4A - Wednesday, October 25, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com e f~ligian 4)athj Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890 413 E. Huron Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 tothedaily@michigandaily.com EMILY BEAM DONN M. FRESARD CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK JEFFREY BLOOMER EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Shady dealings Communication not too much to ask on skybox plan The proposed Michigan Stadium renovations, loom- ing skyboxes and all, continue moving closer to becoming an unfortunate reality. Just as upsetting as the thought of lofty luxury boxes distorting the stadium's traditional bowl, however, is the seeming futility in voicing opposition to the plan. While it's nice that the University is now holding a series of public forums to discuss the chang- es, that would have been far more useful if these forums took place before the University Board of Regents voted on the skybox plan in May. To the Grand Rapids-based Meijer chain, for countering Wal- Mart's $4 generic prescriptions by offering to fill prescriptions of seven common antibiotics for free, provingthat the magic of the free market can solve all social ills. We fully expect insurance companies to announce plans to cover America's more than 45 million uninsured any day now. To Chelsea High School Prin- cipal Ron Mead, for ordering the school's student newspaper to cut an article alleging area police give preferential treatment to Chelsea High athletes, sayingthe paper failed to seek both sides of the story. Just think how much more "fair and balanced" professional media could be if only that pesky First Amendment didn't forbid our government from having such power! KIM LEUNG Sca fe c - San e 6, 4o r. xz I For love of self 4 The advance of the stadium plan reveals a long track record of question- able maneuvers. Last May, the Athletic Department's proposal only made it on to the regents meeting agenda after the deadline had passed to sign up to make public comments, essentially closingthe controversial matter to public input. The case ofmisinformationsurround- ing the July regents meeting makes the handling of the renovation plan even more suspicious. Members of the alter- native stadium plan group, Save the Big House, were given the wrong deadline, allegedly due to a mistake, to sign up for the speakers list - again closing them out of public discussion. The regents gave one member of Save the Big House a spot on the list to compensate for the mistake, but other skybox opponents still found themselves unfairly shut out from speaking. Those who want to challenge the sky- boxes should not face such obstacles to making their voices heard. The Univer- sity must make its plans more open to public debate and be less secretive in its dealings. It shouldn't have to take Free- dom of Information Act requests to see stadium designs that already have been shown to the regents behind closed doors - as was the case for Save the Big House member Bill Wilson, who had to threat- en a lawsuit for noncompliance with the FOIA request before the University made public its preliminary plans last week. While the University did release the designs and fix dates for public meet- ings in the upcoming week, the meet- ings appear rather useless in face of administrators steadfastly pushing an already approved plan. Perhaps the administration remains hesitant to give voice to the opposition because other- wise it knows its plans wouldn't hold up to fan and alumni scrutiny. The renova- tions should have been subject to open discussion with community members much earlier. Aside from the unnerving lack of public discussion, the luxury box plan interferes with the sense of unity and tradition shared by all Wolverine fans. More bathrooms, concession stands and handicapped seating certainly stand to improve the stadium, but skyboxes loomingover the crowd takes awayfrom the common bond the fans share - all standing together in the cold, unpre- dictable Ann Arbor weather, decked out in maize and blue, pumping their fists to "The victors." The luxury box plan also threatens Michigan's claim to having largest college football sta- dium by restricting further expansion. Despite University President Mary Sue Coleman's objection to selling alcohol in the stadium, such a change may be necessary to encourage wealthy fans to lease luxury boxes. Another problem remains in the projected loss of 4,300 bleacher seats to make room for exclu- sive skyboxes and club seats. Save the Big House offers a cheaper plan and 10,000 