a A OPINION Page 4 Sunday, April 14, 1985 The Michigan Daily 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan VOICE party wins top spots' Vol. XCV, No. 155 420 Maynard 5t. Ann Arbor, ML.48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Paul Josephson and Micky Feusse of the VOICE party won the top spots in the Michigan Student Assembly elections last week. Their party nabbed 17 of the assem- bly's 39 seats. 18 percent of the student body-an estimated 6000 students-voted in the elec- tion. This is the greatest amount of voters in recent history. The MUM party, led by engineering senior Kevin Michaels, won 12 seats on the assem- bly, but the MOVE party, led by LSA sophomore Alex Diana did not receive any. On your honor A STUDENT SITS in a crowded lec- ture hall, concentrating intently on the multiple-choice test before him. Knowing that the test will be graded on a curve, he shields his 'paper from other students, for he has heard rumours of widespread cheating at the University. Suddenly, as the teaching assistant turns her back, he sees a student in the next row blatantly copying an answer from an unsuspec- ting classmate. Torn by ,a moral dilemma, he feels obligated to report what he has seen, but feels unwilling to jeopardize his classmate's future. According to the LSA Joint Student Faculty Policy Committee, the preceding scenario happens with alarming frequency at the University. The committee recently interviewed 220 students, 58.9 percent of whom said that they had encountered cheating in the college. To combat dishonesty, the commit- tee recommended four stop-gap measures which fail to address the un- derlying problem - the lack of a systematic policy to discipline offen- ders. The top proposal, having students sit in alternative seats, has already been enacted in many classes and has proven moderately effective at best. The committee also recommended that instructors pass out two sets of exam papers "whenever possible," that faculty members should monitor exams more attentively, and that faculty should not deal with cheating themselves. While ambitious and effective in theory, these proposals are vague and do not provide a uniform policy. The present system of treating cheating cases on an ad-hoc basis adds to this inconsistency. The committee has broached a tpossible long-range solution, however, imposing an LSA honor code similar to the current system in the College of Engineering. The engineering honor code requires students who observe cheating to turn in the guilty party. According to students and faculty members, it has effectively instilled a fear of cheating among engineering students. Whether an honor code would prove similarly effective in LSA is questionable. For the exception of the rigorous and competitive pre-law and pre-medical classes, most of the curriculum plays into the schedules of a more laid back group of students who, by nature of the very college of which they are part, are less concerned' about polished transcripts and more concerned with getting what they can from a course's offerings. Admittedly, this is just a generalization and not all LSA students fit the above description, but, in comparison to those in the College of Engineering, they are less likely to feel directly affected and in- jured by another student's cheating as a means of finding ;immediate success. An LSA honor code would certainly be beneficial if it placed a uniform punishment on offenders. With the current system, (or lack thereof) faculty members view the crime of cheating in different perspectives. While one may do nothing more than admonish a student for not turning in his own work, another may destroy a test or even an entire class grade. All offenders deserve equal punishment for their actions regardless of the nature of the personalities of their professors or T.A.'s. In addition, as the committee itself stated, an LSA honor code would only work if "it instills a sense of pride and discipline in the students." Students would have to take the system seriously, even if it required turning in a friend or acquaintance. Thus, anyone investigating an LSA honor code must seriously examine the pros and cons of this controversial measure. If successfully enacted, it could help to-solve what appears to be a chronic problem of dishonesty; if in- correctly applied, it could lead to even more problems than currently exist. The Week in Review All of the ballot questions passed by a wide margin. Question A asked students if they would like to continue funding MSA through mandatory fees, which may be increased from $4.75 to $5.07. Question B centered on the mandatory fee assessments that are not currently listed on students' tuition forms. These fees may be added to the forms in the fall. Question C concerned the code of nonacademic conduct, and asked if the student bodyshould accept a cody by vote -before MSA and the administration endorsed it. All ballot questions will be used as guidelines in future MSA decisions. Vaccination anniversary On April 12, 1955, Dr. Thomas Francis, then chair of the University's Department of Epidemiology, announced the discovery of a polio vaccine. Under Francis' direction, a team of 120 scientists aided by University Epidemiology students, conducted their research out of the no longer needed Polio Vaccine Evaluation Center and in the School of Public Health. Salk was Francis' former student, who had been testing a polio vaccine at the University of Pittsburgh. He sent test results to Francis in 1953, who confirmed their validity two years later. When the formal announcement was made at Rackham auditorium, the crowd went wild and the Daily