Page 4 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 22,1991 Wbe £id4jan flailg 420 Maynard Street ANDREW K. GOTTESMAN Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Editor in Chief Edited and Managed STEPHEN HENDERSON by Students at the DANIEL POUX University of Michigan Opinion Editors Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. , ,r {: "v'' ,"T . .",vv,::{. ,r..... ....,.is:".......................:::i::":::....:: i":"i:"?:i::":.>::.:4:: MSA reform Student group recognition process should be demolished ckvut -K 000 41 ~II f AL 1 , f f t \ I/I( / 1 X7IiA/( j t j 'Jt i I ornerstone Christian Fellowship, Michigamua and the United Coalition Against Racism may seem like strange bedfellows, but all three have born the brunt of an easily manipulated process within the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) - its student group recognition policy. Depending upon the assembly's reigning ideology, many groups - including the aforementioned - have found themselves and their beliefs on trial before MSA - while merely trying to gain basic recog- nition from the assembly. Groups should not have to be "recognized" by the assembly to carry out activities on our campus. MSA recognition allows student groups to post on the Diag, meet in University buildings and gives groups the right to apply for MSA funding and office space. The assembly has often attempted to rid the campus of "offensive" groups by de-recognizing them. But the reality is that the existence of such groups will continue without MSA recognition. By denying groups recognition MSA is failing to fulfill one of its most basic premises - the general service of student groups. MSA should serve as a resource for student groups - not a conscience. It should protect the rights of all student groups - not withhold them. The current process of recognition, however, has given the assembly the means it needs to deny these rights to student groups by attempting to hold them to a certain moral standard. Thus, a group whose agenda does not coincide with the assembly's can often be denied an opportunity to request MSA resources. In light of such corruption, the recognition policy should be replaced by automatic student group recognition. This way, all student groups will be automatically granted the rights to petition for the assembly's resources, and MSA will be closer to general student representation. MSA does have limited resources of office space and funding, but automatic recognition would in no way force the assembly to afford every group these privileges. It merely protects the opportunity for student groups to request these things. MSA's reputation with the student body is abysmal. The students' apathy towards MSA is largely due to the perception that MSA argues much but accomplishes little. Much of this argu- ment takes place over an area MSA should not control - student group recognition. IfMSA truly seeks to ensure and protect student rights, then it should begin by eliminating inequity in the assembly. If the assembly is to make strides toward true reform - and bring itself closer in line with student interests - then eradicating the current recognition process must be a top priority. Uncivil treatment White House takes 'Jim Crow' O n Oct 22,1990, George Bush joined two other presidents in U.S. history-Andrew Johnson and Ronald Reagan-who vetoed civil rights bills that had previously cleared bothhouses of Congress. Now that the 1991 Civil Rights bill has cleared its initial hurdles in Congress, Bush is gearing up for a repeat performance. Last year's bill had been mandated by the Supreme Court, which gutted Section 1981 of the 1866 Civil Rights Act and Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and then asked Congress to write replacements. Both provisions once provided employees with broad protection against discrimination and placed the burden of proof on the employer in most cases involving possible civil rights infractions. In rulings such as Patterson v. McClean Credit Union, the 1988-1989 Court ruled that the 1866 and 1964 acts covered only an employee's initial hiring but not subsequent discrimination on the job. The results of this and a half dozen similar rulings during the same term were devastating; the McClean case alone forced plaintiffs to drop 96 discrimination claims without furtherinvestigation. Congress' civil rights legislation attempts to redress this injustice. It is difficult enough for a woman or a person of color, often in a subordinate position on the job, to press civil rights charges and risk being fired in the process. It is that much more difficult whenthe courts refuse to accept established stand on civil rights bill Congressional Republicans opposed to the bill have substituted demagogy for discussion. Senate Republican leader Bob Dole castigates the Demo- crats' reintroduction of the bill as part of a "crass political game." But the only thing phony in the current debate is the crocodile tears the Republicans are shedding for those being discriminated against. While they acknowledge that there are civil