4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 8, 1998 ut iign ai 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan - : roc rn A. 2, LAI RIE MAYKC Editor in Chief JACK SCIHILLACI Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise nodte, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion ofthe majority of the Dailv .s editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Conduct unbn 'U' should impose standards on manufacturers o Blue" earmuffs; 'M' comforters with matching pillows; Wolverine boxer shorts. When students decide to attend the University, there tends to be a pretty dis- tinct theme in the holiday and birthday gifts they receive over the next couple of months or years. With stores whose advertisements sug- gest that if you buy one T-shirt, you will receive enough merchandise to clothe your immediate family for free, it is easy for stu- dents to indulge themselves as well. The Michigan logo is the No. 1 selling collegiate label in the world. The University should make absolutily sure that the irresistible 'M' gear is not being produced under poor worker conditions; depending on the company, it is a reality that students could be inadvertently supporting corporate abuse of workers. While no official charges have been brought up against companies that operate under the guise of the body that manages collegiate licensing, the University must ensure that companies that utilize its logo do not employ abusive labor practices. Representatives from colleges and univer- sities nationwide met this week with members ofthe clothing industry and government labor officials to discuss the use of sweatshops in college apparel production. Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman said that the forum will focus on implementing a code of conduct for companies making college apparel. This is essential for maintaining high working stan- dards in the United States and abroad. Sweatshops exploit workers who lack govern- mentally guarded rights to produce products very cheaply. Nothing, including Michigan Apparel, should be made there. The University's contract with Nike is well known for the criticism it has received from activists and the "swoosh" on athletes' jerseys that sports broadcasts always manage to zoom in on during football games. The contract between the University and Nike was signed by then-Athletic Director Joe Roberson, who completely overstepped his bounds in doing so. The University Board of Regents - let alone the students and the rest of the adminis- tration -were not involved in the decision at all. Roberson made a major decision affecting how the world would view Michigan athletics and the University. Elected officials, like the regents, who are voted on by the state, must be actively involved in such a contract that asso- ciates the University with Nike - for better or for worse. The University needs to incorporate the standards that Duke University follows and carefully evaluate Nike's practices before renewing their contract in the year 2000. The University should follow Duke's exam- ple by not dealing with businesses who use sweatshops. Duke's contract with Nike ended two years ago, at which time the school decided to include a code of conduct in its new contract dealing with the use of sweatshops in production of materials. Codes of conduct, while voluntary, can compel companies to comply with high standards if they want access to coveted copywritten logos. Independent contractors, not internal ones, should be hired by com- panies to monitor and accurately report the conditions that exist in factories. Duke set a standard that the University could match - and push the envelope further by actively questioning companies with which it does business. NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'A student is a person in progress.' - RickIHill, coordinator of inter/aith ministries at James Madison University, on how students are susceptible to psychological manipulation by cults THOMAS KUL JURGIS T FN ThXTVE SPE A ~ rSs T 1/4Vv dx,< Z1 W t A.utA tCup! Tws is are un ea# M t er cep drug test?" Aaore ;u n 6& Sr ck time! LETTERS TO THE EDITOR G E woother forums. Although Clarke chooses not Clarke also states that we to be a member of GEO, he GSIs' and send out "flyers on candi- reaps the benefits of the hard dates" that he does not sup- work of CEO members every GS SA' best port. This is simply incorrect. single day that he is an GEO has a stated policy of employee. GEO will continue interest not endorsing any political to work for improving the candidate exactly because of conditions of GSIs and To EDA people like Clarke. Every GSSAs, regardless of TEv A sa right year, GEO is approached by whether they are GEO mem- Steven Clarke hasarih a variety of candidates for bers or not. to not like the Graduate different local and statewide Employees Organization - I offices and asked to endorse SANDRA EYSTER will not try to change his them in some way. Every RACKHAM mind about that ("A proposal year. we decline the opportu- GEO SECRETARY to make GEO fair," 10898). nity precisely because we But I would like to suggest feel that our membership is something for him to do if he too diverse to summarize No olikes doesn't like the things that with a simple endorsement. o ne GEO does. We feel that our membership the stad i urn Is Participate in GEO. It's can make their own decisions that simple. Speak your mind about who to vote for and ho about the upcoming contract against. All we hope is that alo negotiations. GEO will be people vote. there, Stop by the office at Finally. I would like to TO THE DAILY: 527 S. Liberty St. and talk to tell Clarke that if he dis- I absolutely hate the new one of the volunteers in the agrees with the idea of "halo" around the top of office about what you would decent, working conditions Michigan Stadium. Judging like to see GEO do in the for Graduate Student from what I have read in the future. We would like to Instructors and Graduate Daily, it seems its staff would know. There are many ways Student Staff Assistants, then agree. In fact, I have not met to voice your opinion in we do disagree on issues. For one person who likes the GEO, and I would strongly that matter, GEO has negoti- "halo." I have a suggestion. encourage anyone who is ated successfully for pay rais- How about taking a poll of interested to