/,-% 0 a Upm.jon 4A -Wednesday, January 16, 2008 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu KARL STAMPFL IMRAN SYED JEFFREY BLOOMER EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR 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. The Daily's public editor, Paul H. Johnson, actsas the readers' representative and takes a critical look at coverage and content in every section of the paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions andcomments. He canbe reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. FROM T EL Uncommitted t udents Lack of candidate attention explains low student turnout What do Ron Paul, Mike Gravel and Dennis Kucinich have in common? Other than extreme political ide- ologies, they are the only presidential candidates who visited the University before yesterday's primary. The meager can- didate attention afforded this campus has robbed students of the opportunity to interact with a seemingly remote political process, made even more remote by the national parties. Not surprisingly, students returned the favor: Voter turnout in precincts largely dominated by students was only about eight percent. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com NOTABLE QUOTABLE' I don't know how you put Humpty Dumpty back together again, but certainly he has tried to do it - Lou Cannon, a Ronald Reagan biographer, speaking about Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and his efforts to unite the conservative movement, as reported yesterday by nytimes.com. Aprimary not worth holding 6 ongratulation$ to the estimat- ed 1.5 millionvoterswho made the trip to the polls yesterday for Michigan's pri- mary: Courtesy of the Democratic and Republican Nation- al Committees, you participated in a meaningless and counterproductive election. Forgive me GARY for being a little undemocratic, but GRACA Michigan would have been better off if it hadn't held a primary at all. Tak- ing this year off would have saved the state millions of dollars and left Mich- igan as uncharted territory for the general election. Instead of becom- ing a bottom-feeder, scrapping for any kind of primary influence it could muster, Michigan could have been a leader in the beauty pageant of swing states come spring. Sure, the founding fathers might be collectively rolling over in their graves at the idea of a state govern- ment voluntarily disenfranchising its citizens in an election, but consider this: The DNC and RNC basically already did so. The DNC stripped all of Michigan's delegates to the Demo- cratic National Convention because it leapfrogged its primary into January. The RNC slapped Michigan on the wrist by stripping half of its delegates. All Michigan's state legislature had to do to sell the disenfranchisement was play the blame game. Although they are usually "free" in the sense that citizens have the ability to support candidates without fear of political retribution, what many peo- ple forget about free and fair elections is that they don't come cheap. Despite having less than half its delegates, Michigan still paid full price for the election, which is expected to add up to an estimated $10 million and could end up costing even more. A costly but meaningless election shouldn't go over well with cash- strapped Michiganders. The state legislature didn't need to shell out another $10 million to hold an elec- tion for two political parties that wouldn't even save its seat at the national nominating conventions. Nothing obligates Michigan to hold primary elections. Some argue, though, that Michi- gan's primary was important regard- lessofwhetheritwouldberepresented at the conventions. The key feature in this argument is momentum. Thanks to Michiganvoters, native-sonRepub- lican candidate Mitt Romney received the firstbigvictory of his underachiev- ing campaign. But momentum isn't as pivotal if it's expected, and Michigan's results fit the script perfectly. With John Edwards and Barack Obama absent from the ballot, Hillary Clinton was a shoe-in for the win. The media might have built up John McCain as a threat to Romney, but realistically he was always a long shot. Romney has too many Michigan connections. His father, George Romney, was a popular governor here in the 1960s and young Mitt grew up here. You can't beat the hometownboy. Maybe what Michigan wanted yes- terday wasn't about results or influ- ence. Maybe it just wanted a little attention, which it got. Michigan was briefly courted in the national spot- light like it had so selfishly desired when it moved its primary ahead of New Hampshire. However, it's a stretch to say that candidates were taking Michigan seriously. On the Republican side, Romney, McCain and Mike Huckabee managed to find time in the last two days to parrot a few stump speeches across the state. Bowing to party pres- sure, none of the major Democratic candidates even bothered to show up. Michigan's exposure wasn't even close to the months of door-to-door canvassing with which all of the major EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: candidates, including Democrats, swooned Iowans. Rivaling Iowa and New Hampshire was the goal of hold- ing Michigan's primary early, and it turned out to be a failure. Voters, probably unknowingly, tipped their hand in a different way, too. Included in the law establish- ing the new primary date is a section that allows the DNC and RNC access to lists of the people who voted in their respective primaries. For par- ties in a state without partisan reg- istration, this is a wealth of useful information when trying to decipher voting trends, the legality of which was upheld by the Michigan Supreme Court in November 2007. Early primary was better for parties than state. If Michigan had skipped the pri- mary and held out until the general election, it would have been a mys- tery