4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 5, 1998 be idrtgau h ziJg 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 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 Breaking the solencen SAPAC display should be more prominent 'Let them say, 'A vote for Jessie is a wasted vote.' I'll say 'we wasted them with wasted votes.' - Minnesota governor-elect Jessie "The Body" Ventura, in an interview with The Minnesota Daily THOMASKULJURGIS TENTATIVELY SPEAKING --I4EL0 EVftCoK. INSrEAD 0 VAW A CAgo14 TOWAY, t TP OUOT 1 NELP Our TOE PST OFF(C. Yog{ SmYU t 5 1ALt MY AS|NT VS AL40T s IT ( COTIT WK 014 ELECTION t. ., AP~may, rEo~r osT mac ~sA&~ UNLERSTANP kW AR ENVOW WO945 AUDt 5W T IT TO 1WV W 6 APL*WS5 SOAE1A 56 A DA RwM: --4' 15SE APPES5 fl TM~I ALLort Sma / SUPMD 7b B SEIAr tA - - 4-- / 1 R S TO: MW*e -1S \ MASE TUC 15TOPW LETER TOTH ED.O LETTERS TO THE EDITOR L iving in Ann Arbor, students often see others wearing T-shirts with slogans that catch them off guard, such as "Elvis lives in Kalamazoo." Some T-shirts have a more serious message and speak an often- silenced voice of truth. A T-shirt displayed in an office on North University this week reads, "I need to stop just barely surviving and live." In observance of National Domestic Violence Month, the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center is spon- soring the National Clothesline project. The exhibit consists of various T-shirts painted with messages of survivor experiences. SAPAC's presentation is also featuring the Silent Witness exhibit, which contains life- sized silhouettes, representing women who died in an act of sexual violence. Each sil- houette carries a small plaque, telling the story of the person's death. The purpose of displaying survivors' stories is both part of their healing process and an education for people who are less aware of the reality survivors live with. The exhibit is also an example of the sur- vivors' strength - to express emotions, ranging from anger and disgust to hope, kept bottled up inside. Participants in this project should be commended for the strength it took for survivors to express their experiences. Students who did not see the exhibit missed out. But SAPAC kept this powerful and heart-wrenching exhibit on display in its own North University suite. SAPAC should consider putting their display in more prominent places next year, such as the Shapiro Undergraduate Library lounge or the Diag in order to reach a greater number of students. Does making a T-shirt, reading statistics about sexual assault or looking at a silhouette really change anything? Dubious critics should take note: It makes people stop and think. The statistics of sexual assault - especially those that occur on campuses - are often distorted because such a small percentage of sexual assaults are actually reported, and people have differ- ent definitions of "sexual assault," rang- ing from "only" fondling to a "real" rape. According to the Women's Sourcebook, 98 percent of rape survivors never see the arrest or prosecution of their attackers - leaving only 2 percent of rapes to go to trial. But the number of rapes occuring dur- ing the school year is not the issue SAPAC is trying to address. They are offering a visual aspect who shows how pervasive sexualized violence is - and how silenced it is. There are women and men at the University that were sexually violated as children by strangers or family mem- bers - and who may not have become aware of that experience for years. Students must educate themselves and be aware of what their friends might be silently dealing with on their own. The goal of the sexual assaulter is to make their victim feel powerless. SAPAC can take even further strides to give the power to survivors back. Most students spend a session of presentations during Orientation learning about personal safety on campus and the services that SAPAC provides - but all too often, the educa- tion stops there. SAPAC should make the exhibit well known and handy for students to access. With enough publicity, SAPAC could do the University a great service by extending their good work to a broader audience. Getting better Detroit needs help of suburbs to redevelop D etroit finally appears to be shaking its reputation as one of the most decay- ing, crime-ridden cities in United States. In a grassroots campaign to take their city back from Devil's Night arsonists, 35,000 Detroiters took to the streets between the nights of Oct. 29 and Oct. 31 with impres- sive results. In stark contrast to the 810 fires that plagued the city over the three- day Halloween period in 1984, there were only 155 fires this year, an 8 percent decrease from the 168 fires in 1997. Considering that there is an average of 60 fires a night in Detroit on any given night, 155 fires over a three-day period testifies to the strength of the community in Detroit. Detroiters' victory over arsonists and a distorted reputation is not only good news for Detroit, but for neglected urban areas throughout the United States. In an era when suburbanites are abandoning their homes in droves, favoring subdivisions even further from the nation's metropolises, the residents of Detroit have shattered com- monly held stereotypes of inner-city dwellers and shown that resurrection is not beyond the realm of possibility for even the most neglected cities. It takes more than sheer will to turn a city around, though. Detroit's ultimate suc- cess will require active support from the suburbs. While it is fine to celebrate Detroit residents' spirit with an annual pat on back the first week of November, suburbanites ought to remember the past four consecu- tive years of indisputable triumphs over Devil's Night arsonists by remembering the city all year. "Active support" entails invest- ing in the