4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 26, 1998 be Sitit r ?ait 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAVK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor Uness otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. A ll other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daiy FROM THE DAILY Referenda cover many important topics E QUOTABLE Today, I want all women to forget about Diet Coke!' - LSA junior Lara Zador, speaking at the first National Young Women 's Day ofAction on the steps ofAngell Hall. A AMRAN HAFEZ A IT APPENS " Tov St4A LT UWAVE NSME 01t~: w Tasn igr mEh tiVPMi& ."t 'OT M E g o M $T M T $04"" L 01 &a 10 NAMU T O SALT OT tE SA1 AtMSTM a P rr w JONR'S LRO MTR Y <. MIL1 uPR ETTERSTO THE EDITOR very election day comes packed with a big choice: Who to pick at the polls? But voters have another task to face when they head to the polls on Nov. 3- deciding how to vote on ballot questions. And this year's refer- enda cover some incredibly important topics that will affect many areas of students' lives. State Proposal A Proposal A is a constitutional amend- ment that would change the word "handi- capped" to "disabled" in/ Article VIII, Section 8 of the State Constitution. The change simply makes the Constitution's wording more friendly. Vote YES on Proposal A. State Proposal B Citizens should never be put into a situ- ation that forces them to choose between one of their most fundamental rights and horrible legislation. Proposal B, however, has done just that. Next week, Michigan voters will have to decide whether the right to die is important enough to allow state legislators to make decisions best made by doctors and create a committee hidden from public scrutiny. But the flaws in Proposal B can be remedied after it is passed - estab- lishing the right to die for Michigan resi- dents is of paramount importance. One of the biggest flaws in the legislation is that it makes uninformed attempts to put a quantitative measurement on what ought to be qualitative. The legislation mandates that patients who wish to end their suffering must be terminally ill with six months or fewer to live. This could prove difficult for even the most experienced doctors. Still worse, patients who are not necessarily terminally ill but who face tremendous suffering every day will not be able to seek a physician-assisted suicide. Another gigantic flaw in Proposal B is the constitutionally questionable establishment of an oversight committee appointed by the gov- ernor. The committee and all of its records would be exempt from the state's Open Meetings Act and the Freedom of Information Act. It is not difficult to see the problems with this - all public bodies should be open to scrutiny. It ought to be taken as a given that people who are suffering should have the right to end their pain through physician-assisted suicide. But the political climate in Michigan has yielded a referendum with some of the worst fine print in history. Ideally, the drafters of Proposal B would have carefully consulted the medical establishment along with the Constitution before they put legislation before the voters. They did not, and as a result, Michigan voters have to approve a monstrosi- ty if the state is going to allow them to exer- cise their right to die. Thankfully, Proposal B can be modified by a three-fourths majority of both houses of the state Legislature after it is approved. Right-to-die proponents throughout the state are set on modifying the worst lan- guage in the referendum and the courts should strike down the proposal's unconstitutional aspects. Most important, the passage of Proposal B will give people the right to choose when to end their suffering. A "yes" vote on Proposal B is not an endorsement of irre- sponsible legislation, but a vote in favor of a basic right that the state is currently with- holding. Conversely, a "no" vote on Proposal B allows assisted suicide oppo- nents to claim that voters do not want physi- cian-assisted suicide at all. Voting "no" and hoping that something better will come along is very risky. First things first - vot- ers should take their rights back. Vote YES on Proposal B. State Proposal C Proposal C, also known as the Clean Michigan Initiative, warrants passage because it addresses environmental problems that have hpan mreA hd the tat in reent var If ity, prevent pollution, abate lead contamina- tion, reclaim and revitalize community water- fronts, enhance recreational opportunities and clean up contaminated sediments in lakes, rivers and streams. The problem with Proposal C is the poli- tics that have surrounded the uncontroversial ballot initiative. Several powerful politicians, including Gov. John Engler and U.S. Sen. Spencer Abraham (R-Mich.), are hiding their poor environmental records behind the mask of Proposal C. Engler has slashed and cut the Department of Natural Resources budget, effectively rendering it useless, and he encour- aged the use of Michigan as a second home for trash from other states. On top of that, although this proposal is a good idea, the pol- luters of the state are the ones who should be funding it, not taxpayers. Polluters created the contaminated sites - they should be the ones to pay for their revitalization. Due to the cur- rent political climate, polluters who have destroyed parts of Michigan will likely never bear the full cost of their damage because that would, supposedly, hurt the economy. Given these circumstances, voters should support Proposal C because it is the only way such environmental problems will be handled. Vote YES on Proposal C. Washtenaw County Proposal 1 One of the biggest problems facing Michigan is urban sprawl and its costs. Washtenaw County Proposal 1 would address such growth in the Ann Arbor area. Gradually, people have moved further away from down- town, which could possibly reduce the Ann Arbor area to an urban ghost town in the future. These new developments outside the city are extremely costly to the environment and taxpayers' pocketbooks. Being further from the cities, urban sprawl is automobile and service dependent, creating the need for roads, schools, emergency services, sewer maintenance and other basic necessities of a