4 -Tuesday, February 20, 2007 C The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 413 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 tothedaily@umich.edu "Are you sure you're not having a bad day? And tomorrow you'll feel differently about it?" - Los Angeles Salon owner ESTHERTOGNOZZI in conversation with Britney Spears last week, shortly before the pop star decided to shave her head, as reported yesterday by CNN.com. 0 KARL STAMPFL EDITOR IN CHIEF IMRAN SYED EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR JEFFREY BLOOMER MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflectthe official positionof the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. SDS redux New society has a monumental legacy to fulfill A fter a nearly 40-year absence from Ann Arbor, Students for a Democratic Society marked its return to the University last week. With its protests of the draft and the Vietnam War, SDS was once at the head of the New Left movement and the catalyst for social change. This new edition of SDS has a long and storied reputation to live up to, and it remains to be seen if the group has fully committed itself to it, or if it will simply fall into irrelevance, like so many other supposedly activist student groups. 6 Founded in Ann Arbor in 1960, the origi- nal SDS operated until1969 under its mani- festo, the Port Huron Statement. Dealing in inspiring rhetoric and aggressive political protest, it preached the agenda that came to define a generation. It united an entire nation of college students in the cause for establishing the New Left and did so by being vocal and being everywhere. As of now, however, SDS is back in name only. It must accomplish some tangible goals where other student groups have failed to do so. It is crucial for SDS to return to the ide- als it held 40 years ago. The potential to enact social and political change and fur- ther participatory democracy cannot be ignored if SDS is to have a profound impact on campus. The group's members must rec- ognize that the name Students for a Demo- cratic Society means something special at this University, and that it cannot go about its goals in a half-hearted manner. To be a group of action, SDS must clearly define its goals. A starting point of advo- cating temporary workers' rights and denouncing the war in Iraq is just that - a start. Before too long, the group needs to consider other issues of significance to this specific campus. In that vein, the issues to be dealt with today may vary from what SDS focused on in the past, and the orga- nization must be flexible enough to act accordingly. The University became the seat of influ- ence for social change in the 1960s and could certainly be again. Times have changed since then and the new SDS will have far more resources to establish itself~ and make a difference quickly. Gaining' support and visibility on campus needs to be the first priority, because an SDS that makes its presence known right away is far more powerful than one that languishes, for years without students even knowing: of its existence. viable grassroots activism has long been absent from university campuses, and it should be the charge of SDS to rekindle that flame, not just to add to the litany of meetings, sponsorships and events that are the epitome of empty student activ- ism. SDS's greatest achievement could be the revival of one of the nation's sleeping giants of progressive social change. It will tarnish the work of its predecessors should it aim for anything less. am informed by newspapers that we are about four years into the I war in Iraq. But in my mind it has been only 11 months, three weeks and two days. That is the amount of time this war has taken my friend Lucas away from his family and friends. Regardless of how you count it, it seems that the days of this grand misadventure might be numbered. Last week, members of the U.S. House of Repre- sentatives went - on the record to oppose the war. Here at the Uni- versity, Students for a Democrat- ic Society, the group famous for mobilizing thou- sands of college students against MARA theVietnamWar, has reemerged. GAY But until some- one can explain how this plan or that protest is going to bring Lucas home, it's all meaningless to me. Always on the periphery of our com- munal privilege, Lucas never com- plained aboutthe financial struggles his family faced. Instead, he thrived among a group of friends who skied, summered and lunched our way through a West- chester, N.Y. adolescence. He belonged. It was not until the second semester of college that the reality of Lucas's sit- uation became apparent: He could not afford to return to school. For the first time there was a separation between us.I flew back to Michigan to study and Lucas joined the army. He was sent to Iraq last March. In a column last Thursday, Whitney Dibo described the attitude of detached recognition this campus has adopted toward the war (T&D department 'Con- quers' with class, 02/16/2007): "I had watched the astronaut attempted mur- One of us der story unfold on CNN all weekend, but flipped channels during the Iraq war updates. What would (a war pho- tographer) think of my watching E! last night, trying to figure out how exactly Anna Nicole Smith had died?" I must admit that this concept of separateness - the ridiculous notion that we are somehow removed from the throes of this war because it is not us doing the fighting - has sustained me in this past year. It is this separateness that has assuaged the guilt of a friend and helped to justify her inaction. Congress is not going to ask us to make change, to stop a war or to cre- ate a movement. It has never worked that way. Powerful people - whether they be presidents, senators or simply members of