state. It would have been more difficult to gauge whether the state would go Democrat or Republican; support Clinton or turn against her; buy into Obama's message of hope or discard him; and identify with Rom- ney's Michigan roots or see his fraud- ulence. These answers aren't always easy to find in opinion polls because they depend on people not only car- ing but also caring enough to act. But we got partial answers to these ques- tions yesterday, which ruins our mys- tique a little. The sad truth is, not having a pri- mary would have been better than having half of one. Gary Graca is an associate editorial page editor. He can be reached at gmgraca@umich.edu. In November, the state seta primary date of Jan. 15, a violation of party rules. The Democratic and Republican National Com- mittees both struck back, rendering the state almost irrelevant. With Republican candidates offering a weak effort at best and Democratic candidates avoiding the state entirely, the chances of luring the likes of John Edwards and Barack Obama to the University became slim to none. Being located in a pivotal swing state should have been reason enough for a politically active campus like this one to warrant some candidate attention this primary season, especially from Demo- crats. In 2000, Democratic nominee Al Gore came to the University for a question- and-answer session with students, and in 2004, candidates including Howard Dean and John Edwards at least planned to visit campus, even if they later cancelled. These candidates recognized the willingness of University students to participate in the kind of issue-based dialogue that prima- ries usually lack. In the past, candidates have also recog- nized that student enthusiasm translates into votes and victories. This is a strategy that worked for Obama in the Iowa cau- cuses, where 57 percent of voters under 30 years old caucused for him. Where stu- dents weren't propelling him to a victory by caucusing, they were organizing the get-out-the-vote effort, a pivotal part of any successful campaign. But with the exception of Paul, even the Republican candidates who campaigned in Michigan bypassed the University - some against better judgment. Rather than speak to students ofvotingage, Mitt Romney spent Monday morning campaigning at a high school. In an unsatisfying substitution, he sent his son to talk to University students at the Brown Jug in the early afternoon, not exactly a peak hour for bar-going. It was commendable that Gravel and Kucinich came to Ann Arbor in spite of pressure from the DNC, but the Democratic candidates and their party should have rec- ognized their obligation to the people of Michigan. With the state's poor economic situation only becoming an increasingly urgent problem, voters should be focused on whether the need for change is being heard, not whether they are being heard at all. It is a terrible shame for Michigan and its students in particular that both were left out of the process of nominating the next president. The University should have been one of the main campaign stops in Michi- gan, but thanks to the national parties, students were left with little more than an empty ballot, Romney's son and a few fringe candidates. Emad Ansari, Anindya Bhadra, Kevin Bunkley, Ben Caleca, Milly Dick, Mike Eber, Gary Graca, Emmarie Huetteman, Theresa Kennelly, Emily Michels, Arikia Millikan, Kate Peabody, Kate Truesdell, Robert Soave, Neil Tambe, Matt Trecha, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Rachel Wagner, Patrick Zabawa. SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU Hope not lostfor Big House commencement TO THE DAILY: As agraduatingsenior, I amupset about the decision to move our commencement to Rynearson Stadium at Eastern Michi- gan University. I did not work hard for four years to graduate with my friends on another school's campus. It's an absolute outrage that this option was even consid- ered. Frankly, I did not spend $20,000 each year to graduate from the University on EMU's campus. If I wanted to gradu- ate on EMU's campus, I would have gone to school there. Furthermore, holding the commence- ment ceremony at Rynearson Stadium is a major inconvenience. Parking is not read- ily available there, and the stadium seats less than one-third the amount of people that the Big House does. How is that any kind of solution? I would rather have my graduation somewhere on our campus with fewer guests than invite up to eight people to watch me graduate at a univer- sity I did not attend. In order to have commencement at the Big House, portable restrooms could be brought in, a generator could provide the necessary electricity and handicapped seating could be made available on the turf with people needing these accom- modations entering through the tunnels. I am insulted by this decision, which was made for the class of 2008 without con- sultation. I feel that this decision down- plays the importance of higher education, graduation and University pride. I am graduating from the University of Michi- gan, and I want to do so at the University of Michigan. Angie Pargoff LSA senior Inconvenience ofwalk could dissuade smokers TO THE DAILY: I read with interest the story last week about the proposed University Vil- lage apartment complex that could force shops to move or even close, including the revered Village Corner (Stores brace for construction, 01/08/2008). I was con- sidering the changes this would bring to the neighborhood with some con- cern until I read the comment from the owner of Champions Party Store and Laundromat, which would be forced to temporarily move during construction. He complained that, "It inconveniences customers ... if a customer wants to buy a pack of cigarettes [during construction], he's got to walk four blocks." That got me thinking that maybe the construction wouldn't be so