town to be paid for by taxpayers. The proposal would raise taxes 40 cents per $1,000 of property. For instance, half the mar- ket value of a $130,000 home is $65,000, and the owner would have to pay $26 per year for 10 years - a small price to pay in the long run. The money would be used to purchase development rights from farmers, which will preserve farmland to be sold for agricultural purposes only. The rest of the money will go to the acquisition of specific types of land, like wetlands and wildlife habitat, the revitaliza- tion of abandoned urban areas, and toward the' coordination of planned growth in the area. If the Ann Arbor downtown area becomes aban- doned and empty, there will be significant consequences for the University. Students and faculty use many of the downtown-area ser- vices frequently - making their preservation important to the quality of life students expe- rience. Vote YES on Proposal 1. Washtenaw County Proposal 2 While the state's corrections system is not exactly approaching bankruptcy, students should nonetheless vote in favor of this pro- posal. If the money cannot be had from with- in the county, the Board of Commissioners may go to the state to fund the renovations. Considering the state's propensity for taking money for higher education and dumping it into corrections, voting against this proposal could prove dangerous to the University's appropriation. Vote YES on Proposal 2. Washtenaw Community College Proposal This proposal would allot Washtenaw Community College approximately $8.9 mil- lion dollars by renewing an existing property tax. The tax provides for essential components of education, such as providing students with computer access and basic programs. Renewing the tax will not increase the amount that Washtenaw County residents currently pay. The college is an important, widely rceicihle fnrm nf higher ecation for the 'U'maybe unprepared for Y2K bug TO THE DAILY: I am a recent graduate of the University working for a computer software company. I just read the article on the University's discussion of the Y2K problem ("ITD address- es 'worst-case scenario' in Y2K problem," 10/19/98). If the University is just starting to think now about the problems they may face n the year 2000, they are way behind schedule. Just certifying the comput- ers is not enough. All of the infrastructure at the University must be tested, and in many cases replaced or updated, I recommend the University retain a consulting firm to oversee the Y2K problem scenario. Trying to update all the infrastructure at the University by November of 1999 is definitely cutting it close. It should be finished earlier and then tested before that fateful day. Good luck: I hope the University handles this possi- ble problem scenario better than it has handled others in the past. In this matter, there are no easy second chances. ETHAN STETTNER UNIVERSITY ALUMNUS One mUSt not cherish sin for forgiveness TO THE DAILY: I would like to applaud Jennifer Walters for her state- ments at the Coming Out of the Closet Day on the Diag on Oct. 16. She was both inspira- tional and thought provoking in her statements about Christians the Church and their thoughts and reactions to homosexuality (specifically, the death of Matthew Shepard). Walters main argument was: "To be queeraand faith- ful is not a contradiction." One must agree that this statement is true (on one interpretation). To be queer and faithful to a romantic interest is quite possible, since romantic fidelity solely consists of remaining with that person. To be queer and faithful to a country is also quite possible, since patriotic faith or pride is the love and adoration for one's country. However, in the context of being faithful to be queer and faithful to God I will note, is not only a contradiction, but an incredible misunderstanding of God (or the Christian God). Jesus said, "Yet a time is com- ing and has now come when tlC- ,- nrci-nc~c ilnr all sin. So Walters could argue, (as we so often hear) if God is love and forgives, even if homosexuality is a sin, God will forgive her. That is where the misunder- standing of God occurs. God is love, but He is also just, and He has deemed what is sin and what is not. God has ordained that any- thing against him or what He has said is sin. God hates sin, and when we sin (whether Christian, non-Christian, homosexual, transgendered or heterosexual), God hates it. But because of the death of Jesus, God forgives us if we ask for it. Does that mean that we stop sinning when we believe in Jesus? No. But we are called to stop cherishing our sins. Psalm 66:18 says that God will not hear us if we cherish our sin. I sin just as much as any other person, but because I believe that Jesus died for me (and you) about 2,000 years ago, I am forgiven. I also know that God hears my prayers and my desire for forgiveness because I do not cherish my lies, my lusts and my pride (though I do these things). To cherish homosexuality and be a man or woman of faith will only lead to anger, either at God or at yourself. I invite all gay, lesbian and transgendered men and women to regard truth. God wants to show you his incredi- ble love, but the Bible says that He cannot do that while we cherish our sin. I invite you to come to Jesus for peace. never be suitable models for human disease. Animal research has taken far too much money and attention from more applicable scientif- ic techniques. Many prominent medical professionals, such as Henry Heimlich and Charles Mayo, have called vivisection into question. Many advances, such as the use of anesthetics, have come about without ani- mal testing. And animal testing is unreliable - the drug thalidomide caused birth defects in more than 10,000 humans after being found safe on rats, mice, rabbits, dogs, hamsters and primates, while the valuable drug penicillin kills guinea pigs. The truth is that animal research is a long- standing tradition that pro- ~ duces results which are easily published and bring huge amounts of funding to univer- sities. But the large majority of animal testing is repetitive, unnecessary and unscientific. The animal advocates I know and support do not "put animal life above human life" as Jeschke suggests. We are advocates