printed a special edition to proclaim the news. The University was flooded with phone calls from people around the world who wanted confirmation that the miracle was true. The virus that killed and crippled thousands each year has been virtually wiped out by Salk's discovery. Student awards 48 students and 11 groups received cer- tificates of recognition for extra-curricular The Week in Review was, compiled by staff writers Karen Klein and Amy Mindell and editors Thomas Miller and Andrew Porter. contributions to the University community. Of these, 17 students and two groups were given honorable achievement plaques for out- standing contributions. The awards are sponsored by the Office of Student Services, the Comprehensive Studies/Opportunity Program, and the Michigan League, among others. Last year, the award committee decided to hand out cer- tificates in addition to the plaques so that more people could be recognized. "The recognition awards are a singular distinction," said Shapiro, "it demonstrates a committment made by students to'something beyond themselves." Shapiro gave first year law student Eric Schnauffer an award for his effort in fighting the proposed code of nonacademic conduct: his effort has compelled Shapiro to rewrite the code. Other recipients include LSA senior Byron Roberts for his research on minority recruit- ment and retention, LSA senior Steven Smith, who chaired the Millions Against Multiple Sclerosis group, which received both an achievement and recognition award, and An- nette Fernholz, Editor in Chief of the Ensian. Activism on campus Armed with a volatile political issue - namely apartheid in South Africa - cam- puses on the east and west coast have ex- ploded again in protest after almost a ten year hiatus. At least 100 student protestors have set up an around the clock vigil in front of Columbia University's Hamilton Hall for the past week. Also 50 student protestors at the University of California-Berkeley spontaneously began a continuous vigil after an anti-apartheid rally last Wesnesday. In both instances the student efforts are designed to apply pressure on their respective schools to divest assets within South Africa. Closer to home in Rackham Hall, David Nbada, member of the African National Congress, advised all those opposed to apar- theid "must become a fighter-either a fighter politically or a fighter militarily." Adding fuel to the Columbia protest are six students who have entered. a hunger strike now in its third week. The hunger strikers are demanding a meetin with the school's trustees to discuss the divestment issue. At Berkeley, student protestors are deman- ding a quickening of the pace of University divestment. The UC Divestment Coalition, the group which sponsored the rally, has demanded that the report concerning divest- ment be presented to the regents at its April meeting instead of in June. The anti-apartheid vigils come in wake of the arrests of students at Yale and the University of Colorado over CIA recruitments on their campuses. Protest at Pioneer More than 200 Pioneer High School students boycotted classes to protest the forced resignation of their senior advisor, Martha Graham. The students feel that Graham is being un- fairly held responsible for scheduling the prom and homecoming 'dances on Jewish holidays and charges of racism in a student election last summer. Wiley Brownlee, of the school's superinten- dent's office confirmed that no students would be suspended for their action, though they would receive unexcused absences. Brownlee said that the action was "quite an educational thing and they did it with a lot of class. We're proud of them for that." Blowoff for Tigers On Tuesday, the Detroit Tigers kicked off another season of baseball, America's cen- tury-old' pasttime. Students everywhere dropped their responsibilities to further their educations and flocked to televisions in order to catch that cherished first game; the reminder of how pleasant the memories from, the previous summer have been. The Tigers, needless to say, opened their season by shutting Cleveland down in three consecutive games and letting the rest of the American League know that, once again, they were the team in baseball to beat. They needed to reach back and put out their familiar magic twice in the series by mustering come-from-behind wins late in the first and last games. Their rookie third- baseman Chris Pittaro got off to a pheno- menal start and helped lend the impression that, come next October, the Graduate Library may very possibly see the return of study/rioting when the "boys" recapture the championship of the world. The immediate implications of the return of Tiger baseball are already evident: Students with portable radios are invading the campus with broadcasts, and Tiger shirts and caps are rapidly becoming official school unifor- ms. The Tigers' opponents are considerably stronger this year, notably the slug-stuffed Red Sox and the ferocious young Blue Jays. Repeating just as division winners is nearly impossible in the American League East, baseball's fiercest division, and the Tigers will probably besworking harder than ever this summer to prove that they're still baseball's finest. Did you conspicuously notice how nice the weather got as soon as baseball season star- ted? 04 Reconciliation Focus on retention . 