4A - Friday, November 3, 2006 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890 413 E. Huron St. r 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. Bring back Brater Experience and issues make incumbent the best choice W ith term limits ensuring few politicians stay in Lansing for long, state Sen. Liz Brater is about as experienced a Michigan legislator as one will find these days. Brater is seeking a second and final four-year term in the state Senate from the 18th district, having already served in the state House for six years, the maximum allowed. She faces challenges from Repub- lican John Kopinski and a write-in candidate, Tom Partridge. When black Americans refer to Obama as 'one of us,' I do not know what they are talking about.... (He has not) lived the life of a black American." - COLUMNIST STANLEY CROUCH, refer- ring to Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.), in a column published yesterday in the New York Daily News. KIM LEUNG 1/ 5 {(' \ i S{j 4 Six simple rules for life in A2 nside Michigan Politics editor Bill Bal- lenger has designated Brater as the most liberal state senator. While that might be a dangerous label elsewhere in the state, it won't hurt Brater's chances for re-election from a solidly Democratic district in Washt- enaw County. The slant of Brater's district gives her the freedom to voice concerns that other Democrats might avoid, such as point- ing out that the state needs more revenue to provide the services that residents want from it. Brater hasn't had terribly much luck get- ting her legislation on the agenda over the past four years, but that's life in the state Legislature's minority party. She has some solid ideas, though, that deserve more attention than they've received. Brater has proposed a package of voting reforms that would allow separate addresses for voter registration and drivers' licenses. Currently, they must be the same, a restriction that keeps many college students from voting. She wants to see more mentally ill criminals receive treatment rather than jail time, and she has constructive ideas for developing a land-use policy different from the status quo of urban sprawl and neglect of core cities. John Kopinski, Brater's Republican chal- lenger, is running in part to encourage more young people to become involved in politics. You can even find the 25-year-old Michigan Tech alumnus on Facebook and MySpace. A political newcomer, Kopinski is refresh- ingly willing to ignore the typical partisan divisions. He's happy with his opponent's environmental advocacy. Kopinski is down- right enthusiastic about improving public transit - an awfully rare quality for a Michi- gan Republican seeking public office. The Elliott-Larsen Act, Michigan's prima- ry civil rights law, currently protects against unfair treatment based on height or weight, but does not prohibit discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. Kopinski is open to changing that. In other areas, however, Kopinski adheres to his putative party line all too well, staking out hard-right social conservative positions on abortion - he opposes it even in cases of rape and incest- and on embryonic stem-cell research. Kopinski is an interesting candidate, and government would work better if our political system were more amenable to candidates like him who aren't easy to paint entirely in red or blue. His lack of experi- ence and his social views, however, compare unfavorably to the Democratic incumbent, and the Daily endorses LIZ BRATER for state Senate from the 18th district. kWrkinonarailro Rail line superior to costly highway expansion Michigan's attempt to claim a more sustainable and secure future is in many ways a collective cultural response to the slow and raspy death of its automotive industry. And in a state that has shunned public transportation in nearly all forms, trains are finally revealing their potential. Perhaps steel and wheels cannot solve all of Michigan's economic difficulties or ease the transition to a knowledge-based economy, but a new model of human and environmental interaction surely couldn't hurt. What southeastern Michigan needs is a commuter rail line - both to provide a much-needed service to commuters, and because the proposed commuter rail is more economically viable than the alternative. Ann Arbor Mayor John Hieftje's floating plan for an Ann Arbor-Livingston County commuter rail line to ease congestion along the US-23 cor- ridor may become a reality. Over the past year, decades ofcareful plan- ning for publicransit have found a home in a set of existing freight lines. Early June saw a coalition of local politicians, entrepreneurs, railway enthusiasts and University repre- sentatives embark on an 80-mile passen- ger voyage along the Ann Arbor and Great Lakes Central Railroads in anticipation of the inception of a new era of transportation based on an old model - commuter rail. The occasion was the union of the local govern- ment's enthusiasm for the rail project with concerted private support. Louis P. Ferris Jr., owner of the Federated Financial Corp of America, acquired the Tus- cola Saginaw Bay Railway (promptly renamed the Great Lakes Central Railway) in March and has since dedicated his financial prowess to building a coalition of public subsidies and private-sector funds to facilitate the project's groundbreaking. While you may not be able to ride the rails by this time nextyear, Ferris's support should help to boost morale for the wait. Ever the optimistic gambler, Ferris has also invested in 52 double-decker, stainless- steel passenger rail cars. The project will not require laying new rail, though significant modifications of the existing freight line will be required to enable the passenger rail line to make its first run in three years. The track must be updated to allow trains to travel up to 60 miles per hour; several crossing gates must be installed along the line, and at least three stations, including a proposed park-and- ride stop, will have to