Election 2004 * coverage The Daily's endorsement of John' Kerry and the Republican take- over are highlighted.C PAGE Fall 2005 c 0lTUDEn DITIOg 0' NEW STUDENT EDITION W Squirrels take over Sam Singer was terrorized by a group of Ann Arbor's noto- rious, overfed squirrels. PAGE5B SECTION B __ s.:,_ , a. ' Join the fih tfor e ucation F or a good number of students - and I'm including myself - this place wasn't a first choice. Instead, it was a safety school - one where grades and test scores could safely guarantee me admission. It was the vaunted halls of the Ivy League - the his- toried colleges of Harvard, Yale and Princeton - of which I dreamed. Who can blame me? Year after year, attention is lavished on the Ivy League because, as the U.S. News and World Report rankings assert, that's where the best students study and the leading research is per- formed. To drive this point home, a colleague of mine once pointed out that in a selected month, The New York Times mentioned Harvard University more times than the entire state of Michigan. (Harvard, Harvard, Harvard, Zac Peskowitz) Indeed, if public perceptions were indicative of reality, schools outside the elite Ivy League circle would be of minor relative importance. Yet, for all practical purposes, the elite Ivy League is of far less societal significance than schools such as this university. Academically, our professors are of the same caliber; our political science department, for example, is the best in the country. The fundamental dif- ference between Harvard (or any elite private school) and Michigan (or any top-quality public school), however, is output: far more future leaders are educated at public schools than private schools. Expand that analysis to encompass all schools, public and private, and it becomes abundantly clear: while private uni- versities such as Harvard steal the spotlight, the majority of college-educated adults come from public universities operating in the shadows. In 1789, the Northwest Ordinance was passed to guide westward expansion. Buried within the document, and now emblazoned above the pil- lars of Angell Hall, was Article III: "Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of man- kind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged."In 1879, over a century after the ordinance was passed, a large percent- age of Americans were still illiterate and higher education remained the province of the privi- leged. Nonetheless, University President James Angell gave an address titled "The Higher Edu- cation: A Plea for Making it Accessible to All." He made the case that any and all qualified indi- viduals should have the option to attend college and earn a degree. A visionary with ideas years ahead of their time, Angell laid the foundation for the University as we know it: a publicly-sup- ported world-class research and educational institution which recruits only highly-qualified faculty members; in Angell's own words, "an uncommon education for the common man." Today, the University is the crown jewel of a state which is rapidly running of out jewels - and more importantly, jobs. As a contributor to the Times pointed out, Michigan was once regarded as a prosperous state: wages, medical benefits and retirement pensions were secured by generous union contracts, while jobs were guar- anteed by a voracious appetite for domestically- produced cars. Over the last 30 years, as robots have replaced assembly line workers and Toyotas have replaced Fords, automobile manufacturing has failed the state. The traditional formula for success in Michigan has proven untenable, and Gov. Jennifer Granholm has been seen reading Thomas Friedman's "The World is Flat," which argues that human capital, created by rigorous higher education, is the fuel which will drive tomorrow's economy. The direct conclusion of that assertion? This university, easily the best in the state, will undoubtedly play a significant role in any economic renaissance. Unfortunately, while the state is relying on public colleges to produce a new generation of competitive workers, its leaders have chosen to abandon their commitment to higher education. Since the economic downturn of 2000, state funding for public universities has slowly begun to dry, and each of the state's 15 public institu- tions has had to absorb millions in cuts. A major budget deal, brokered in 2004, was supposed to limit the rate of tuition hikes to approximately the rate of inflation if the state restored $20 mil- lion in University funding. Instead of restoring that money, Granholm's 2005 state budget has found new ways to cut an additional $5.6 mil- lion from this university - a total of $30 mil- lion from all the state's institutions. At a time when the state's economic future depends on the ability of public universities to churn out graduates qualified to work in the flattened and globalized marketplace, it can- not afford to abandon its commitments. As young journalist for The Michigan Daily, reporting from the 1960 Dem- ratic National Convention in Los Angeles wrote, "There is no escaping the fact that the movement does exist, that it is developing potency and momentum, and that it has the ability to sometimes change a social situation." The young man, Tom Hayden, would later become this paper's editor in chief as well-as an icon for progressive advo- cacy and the movement - then 500 students who wanted the Democratic Party to adopt a stronger civil rights plank - would become the largest and most influential mass-move- ment in our nation's history. It was a mere four years after Hayden's piece ran when President Lyndon B. John- son signed into law the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - the single most sweeping piece of civil rights legislation in U.S. history. With- out the unyielding dedication of millions of young civil rights activists in Ann Arbor and What we stand for Daily a champion of students for 114 years across the nation, such a bill may never have succeeded. In the 1960s, the University was a pro- gressive hotbed - students organized sit- ins first to protest racial discrimination and later to oppose the rapidly expanding U.S. military presence in Southeast Asia. It was in this tumultuous and rebellious atmosphere that the ideological tenets of this paper were forged. An unbending commitment to free expression, a firm belief in the equality of all individuals and an unrelenting desire to achieve lasting social justice - these val- ues guided the Daily's editorial page then, and they continue to guide it now. Day by day, year after year - from administrative threats to campus-wide boycotts - this page has stood firm against