4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 8, 2003 OP/ED able £tftchijlun du* 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 LouIE MEIZLISH Editor in Chief AUBREY HENRETTY ZAC PESKOWITZ Editorial Page Editors 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. NOTABLE QUOTABLE Did I expect George Bush to fuck it up as badly as he did? I don't think anybody did." -Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, in an interview with Rolling Stone on President Bush's handling of the war in Iraq, as reported Saturday by The New York Post. . . .._. t,, h< 1'?o r i .{ SAM BUTLER CLASSIC SOAPBOX R. %elo c & . , 1, - -- . . + 1SJ 1e- S FiJ UY'njcVj. Gc: Q I 4 :d Q -_ ,927 l'(he e~sbzflce. o Piroct'as+'%n o+%0 vi Affirmative action for conservatives shouldn't be necessary JOHANNA HANINK PARLANCE OF OUR TIMES 4 he affirmative action cases may have ended this summer, but its wake is still strong both on campus and off. On Dec. 2, the Daily reported that the University had mailed 1,400 acceptance let- ters to potential incom- ing freshman, as opposed to 2,200 at the same time last year. The U.S. Supreme Court decision has meant that high school seniors are spend- ing more time on their applications, which require that applicants to the College of Literature, Science and the Arts complete two 250- and one 500-word essays. Race and diversity aside, why it took a Supreme Court ruling for the University to figure out that number crunching does not a good admissions decision make is mysterious, but we can be glad that the new applica- tion's thoughtful format tries to give those students room to stand out whose stan- dardized tests scores and "legacy" (whether their parents are University alumni) do not speak on their behalf. But predictably, there are still more conservative voices waiting in the wings for whom the Supreme Court's compro- mise wasn't good enough. A statewide bal- lot proposal in Michigan, promoted by University of California Regent Ward Connerly, which aims to ban any form of race-based college admissions decisions or employee hiring practices, looms close on the horizon. On Friday, the Detroit News reported that "A broad coalition of busi- ness, labor and social groups led by a retired brigadier general [Gen. Michael Rice] has emerged to fight [the proposal]." On campus, the usual suspects are already moving into high gear to do the same. But there's one other drip from the Supreme Court decision runoff that has only caught people's attention in passing. This is the question of how much the University is willing to put its money where its mouth is on the idea "diversity of viewpoint" - an ultimate aim of affirmative action in its admissions process, and one which is logical- ly connected to race, ethnic, and socioeco- nomic diversity. On Nov. 14, the Daily ran an article, "Lawmaker criticizes 'slanted view of reali- ty' on 'U' campus," which quoted state Rep. Leon Drolet (R-Clinton Twp.) as saying that the University contradicts its goal of diver- sity, which by its current policies is only "skin-deep." "I hope the University will stop treating people like pieces of skin," Drolet said, "but rather as minds." Knowing people in admissions and having read the new application, Drolet's remarks not only come off as offensive and insensitive, but also as incorrect. But this kind of sentiment is out there, so much so that back in September Mike Rosen of the Rocky Mountain News recommended that "The solution [to liberal bias in acade- mia, specifically in the humanities and social sciences] is to provide more competition in the war of ideas by recruiting conservatives who can speak with the same conviction for the things in which they believe." Affirma- tive action for conservatives? For this idea's proponents, it seems, it's not all about a mer- itocracy. In a note "From the Desk of David Horowitz" found at FrontPagemagazine.com, Horowitz tells the story of an ROTC student at Bowling Green who, long story short, was failed in a class on the Vietnam War by "a '60s leftist professor who regarded America as an imperialist monster." There are a healthy number of similar stories to be found on the website, and my inclination is to believe them. 4 The last thing we need, though, is a fight for quotas for conservatives. If this is the case, that a "conservative" viewpoint is both grossly mis- and underrepresented at public universi- ties, we haven't learned our lessons in sensitiv- ity and tolerance from the whole affirmative action debate. I don't consider myself a conser- vative (even after three and a half years on a campus where the "Left" could not be more annoying), but I did feel uncomfortable when, in an Italian class at Berkeley this summer, the teacher went off on a 20-minute rant about the evils of the United States, in Italian. I saw my classmates try to voice their opinions, but it was pretty difficult to do when the teacher required that they respond to his political argu- ments in a language they'd been studying for six weeks. The Right, instead of demanding the installation of an institutional framework for proportional representation of political views amongst the faculty, should forget cynicism for a moment and instead cam- paign to educate the campus in sensitivity to political diversity now that the word is out about racial and ethnic diversity. The last thing we need is bipolar smarminess, where the left grins and tells the right, "so you want quotas after all, eh?" and the right responds, "if you like affirmative action so much, make it comprehensive." What this boils down to, to borrow