4A - Thursday, October 9, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com l e lic[ igan wily Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position ofthe Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views ofttheir authors. Rising hopes Concessions on high-rise empower Ann Arbor residents. Ann Arbor takes pride in its quaint, small-town ambiance juxtaposed against its exciting college atmosphere. So it's understandable that residents have historically fought development tooth and nail, including the high-rise construc- tion project known as 601 Forest. With developers now making concessions with regards to the size of the building, residents have scored a minor victory for Ann Arbor. Unfortunately, they picked the wrong battle. While it's heartening to see cooperation between residents and developers in the creation of a much more palatable plan, the new'design still disregards the main problem with student housing: affordability. The whole point of the armed forces is to hurt the environment:' - Justice Stephen Breyer, commenting on the relationship between the military and the environment during U.S. Supreme Court oral arguments yesterday in Winter v. Natural Resources Defense Council. CHRIS KOSLOWSKI I OUT AT E-MAIL CHRIS AT CSKOSLOW@UMICH.EDU Um-uih-Big-Oil-uh-uh-Bush Ga What's wrong with saying Which nation's economy has lied-um-carbon-corporate- "Thefundarnentals ofours tonefunodamentaisan gredcapitalist-pigs-onkohk economy are strong why isn't that nation richer than the United States? On p C> o *'5, 0 lie away from thepresidency 6 6 The original proposal for 601 Forest, an upscale student housing development that will be located at the corner of South For- est and South University Avenues, estimat- ed that it would be about 25 stories tall and contain 1,200 units. From the plan's incep- tion, residents have been up in arms, argu- ing that the high-rise didn't fit the area. On Monday, developers responded to con- cerns by bringing a revised building plan before the Ann Arbor City Council for just 14 stories and between 550 and 650 units, appeasing many concerned residents. Granted, that's not to argue that the new plan for 601 Forest is perfect. It has always had flaws. But contrary to the beliefs of many residents, size wasn't one of them. Building up is always better than building out. Urban density is more convenient and eco-friend- ly than urban sprawl, and fighting growth skyward while ignoring bigger flaws shows a troubling lack of foresight. Plus, one has to question if a building only one story taller than Tower Plaza would have a measurable impact on the community. But high-rises cancel out their own use- fulness if they aren't serving the 'needs of the majority. What should bother stu- dents most is the fact that the developers don't seem to have them in mind - or at least most of them. 601 Forest, like other off-campus high-rises of its kind, offers expensive housing targeted at upper-class students. But Ann Arbor's problem is not a lack of housingwith flat-screen televisions. It's a lack of affordable housing. And while developers should be catering to this need, there's no reason for residents to quibble over a single story instead of calling atten- tion to an important flaw. However, this new plan represents more than an 11-floor concession on a minor point; it represents the ability of Ann Arbor residents to make a difference in their city. While the city government was in a tough position to fight - let alone win - this battle, residents led a successful effort against an undesirable project. Admit- tedly, the nation's recent economic woes likely played a role in the decision to scale- back the upscale 601 Forest, but much of the change can be attributed to local out- cry. That should prove quite empowering for future projects. Progress can't be stopped. As the Uni- versity and Ann Arbor grow, more housing will become a necessity. It is our responsi- bility, though, to help guide development - and this concession shows that we have more influence than we think. While pro- posals like 601 Forest aren't that common in Ann Arbor, they are more common than plans for more affordable housing devel- opments. Students need more inexpensive options, but if they don't use platforms like the Michigan Student Assembly and the Ann Arbor City Council to voice this need, developers won't hear them. know how much you love your candidate. Maybe you have chalked John McCain's name all over cam- _ pus, bought a giant cardboard cutout of Barack Obama or sacrificed a goat for Ron Paul on yourI gold altar. That's part of the beauty E of American poli- tics: You have the EILEEN freedom to support your candidate with STAHL whatever craven level of endorse- ment you can muster. But no matter how fiercely you want your man in the White House, I wish you would stop lyingto get himthere. Last week, there was a fiasco on campus involving an unknown reg- ister-your-ass-to-vote person, who screwed up in an epic fashion. Appar- ently, upon-learning that a student supported Barack Obama but wasn't old enough to vote, the clipboard-tot- ingmastermind advised the student to put down a fake birthday on the voter registration form. Great way to sup- port your man there - except for the whole breaking a federal law part. Not surprisingly, the election sea- son tradition of distorting reality isn't limited .to our campus. Groups sup- porting either Obama or McCain are springing up everywhere, and thanks to the Internet, they can easily spread their messages. See, everyone