ILT''S*TEEDIO: O No *coverage of Williams' victory TO THE DAILY: It seems odd that the Daily would cover Pete Sampras' imbledon championship in east week's edition and say not a word about Venus Williams' victory. The reason can't be tim- ing. She won the day before he did. Nor can it be significance, since both champions made more than the usual history with their titles. So I wonder what the rea- son was. Hope you folks can try to figure it out. JOHN WOODFORD EXECUTIVE EDITOR, MICHIGAN TODAY University's arch itectu re uninspired TO THE DAILY: I was pleased to read last week's editorial "Beautiful Buildings" (7 10/00) Most of the newer buildings on campus look - as the edito- rial states - as if they've *een lifted from a cheap office park or a factory. If architecture is supposed to reflect the purpose and goals of the builder, the University's buildings project an image that is unimagina- tive and uninspired. Furthermore, the admin- istration's readiness to tear own older buildings such as the Frieze suggests a school that has little respect for its own history and tradition. Faculty. research, and Send letters to the editor t, Contact the editors a programs should be the top priority, no doubt. But the University needs to be much more thoughtful about archi- tecture. This means respect- ing and renovating older buildings and designing new buildings that project the strong vision and ideals of the school. JEFF KEATING ALUMNUS Bush, the reformer TO THE DAILY: Governor George . W. Bush calls himself "A Reformer With Results." Yet, test his rhetoric for accuracy and you will see that he has favored polluters and the wealthy while ignoring the needs of the majority of Texans. The state of Texas under Bush's leadership is ranked as follows in the fifty states: 1) I st in percentage of children withoutt health insurance 2) 1st in air and svater pollution 3) 1st in toxic chemical accidents 4) 3rd in having the most regressive state tax structure 5) 5th in percentage of the population living in poverty 6) 41st in per capita spending on public education 7) 45th in SAT scores 8) 48th in per capita fund- ing for public health Bush's image as a reformer is clearly a fabricat- ed one! If this is the environ- ment that he has cultivated in Texas as a leader, why would anyone want him to lead the entire countrv? Is George WBush just a little bit of history repeating? A fter admitting in a New York the sixth and second chiefs, during the wars that shaped their Times interview last week respectively.The elder Bush recog- generations - Bush as a fighter that his son is far less foreign poli- nized early that the formula for a pilot in World War II, Adams as a cy-savvy than Al Gore. some pun- familial presidential legacy starts diplomat during the Revolutionary dits began to wonder where former with a name, War. From there the Ivy-league President George Bush's loyalties and like the fathers each took to politics. For lie. Adams clan Adams that meant serving as an Nevertheless, old George told before him, ambassador before joining nation- the newspaper from his his first son al icon George Washington to Kennebunkport pad that it would- inherited his serve as Vice President. For Bush, n't be prudent to discount his son name with a whose start in politics led to ser- this November. After all, old man twist. The vice as an ambassador as well, Bush says the same fickle popu- key, John things really started to look up lace that sent him and Bar packing Q u i n c ywhen he latched on to film icon is once again hungry for change. proved, was a Ronald Reagan to serve as Vice Yet in all the talk of changing polit- middle name GEOFF President. Starting to see the con- ical winds, the actual idea of a that set you GAGNON nections? father-son duo is an old one with apart but a A As the country's second in rather historic origins. first and last £ .} command, each man harbored Since John Quincy Adams fol- name that aspirations for the top spot and lowed his father to the presidency reminded voters of someone else Adams even .grumbled openly in 1825, no other father-son team - that's exactly what George Jr. about the uselessness of his posi- has claimed the nation's highest received, in the form of a W. tion. Nevertheless, they both got office. But that won't stop baseball The connections don't end their turn in the White House and lovin' George W. Bush from mak- there. In fact they don't even start both were asked to leave after just ing a run at the oval office this fall there, but rather in Milton, Mass. one term. Before that, though, each in a bid to restore the family name where George Sr. was born to an man's re-election seemed assured to the White House mailbox. influential family in 1924 - a vir- after navigating the country And don't think that George tual stone's throw from Braintree, through foreign squabbles and and son haven't been taking a few Mass. where the Adams family coming out smelling like roses. cues from the patriotic Adams was reared. After privileged child- Adams had his X,Y,Z Affair and family who saw son John Quincy hoods, both elder Adams and papa Bush claimed the Persian Gulf follow in his father's footsteps as Bush served their country overseas War, yet neither could make their popularity last through to election time. Crawling out of the shadows of their respective predecessors was tough and both Bush and Adams attempted to do so with military buildup - Adams added three new frigates to the navy! With all of their dads' similar- ities, a George Jr. win this fall could complete the comparisons between the families. And for a sure-fire prediction of what a George Jr. White House would mean, simply look back to John Quincy's less than memorable tenure. Like George W, John Q. got his