4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 23, 1995 iihe , ic igttn at7llj JAms M. NASH ON THE RECORD 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Ml 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan f MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES M. NASH Editorial Page Editors Surveys tell an icomplete story ofAmerica i'srack divide Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion ofa majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Follow the mone ' courts state with ood outreach programs T he University's plan to request $18.4 million in state appropriations increases this year represents a major shift in the tactics of the administration and its lobbyists in dealing with the politics of Lansing. Their efforts should spur the Legislature to in- crease appropriations by the rate of inflation - something that has not occurred in the past seven years - and approve an additional $9.5 million for the University's proposed state outreach programs. Provost J. Bernard Machen has presented a plan to the regents that would expand edu- cational opportunities for Michigan citizens by creating a Center for Learning through Community Service, a State and Local Policy Outreach Center, an Economic Development Outreach program and, perhaps most impor- tant, an Institute for Educational Innovation in K-12. The plan also would allocate $2 million to expand undergraduate research opportunities at the University. In the past, lawmakers have perceived the University as overly confident in its dealings with the Legislature, expecting to rest on its laurels and get everything it requests. De- spite the obvious social and economic ben- efits the University - between its superior academics and its medical center-brings to the state, the regents and administration are often seen as indifferent to Michigan resi- dents. The $9.5 million requested for state outreach should reverse this trend. Placing a premium on education of Michigan residents -- which eventually benefits the state eco- nomically - is the reason the University's satellite campuses are thriving, and Ann Ar- bor would do well to follow their lead. The efforts to implement these programs are laudable and deserve the highest atten- tion from the Legislature. Just as millions have been designated to Michigan State Uni- versity for agricultural extensions, the out- reach programs play off the University's strengths by recognizing its strong educa- tional and research facilities. It would be nothing short of mean-spirited hypocrisy for the Legislature, which bitterly complained that the University was ignoring the interests of Michigan residents, to vote down a plan that would benefit the state just as surely as it would the University. The coming battle for state appropria- tions represents a critical juncture in state support for education. Since 1985-86, infla- tion-adjusted appropriations have hovered around a constant $225 million. While oper- ating expenses and tuition have continued to increase, state appropriations as a percentage ofall revenues continues to decline -mean- ing students are forced to foot a greater portion of the bill. Arguably, there may be a need for downsizing at the University in an effort to save money. But for every program that is cut, there are 100 more initiatives waiting to receive funding. As research funds from Washington de- crease, the University is forced to pick up some of the slack. Finding less expensive ways to maintain high standards and accom- plish goals should be a top priority for ad- ministrators. But if the Legislature continues to rebuff the University's request for in- creases equal to the rest of the state's public universities, the vitality of the programs that give the University global stature will be in jeopardy. It is lamentable that academic institutions have to struggle with each other in the politi- cal arena for a greater share of the pie, but it is a reality for all public institutions. Each year, the University's budget depends largely on the whims of legislators. Rather than allow lawmakers to walk over the Univer- sity, the administration is getting into the game and has presented a viable plan for extending University benefits to Michigan residents. This time, if lawmakers punish the University, they will be punishing education for their constituents as well. G Survey says ..." With those words Richard Dawson, the genial host of "Family Feud," gave us another glimpse of life in our times, com- plete with bells, buzzers and animated fami- lies competing for cash. The show provided my first real expo- sure to the public-opinion survey. Of course, Dawson made no claims of scientific valid- ity about the show's polling methods, but the numbers seemed to speak for them- selves. With a new ocean of polls suggesting that we as a nation are more divided now than any time since the 1960s, it's time to step back from the numbers and ask what they really mean. Most of us are familiar with the evidence: S Leading up to the verdict in the OJ. Simpson case, numerous polls found that three-fourths of white Americans deemed Simpson guilty while a similar proportion of blacks thought he was innocent. * According to a Newsweek poll, 65 percent of whites and 52 percent of blacks felt the verdict "increased racial tensions" in America. Whites, polls show, are almost evenly split on affirmative action while blacks over- whelmingly support the initiative. Seventy- seven percent of whites polled by Time/ CNN in early 1995 said affirmative action programs "sometimes or too frequently" dis- criminate against whites. Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam and organizer of last week's "Mil- lion Man March," has a 53-percent favor- able rating among blacks but a 56-percent unfavorable rating across a survey sample made up of equal numbers of whites and blacks. The survey was conducted for Time magazine and CNN. Such results, with their gloss ofscientific validity, point to a deepening racial divide in the United States. But we don't need polls to tell us that. Anonymous and easily packaged with sound-bite analysis, the surveys are a convenient cloak behind which to hide the jumble of raw emotions that play such a large part in race relations today. No poll could have foretold the outpouring of rage that erupted in Los Angeles in 1992; no survey could possibly account for the appeal of white racist politicians like David Duke. Our Great National Dialogue - the one president after president has called for in the wake of racial incidents - has been pre- empted by Gallup. President Clinton, in a remarkably can- did speech last week at the University of Texas, sounded a call for reconciliation be- tween the races. Clinton, for once living up to his role as the nation's moral leader, admonished all Americans to "clean the house" of racism. But Clinton's words will be lost in the racial divide unless leaders of all races and political persuasions pick up where the president left off in the dialogue. That won't be easy. Polls show that race issues remain politi- cal dynamite, too volatile for most main- stream politicians to touch in all but the most general way. Before Clinton's speech last week, 1996 presidential candidates avoided the issue of race, with the exception of Cali- fornia Gov. Pete Wilson, who made the dismantling of affirmative action a corner- stone of his campaign. Wilson has since dropped out of the race. Polls, by segment ing the nation into neat little demographic groups, have been unhelpful in America's racial dialogue. Surveys tend to confirm our preconceived notions about race relations: 1. as a 21-year-old suburban white male, am supposed to oppose the system of racial preferences known as affirmative action, distrust many black leaders and hold a gen- erally dim view of black-white relations. That public-opinion surveys often become self-fulfilling prophecies is particularly un- settling as it perpetuates feelings ofdivision. Whites, told by polls that blacks don't trust them, will return the favor by simply avoid- ing discussion on racial issues. All of this from a few harmless numbers, slung with game-show precision by self- appointed "experts." If true racial healing in our nation is to begin, we must initiate a dialogue like the one President Clinton is imploring, instead of letting our surveys do the talking for us. - James M. Nash is an LSA senior and a Daily editorial page editor. He can be reached over e-mail at jnashqumich.edu: i JIM LASSER SHARP ASI i i I, NOTH ING LIKE THE YEAFH! ' A5E BALL AND AMERICAN PASTWE OPPRES51ON O F NATIVE AMER ICAN!S ND/ANS A _\ s FOAST NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'I think I still have enough brain cells that I can teach.' - University President James J. Duderstadt, on his plans to return to the College of Engineering faculty VIEWPOINT Cruel joke of communism still Ending sexual assault Awareness week highlights need for solutions mid the crisis of midterms, the Sexual ssault Prevention and Awareness Cen- ter is asking the University community to remember a different kind of crisis. The ninth annual Speakout for Survivors of Sexual Violence will be just one part of Sexual Assault Awareness Week, which be- gins today. Each year, the Speakout gives more students the opportunity to declare their survivorhood. The event, anticipated by many groups across campus, offers people in the community a chance to voice their experi- ences and feelings about an issue that is poorly understood. Other activities include self-defense classes and workshops for fami- lies and friends of survivors. There is a glaring necessity for these events, despite an ongoing effort to provide support services for assault survivors. There are organizations to help survivors, but sexual assault is still prevalent. While it is com- mendable that groups such as SAPAC exist, it is unfortunate that they need to exist at all. Students who have used SAPAC's ser- vices find an invaluable resource that is not offered anywhere else on campus. SAPAC's presence is not only a comfort for survivors, but a reminder to the community that sexual assault is still rampant. For almost 10 years, the Sexual Assault Awareness and Prevention Center has effec- tively provided students with much more than counseling services. Education programs such as residence hall presentations, self- defense workshops, a 24-hour crisis hotline, and the group's co-sponsorship of Safewalk and Northwalk make SAPAC an integral part of the campus and help prevent sexual assaults. A majority of SAPAC's effectiveness lies in its single-mindedness. It is not fundamen- tally affiliated with any other organization, and has no agenda other than helping victims of sexual assault and their families and friends. This is especially important to providing a support system - without pressure to take action - for students who have already had one choice taken away from them. The campus and community need to con- tinue their support of sexual assault survi- vors and attempt to prevent further assaults. For survivors, one day of speaking out and one week of awareness do not repair years of limited choice - silence or stigmatization. As long as sexual assault occurs, events like Sexual Assault Awareness Week will continue to be a part of campus life. The University and the community must work for an environment in which these programs are encouraged, but no longer necessary. By Alexandra Neyman In the former Soviet Union, people tell many jokes and sto- ries about communism, Marxism, socialism. All of these -isms