rights infractions, they don't lift a finger to fight against them. The proposed bill would reinstate former guidelines for pressing discriminaton cases. It would mean expanded guidelines to allow women, religious minorities, and the disabled to collect punitive damages as well as back pay; currently, only people of color can collect punitive as well as compensatory damages. It would, as Representa- tive Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) promises, con- tribute toward the establishment "a level playing field." By itself, the proposed civil rights bill only begins to redress a problem with much deeper, more institutionalized roots. Recent studies con- firm that both women and people of color have actually lost ground in their fight for equality during the last quarter century. Nonetheless, the bill takes an important first step in the right direction. Bush is not only refusing to walk this first mile toward genuine equality; he is tripping over himself in his efforts to walk backward. While the nation moves toward the Stop heterophobia To the Daily: I have recently read the article "The 'City Hall 1' Comes Out" (3/20/91) in The Michigan Review and I am aghast at the heterophobia displayed by ACT- UP against "City Hall 1." Jeff Muir wanted nothing more than an intellectual conversation with the members of ACT-UP. What he received were insults and harassment because of his heterosexual appearance. How can members of ACT-UP continue to scream "homophobia" when they participate in discrimi- nation of heterosexuals? I think that the demands of the "City Hall 1" are justified and will help the heterosexual community maintain their rights as citizens. The heterophobics at ACT-UP must meet these demands today! They must be held responsible for their actions and pay retribution to the "City Hall 1" and the hetero- sexual community for their blatant heterophobia. Matthew DePerno LSA senior Mike Gill again? To the Daily: Once again there are some assumptions and conclusions in Mike Gill's Band Corner that need clarification ("Thumbs up and down for hockey band," 3/18/ 91). With regard to his comments about the band's apparent inactivity during the second period of hockey games, it should be noted that time during the beginning of the second period is one of the few opportunities that we band members have to visit the concession stand and restrooms without missing much. As trombone section leader for the band, I certainly don't like to do cheers with several members of the section missing because it detracts from the sound. This is the case with other sections as well. As for the "cowbell inci- dent," the interruption by the percussion was merely an accident, as they were already preparing to play just as the cowbell started. The members of the band, being among the most spirited of hockey fans, do not feel that the cowbell playing intrudes on "our precious territory;" we welcome and enjoy this show of student support. And although it is true that the saxophones cannot fill the arena with their sound, they work hard to prepare their cheers, which are enjoyed by people well outside of a six foot radius. All of the sections of the band should and do have the opportu- nity to play cheers if they choose to do so. So once again, it appears as if Mike Gill did little or no research to back up his commen- tary. Jeffrey Lawrence Engineering sophomore On the abortion issue... To the Daily: I am writing in response to the 2-1 ruling by the Michigan Court of Appeals on Feb. 20, that threw out the ban on state-paid abortions for poor women. Before I become any more detailed in my argu- ment, I want it to be understood 'that I am neither advocating nor admonishing abortion. I want to employ my right as a state tax payer to speak on an issue I believe should be confronted: the issue of education. In the 2/21/91 issue of the Daily it was reported that the State Court of Appeals overthrew a ban approved by voters in 1988 that ended a $6 million annual budget subsidizing some 18,000 for poor women. This ban was reversed in a suit involving the gang-rape of a 15-year-old girl who could not afford the $1,000 procedure without the state's help. The figures in the Daily imply 18,000 abortions are subsidized by tax payers' money annually. Of those 18,000 how many involve rape or incest? Sen. Lana Pollack (D-Ann Arbor) was quoted as saying "the cost of an abortion is significant even 0 though it may not seem like much to the affluent." To let Pollack know, the cost of an abortion is significant to anyone, but the cost of protection against pregnancy is significantly less. Pollack continued by saying, "The right to privacy should not be determined by income." The right to privacy, in matters involving the state, should not be determined by income. With the possible exception of cases involving rape or incest no abortions should be funded by the state. Some may argue that those "poor women" who do carry the pregnancy to term will only add more problems to the system. This may include adding another child to welfare or leading to detrimental social ramifications and quite possibly even a worsen- ing condition of life for the mother and child. However, the voters in 1988 showed they did not want to fund state paid abortions. This issue is not of black and white circumstances, there are several gray areas. The resolu- tions made will never please everyone but education could never hurt the situation. 