start in public service through his dad before he won the White House. Branded as a corrupt politician, the scholarly Adams (ok, so not every comparison holds up) returned home after a dismal term. So if history, or at least the Adams family, can tell us one thing, the most Bush can hope for with a win this fall is four rocky years of corruption before a sup- porting role in Steven Speilberg's film "Amistad." - Geoff Gagnon can be reached via e-mail at ggagnon(ud;tmich.edt. Voting with your heart versus voting with your brain O ne of the most unexpected and welcome developments on this campus and across the nation is the recent resurgence of social activism. Groups working on behalf of human and workers rights have become especially prevalent and large movements focusing on the environment, the death penalty, police brutality and other issues have also been gaining in promi- nence recently. The starkest example of this new activism is an alliance of groups who had not previously worked with each other, such as human rights activists, environmentalists and labor unions, over trade and other economic issues. Political and social activism never really went away, of course. The new activism has been coming from the left and follows a long period of conservative dominance of social activism that saw the rise of the Christian Coalition and other right wing organizations. The liberal groups focus largely on issues different than the biggest grassroots players on the right and not many have yet risen to fight school prayer or the denial of evo- lution, but it is good to see the envi- ronment and workers' concerns BOB BIRD HOLLAND, MI making their way back onto the national agenda. The left-leaning activist move- ment is only in its infancy and will undoubtedly face some problems. Factory work- ers and envi- ronmentalists are bound to rmn into trou- ble with each r other, for example. But the most PETER important les- CUNNIFFE son these groups have _____E_.___ yet to learn is one the right figured out long ago: they have to work within the sys- tem to have any real influence. Activists of any ideological bent have to be careful of succumbing to the belief that most people agree with them. Even if you get a majority favor- ing your issue in a poll, don't expect a lot of hard work or other contributions to your cause from those people and don't expect them to vote on the basis of that one issue. For activists to ever have any actual influence, they must realize that there is a time for activism and a time for pragmatism. The United States is not a country of extremes and people on the ends of the ideological spectrum have to make alliances with those in the middle if they ever hope to have Coll any influence. The right realized this long ago and decided working with the established center-right party was in their best interest. They dislike the presence of people like Christine Whitman and Rudy Giuliani in their party, but have accepted it as the price for having their issues on the table. The agenda on the left faces an even tougher battle than did the right's, considering this country's conservative tilt. But many liberal activists have nevertheless chosen to alienate themselves from the established center-left party. Claiming if they could just get the tens of millions of non-voters to the polls (and ignoring the fact that the vast majority of voters and non- voters identify themselves as con- servatives), they'd be winning land- slide victories, many of these new liberal crusaders shun and even try to cause problems for the Democratic Party. The refrain heard from people like Ralph Nader is that there is basically no difference between the parties, so why support Democrats over Republicans? As proof, he points to the recently passed Permanent Normal Trading Relations with China bill that labor unions fought tooth and nail against, but passed with a large number of Democratic votes. What Nader seems to be forget- ting is that trade with China does not define the American political system. The two parties each have a broad ideological spectrum within them, but they are in no way the same party. The party of Ted Kennedy and the party of Jesse Helms are not two sides of a coin. Whether Nader and others on the left like it or not, with our single- representative districts and Electoral College, this country is constitutionally rigged to be a two party state. And that's not changing. If groups such as labor and envi- ronmentalists want to have any influence, they need to pick a party and use their grassroots activism to support it. Being part of the system they think is broken is an unpleas- ant idea for many, but they need to suck it up and face reality. By working for the Democrats, these activists get their ideas put on the table and they have a chance to influence policy. By fighting the Democrats, they risk putting the Republicans in power. Do labor leaders remember when the President of the United States busted unions? Do environ- mentalists remember when the Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency fought against them rather than working with them? Do human rights groups remember when the President fought against sanctions on South Africa's racist regime? That is the difference between Republicans and Democrats. It is huge. Which party is in power doesn't guarantee liberal groups automatic failure or success, but it does deter- mine whether they're playing offense or defense and, in many cases, whether their ideas get con- sidered at all. -- Peter Cunnffe can be reached via e-mail ctt ocunnit tumich.edt. ' 4 a" ' ' w.v ' ,... .:.. 33"'0 5 ;. ",,r v " _. y i '..' ,.: 5,:. ..1'w.:k: _ 'IW c Z % .. b.t, .y t 4< t pp. ' ., , i- , s H F ^ s aye ( .., s ry9 , s 6 L b.;..,. y , t