be built. All told, the commuter project is a $27-million invest- ment - a number that, as Hieftje and Fer- ris point out, is far less terrifying than the $500 million required to add a third lane to the local stretch of US-23. The wide coalition rallying in support of the return of trains to Michigan's heartlands should make the prospect of raising the required $27 million less harrowing. Sus- tainable energy advocates, cultural roman- tics, proponents of more effective land-use laws and sequestered suburbanites looking for a bit of the East Coast experience - or sick of the search for parking garages - all rejoice in the increasing likelihood of the line's construction. But money alone will not bring the trains. Finances and red tape waltz hand-in-hand over the graves of many would-be commu- nity initiatives, and the passenger rail is no exception. As per the policies of the Michi- gan Department of Transportation, the Ann Arbor community must conduct an envi- ronmental impact study of the proposed changes to Ferris's rail lines. The study must then weigh these results against the US-23 expansion plans. The study is slated to take 18 months, but Hieftje is optimistic that the same coalition that will fund the rails will also help to speed up grassroots research efforts. Public transportation can do wonders for the transformation of communities from isolated nodes of random and temporary interaction to bustling, dynamic human landscapes. All that for $400 million less than the cost of a third lane? Even the ghost of Henry Ford would drink to that. A nyonewhio how passionate I am about chang- ing the housing situation for stu- dents across cam- pus.Foryears,I've watched injustice JARED after injusticeG plague friends GOLDBERG and roommates. Now, given that I will not be living in Ann Arbor next year, and I have lived here as a student nearly consistently for nearly four years, it's time to share my wisdom about the reality of hous- ing for University students here in glorious Ann Arbor. 1. On-campus housing is lousy. The largest dorm - Bursley Hall, home to 1,240 people - is about as far as you can get from Central Campus. It's also the most recently constructed dorm, though it was completed near- ly 40 years ago. The cleanliness of residence hall bathrooms, especially community ones, leaves much to be desired. And whoever thought that not building a cafeteria in every resi- dence hall was a good idea probably never had to trudge through snow (uphill) to the neighboring residence hall. 2. Off-campus housing is worse. If you thought a cramped cell in Mark- ley was bad, try living in the slum ten- ements located just off campus. The prices are outrageous, the houses and apartments could easily be confused with crack dens, and student neigh- borhoods are a major target of crime. While the Ann Arbor Police Depart- ment practically sends out a SWAT team to off-campus neighborhoods to enforce alcohol laws, the police were Columnist wrong: No mutiny for Steele TO THE DAILY: I'm curious to know where John Stiglich has been getting his informa- tion about the Maryland Senate race between Ben Cardin and Michael Steele (Stealing Obama's thunder, 11/02/2006). Stiglich states that Prince George County's blacks are engaged in mutiny against the Democratic Party. While several black Democratic county leaders have recently endorsed Steele, yesterday's WashingtonPostnotes that, in the last gubernatorial election in Maryland (from which Steele emerged as lieutenant governor), only 14 per- cent of that county's black voters sup- ported him. Not exactly overwhelming numbers. Additionally, according to an Oct. 22-26 poll by the Washington Post, Steele trails Cardin by 11 percent. Hardly a reason tobe scared shitless. Aaron Willis LSA sophomore Borat'a film to be taken lightly TO THE DAILY: I truly feel bad for the two authors of The real Borat (11/01/2006) who are afraid to publish their names in the Daily because of the likelihood of retribution from the government of Kazakhstan. But I have to ask, given the fear that repressive government has inspired in them, was criticizing a film that was never meant to be taken seriously really the best use of their anonymous pulpit? Ben Beckett LSA sophomore MSA crosses line in condemning MCRI TO THE DAILY: Tuesday night, the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly passed a resolution to essentially condemn the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative (Proposal 2). MSA has crossed the line between attempting to influence state elections and doing what is actually in students' best interests. Is it appropriate for MSA to take a side on this proposal while the opinions of the students it SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@MICHIGANDAILY.COM supposedly represents are split on the issue? Would it be appropriate for MSA to endorse a gubernatorial candidate? Absolutely not. So what gives MSA the right to do this? This is the same MSA party that dictated to students what they should drink by supporting the Coke ban. Tuesday night, MSA once again sat on its high horse, attempting to dic- tate to students how they should vote while ridiculing and humiliatingthose who spoke out against them. MSA's attempts to influence state and nation- al politics must stop at once. There is a new party this election that vows to take the political B.S. out of MSA and focus solely on students' needs: the Student Liberty Party. For this reason, I urge you all to support the SLP. Dan Shuster Rackham The letter writer is an MSA Rackham representative and a member of the Student Liberty Party An apology to misled opponents ofDHMO TO THE DAILY: I apologize to Daily readers and edi- moment" for the students who have an uninformed or biased view about black students. But rather than encourage self-reflection in such students, Cohen prefers to work to bring about a situ- ation in which black students would almost disappear from campus. According to scholar Maya Rock- eymoore, a 2004 U.S. Department