pressures to compro- mise and equivocate. We are now charged with ensuring the Daily stands resolved and hereby pledge not to falter. For decades, in accordance with its deepest convictions, the steadfast and watchful eye of the editorial page has commanded notice from all echelons of government - be it from a Michigan Student Assembly representative or a concerned congressman. With passion, persuasion and often - painstaking reitera- tion, this page has fought fiercely for students' rights and administrative accountability. But advocacy and dialogue is a two-way street, and this page is worth far more than what we deem fit for this gray box. Essen- tial to the functioning of our University, the operations of our government and advance- ment of our society is lively, passionate and informed debate. In our 114 years, the Daily has served not only as a steady champion of students' rights, but also as an open forum for those who wish to be heard. As we pledge to continue the Daily's editorial tradition, we encourage you to contribute to the spirited debate hosted on this page. With the help of an active and engaged readership, this. page can become more than the Daily's editorial mouthpiece, it can retain its status as the printed pulse of the student body - a force that if harnessed properly, is vigorous in spirit and boundless in influence. Suhael Momin Sam Singer Editorial Page Editors Three reasons not to despise GEO JORDAN SCHRADER PORT HUt.RON STATEMENT MARCH 30, 2005 n Thursday after- noon, I tried to explain to some y , of my roommates why they shouldn't cross the picket lines that graduate student instructors had formed out- side University buildings. The reasons to stay away from class that day seemed so obvious to me that I had trouble even articulating them: Crossing a picket line is something that is just not done. I think I began learning that lesson around the time my mother was pushing me in a stroller along a teachers' union picket line. I tried to explain to my friends that respecting a picket line means respecting the unions that created the middle class and stood up to corporate America on behalf of the common man. I told them that if they saw unions as corrupt rackets, meddling in the free market and exploiting their benevolent employ- ers, it was only because the people who run this country have promoted that image. And then my opponents pulled out their trump card. All well and good, my roommates said, but GSIs are still a bunch of whiny slackers who have their entire education paid for and still complain about not making enough in salary and benefits. It's hard to defend against that kind of argument. The Graduate Employees' Organization just doesn't have a platform that's easy to rally behind. While some students take out enormous loans and work a full-time job to make ends meet while attending graduate school, a typical GSI has he full tuition bill paid and also earns about $20 an hour. He receives health and dental benefits for himself and his dependents, along with a stipend to cover some day care costs. The people who awkwardly lead our discussion sections and write illegible comments on our papers are not the proletariat. And when they make a big ruckus every three years at contract time about their plight, threatening to bring the University to a halt if they don't get their way, it can alienate some under- graduates who question their dubious complaints. So I'd like to focus on the positive aspects of GEO, and some reasons to support the union - even if you question its scare tactics and its claims of being oppressed. Here are three things to con- sider about GSIs: "Whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me." Apologies for quoting Jesus in defense of GEO. But the union has consistently looked out for the least of its members. It has made the most marginal groups, which would be easiest to cast aside, the centerpiece of its campaigns. The union stood behind parents in 2002, per- suading the administration to nearly double child care subsidies and investigate the availability of child care on campus. This year, it is looking out for its transgender members. GEO has already persuaded the Univer- sity to add anti-discrimination clauses concerning "gender identity." And while I'm skeptical about GEO's demand for health care benefits that cover sex-change operations, it does reflect a deep concern by the union for the rights of the minority. A win-win situation for couples Another GEO demand that may end up being too impractical and expensive to gain any traction is the "designated beneficiary." But if the administra- tion does agree to some version of this plan, it could have positive repercussions beyond the University. It could go a long way toward making a compromise in the culture wars. GEO understandably doubts that same-sex ben- efits will survive the legal fight over the meaning of Proposal 2, which banned gay unions in Michi- gan. So the GSIs want to expand benefits. Under the GEO plan, one adult chooses another adult to share his benefits. That's it. No requirement that the two people be married or meet any qualifica- tions as partners. Advocates of gay rights can cheer this plan because it puts same-sex and opposite-sex relation- ships on the same level. And conservatives will note that the plan removes their biggest complaint about same-sex benefits: that they give "special treatment" to gay couples, discriminating against unmarried heterosexual partners. If this innovative solution spreads, it could end all rational objections to same-sex benefits. A culture of respect In its 30-year history, GEO has forced the Uni- versity to take GSIs seriously and consider what would happen if these instructors, the foundation of undergraduate education, stopped working. More See SCHRADER page 2B A falling star JASON PESICK ON.>KE ~MALLi. \OICE OCTOBER 12, 2004 wo years ago, things were very differ- ent for Jennifer Gra- nholm. The young attorney general was manhandling Lt. Gov. Dick Posthumus in the ... on November 6, Granholm will instant- ly become a figure of national importance - not just because Michigan is such a crit- ical state on the electoral map but because her combination of intelligence, charisma, and centrist politics make her an ideal spokesperson for Democratic politics in the early twenty-first century." He went on Republican secretary of state and attorney general. She also happens to be governor during difficult economic times, when the trickle of revenue into the state's budget ties her hand. And Granholm barely con- trols her own party, split between economi- cally liberal labor Democrats and the rest of the party. 1 , . I