extra bleacher seats along with other improvements. Its plan and other alternatives should be given a chance to be debated through proper public discourse. With both Coleman and Athletic Director Bill Martin set on building skyboxes, however, that seems unlikely. S tart your engines, folks. Another campaign season approaches. Yes, another vindictive battle for the hearts and minds of our student body - or at least the small fraction of us who L actually vote, much less pay attention to the impending cam- paigns - will beginV in the coming days. RAFI The massive lists of e-mailaddresses are MARTINA undoubtedly being- compiled. The posters will appear, and soon every conceivable space on cam- pus will be defiled with the names and trite slogans of our unscrupulous rep- resentatives. Look too for the Facebook groups lionizing specific candidates and their political party machines. You'll know it's really in full swing once your inbox begins piling up with seem- ingly personalized messages soliciting your vote. I'm not describing the crookedness of any real political system. Rather, these depredations augur the peren- nial student government elections, the knockoff campaigns of students taking themselves far too seriously. (For the sake of full disclosure, that's certainly an indictment I've been on the brunt end of, too.) But taking oneself too seri- ously needn't be an offense in and of itself. Plenty of us take ourselves and our studies seriously. Indeed, at the cusp of full-fledged adulthood, why shouldn't we? And yet seriousness in demeanor necessarily follows seriousness in deed. With a budget of about $500,000 annu- ally, such seems to be the case with our studentgovernment. But then why doso many of us consider it such a joke? Per- haps it follows from the actions of our elected representatives. Never missing a chance to refute the assumption that student government might conduct itself in a principled way, our ambitious peers have taken the rather sober tack of justifying their ends (election) with nearly any means. In that vein, it didn't surprise me to overhear a veteran of student elections instruct an aspiring novice that, "You have to be ruthless. ... Do shit that nobody else would do.... I was willing to do anything for a vote. Anything." Suchsang-froid in the face of sacrific- ing principles for political expediency certainly accords with political move- ments looking to history to exculpate their perhaps reckless missteps. Thus could Lenin excuse the perhaps exces- sive policies of a nascent Soviet Union in the hopes of future good. I don't get that same vibe with student govern- ment members. They seem willing to abuse their student populace with a zeal bereft of any ideological justifica- tion (as, of course, Students 4 Michigan always reminded us ofitslack of any sin- gular or overarching ideology). Wheth- er it's flooding our inboxes, littering our sidewalks with leaflets or obscur- ing our view of the pavement ahead of us with ubiquitous campaign pitches, our leaders appear not to have bothered themselves with our welfare, much less a grander goal to "end history" or what have you. No, it seems they're content with a recurring system - albeit with conspicuously altered party names - of abusing the shit out of us. And for what? Assuming it's indeed not for a larger ideological scheme, it seems the obvious answer - indeed the answer staring us in the face on every campaign leaflet - is the self-aggran- dizement of these ambitious individu- als. Sure, it's not a one-party system, though the succession of Students First to S4M to the Michigan Action Party might have us believe otherwise. A choice of parties notwithstanding, the salient feature of these political groups remains the shameless self-promotion of our enterprising peers. When S4M - or MAP - displays a keen interest in representing a plurality of beliefs and groups (some of them mutually exclu- sive), one shouldn't call it diversity. Call it tokenism. And with it comes the tit- for-tat of numerous narcissists willing to promise the votes of their constituent groups for mutual self-advancement. Let's face it - your average student cares little for voting. But student groups sure do. When the e-mails flood Only narcissism drives MSA electioneering. inboxes and the candidates knock on doors, it often obscures the real leg- work behind student elections: the mass mobilization of each student group - frat, political group or ethnic organi- zation - to get its candidate elected. It's more of a whip system than a democra- cy: The groups that look to benefit most from