older generations whose ideas have passed their time - are afraid of progress. They hope that we are pacified by reality television and Britney Spears's underpants. They want us to remain immobilized by the divisions of class and race we have inherited. It's nice that the House has decided to rebuke the president for his failed crusade in Iraq. But really, the debate being held in Congress is little more than political posturing.And not unlike other times in American history, it's up to the youth to stop this war. The University must weigh in on the war in Iraq, not by protesting its exis- tence (too late) or by exploiting it as a political pawn for partisan gain, but by organizing and demanding change. The return of SDS to Michigan is promising. I want to believe that it will invigorate the debate and bring an end to this war. But it cannot do so until we acknowledge that the war in Iraq is as much a part of our generation as "The Real World" or MySpace.com. We can- not wait for Congress to solve the quag- mire it helped create. The revolution may indeed be televised, but it will not be broadcast by C-Span. Yes, the idea of separateness is allur- ing, and in the moments when I feel particularly guilty, I have often looked to it for relief. But for someone so far removed from the classrooms of Angell Hall, Lucas bears a striking resem- blance to you and me. He still has his Facebook.com account. I check up on him from time to time, browse his pho- tos of the endless desert and the cam- ouflaged madness. Lucas's activities as posted on Facebook include, "Building sandcastles with Michael Farracaro." I smile, encouraged by the thought that what was always a wicked sense of humor may survive Iraq. Youth must stop this war - for their own sake. Also on his Facebook profile is a quote from Matisyahu, the. popular Jewish reggae musician who happens to be from our hometown of White Plains, N.Y.: Now death is all that's left toponder I wander off hoping to catch my breath And hold it, mold my memories from untold scripts And roll up in a tornado twist, now I'm certain There's a pertinent reason I'm on this earth Seasons change in White Plains, but we remain alert.. Lucas - like all our peers in Iraq - does not belong to the ivory tow- ers of academia. But he does belong to our generation. Eleven months, three weeks, and two days in, I just needed to make sure someone else knew it, too. Mara Gay can be reached at maracl@umich.edu. Editorial Board Members: Emily Beam, Kevin Bunkley, Amanda Burns, Sam Butler, Ben Caleca, Brian Flaherty, Mara Gay, Jared Goldberg, Emmarie Huetteman, Toby Mitchell, Rajiv Prabhakar, David Russell, Gavin Stern, John Stiglich, Jennifer Sussex, Neil Tambe, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Wagner, Christopher Zbrozek SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU 'Make Ann Arbor Bright' to fight campus crime TO THE DAILY: In response to last week's news article about campus crime (Students robbed at gun- point, 02/13/07), I'd like to point out that crime is one of the major issues that the members of Make Ann Arbor Bright are working hard to alleviate. Crime has started to run rampant on campus. Streetlights in Ann Arbor are critical to the safety and peace of mind for University students and their parents. Most people at the University travel home late at night, and the only protection they can hope for is light to guide their way. Campus blue light emergency phones deter crime effectively. The addition of light poles will do the same for the most poorly- lit areas. In particular, the triangular inter- section of East University Avenue, Tappan Street and Prospect Street is in dire need of up to six streetlights. Ann Arbor is not ful- filling its ordinance requiring a streetlight for every 180 feet in this intersection. Make Ann Arbor Bright is addressing this problem and has already successfully lobbied the City Council to approve what is known as a "special assessment district" in this area. These districts have been set up only because Ann Arbor has suspended the addition of street lights due to financial problems. Make Ann Arbor Bright has accomplished the pos- sibility at least of adding six new street lights but with one obstacle in the way: Ann Arbor will require many years of funding for these street lights to be installed. The group intends to further lobby the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Energy in order to see wheth- er either will grant funds for this project. Make Ann Arbor Bright is also considering going to the University Board of Regents to see if it would provide this funding because the issue of lighting in off-campus areas mainly targets students of the University. Tyrone Schiff LSA sophomore Pointing out Church's intolerance not unfair TO THE DAILY: In response to Daniel Phalen's letter to the editor in Monday's Daily (Daily opin- ion unfairly criticizes Church's intolerance, 02/19/07), I would like to point out the absur- dity of the idea that the Catholic Church's intolerance was "unfairly criticized." It should strike readers as contradictory that Phalen wants them to be more tolerant of the Church's intolerance. The harsh truth is that the practice of not allowing same-sex couples to jointly adopt is both discriminatory and intentional. And it is not surprising. The Church has a longstand- ing tradition of being more concerned about everyone's sex lives than discrimination. Equally unsurprising is the forced retirement of Bishop Thomas Gumbleton. Although it is possible his retirement was simply due to his age, the Church has shown its willingness time and again to retire or excommunicate priests and bishops who challenge its power. Even child molesters in the Church do not get this harsh treatment - as long as they publicly support Catholic dogma. Phalen espouses the black-and-white atti- tude of the Catholic Churchwith phrases like "Catholics are typically not in the business of choosing between the lesser of two evils," and "The Catholic Church is concerned with ideals ... Problems arise when we settle." But the problem is that the Church is concerned with ideals at the expense of facts. The reli- gious Right claims that adoption by gay peo- ple has a negative effect on society, but no evidence is ever given, and it is too seldom asked for. We must be intolerant of the Church's intolerance as long as necessary. Only then will its position on homosexuality become, untenable, just like its past positions on slav- ery and fair treatment of women. Brian Wagner Rackham 4 0 AMANDA BURNS South Dakota's take on abortion Since Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973, state legislatures across the country have worked to narrow the scope of the ruling. The South Dako- ta state legislature, however, spent the last year seekingnot to revise the landmark case, but to overturn it. The legislative battle began last March when South Dakota's Repub- lican Gov. Mike Rounds signed an almost complete ban on abortion. Exceptions to the ban were granted only if two doctors determined the mother's life to be in danger. Notably, the law did not allow abortion in the case of rape or incest. Rounds admitted when signing the bill that the ban would not take effect for some time because of expected legal challenges. South Dakota politi- cians were quick to legislate into the private areas of their constituent's lives in exchange for the chance to appear before the Supreme Court. Before the law could take effect in July of 2006, abortion advocates collected enough signatures to place the issue on the November ballot. The ban was defeated by a 56- to 44-percent margin, leading many to believe the issue was settled. Earlier this year, however, law- makers reintroduced the ban with what they called be several improvements. Exit polling showed that many who rebuked the ban in November did so because they con- sidered it overly harsh not to grant exceptions to victims of rape and incest. The reintroduced bill deals with this concern, but in a clinical manner that is sickening in its lack of respect for the trauma induced by rape and incest. If passedthe newlaw would grant exceptions for victims of rape, but onlyifrapevictimsfile apolicereport within 50 days of being attacked and later turn over the aborted fetus for DNA testing. For incest, the rules are even more stringent - victims must name their attackers on the police report and again provide the aborted fetus's DNA to support the claim. Forcingvictims to file a police report not only thrusts them into a legal battle before procuring an abortion, but it also creates an atmo- sphere of distrust. The DNA clause only adds to this. The South Dakota legislature is so concerned with preventing false claims of rape and incest that women must prove their claim sci- entifically. Planned Parenthood estimates that only 39 percent of all rapes are reported to police, and while it is certainly important to improve that number, requiring a police report in order to have an abortion is not the way. Women often do not feel safe reporting rapes to police. Statistics support this fear. Ifa woman reports a rape, according to Planned Parent- hood, there is only a 16.3-percent chance her assailant will spend even a day in jail. Coupled with the fact that 66 percent of women reported knowing their attacker, it is clear why filing a police report remains difficult for some women. Victims of rape should be encouraged to cooperate with the police, but until the system changes to provide more protection and assurance, requiring police reports to terminate a preg- nancy that is the result of rape is an undue burden. The law is even more insensitive in cases of incest. If victims must name their abuser and then turn over DNA evidence to support their claim, many abused girls will choose to suf- fer in silence. Incest is an emotion- ally complicated cycle of abuse that tears families apart. As with rape, it is important that the percentage of reported cases of incest increases and that the perpetrators are brought to justice, but lawmakers should not force women to bring a pregnancy to term becausethey are notyetreadyto reveal their abuser. South Dakota lawmakers are clearly concerned with the life of the unborn, but they seem less concerned with the quality of life of the living. While filing a police report concern- ing an incident of rape and incest may seem like an easy formality, for many victims it is an insurmountable chal- lenge.Victimsofsexualabusedeserve respect and dignity when makingthe difficult decision to abort a pregnan- cy. South Dakota's proposed abortion ban give them neither. Amanda Burns is a LSA senior and a member of the Daily's editorial board. 6 i CHRIS KOSLOWSKI chinese New Year's was this mean first there's Babe , Then WHEN O WE GET OURS? weekend, I can't believe they there s Babe: P cg in the 'ty would name the whole year Nowthis! after a stupid pigI blame Reaan " q 8 aaC I II--1r Letters Policy All readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Please include the writer's name, college and class standing or other University affiliation. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. The Michigan Daily reserves the right to edit for length, clarity and accuracy, and all submissions become property of the Daily. Letters will be printed according to timeliness, order received and the amount of space available. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. Editors can be reached at editpage.editors@umich.edu. 0 4