0 N FRIDAY,; President Reagant announced his plan to lay a. wreath at a. German military cemetery as a symbol of reconciliation with the German people. Reagan was met with'criticism for his action from the American Legion, members of the Jewish community, and others who are outraged by Reagan's insensitivity. The problem is compounded by Reagan's decision not to visit Dachau, a Nazi concentration camp, because he doesn't want to "send the wrong signal" to Germans. Reagan feels that going to Dachau emphasizes the past instead of looking toward the "spirit of reconciliation" between the United States and Germany. The president does not want to re-open old wor woun- ds. Reagan's intentions are clearly good, but his method is deplorable. Reconciliation with Germany is hardly contingent on Reagan's acknowledgement of - the horror in Dachau. Reagan has justified his decision not to visit Dachau by saying that "very few" Germans alive "remember even the war, and cer- tainly none of them participated in any way." People all over the world do remember the war, and that is why Reagan's symbolic laying of the wreath is such an impressive gesture of friendship from the United States to Germany. At the same time, Reagan's dismissal of the Dachau concentration camp is similarly a signal to the world of Untied States' feelings toward the holocaust. The people of this country do remember the holocaust as a large and ugly part of the war. President Reagan's insensitivity for the people who have attachments at Dachau. is disrespect for all those who survived the concentration camps. Survivors of concentration camps and their descendants do not forget the past in their effort to look toward the future. New attitudes of friendship and reconciliation are formed by learning from history, not by ignoring it. As a representative of the people, President Reagan needs to understand the significance of his inaction as a statement of disinterest in this country toward the survivors of concentration camps. This is not the message an aware and thoiuhtful nresident wants to conve-v By Cheryl Jordan, Constance Jordan, and Byron Roberts University administrators in recent Michigan Daily ("Racism ar- ticle stirs anger," 4/3) and University Record ("Frye rebuts biased Free Press article," 4/8) articles have expressed disappointment over the March 31 Detroit Free Press article, "Being Black at UM." Administrators contend that the Free Press should have produced a more objective story; if it was necessary to produce such a story at all. A related implication is that black students who were interviewed for the story could have been more objective in their comments. Specifically, administrators have charged that black students' com-" ments expressing dissatisfaction with the quality of life at the Univer- sity were made "willy-nilly." Also, administrators have complained that these comments were "misleading" and "damaging" to the University's image. They claim that these comments will hamper future minority recruitment efforts. Among those black students in- -terviewed for the Free Press story, we would like to respond. Black students at the University have no control over what is con- sidered newsworthy by the Detroit Free "Press. Nor do black students control how newsworthy stories are written. Black students do have concerns about the quality of life at the University. Given the oppor- tunity to discuss these concerns, eight of us did. Members of the University's sports teams and student government discuss campus issues with the public regularly. We have the same right. The article focused on the experiences of eight black student leaders at the University. It represented accurately the opinions stated during the interview. It included positive as well as negative comments. We do not think that the article was "highly irresponsible." It is not clear way the administration holds this view. It is unfortunate that ad- ministrators did not respond to student comments for the article. Our responses were not misleading. They were sincere. Dr. was not our task to assume the role of impartial observers. Our job was to describe our feelings, as black students at a predominantly white institution. Administrators have said that the article implied that the University is "permeated by racial bias againstrblacks." However, it is clearly the responsibility of the educated reader to determine to what degree our comments represented the experiences of many black students on this campus. The comments of several other minority group students suggest tha we do share similar experiences with them. A March 12 letter to thW Michigan Daily, entitled, "Anti-Semitism Prevalent at University," discusses concerns similar to those raised in the Free Press article. An article in the April 15 issue of MSA News entitled, "Quality of Life at the University of Michigan: The Hispanic Perspective," reflects these concerns, likewise. We do not aim to hamper University recruitment, retention and graduation initiatives. However, we and other minority students will retain the right to speak out when we feel the need to. Administrators claim that our statements will be damaging to th University's image and thus minority student recruitment efforts. I this likely? In the same Daily article in which administrators voiced their comments, Dave Robinson from the Admissions Office said: "I really don't think there are hordes of students that are scared of us. These students are used to taking it on the hide, enduring hardships." In the University Record article, Dr. Sudarkasa said: "It is my judgment, however, that the 'image' factor is far less a deterrent to increasing enrollment than economic factors." The University teaches us to think critically and to value debate. We are not taught to accept circumstances as they exist. We are taught to probe constantly for new and better answers. In our opinion, the ad- mintrtin-rahehan ~neimin n~n -.cfiAi~itc~' .m.imin tnt nn I