complicity in this amour-propre machine rely on their members' com- pliance, spurring them to vote the night of elections. All of this is not to say that student government is irrelevant (I think its fat budget speaks to its importance) - just unscrupulous. Or at least it's a congress of unprincipled demons one witnesses only in Milton's Paradise Lost. But this isn't pandemonium, it's pan-narcis- sism: Our representatives worship at no altars of special interest but their own. They're savvy egoists, future Karl Roves (undoubtedly a wet dream for some of them). These are resume pad- ders par exemplar. Rafi Martina can be reached at rmartina@umich.edu. 4 The real stakes NICKI SITKO Do you remember Vincent Chin? While the name Vincent Chin may not be familiar to many of us, nearly 25 years after his brutal beat- ing, there is no doubt that the implications of his death are important today. Chin, a Chinese American, was beaten to death with a baseball bat by two white autoworkers from Detroit, Ronald Ebens and Michael Nitz, after an argument at a strip club in Highland Park. Although it seemed clear that Ebens and Nitz had been motivated by racism, they received only three years probation and a $3,000 fine for their hei- nous actions. The Chin case came at a time when many blue-col- lar workers, faced with the decline of the once-pros- perous auto industry, were looking for a scapegoat. It was easy to cite cheap for- eign cars imported from Japan as a threat to the Big Three auto manufactur- ers. American companies couldn't compete, which led to the layoffs of thousands of workers. Unfortunately, those ignorantaboutthe real causes of the crisis turned to Asian Americans of any kind to abuse, degrade and murder, convinced they were the cause of unemploy- ment and poverty. This fear and hatred was at the heart of the Vincent Chin case. Although Ebens and Nitz claimed their actions were not racially motivated, the testimonies of several eye- witnesses provided strong evidence otherwise. What's more, despite the protests of the American Citizens for Justice and countless other organiza- tion against the sentenc- ing of Ebens and Nitz, and after several appeals, the criminals did no time in jail for the murder. One must question the bias of a justice system that lets off two white men who plead guilty to manslaughter of an Asian man. As Asian immigration has doubled in the last 10 years and the Big Three continue their decline, the real question is whether our social awareness of such issues has progressed since the 1980s or whether could there be another Vincent Chin case in our future. Even today, many blame investment in China and Japan for Michigan's loss of jobs and economic instability. Asian car com- panies are winning in the American market with cheaper, more technologi- cally advanced vehicles, and autoworkers are still angry and worried about job security. The xenophobia of the 1980s still exists and is hindering Detroit culture. In today's world, failing to acknowledge growth of foreign influence in Amer- ican markets will prevent a full entrance into the global economy. Detroit's aversion to the unknown, whether it be another race or another car company, means we cannot forge bonds which will bring our society out of decline. It's unlikely that another serious murder like Vincent Chin's could occur these days. Ethnic tolerance has significantly increased in recent decades, and our justice system has evolved to protect minority groups victimized in the past. However, the fact remains that our reluctance to accept the unknown still exists and has the potential to alienate many Vincent Chins for no real reason. Our society needs to change this alienation into accep- tance, or face the growing consequences. Nicki Sitko is an LSA senior. Get ready for a time warp - it looks like Republicans have turned back to the Cold War for some old-fashioned scare tactics. In a throwback to former President Lyndon Johnson's 1964 ad campaign, a new ad sponsored by the Republican National Committeee asks American vot- . ers to remember "they stakes" of the Nov. 7 election beforek heading to the polls.L It has been more WHITNEY than 40 years since Johnson's cam- DIBO paign against Barry- Goldwater, but "the stakes" remain the same: death and destruction - or, as we like to say these days, terror. Of course, the enemy looked dif- ferent in the early '60s - less like a bearded, turban-clad combatant and more like a mushroom-shaped cloud. Johnson's infamous "Daisy" campaign ad depicted a heart-wrenchingly ador- able girl counting to 10 while picking pedals