4' Monday, July 2, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Cy he Aidyigan &itu KELLYN JACKSON The vagina vote Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 MaynatdSt. Ann Arbot, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR IMRAN SYED EDITOR IN CHIEF 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. Access denied Regents continue to skirt ADA standards I don't much care for her, but there is still one thing that I admire about Hillary Clinton: her vagina. Although it's hard to tell with that hair cut and a collar bone that never sees the sun, she is a woman. A woman shooting for the highest posi- tion in this "man's world," and there's something to be said for that. She may not be the best candidate, but the prospect of her being the first female presi- dent is good enough for me. And it's about damn time. Part of me wants to jump up and down, wave my "Women for Hillary" flag and support her solely based on that one bio- logical fact. But I won't - not Clinton has hit the road, campaigning, fundraising and speaking at every stop. But like Charlie Brown's teacher, what comes out of her mouth sounds more like monotone gibberish than a reflection on important issues. She has apresence, but no concrete, detailed, this-is-how- much-it-will-cost platform. The ideas she does have, dis- cussed in her speeches and post- ed on her website, come in the form of dumbed-down, I-want- world-peace-beauty-queen fluff. Her plans have no agenda, policy or bank to back them up. On top ofhaving a porous plat- form, Clinton has a conspicuous history. As a young woman, she campaigned for the racial con- servative Barry Goldwater, and for six years between 1986 and 1992, she sat on Walmart's board of directors. Personally, she favors abstinence and opposes gay marriage. Most importantly, five years ago she voted in favor of the war in Iraq and continues to be unapologetic about that vote. These actions and ideolo- gies are not Democratic. They are not even moderate. She has all the staple ingre- dients of electability: a bright and intelligent child, a caring and sort-of-loving spouse and a political track record that should have a popular junior Senator shaking in his boots. Why then is she so concerned about being "electable?" Where's the leftist lady I want so badly to win? The truth is I'm sure Clin- ton is not that woman. I want a competent, left-wing woman to win. I want a woman in the Oval Office period. In the chair, not under the desk. Kellyn Jackson is an iSA sophomore. I 4 n one last confirmation that nothing - not fans, not until she gets a platform and tradition and not even the law - will stand between convinces one that she's more the University and its quest to add skyboxes to than a political puppet vying to be America's sweetheart. And Michigan Stadium, the University Board of Regents gave maybe, I don't know, starts act- its final approval of the project last Thursday. Since the ing like a Democrat. beginning, the skybox plan has been a mockery of Uni- versity football tradition. However, as the plan continues to ignore the opposition from the Michigan Paralyzed Veterans of America it has evolved into a mockery of the U should accept University's tradition of diversity and acceptance as well. Z.---Visa, MasterCard SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU a retain less affluent students. It's 2007. Nowadays, even McDon- ald's accepts credit card pay- ments for trivial $1 purchases. That's because this large corpo- After repeatedly marginalizing any opposition to the skyboxes, the regents'vote on Thursday was the final green light for the sta- dium plan. The 6-2 vote approved the construction contracts for the $226-million project presum- ably set to begin shortly. But the regents forgot about one small detail: There is still an outstand- ing lawsuit that could crumble the whole project. Back in April, the Michigan Paralyzed Veterans of America filed a lawsuit against the Uni- versity because the stadium proj- ect fails to meet the guidelines of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. According to that law, any stadium built after 1990 must make 1 percent of its seating handicap accessible and that seat- ingi ist be dispersed throughout the stldun. Any stndumn like the Big Hiouse that was built before 1991i must be broughti tim inADA stand:ardswhen it is renonted. tor the Univ.ersitytis min'ns that more thani 1,t0 o hi CU'- rent 107,501 seats in the stadium would have to be handicap acces- sible. The project only increases that number of seats to 282. Instead of meetingtthe require- ments of the law, though, the University has danced around the issue. Although the Univer- sity agrees that the new luxury boxes must meet ADA standards, by classifying the changes to the concrete bowl as repairs and not renovations, the University is skirting the ADA requirements. But the University's stance is nothing more than semantics. There are legitimate renovations being inade to the concrete bowl including widening the aisles and eliminating more than 4,000 bleacher seats. By ignoring these concerns, the University is put~ ting itself in an uncertain legal situation that could topple the stadium construction just as it begins - wasting much of the $226.million going to the project. Instead of sitting., in its ivory t0eii r f uixury boxs, tit Uni- si sy nens icctepwn acind sCtti, tn disagreement i the Miichiigan Paralyzed Veterans of America. The skynx ins are not just bringingi, new elitism to the ig Ho use, that elitism is destroy- ing the University's tradition of1 diversity and inclusion. TO THE DAILY: ration makes billi There continues to be one each year by being major flaw in the University's If a clown can d payment system: Students University can too at the University cannot pay University's billing online using a major credit card. the 21st century. Instead, students are limited to an awkward form of payment Stephen Rushing called eCheck. Lawe school Did it ever occur to the Univer- sity that there might be students , with good credit and access to iaily over credit cards, but without deep- p pocketed paremims amnd access to irupaGC of theiribig checking accountsWho inakes these decisions anyway? T'iO THE DAILY: Correction: Which bureaucrat in The Michiga hides behind a "committee deei- cle on Ann Arbor' sion" in order to implement this buses, (A'iembraces extremely shortsighted policy? 06/18/2007) the For those of us who pay our Transportation A own way, this addition would be Mayor John Hieftj helpful. I often have more credit for buying "more available than cash on hand. In tally friendly" bus miny cases, I have to use credit Johnson and the U cords to pay large bills when service are implicit cash is running low. failing to do so. Bu, The University must become bus costs $250,001 more flexible if it expects to a regular (low-suis attrctc 'ind mnnire iinmortanthy incs and tine prais ons of dollars user friendly. Jo it, then the . It's time for office to join states buses n Daily's arti- s new hybrid shybrid buses, Ann Arbor ,uthority and e are praised environmen- es, and Keith Jniversity bus ly scolded for t each hybrid 0 more than Ifur biodiesel) e is wrongly directed. The gas and maintenance sav- ings for the entire AATA fleet of 75 buses totals $2,500,000 over 12 years. That's roughly $2,800 per bus per year. Dividing the extra amount each hybrid costs by the per year savings, the pay- back period is nearly 90 years! The environmental benefits can- not possibly be worth that cost. The time for hybrid buses is not yet - the University bus fleet manager is quite right. How can the AATA afford these hybrid extravaganzas? The article fails to ask who pays for them. The University buses are paid for out of higher tuition costs and reduced staff salaries. The AATA buses are paid for by the federal and state government subsidies. If the subsidy regu- lations permitted it, the AATA wouldgold-plateitsbuses.Hybrid buses are pure pork - our pork to be sure, but pork nonetheless. Ihope the Daily will do another article on this subject, preferably before the AATA wastes - from a national viewpoint - almost $20 million on hybrid buses. Richard Porter Faculty 0 0 Editorial Board Members: Mike Eber, Jennifer Sussex, Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Wagner