participate. es, tuition waivers, health students and see what they in addition to this simple insurance, improved peda- think about the Stadium's advice, I would like to correct gogical training, non-discrim- new look? I'd like to see what a few misleading statements ination against international the results are. by Clarke. The GEO bash is GSs and other benefits that If you recall, Athletic not a chance to "drink all the make GSIs and GSSAs better Director Tom Goss said he beer that you can." [Had able to do their jobs. Does was expanding the stadium Clarke attended the bash, he Clarke opposerthese issues? "for the students" Well, if would have seen GEO active- As a result of the volunteer that's the case, why not let ly encouraging responsible work of GEO members, we Goss know what the students drinking. For us, the bash is a have a strong contract and think about the "halo?" chance to meet current and some of the best workingJAEMRCE future CEO members who we conditions at anyuniversity JAMES MERCIER would not necessarily meet in in the United States. RC FIRST-YEAR STUDENT VIEWPOINT mwpo ws allyna rate Pemts words make the Clinton scandal even more unbearable T he nation should pause for a moment and quietly give thanks for the blood-freezing insanity of H. Ross Perot. This screeching. self-serving dema- gogue resurfaced over the past week, AINN just when his coun- try needed him most, Before Perot let loose, it seemed that national dis- course was already at an all-time low. It seemed the Oval Office was occu- JEFF pied by the most ELDRIDGE scurrilous creature S TIK( VI possible. It seemed Congressional Republicans were trading crimes and misdemeanors for heavy breathing and badly written porn. We were losing track of what the meaning of "is" is, No more. Without intending to, Perot's recent comments give a new appreciation for the sweetness and civil- ity of the Clinton scandal. The question of whether oral sex con- stitutes sex has an inspiring aura of Jeffersonian grandeur. I feel nostalgic for the good old days, when pundits discussed the significance of Paula Jones's nose job. MSNBC commentators sneering at the camera and demanding the right to finish their sentence? Positively quaint. Consider the comments Perot made on "Meet the Press" this past Sunday: A man that would normally/unction rationally; if you get him high on cocaine, will act like Clinton acts when he e not functioning rationally. And I know that because I spent a lot of time in the war on drugs in Texas." Soon after, Perot added a caveat, say- ing that if the President is not on one continuous cocaine rush, at least he has been "taking something from time to time to spin him out and that's terrible." Perot's Sept. 30 performance on "Larry King Live" included similar analysis, plus a torrent of pseudoscientific babble about the President's drug-addled biopsychology. The Texas billionaire made claims that were far worse. He compared Clinton to Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, Fidel Castro and Saddam Hussein. Lest his remarks be construed as offensive, Perot quickly added that he limits the analogy strictly to "lust for power." This noble patriot is not content to sit back and let impeachment proceedings play out. Oh, no. He's going to launch a march on Washington, D.C. sometime in early December, with hopes of gar- nering enough of a turnout that the President will be persuaded to step down. He dismisses the possibility that there's not enough time to plan a peti- tion drive or organize a march. After all, Perot humbly reminds us, "God created heavens and Earth in six days." So the real hurricane hasn't even hit yet. Perot appears intent on driving this scandalto the lowest possible depths. Granted, I'm no Clinton defender - there's little doubt in my mind that res- ignation is the best way out of this mine- field. But what Perot is doing is equally reprehensible. Daniel Patrick Moynihan coined a phrase that's been bandied about for years -"defining deviancy down." The thinking goes that declining norms of behavior form a self-perpetuating cycle, until certain actions that were once heavily stigmatized become an accepted part of everyday life. Clinton himself has defined deviancy down to the point where intelligent people dismiss perjury as merely lying about sex. And in his effort to illustrate the indiscre- tions of the President, Perot further trivial- izes the amoral and grotesque. pa There's no excuse for comparing Clinton to the greatest mass-murderers of the 20th Century. His offenses may be impeachable; they're certainly not Hitlerian. The accusation that Clinton uses cocaine is not especially new - Roger Morris's 1996 book "Partners in Power" devotes several pages to discussing an alleged Clinton drug habit in Littlem Rock. Evidence that it actually occurred is dubious. Now there's Ross Perot, the Sonny Corleone of American politics, injecting baseless accusations and harmful rhetoric to a situation that's nearing crit- ical mass. A situation already filled with spite, half-truths and damning conse- quences. Can anyone credibly believe that Perot is doing this for the welfare of America's children? Can even the most ardent opponents of the President shrug off the accusations of drug addiction Going nowhere :House should put an end to impeachment issue Since President Bill Clinton announced that he had indeed engaged in "inappro- priate relations" with Monica Lewinsky, the Associated Press has moved hundreds of sto- ries concerning the chief executive over the niewswire. Headlines trumpeting the latest action of the House Judiciary Committee have become commonplace. What began as a tryst involving the head of the U.S. government became a national nightmare as spin doctors and political pundits stood their ground and defended or decried the president. But at its heart, the scandal remains a matter of sex and other issues unrelated to governmental opera- lion. The threshold of "high Crimes and Misdemeanors"- the constitutional require- ment for impeachment of a president - has not been met. When the House of Representatives assembles to vote, either today or tomorrow, on whether to initiate an impeachment inquiry, it should hasten an end to the questions surrounding Clinton's presi- dency immediately. Some might argue that Clinton's moral ineptitude in committing adultery is sufficient to remove him from