from other campus movements, is fewer "blue-outs" and more "fast-a-thons." So that's it, after two and a half years, my last Daily column. In the words of Sappho, it's been glukopikros. More sweetbitter than bitter- sweet. Thank you: Emily Achenbaum, Mike Grass, Nick Woomer, Geoff Gagnon, Jon Schwartz, Manish Raiji, Aubrey Henretty, Zac Peskowitz, Jason Pesick and most importantly, readers of The Michigan Daily. You are impossi- ble, and that's great. Hanink can be reached atjhanink@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Column portrays members of football team as friends, students, neighbors TO THE DAILY: Too often at Michigan, we, the students and other members of the University com- munity, see the members of our football team as remarkable athletes. While they are this, they are not just this. They are students, like most of us here on campus, with exams to study for and papers to write - not to mention the long, daily practices, weight training and any rehabilitation that they must endure as well. They are also friends to many outside of their teammates. Like everyone else, they try to sneak in time with their buddies as well. We may realize these issues and may occasionally get a glimpse of this in our classes when we happen to see John Navarre in a communications class or Chris Perry studying in the Shapiro Under- graduate Library or a group of the football players as they walk across the Diag with "nonfootball" people. But one issue that we are not afforded the opportunity to glimpse into is the family part of the play- ers' lives. Players talk of their parents being their heroes and always pushing them to try their best on and off the field. A never- ending wall of support and tower of love is the picture we are painted about the foot- ball players' parents. Rarely do we hear details of this or details of how the players are often key members in their families as well. They often give strong measures of support back to their families and some- times seem to be the main provider of sus- tenance and care within the family. This brings me to the sports column recently written by Courtney Lewis on junior linebacker Pierre Woods (Moving mom in helps Woods handle heartache, happy and fulfilled as possible. Love rules in his house. It also tells of the hardships he has over- come in life, reminding us again that ath- letes do not lead the perfect lives that some stereotype them as having. Yes, not only do they have exams, papers, friends and fami- ly, they also have other real world issues to deal with, such as death. We are then able to add resolve, growth, and a willingness to be helped to his list of qualities. Lewis presents us with not only a review of Woods's accomplishments on the field but also of his triumphs off of it. With articles of this nature, we, the com- mon students, are able to see the human- ness of Pierre Woods, and his fellow teammate on our champion football team. Their love of football rules in the Big House for all to see, while their love of life, knowledge, family and friends lives out of the spotlight and scrutiny of 112,118 people. HEATHER VOGT Kinesiology sophomore Article inaccurate, fails to address the severity of Bhopal disaster TO THE DAILY: As students involved in the campaign for Justice for Bhopal, we are compelled to correct dubious claims advanced in Stu- dents protest Bhopal disaster on Dow execu- tives' doorsteps (12/4/03). First, the 1989 out-of court settlement between Union Carbide and the Indian government never exempted Union Carbide from cleaning up the contamination left by the pesticide plant. The settlement only covered civil awards to individual victims. The extent of the contamination was not at the time known and was first officially established in 1990 through an independent study con- be consumed. International law, U.S. Law and Indian law apply the polluter-pays principle bind- ing Union Carbide to the liability and require it to remediate the site. Dow Chemical Co., as 100 percent owner of Union Carbide, is legally bound by U.S. merger law to take control of all of Car- bide's assets and liabilities. Legally and ethically, Dow's insistence that it did not cause the accident and contamination are contradicted by the fact that as purchaser of the company, it is Union Carbide. It is responsible for the deaths and disabilities resulting from the mutagenic and carcino- genic chemicals that the 20,000 Bhopalis drink daily. On its own website, Dow advances the policy of "Responsible Care," which promises "to work with others to resolve problems associated with past handling and disposal practices." It is currently using our own School of Natural Resources as an open advertisement for its commitment to social and environmental practices through a plaque that hangs in the school's commons. There is now dis- cussion of naming a Dow faculty chair in the school. The University should demand more from a company that is responsible for the worst chemical industrial disaster in history and not compel itself to plaster Dow's name to positions that deceive the public of its actions. DAVE SOMERS Rackham LETTERS POLICY The Michigan Daily welcomes letters from all of its readers. Letters from Universi- ty students, faculty, staff and administrators will be given priority over others. Letters should include the writer's name, college and school year or other University affiliation. The Daily will not print any letter contain- ing statements that cannot be verified. I Pt .1 A h0 d l ant toannnrnr; ..~l 4 4 I~~~~~~~ " rr.t~i~..ip~ I a t. e cv dent hesU Id exnlnre the resorces 1 A