bad. It would have the unintended benefit of helping smokers who would like to quit but have a hard time overcoming their addiction. Surveys show that the vast majority of people who smoke would like to stop. The evidence is clear that sometimes all it takes is some new inconvenience - con- sider the proven impact of smoking bans in public places on reducing consumption - to help smokers get over the hump. Who would have thought that the con- struction of the new apartment complex could actually save lives? Cliff Douglas The letter writer is the executive director of the University of Michigan Tobacco Research Net- work and an adjunct lecturer in the University of Michigan School of Public Health. Whining ofgraduating students unwarranted Graduation ceremony ultimately unimportant TO THE DAILY: I know what it is like to graduate off campus and away from tradition. Due to construction efforts and limited parking, my graduating class at Lee M. Thurston High School in Redford, Mich. could not graduate in our courtyard and walk across our humble outdoor stage as so many classes had before us. Despite pro- tests, petitions and threats, the ceremony was instead held indoors at Detroit World outreach, a giant church center. The hall was gorgeous, and we had a memorable ceremony, but it was not home. Like the University's present dilemma, tickets would have been limited - four per family - had graduation been held in the courtyard. With ample room at the new building, there was no limit on those in attendance. Needless to say, we would have rather had the limited tickets. I was saddened to not be able to cele- brate my high schoolgraduation following tradition. However, in the greater scheme of things, life goes on. I will be graduat- ing in a few short years, and I envision doing so on our campus - our Big House. I completely support keeping graduation and-blue banners as a replacement for a University ceremony is laughable. The thought that any responsible Uni- versity official sanctioned this Potemkin village suggests an administration inca- pable of reasoned thought processes. If these plans go forward, we ask that the University please forward us a refund of the difference between the cost of an Eastern Michigan University and Univer- sity of Michigan education. Julie and Jim Shannon Tawas City, Mich. Poor administration to blameforpoorplanning TO THE DAILY: As I was reading the B-Side in Thurs- day's Daily, I came across the article about Chinese street performers (What Ann Arbor is missing, 01/10/2008) and was rather irritated. In typical "Is there noth- ing we can't learn from the East?" style, Ben VanWagoner fondly remembered three blind musicians and a troupe of little girls doing gymnastics in the streets of Wuhan, China and presented them as indicators of how accessible art is to the masses in China. The article goes on to assert that art in America "is becoming the realm of the educated" and wealthy, because access to art exhibitions and per- formances usually requires entrance fees. At the end, the author even called the streets of Ann Arbor "grimy and loud." I'd like to remind the author of sev- eral things about China. Art is certainly teeming in the streets of Shanghai and Beijing, namely in the form of bootlegged foreign films and counterfeit fashions. More importantly, why were these tal- ented performers on the street in Wuhan and not in a state-sponsored theater? or better yet, these performers could have been in one of the thousands of rural villages largely ignored by Chinese lead- ership until it needs cheap laborers or conscripts. And why were those little girl acrobats, who supposedly represent the egalitarian access to art of an enlightened social state, not in school? Let's not kid ourselves; modern China is not a paragon of free expression. The artistic establishment in capitalist coun- tries like ours is not perfect: It's plagued by unfair compensation and a lack of funding. But don't mistake Wuhan's abundant street performers for a failure of our own society. Adam Ajlouni LSA junior TO THE DAILY: on campus, now at Kudos to the Eastern Michigan Uni- of 2008 should co versity students who are putting Univer- Remember that lif sity of Michigan seniors in their place. ment is not an end; The hand-wringing that has played out in recent letters to the editor is laugh- Jimmy Tomczak able at best. The letter writers seem to LSA sophomore feel that the University owes them a graduation in the Big House. Hogwash. Absent Sua These students paid the University for an education, and I have no doubt that the University has upheld its end of that TO THE DAILY: bargain. I don't remember seeing any Where was the "Big House graduation clause" in my false advertisingtb acceptance letter. was unnecessarily Also, students should take it easy on using the phrase "rich and well- Kristen Tebo known alumni" ('U' abandons tradition, Rackham 01/11/2008). Students might have forgot- tenthis,but itis these donations that allow Poor admit many campus facilities and programs to remain world-class. And here's a free tipIblae, f nr.p for all graduating seniors: Calling luxury boxes "classist" (Family will miss first and only trip to Big House, 01/11/2008) is TO THE DAILY: exactly the type of melodramatic rhetoric As the parents that would have anyone outside of a col- versity student, w lege campus snicker. of the University's nd always, but the class nsider the big picture. e goes on Commence- ; it is a beginning. loku missed Sudoku Monday? The hat there was one inside cruel. zistration to Poor planning of a graduating Uni- e find the recent news s graduation ceremony disconcerting. To sug- Rynearson Stadium at University with maize- ROSE JAFFE tS Wl~l ith ea V' i4k otOnc'J TeasetMand up' ~~1 (1 *I Michael Saltsman LSA alum plans extremelyd gest decorating R Eastern Michigan1