can use the Internet, from a well-researched politician to a deranged grandma, who sends her e-mails entirely in capital letters about SOMETHING ADORABLE THE CAT DID. Obvi- ously the Internet isn't regulated by journalistic standards - yet people still listen. Consider BornAliveTruth.org, a pro-life organization that's putting out anti-Obama ads on the Internet. In one, a woman speaks who some- how survived her mother's attempt- ed abortion. She tells us that Obama opposed a bill in the Illinois state leg- islature that would have recognized the children of failed abortions as "human (people)." Stone-faced, she concludes, "If Obama had had his way, I wouldn't be here." Obama's not only pro-choice, but pro-baby murder. Except the video leaves out an important detail (sur- prise!): At the time the bill was pro- posed, doctors were already legally required to care for all children from failed abortions. I'm pretty sure that the woman in the ad hasn't been treated like a space alien her whole life either. Obama opposed the bill because he believed it was the first in a series that sought to overturn Roe v. Wade, not because he wanted to drop- kick newborns into biohazard bins. I know what you're thinking, "Those Republicans sure are terrible." Democrats would never use the Inter- net to spread deceit like that. Oh wait, my bad; they did. By now, we all know that Bristol Palin - Gov. Sarah Palin's 17-year-old daughter - is pregnant. But several weeks ago there was an online movement started by the Daily Kos to expose that Sarah's infant son, Trig, was in fact Bristol's, and that Sarah was trying to cover it up by pos- ing as his mother. At first, there was some compelling evidence for the rumor. However, as it became increasingly apparent that it was all baloney, many of the Demo- crats in an online forum I frequent continued to pursue it fervently, intent on spreading shaky evidence to give Obama a boost. "I don't even care if it's true or not," wrote' one commenter, "As long as it ruins (Sarah Palin)." Whyare people doingthis?Itreflects poorly on your candidates when you do. Political discourse has never been a game played over tea and crumpets, but latelyit's been gettingridiculous. Then again, we don't exactly have great role models, especially with both candidates telling straight-up lies about each other. There's the infamous McCain ad claiming that Obama wanted to provide sexual education to kindergarteners, which he did, if you consider "what to do if someone touches you inappropriate- ly" to be sex education. Then there's the Obama ad that accuses McCain of wanting the war in Iraq to go on for 100 years. McCain did say he wouldn't be opposed to a century-long presence Why stretching the 0 truth isn't going to Win this swing vote. in Iraq, but only a nonviolent one, like the one we have in Japan today. OK, so the candidates themselves are jerks, too. But why does it have to be that way? Instead of meeting their opponents on dirty ground, why can't they make more ads exposing the other guy's tricks, thereby giving themselves some moral superiority? All of this is hurting people who want to make informed decisions. I can't do much about what Obama and McCain are up to, but I can yell at young campaigners in a newspaper column. So Iwill: Knock it off. I mean it. Seriously, if you guys keep this up, my swing vote is going to Ross Perot. Eileen Stahl can be reached at efstahl@umich.edu. S SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU Depression doesn't have to happy, healthy life. control students' daily lives Melissa Nestor LSA sophomore " TO THE DAILY: In response to the Statement article Wednes- day about living with depression (The double life of depression, 10/08/2008), I was some- what disturbed by the message the writer, Jane Coaston, sent. Coaston made it sound like all people suffer- ing from depression struggle on a daily basis to make it through without suicidal thoughts. Our society has the perception that those afflicted with depression are "sick" and can't think clearly. However, there are so many students at the University who suffer from depression, receive treatment and do well. I know sev- eral people with depression who say they feel healthy and happy and that they have not had depressive episodes in quite awhile. I think it is important to point out that not everyone who has depression is crying and sui- cidal all the time. Many appreciate the joys of life much more after a depressive episode. Liv- ing with depression takes personal strength to confront the problem and get treatment, and suffering people should take care of them- selves to get the help they need. Sometimes, it takes work to find the right therapist or the right medication, but no one should have to feel alone. There are solutions out there, and there are people who survive with depression and lead a BELLA SHAH Hillel offers support for all students TO THE DAILY: I would like to thank the Daily for its cover- age Tuesday of the "Go Blue Think Pink" fund- raising campaign (Greeks team up to fight cancer, 10/07/2008). It is fantastic to know that Univer- sity students are amongsome of the most philan- thropic and support so many worthwhile causes. As the assistant director of Hillel, I wanted to add that we are proud to have our name associ- ated with events like Go Blue Think Pink,;Dance Marathon, Pike Comedy Night, Relay for Life, AEPi Splash Bash and many more. Hillel will always be a resource for both Jewish and non- Jewish students and will continue to meet the needs of all students on campus. We at Hillel would like to offer assistance to any student group, large or small, that is look- ing for guidance and help in planning events. Feel free to contact me directly at jjmarco@ umich.edu. Thanks again, and Hillel wishes everyone a Happy New Year. Joel Marcovitch The letter writer is the assistant director of Hillel. E-MAIL BELLA AT BELLZ@UMICH.EDU LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Readers are encouraged to submit letters to the editor. Letters should be less than 300 words and must include the writer's full name and University affiliation. All submissions become property of the Daily. We do not print anonymous letters. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. JENNIFER SUSSEX|IEP T - Rage against the voting Machine After the calamity known as the 2000 presidential elec- tion, public outcry forced the U.S. Congress to pass the Help America Vote Act of 2002. HAVA solved the problem of those pesky "hanging chads," giving states about $3.9 billion to switch from the punch-card voting system to touch-screen machines, among other changes. But due to the way these machines are monitored (or rather, not mon- itored), this election is precariously close to mirroring the contentious election of eight years ago. With HAVA's help, the high-tech, computerized touch screens that have replaced paper ballots appear to have resolved the issue of determining voter intent in the event of a recount. Few besides residents of Sarasota, Fla. realize that some models of the new machines actually eliminate the possibility of an accurate recall entirely. In the 2006 race in Sarasota, tallies revealed that Demo- cratic candidate Christine Jennings lost to Republican Vern Buchanan by about 368 votes. The results wouldn't have been an issue, but it turned out 18,000-members of the com- munity "undervoted." In other words,18,000 voters bizarre- ly cast an invalid vote for neither Buchanan nor Jennings. Sarasota polling places used Electronic Systems & Soft- ware, Inc.'s iVotronic touch screens, which record votes on a digital memory card similar to a flash drive. However, the iVotronic only stores a copy of the voter's selections on its digital memory card. No paper copy is ever created. This means that if the 18,000 undervotes were caused by a problem with the computers themselves, a digital recount would produce similar figures, confirming some doubts already surrounding the new technology. With the exception of a few more votes in favor of Jen- nings, the results of the digital recount were the same as the previous tally, leavingthe rest of the 18,000 undervotes unexplained. Some have argued that voters deliberately abstained from voting in the mudslinging Buchanan- Jennings campaign. But even after the 2000 election, it is unlikely that the acidic aftertaste would be enough to dis- courage 18,000 from participating. Rather, it is more likely that the software was responsible for the undervotes. An internal memo from high-ranking ES&S employees dated August 2006 confirmed that the iVotronic machines had flawed software. The executives discussed a bug that created a delay in displaying the voter's choice. If voters became perplexed and clicked their choice again, it would deselect the original vote. Could that have happened 18,000 times? Robert Frost, an associate professor in the University's School of Information, postulates that our culture revels in its love for the quick "technical fix," likening technology to a magic wand that is presented as a solution to all of our problems. As a result, the touch-screen machines entered the market for voting machines without adequate testing or litigation to enforce quality standards. Under federal laws created in 2002, the testing of the machines is still not technically required - and if it does take place, the vendors of the voting machines fund it. And because the companies fund it, the testing is considered private. After all, the results of a private study do not have to be disclosed to the public, rendering the average citizen incapable of holdingthese companies accountable. HAVA should now recognize that the companies that create these products can't be trusted to conduct inde- pendent testing, if for no other reason than because fix- ing problems with their machines costs them money. The computer's source code - the programming in the com- puter itself - should be opened up. An open-source code would allow the functionality of the machines to be tested at academic institutions, where the findings could then be made accessible to the public. The computer scientists who would test and improve these products could also then eliminate the use of the problematic, paperless machines like the iVotronic. Without a paper trail and properly tested machines, the 2008 election could become another fiasco. At a time when the country is more active - and more polarized - than ever in recent history, we must be able to take amore active role in developing the technology with which we cast our votes. Right now, the only ones voting are the corporations. Jennifer Sussex is an LSA senior. 0 Q izZ ALT1A INL ! W It ALS 0I EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Nina Amilineni, Emad Ansari, Elise Baun, Harun Buljina, Ben Caleca, Satyajeet Deshmukh, Brian Flaherty, Matthew Green, Emmarie Huetteman, Emma Jeszke, Shannon Kellman, Edward McPhee, Emily Michels, Kate Peabody, Matthew Shutler, Robert Soave, Eileen Stahl, Jennifer Sussex, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Margaret Young I C 46 14