are rooted deeply in almost the same ideology, which so far has not worked and has not shown a glimpse of future. This is why the jokes are told in the first place. However, the campus of the Uni- versity of Michigan and its very liberal student body does include some groups that see communism or Marxism as the only possible solution for survival. Some of such groups are the Young Trotskyists, Socialists, Marxists, Maoists and others which believe that they are "chil- dren" of the "great and almighty" Vladimir Ilyich Lenin. These people deem that in the United States, the power is held by the next groups: "the owners ofbanks and multinational corporations," or what the Maoists simply call them, "thieves," "government officials, or pimps," and finally pigs, which was quite unclear to me. Their solution to this "prob- lem" is to build a stronger power, which is quite ironic, since it is intended to be built with commu- nism, and to take the power away from the Oppressors. Thus, they believe, that they have to learn all the -isms, depicted above, or in the simplified form quoting, "the revolutionary sciences that work." The slogan of these groups is simple, "Proletariats of all coun- Neyman is a first-year Art student. tries unite!" Their statement in- cludes the "complete break with the Democrats and Republicans," and the creation of workers party and a classless society. They are not satisfied living under capital- ism, because, in their opinion, the United States lives off the backs of the Third World countries. They urge for a new Bolshevik Revolution and defend the Cuban regime. Since I myself was born and lived for 13 years under what might be called a regime that moved toward communism in the Soviet Union, I was certainly worried and very much interested in these movements. I have lived under both "communism" and capitalism; thus I, unlike the groups which call themselves communists, and have never lived under such regime, can relate between the two easily. From the first glimpse, the idea of communism sounds very engaging and appealing to the "hungry masses." Nevertheless, this idea is also a philosophyor an ideology that states that the wealthy should not only give the crumbs from their tables, but that the poor should participate in the feast itself and be equal to the higher class. Only in reality, this theory never works. The Marx- ists should be able to separate the ideology from realism, and real- ize that the classless society might only exist if the society will be so dark, uneducated and hungry that it will not understand what is go- ing on. This case had happened in the Soviet Union, as one can see it has not worked so far. The other case would be the one ofthe highly developed society that willingly, not with the help of the physical strength, would renounce its pos- sessions for the cause of equality. The Trotskyists say that the re- gime that occurred in the Soviet Union was not communism, be- cause of Stalin's dictatorial re- gime, and that if Lenin would continue his "preaching" the country would be on its way to communism. The answers to this are quite simple. The country was said to be on its way to this social equal- ity. A "five-year plan" was pro- posed each time, yet communism still seemed to be that horizon line where the Earth and the sky meet, and which is so unattain- able. Thus communism became the shortest anecdote ofthe coun- try. Their fascination with Lenin really scared me and reminded me of my years in kindergarten, where we sang songs and told poems about the great Grandpa Ilyich, or Father Lenin. We were ordered to wear a star close to our hearts, with the picture of young Lenin in it, and always say, "Lenin lived, Lenin lives, Lenin will live!" or "The Communist Party is the brain, honorandconscience of our epoch!" I saw this exact fascination in the eyes of the Marxists. Instead of praising Grandpa Ilyich, they should real- ize that he was the one who brought the economic dislocation to the countryand not Gorbachev, Brezhnev or Stalin. These were simply the branches of a big tree. Lenin was the one who created the KGB, sent anyone who dis- unfunny agreed with him to Siberia an4' totally destroyed any hope for any "normal" way of life for the Russian people. Lenin did also propose a race or ethnic equality. Yet African Americans were only allowed in the universities, in or- der to establish a solid influence, over the countries from which they came. There is a good Rus- sian anecdote that states that Lenin wanted to make everyone equal, and make the wealthy give tip everything for poor. He achieved that, and everyone became poor': the poor and the rich. So far capitalism and a mixed economy, which exist in he' United States, seem to be the onily- possible and the best solution for people to build their lives. This is why I left communism behind and came here, to the most pros- perous nation in the world. The Marxists who live under commu- nism say that United States is so prosperous because it lives off the backs of the Third World countries. Answering this com- ment I can simply say that first of all the Marxists should realize that the basis of foreign policy is self interest! Second, the Ameri- can people work 10 times harder than the people of these Third World countries; thus we are a prosperous nation, which helps these poor countries, even when it is absolutely unnecessary. According to the above, the "communists" should realize that their philosophy, as engaging as it might sound at first, can be- come a bitter joke to the affluent nation, if the Marxist concepts will be put in practice. How TO CONTACT THEM State Sen. AlmaWheeler Smith (-Washtenaw County) 410 Farnum Building Lansing, M148909 I I 7tA7 0 el '~$~Ar.. LETTER Affirmative action programs are another form of racism