for all life and want cures found to horrible illnesses as much as anyone. Animal activists realize that breaking into a lab and stomping on the brains of mice is not themost effective way to further the cause. ALLISON HESS LSA SENIOR Violence taints protest of racism TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to David Gaskill's letter ("Taub's letter was r'idicu- lous,"' 10/23/98). Gaskill said that City of Ann Arbor was being unfair. Who caused the destruction of city property? The ones that have the "courage to fight bigotry." Does one's beliefs make it legal to do whatever one wants? No. Laws make it legal for groups, such as the KKK, to speak their views without fear of attack. Does it make their views better than your own - no! It would be a pretty messy world if it were possible to legally attack anyone with whom you disagreed. Anti-racist beliefs are obviously far more noble than the Klan's, but let them be ignorant and let us be civi- lized. We should not look like babies throwing a temper tantrum, we must look mature and organized. And another point - what did the protest accomplish? The protesters were arrested and looked like fools in the media. The Klan performs these rallies to make their opposition act foolishly and to nit :-.34-4:- t nn rnn' :_ r The working class plight of the NBA player G reed has always been a great American tradition. It is the legacy of illustrious settlers who "negotiated" land from Native Americans; it is the culture of our hedonistic media icons; is a staple of middle-class life. An' today the tradition lives on in one of our most sacred arenas: The National Basketball Association. Through the eye of the fan, it's difficult to what's got all a these million- aires so ticked SCoT off. Fans HUNTER swarmed to RtOI. lI iT l_ 'I games last sea- ITmi S meU son in record numbers.Franchise owners are far from destitute. And the average player earns $1.4 million per year. But not everyone's greed has been sufficiently satiated.s0 Franchise owners, claiming the financial failure of several teams, want to find a way to limit the growth of players' salaries. Players, unsettled by the great wage disparity within the league, want fran- chise owners to divvy money among players more equitably. By all respects, this is your classic proletariat labor battle. On the court, you have a struggling lower caste of NBA players who earr less than $1 million, while otner players - the ones we care about - make several million dollars each season (and get all the women, too). The working- class players are struggling to bring some semblance of wage equity to the league so they don't have to all feel quite so inferior to the bourgeois play- ers like Shaq. In the stands, you have NBA com missioners and franchise owners, tradi tionally fat with earnings, who have suddenly claimed that unreasonably high salaries have made it so that they can no longer subsist comfortably off the players' sweat. The league and the franchise owners want to place a more or less uniform cap on players' salaries so that they can buy better players for less money. But neither side is really talking. So while we adoring common peopl* sit restlessly at home watching all the dry sports on ESPN, players and owners spend the first two weeks of cancelled season settling their labor dispute. As a member of the expendable class of common folk, it continually proves a challenge for me to understand NBA players' big gripe. These guys are lav- ished with fabulous cash and prizes each year; and they get to make high- qualityrap records and appear in com- mercials. Plus, if everything works out just so, they can each have up to 20,000 women over the course over a career. Doesn't sound like too difficult a life now does it? But as I've only just come to realize, this life is not that of the typical NBA player. Only the truly elite players lead such thoroughly idyllic lives. Michael Jordan, for instance, has nothing to complain about - no reason to be dis- content with his contract worth a report* ed $2.8 gajillion. He's already won the negotiation game. It's the other 37.5 percent of the league that is getting shafted. The average NBA player doesn't have everything quite so well. He is just your usual millionaire struggling to make ends meet. He doesn't sleep with Madonna, rap with Fu-Schnickens, or make films with Bugs Bunny. Instead he ambles around the court for a couplW of minutes each game to fill the void left behind when one of the rich players needs a rest. He sits idly by while cam- era crews trample him to get to Charles Barkley or Jeff Hornacek. And even thoughthe makes more money in one year than most people made in the 1980s, something still gnaws at him. Something quite under- standable. The NBA each year makes mo money than most people would imag ine. While individual teams may have its own money problems, the consump- tion effected by ticket sales, game-time commercials and N BA merchandising earns the league about $2 billion each year. However, most of thaterevenue is structured away from the very players whose sweat adorns the NBA logo. If you think the athletes make a lot o money, leaf through the fat wallets or- the men who run the league. Then. you'll see true disparity. What's at issue here is not whether players make enough money to sub- sist - I'm pretty sure Allen Iverson has more than enough money to feed ED BLUM LSA SENIOR Letter distorted animal rights cause TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to Julie Jeschke's letter of Oct. 19 ("Crime at Kresge is 'sicken- ing"'). When I read the origi- nal "Crime Notes" write-up that described the theft and vandalism of animal research data at Kresge Medical Research Center, I too was "sickened." But, as president of the Michigan Animal Rights Society, I was even more sick- ened to read Jeschke's letter pinning responsibility for the crime on animal-rights activists, "the only ones who could possibly see this act as being worthwhile." What would a true advo- cate for animals have to gain by destroying this type of data? Now, 16 more mice may be killed to repeat the original procedure and produce replacement data. The majority of animal activists understand the law haveo merefficent