off a flower. When her squeaky voice reaches the number 10, the cam- era zooms in on her eyes, which morph into a horrific nuclear explosion. Realizing the public has lost faith in Republicans' ability to "stay the course," the party is borrowing a page from Johnson's scare-tactic campaign: If voters choose the opposition, they essentially are willing the death of a little girl picking flowers in a field. The GOP ad, which debuted last Sun- day on national news networks, opts for even higher drama. There is no sound except the noise of a ticking clock. (Or it is a bomb?) Shadowy images of Osama bin Laden and other terrorist leaders flash onto the screen as chilling quotes fade in and out, leaving phrases like "kill the Americans" and "suitcase bombs" lingering on a black background. It certainly scared me - but not for the reasons the RNC had probably hoped. I'm frightened that too many Ameri- cans will fall for this obvious manipu- lation of our collective consciousness. Republicans know our weak spots. They know we were all glued to the TV two weeks ago when an unidenti- fied plane crashed into a New York City apartment building. They know Ameri- cans are willing to take off their shoes and be inappropriately "wanded" in front of strangers at an airport in the name of national security. They know words like "suitcase bombs" make our hearts skip a beat. And in these crucial weeks before the highly contested elec- tions, I'm afraid the GOP will exploit our country's deepest fears to maintain control of the House and Senate. The Democratic National Committee is trying to lift the curtain and expose Republicans as the Wizards of Oz that they are. The Democrats have run an ad featuringPresidentBushusingosamabin Laden's name 17 times in a single speech in September. But will voters recognize fear-mongering when they see it? The irony is that if the Republicans had in fact made America safer since the 2004 election, they wouldn't have to rely on an ad campaign so focused on fear. Think of what the ads might look like if Americans actually did feel safer. They might go something like this: A cheery woman and her daughter enter an air- port. The woman calmly hands her ticket over the counter to an employee with a headscarf, and they smile at each other sincerely. The pair then serenely boards the plane, and as the engine starts, the little girl begins to count to 10. However, instead of the camera zooming in on her eyes to reveal a nuclear explosion or a Taliban training camp, the woman calm- ly holds the child's hand, easing her fear. Thanks to the leadership of George W. Bush, she feels confident in their safety as the aircraft leaves the ground, at ease in the hands of the Republican government. Sound laughable? It shouldn't be. But no one, not even the most Bush-loving advertising agency, could make an ad like that work. Americans do not believe we A campaign of fear is the only hope Republicans have of winning. are safer. We don't believe it because the numberofsoldierskilled inIraqhasmore than doubled since the 2004 election. We don't believe it because we're hear- ing about the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan and the rise of Islamic extremism. We don't believe it because if we travel abroad, our international repu- tation is embarrassingly obvious. Republicans cannot rely on a cam- paign centered on the progress of the last two years, because America is slow- ly wising up to the fact we aren't really any safer. The last card left to play is fear. It's the same campaign strategy from 2004, and as everyone knows, a sequel rarely matches up to the origi- nal. The question will be whether the audience is willing to be scared into complacency again. Whitney Dibo can be reached at wdibo@umich.edu. JOHN OQUIST | THE 2006 WWF LIVING PLANET GEEZ...WHO'S FAULT DO YOU AND GOD SAID UNTO THEM, BE I KNOW EXACTLY WHO TO REPORT SAYS THAT IF WE THINK THAT IS? FRUITFUL, AND MULTIPLY, AND BLAME...THANKS A LOT, GODI CONTINUE AT CURRENT RATES, REPLENISH THE EARTH, AND WE'LL NEED TWO PLANETS' SUBDUE IT: AND HAVE DOMINION WORTH OF RESOURCES BY 2050, OVER THE FISH OF THE SEA, AND EVERY YEARI HOLD ON... OVER THE FOWL OF THE AIR, YEAH, NICE GOINGI AND OVER EVERY LIVING THING THAT MOVETH UPON THE EARTH. rL 4.. -r I I I Editorial Board Members: Reggie Brown, Kevin Bunkley, Amanda Burns, Sam Butler, Ben Caleca, Devika Daga, Milly Dick, James David Dickson, Jesse Forester, Gary Graca, Jared Goldberg, Jessi Holler, Rafi Martina, Toby Mitchell, Rajiv Prabhakar, David Russell, Katherine Seid, Elizabeth Stanley, John Stiglich, Rachel Wagner. 1 A