office. Although it will win him many fans, his adultery is a tale for the tabloids, not congressional hearings. To remove him from office for what boils down to a value judgment amounts to moral main- tenance by the government - a proposition that is difficult to support without invoking a Puritanicalism most of the nation threw out decades ago. One' of the primary charges against Clinton that many cite as grounds for impeachment is perjury in the Paula Jones case. Determining whether or not Clinton perjured himself relies on a legal definition that produces a question much more com- plicated than whether or not the president simply lied. Just because Clinton acted eva- sively or twisted the meaning of the phrases Ci11Vlfl Y [lf' !11: , '1st I-t - tl 2_ _ l lt- A deposition. The case was a civil suit against him for actions that allegedly took place while he was the governor of Arkansas. While the president should have acted in good faith, his actions outside of the realm of his political office are just that and should not be the impe- tus for impeachment. The content of Clinton's alleged perjury would have been used to cover up legal behavior. While Richard Nixon's actions in the Watergate scandal involved cov- ering up patently illegal activity intended to continue his tenure in office, Clinton's actions were not as malicious. One thing is for certain, though: President Clinton is no saint. He acted disingenuously when he announced to the nation in January that he did not have a sexual relationship with Lewinsky In betraying the public trust, he hurt the image of the government and of the presi- dency. He may well have prevented people from being able to trust the government in the future. But his actions smack of bad judgment and poor handling, not incompetence and cor- ruption. While his handling of the matter should not endear him to the public, it is not grounds to oust him from office. The impeachment process should not be used as a weapon but must remain a tool for removing those who take part in gross acts of corruption. The investigation that led up to the disclo- sure of the Lewinsky affair began by looking into the Whitewater scandal. It then proceed- ed to numerous other "scandals" before stum- bling upon the nugget that was the Clinton deposition. The Starr Report - filled with graphic sexual details and one-sided supposi- tions - provided more shock value than it did substantive evidence. After spending $40 mil- lion and numerous years in the search for dirt, Kenneth Starr came up with a scandal that is at best tangential to its original charge. As members of the House vote on whether to initiate a lengthy Republican-backed or a a_ e e By ETHAN JOHNSON On Monday, The Michigan Daily printed a viewpoint that attempted, using strong rhetoric and half-truths, to describe the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and assert that the Palestinian cause is not receiving sufficient media attention. If University students are not to be swayed by the emotionally charged propaganda in this letter, then it is critical to know the facts surrounding this situation enveloping the Middle East. Israel was established in 1948 as a democ- ratic state approximately the size of New Jersey. It is surrounded entirely by non-demo- cratic Arab countries with vast lands and com- bined populations more than 10 times that of Israel. Almost every one ofathese countries is hostile, and the dictators who lead them have traditionally garnered support by proclaiming two goals: destroying Israel and throwing Jews into the Mediterranean Sea. The Palestinian nationalist movement was born as a response to Zionism, but nonetheless the Palestinians, like the Jews, deserve the Wilsonian right to self-determination. For this reason, Israel has been negotiating the creation of a Palestinian state seriously for the past decade. The Arab countries, by contrast, have no gen- uine interest in helping the Palestinians, because as long as Palestinian "freedom fighters" are in the news, Israel incurs negative media exposure, thereby benefiting them politically. It is also interesting to note that the Palestinians were offered their own state in 1947 by the United Nations but they rejected the offer because they refused to live next to the much smaller state offered to the Jews. This position remained unyieldingly firm for more than 40 years, so it is not surprising that the Palestinians have been unahle to create their statehood. Israel. The authors allege Israeli police brutality and compare it to the way "Mississippi was in 1964." First, unlike black civil rights pioneers, Palestinian protesters commonly throw rocks and Molotov cocktails at Israeli police. Second, Israelis are not, as the letter asserts, "machine- gun-toting racists" This blatant use of propagan- da writing style is both insulting and embarrass- ing to all readers, not to mention that the state- ment is flagrantly wrong. Palestinian citizens of Israel lead infinitely better lives than Palestinians living in Arab countries, have free- dom of expression and participate freely in the Israeli democratic election process. Moreover, Israel is the only country in the Middle East with the moral fortitude to help the Palestinians cre- ate their own state. The Arab countries, on the other hand, are mostly interested in fostering ter- rorist attitudes in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Yet another complaint delineated in the let- ter is that the authors' families "are not allowed to go to work" because of Israeli blockades along the borders of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. In order to understand this phenomenon, imagine that approximately every three weeks an idle book bag exploded at a different com- puting site of the University's campus. If stu- dents faced this continuous threat, we would be very apprehensive about who was entering our computing sites. Similarly, when bombings on buses and cafes disrupt the very sanity of life in Israel, the government strives to ensure that ter- rorists are not traveling freely across its borders. While it is true that the economies of the West Bank and Gaza Strip need aid in their develop- ment -and there are many that want to help - security considerations must be addressed. Finally, the viewpoint asserts that the Daily's lack of attentiveness to the authors' cause may