4 Perhaps the state could use some of the $6 million previously allotted for Medicaid abortions to promote sex education in schools and the communities of the state. I doubt most people would object to the prevention of unexpected or unwanted pregnancies. Dawn Zencka LSA first-year student patterns of on-the-job harassment and trends sug- twenty-first century, gesting discriminatory promotion policies. on a nostalgia trip fo The time for more long-term solutions is now W hile it is important to support the drive for a tend a "poverty scho new civil rights bill, it is also time to realize that they can' tcompel such plans are simply stop-gap measures, and do white counterparts. A not offer long-term solutions. The facts illustrate deal with this realit that equality cannot be legislated; it must be cul- environment to produ tivated from the beginning. Any bill that Congress This means targetting manages to come up with is merely window- combat disadvantage dressing a much larger problem. Unfortunately, rea To truly combat the problem of inequality in often don't spell poli America, we must attack the source. One out of grams aimed at the in' every four young blacks is in prison. We must our inner-cities don't attack the widening income gap between certain realize that will all b ethnic minorities and mainstream America. And failure to make this in - perhaps most importantly - we must embark on a permanent program to rescue the youth before Both govemmenta they become trapped in the same cycle as their dealt with this issue in parents. manner. It is more pr When more than one-third of all Black and new "desperation plan Hispanics in this country grow up in a "poverty for dealing with the p household" in a "poverty neighborhood" and at- not yield fruits until t George Bush has embarked r the days of Jim Crow. Crossing L.A.'s thin blue line ol," it comes as little surprise :e with their more advantaged kny civil rights package must y - we must upgrade the ice an "upgraded individual." children from a early age to d situations. 1 solutions to these problems itical advantage; costly pro- vestment in a better future for win elections. But we must ear the burden created by a nvestment. l and civil rights leaders have n a sickeningly short-sighted rofitable politically to unveil ns"thanto devise real systems problem - systems that might he next generation. "Stacey Koon," insists his par- ish priest, "is a very gentle family man. But as a policeman he is under a lot of pressure." Being gentle and being a cop have never exactly ' been syn- onymous. In 1991 Los Angeles, where the police force resembles a small army and the gang popu- lation is ap- say - a little less sensitive. But when you think about those packs of criminals in Watts and East L.A., what can you do? As Koon's priest makes clear, "there is a very thin blue line between civility and chaos, and that blue lineis our police force." But who do you call - as an ACLU ad in the L.A. Times asked last week - when the gang wears blue uniforms? When two-thirds of all Black men in L.A. have been arrested, although only a fraction of them have everbeen charged? When a jeering LAPD squad forces 30 mostly Black men to walk on their knees at gunpoint because they are in an affluent, mostly white neigh- borhood? More importantly, who do you call when the gang is wearing gray flannel suits? When it is the city's wheelers and dealers, responsible for waves of factory closings and an underfunded school system more Black Watts while regional growth reached a staggering 45 percent. Jobs are available, but not ir L.A. - and not for Blacks. A few years back, 50,000 mostly Black and Latino youth lined up for miles to apply for a handful of unionized longshore jobs in the L.A. harbor. With few options and no future, it is no wonder so many of them wind up in gangs. "Gangs are never goin' to die out," asserts a 16-year-old Grape Street Crip. "You all goin' to get us jobs?" Aprobing question -onewhich begs for a response from leaders with the imagination and the guts to admit thatL.A.'s gangs and its brutal police force are only symptons of a much bigger problem; Sgt. Stacey Koon, much like all the Blacks and Latinos he has been taught to hate, is a victim of an establishment which divides working people against each other for its own interests. 0 Mike Fischer Nuts and Bolts MR. CLOWNJ F ZMY f-n-{ Ca-ASS HAMSTE=R DC IA SURJAL ISA NH.TURAL. ME F~y2 7 .4a! T WAA-,Ni- MI ALSO THINK 7*A-r E NcOUGH CRSDT.THEY'RE by Judd Winick PRNCPAL FEFE'S TON A ETY lXLO TIE FR A - proaching __ _ _ 50,000, they seem to be mutually exclusive. Koon was the commanding of- ficer during the now infamous vid- eotaped beating of Rodney King. Koon's friends, trying to juxtapose