of Education report states that "in schools where at least 75 percent of students are low income, there are three times as manyuncertified or out- of-field teachers teaching both Eng- lish and science than in schools with middle and high income students." She further cites a 2005 Harvard Civil Rights Project study of 11 states which found that "schools serving the highest percentage of minority students have fewer teachers with full credentials, twice as many teachers with emergen- cy credentials and more inexperienced teachers than schools serving the few- est minorities." Every honest person of any back- ground knows that this is the reality of American education. We all know that the abstract and barren "equality" between blacks and whites that Cohen tediously asserts simply does not yet exist. That's whyit is vital to all Michi- ganders that Proposal 2 be soundly rejected. We still have to work for fair- ness for all. missing when a friend of mine was almost mugged and assaulted less than a block from the Law School. 3. There is a special circle in Hell for bad landlords. In college towns, a good landlord is the exception, not the rule. Most landlords are oppres- sive profiteers who see no shame in robbing students. And this isn't just an Ann Arbor problem. Last spring I read about the case of Central Michi- gan University students Courtney Hernandez and Kathryn Mahanic. Hernandez was killed in a crash with a drunken driver while Mah- anic barely escaped with her life. At the advice of her friends, family and therapist, Mahanic moved out of the apartment she shared with Her- nandez, getting assurances from her landlord that a new tenant would be found. Six months later, her landlord sued the still-grieving families to get the unpaid rent. 4. Avoid the truly slimy landlords. Student Legal Services should pro- vide a list, based on the number of lawsuits in which it represents stu- dents against their landlords, of the worst of the worst. The slimiest in my experience was Jeffrey Gallatin of Gallatin Realty. In order to maximize profit, landlords like Gallatin will get around the city ordinance that allows only six non-related people to lease a single unit by just keeping extra ten- ants off of a lease. That's what Gall- atin did to fit nine people into our house. Keeping track of what part of the unit is responsible for what utility bill is always important, unless you want to pay for something you aren't renting. In our case, we ended up paying for a basement that Gallatin used exclusively while we were only allowed use of the first two floors. Finally, while security deposits are legally - under state law - the property of the tenant, in Ann Arbor it's more like a communal fridge the landlord can raid at will. Out of more than $6,000 in our security deposit, Gallatin initially returned less than $150. 5. Student Legal Services isn't that great. A relatively unknown rule is that SLS cannot represent students against each other. In theory, that's a reasonable idea; in practice, it pro- vides an excuse for SLS to bail when the going gets tough. When we sued Gallatin for our security depositback, at first SLS was ecstatic about repre- senting us. This enthusiasm turned to disdain, and eventually SLS refused to continue being our attorneys, forc- ing us to settle. Coincidentally, this was just several weeks before we were to go to trial. In the end, Galla- tin unfairly, but legally, kept well over half of our security deposit. 6. Make sure your roommates are up front with you. There are too few statutes outlining landlord and ten- ant rights, but there don't seem to be any at all defining rights between two tenants of the same property. If a roommate does something objec- tionable, there aren't a whole lot of options to pursue. My current room- mate has had his freshman girlfriend stay over every single night, despite my recent protests. Lindsay has a room in Markley. That's where she needs to stay. These are six simple rules to sur- viving the pit I like to call Ann Arbor. You can heed them or you can ignore them. The choice and its consequenc- es are yours. Jared Goldberg can be reached at jaredgo@umich.edu. 6 I I tors who I misled into believing that the dihydrogen monoxide survey I did John Woodford was my original idea (Do you oppose Ann Arbor DHMO?, 10/31/2006). Tom Regan is correct (DHMO gag old news, on Inter- net for years, 11/01/2006) - my survey Ifyou want is merely a variation on an old joke, and in writing my viewpoint, I failed 4.0, go to S to properly cite my sources. I'dliketothank Tom Way,the owner TO THE DAILY: of www.dhmo.org, the website I drew I read Christine. from heavily when putting together stepstowarda 4.0(1 my viewpoint. I'm sorry I didn't give like to add one she him due credit in the article itself this University. an easy tate Beamer'sEight easy 10/30/2006), and I'd missed: Don't go to AndrewKoltonow Engineeringfreshman JosephByrne LSA senior JOHN OQUIST USH.I CAN'T WATCH TV NEWS THESE SENATORS AND "PNDITS THEY SHOULD SEND ALL OF THEM ANYMORE. EVERY MAJOR NEWS AND "ANALYSTS" WHO TAKE OVER TO IRAQ, BECAUSE LET'S OUTLET IS COVERING REACTION TIME OUT OF DEALING WITH FACE IT, THEY'RE DUM ENOUGH TO ABOTCHED JOKE REAL ISSUES TO MANUFACTURE TO SERVE IN THE ARMED FORCES BY JOHN KERRY. OUTRAGE ARE DISGRACEFUL ANYWAYI I MEAN, DUMB ENOUGH / TOG ET THE ARMED FORCES STUCK IN IRAQI I MEAN- 0 MAESMIA, IR~EAT K 05nlsec~RS PAG Cohen misrepresents 'U' Unions not better state of education than this guy's mom TO THE DAILY: TO THE DAILY: Carl Cohen is at it again (From pan- I would like everyone on campus to elists, a few last words on Proposal 2, know that, contrary to what the adver- 11/02/2006). As in his past writings, tisements in the Daily may say, Univer- he highlights the feelings of black stu- sity Unions are nowhere near as good dents who he claims are humiliated by as my mom. other students' views on affirmative action. A philosophy teacher ought to AdamWilson seize on such occasions as a "teaching Rackham