city, supporting businesses based cultural resources, hiring Detroiters and electing lawmakers who are committed to the city's revival. Detroiters have demon- strated time and again that they have the will to make their city successful again, but suburbanites need to provide some of the capital necessary to channel toward the rehabilitation of the city. Detroit does not need handouts; it needs the faith of people and organizations with the resources to establish mutually prof- itable relationships between themselves and the city. The General Motors Corp. obvi- ously saw the benefits of investing in Detroit when it hired 500 residents and embarked on a multi-hundred million dollar manufacturing venture within the city's "empowerment zone." The advantages of living by a vibrant city, while manifold and self-evident, appear to have been over- looked by all too many in southeastern Michigan over the past three decades. Those in the suburbs are bound to reap the benefits of a healthy urban core in the form of high property values, plentiful jobs, low crime and a high quality of life. Yet again, community members in Detroit have demonstrated that apathy and laziness are hardly as rampant in the inner cities as suburbanites seem to think. The people of Detroit have proved to the nation that America's urban areas are populated with passionate, hard-working people who care about their community. It is time for the suburbs to respond by investing in and promoting the rejuvena- tion of the inner cities. Dedication and community spirit tempered with money from the suburbs equate to a better future for everyone in the nation's metropolitan Lockyer did not relieve gender inequality TO THE DAILY: Whew, and just when I was beginning to really worry! I was beyond thrilled when I picked up a copy of the Daily on Oct. 27 and learned that, per the divine wisdom of Miss Sarah Lockyer, gender equality has been achieved. "Hooray!" I shouted, spinning around and around in all of my feminine glory (boy, was my skirt a- flyin'). Yay, no more 1.3 forcible rapes every minute in the United States, no more eating and body image disor- ders, a female president of U of M and theacountry, no more wage gap, no more glass ceiling, no more domestic violence, no more privileged women stepping upon the necks of (and ignor- ing the real lives of) less- privileged women, no more women on my TV proclaim- ing that cleaning an oven is rewarding and that "your period is more than just a pain," no more judges asking, "Well what did you wear that night - could it have been a 'black shirt, tube top and stilettos?,"' no more sexual harassment! But why go on? None of that is relevant any- more! As a newly liberated woman, I think I'll just sip a little on this Diet Coke and kick back with the latest J. Crew catalog. That's all we ever really wanted anyways, right ladies? CARLA PFEFFER LSA SENIOR Suicide does not belong in Crime Notes TO THE DAILY: I am writing in regard to the Crimes Notes detail of Oct. 27 ("Martha Cook resi- dent tries to overdose"). Frankly, I am appalled that this incident was put into a section of the paper devoted to crime since to the best of my knowledge, attempted suicide ceased to be a crime with the end of the Victorian era. Painting the act of a depressed and desperate per- son as such merely stimag- tizes it, making other stu- dents less likely to seek help. I am especially concerned as a fellow resident of Martha Cook. Unlike many other res- idence halls, Martha Cook is small enough that every woman in the building is at least an acquaintance and usually a friend - and as such, we try to look out for each other. Categorizing this woman's tion at large. A suicide attempt is neither, and trying to classifyv it as one merely hurts students who are strug- gling with emotional prob- lems. PATRICIA DARK LSA SENIOR Daily staffers should not intern for 'scab' papers To THE DAILY: I understand that the Daily has recently hosted a representative from the Detroit Free Press, who con- ducted interviews of Daily reporters for internship posi- tions. The Daily must under- stand that more than 2,000 of the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News workers have been through a devastating strike which started in 1995. After two years, the workers agreed to return to work, but have been locked out of their jobs since last year, with most still waiting to be rehired. The newspapers have had a series of court rulings against them, charging them with provoking the strike through unfair labor prac- tices. They delay and appeal while their workforce waits for their jobs and millions of dollars of they are owed in back pay. These are the same workers who sacrificed pay raises for years to make the newspapers profitable. The News and Free Press are scab newspapers, and the Daily staff should not be talking with them, and certainly should not be working for them. I urge the Daily to reject the scab interviewer from The Detroit News who is coming this month. I ask all University stu- dents to join the ongoing boycott against these worth- less papers. We cannot let corporations like these get away with treating their workers in this disposable manner. ERIC DIRNBACH RACKHAM Michiganders should leave the 'U' To THE DAILY: It's time for all us farmers to jump back on our tractors and let the New Yorkers have their University of Michigan. What they say about us is true. We lack the fashion genius they have, particularly the black North Face jackets that go so well with the inte- Daily misused anonymity TO THE DAILY: I am the "Megan" identi- fied in the Daily's Oct. 26 article on the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center's 12th annual Speak Out and again in the notable quote of the Oct. 27 issue. As your article stated, all survivors speaking