University. It is likely that his chief opponent, Gov. John Engler (R- Beal City), will also visit the Ann Arbor area in the coming weeks before the November election. It is a fitting honor that the University's campus are visited by the leading political figures of our state. Not only do local and regional politicians visit the University, but leading national and international figures pay our school tribute also. Hillary Rodham Clinton visited the University at the end of the winter term and just last Monday, a former presidential candidate in South Korea, who is now the Korean ambassador to the United States, visited campus. The fact that so many politicians visit benefits the student body enormously. Every student is able to listen to these per- - sonalities and hear what they have to say verbatim. There is no media taint, and scan- dal of any nature fades away as the political character lays out his or her ideology for the student body. It should come as no great surprise that so many well-known and respected politi- cians come to the University. The student body has traditionally been very politically active on election day and through its work on political campaigns. In addition, the r'ntir .. i , n. P r1n m a a n r ttan-'c. t11 lltrlnan serves as a valuable resource for students interested in both working in politics and interpreting various political issues. With all these unparalleled resources, the University's student body should be involved in the political scene. While politics may seem not to get into our everyday life, it is composed of the fabric of our everyday life. The student body must know exactly who the candi- dates are and for which issues they stand. Candidates must be carefully screened before they are elected for any potential defects; issues and ideas must be careful- ly analyzed and weighed in the minds of the voters. Having all of these excellent resources and opportunities, the student body should transcend media blurbs and partisan squabbles to be thoroughly informed and involved in the political process. Every member of the University's student body who is eligible to vote should register and take part in the politi- cal process. Students that have yet to reg- ister to vote should do so by Oct. 3 to ensure that they can cast a ballot come November. When the student body real- izes that their financial stability along with the world in which they will raise their kids will be determined by the poli- tics of today, political science will, maybe not be the mother of all sciences, but at least will be one of the important ones. Perhaps by November the student body will not only vote but also be politically active by showing the benefits of the tntl aikir 1,, ura iop i