out were informed that they could remain anonymous.Yet I made a decision that what happened to me was nothing to be ashamed of and agreed to have my statements repro- duced. Furthermore, I gave my name to a Daily staff reporter when I was approached. But I was only described in the article as "another survivor, who iden- tified herself as Megan." In choosing to disregard my decision to reveal my identi- ty, the Daily added shame to my experience and perpetuat- ed the myth that sexual assault is a deep, dark secret that the survivor must hide. I am not ashamed of what was done to me and wanted to demonstrate that through speaking out. Since I could not speak out in the manner I wanted to on Monday, I will try again today. MEGHAN ROHLING LSA SOPHOMORE Denying room to Cohen is a 'disgrace' TO THE DAILY: I am writing in response to the Daily's article ("RC revokes offer to name room for Cohen," 10/28/98) on the decision to take down a plaque honoring Prof. Carl Cohen. As a founder and prominent professor of the Residential College, the deci- sion had been made to dedi- cate East Quad's reading room to him. The purported rationale for the plaque's removal was that University naming pro- cedures had not been fol- lowed by the College. This seems a pretext, not a reason. The Residential College's hand was not forced. Its director, Tom Weisskopf, made a decision not to work with the University to keep the plaque up. In the article he says, "This is by far the toughest decision I've had to make. There were many good reasons for proceeding with the naming and for not pro- ceeding." What reason was there for not proceeding? The only perceptible one is Cohen's outspoken opposition to University admissions poli- cies. He and his contributions If impeachment efforts hurt the GOP bring on the showdown T he Republican Party may have suf- + fered on Tuesday because of its efforts to impeach a corrupt President. If this is the case, I say it's a cats worth suffering for. Lately I've been telling myself that I've become a something of a moderate. I like a few Democrats. The GOP's handling of the impeachment investigation wavers between the embarrassing and the catastrophic. JE Then came ELDRIDGE Tuesday night. S ' \ By early __________F4 Wednesday morn- ing, I was consoling myself with a bottle of Bass, glaring at people walking by me as I worked at the Daily, and mulling over the nation's latest symbol of mass insanity - former WWF star and new Minnesota Gov. Jesse "The Body" Ventura. (No fie numbers were available for Oregon Sen. "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan or New York Rep. Junk Yard Dog.) Watching the first election returns was like watching a slasher movie. It was a painful experience. One by one, the President's foes fell - Al D'Amato in New York, then Lauch Faircloth in North Carolina, then Bob Inglis in South Carolina. Peter Jennings and Brian Williams got gleeful. The Republicans got bitter. Newt Gingrich delivered his own victory speech early in the night, warning the news media and the public against drawing conclusions too early in the evening. Sure, he was smooth. Newt's a smooth guy. But I could tell he and I were thinking the same thing: We're screwed. Around I I p.m., pundits started ta ing about a Democratic gain of four seats in the House. With alarming pre- maturity, speculation flew about what the election portends for Al Gore, George W. Bush, Dan Quayle and the other photogenic yahoos vying for the presidency in the year 2000. "BACKLASH?" screamed the ABC News Website. "LOBOTOMY" might have been a more appropriate label. Political science professors will wi books about this election. How, in the midst of one of the greatest presidential scandals in history, does the president's party hold steady in an electorate that's slowly ebbing to the right? "This is a dark day, man," muttered an acquaintance, one of this campus's many reticent Republicans. Ambiguity abounds: Some of this was local; most incumbents won. considered across the board, there's an obvious pattern. Thepresident's biggest foes lost. However sick and irresponsible it may be, it has been noted repeatedly that the pres- ident personally blames Faircloth for the rise of Ken Starr. And D'Amato led early Whitewater hearings in the Senate. After Tuesday, Clinton will never have to fume over them again. Meanwhile, the very liberal, very divisive and very pro-Clinton Bar Boxer won reelection in California It's morning again in America. But this morning, opponents of perjury, obstruction and deceit get punished, while apologists for corruption are rewarded. One of my friends in high school, the very witty and very sarcastic Louie Shansky, used to have a saying: "In the land of the foolish, it is foolish to wise'to Voters don't want to rock-the boat. The stock market is back. These are the good old days. All hail Olestra, the Teletubbies, HDTV and low interest rates. Those mean old Republicans want to take away our nice president. Shame on them. How dare they invade invade his personal life? How dare they distract us with silly talk about crimi- nal wrongdoing and impeachable offenses? In late August I was having a convex tion with a Clinton apologist. "if the Republicans stand up for punishing the president and lose every seat in Congress, I won't care," I said. "At least they'll have stood for principle. I'd rather see them fight and lose than let this slide." I still believe this. Certainly, I never thought the situation would go this far. No matter how disturbing the impeach- ment proceedings proved, I never i red a scenario where. voters woi reward this president. Whether or not they were intentional- ly sending that message, it is the signal that has been sent. It is how this November will be remembered. Over the past few years, I've grown