rietgtoditran Ninety-eight years of editorial freedom Vol..XCVIII, No. 71 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, January 13, 1988 Copyright 1988; The Michigan Daily Dean Steiner explains past statements UCAR calls Steiner's statements By LISA POLLAK LSA Dean Peter Steiner held af press conference yesterday to clarify his allegedly racist remarks, but a tense question-and-answer session leftz many members of the Unitedi Coalition Against Racism angry andt dissatisfied with Steiner's explanations.1 "During the conference he madec many other racist comments that1 basically solidified those notions we had of him already," said Pam Nadasen, a UCAR steering committee member. Steiner told a crowded room of more than 50 UCAR members that he regrets the wording of - but stands behind - a statement made in a Sept. 17 speech to LSA department heads and directors. While describing his plan to promote affirmative action in faculty hiring Steiner said: "Our challenge is not to change this University into another kind of institution where minorities would naturally flock in much greater numbers. I need not remind you that there are such institutions - including Wayne State and Howard University. Our challenge is not to emulate them, but to make what is the essential quality of the University of Michigan available to more minorities."' UCAR members have called the statement "racist and offensive" for several reasons - including the implication that Steiner does not' want large numbers of Blacks to attend the University, and that he 'racist' sees institutions with higher Black enrollments as inferior. UCAR has demanded a formal apology from Steiner, but he will not consider their demand until meeting with the group at 1 p.m. today, he said. "I wish I hadn't said that paragraph," Steiner said. But he defended the statement as part of his plan to "keep the nature of the See STEINER, Page 2 Black faculty challenge Steiner By LISA POLLAK A group .of Black faculty members, including Vice Provost for Minority Affairs Charles Moody, signed an open letter yesterday criticizing LSA Dean Peter Steiner for "a regrettable lack of sensitivity to racial inequality," and rec- ommending sensitivity training for all University administrators. The letter, signed by nine Black faculty members last night, also congratulates Steiner for pledging to do more to increase the number of See BLACK, Page 2 ' LSA Dean Peter Steiner answers questions yesterday during a heated press conference held to discuss his allegedly racist remarks. MSA opposes Fleming's proposal By RYAN TUTAK The Michigan Student Assembly, in its first meeting this term, easily passed a resolution that "strongly opposes" Interim University President Robben Flem- ing's draft for a "code" of conduct last night. Fleming's proposal, released Monday, calls for academic sanctions against students- who verbally or physically harass minorities at the University. Under the policy, students could be expelled, suspended or placed on academic probation for discriminatory acts. The resolution, which passed 29- 1 with one abstention, said that the benefits of the proposed policy "do not exceed the detriments and dangers which it presents for the (University) students." "The positive step of trying to deal with racism is overwhelmed by the abuses of first amendment rights," said Student Rights Committee Chair Mike Phillips, LSA junior. The policy states that "Enforcement of our rules... is com- plicated by our constitutional rights."' In strong statements against the policy, many assembly members agreed that Fleming's code was not intended to fight racism. "Fleming isn't really concerned with racism," said Bruce Belcher, a non-elected member of the assembly. "We've seen acts of racism by the administration this year, and nothing, was done aboutthem." Others feared the open-ended nature of the policy could allow University administrators to abuse it. "It's incredibly vague," said Rackhami representative Steve Angelotti. "Iti could be a major tool of harassment... and could have a+ chilling effect on free speech." Citing the 5.3 percentage of+ Black enrollment at the University, Phillip's said his main complaint about the proposed code is that it does not address the real problem of racism. "This does not deal with institu- See ASSEMBLY, Page 3 KING SYMPOSIUM CONTINUES Law prof. speaks on civil rights movement U Council members By KRISTINE LALONDE and JIM PONIEWOZIK The University's two-day Martin Luther King, Jr. Symposium closed yesterday with workshops, guest speakers, and a closing address by Georgetown University Law Prof. Elanor Holmes Norton, who urged educated Black youth to become leaders in a movement for racial equality. In her speech at Hill Auditorium, Norton said that Black students "whose education gives them the opportunity to go in unprecedented ways" have an obligation to other members of the Black community who have not yet benefited from ad- vances in civil rights. "Dealing with (problems of) race is in part an intellectual enterprise," Norton said. The civil rights movement is changing, Norton said, because overt legal discrimination has been re- placed with more subtle problems such as economic disparity between Blacks and whites. "The issues are compelling, but no longer self-evident to the society at large," said Norton, who added that this change will make it more difficult for new civil rights leaders to marshal public support. Norton also said that people con- cerned with Black advancement may become complacent, and therefore less inclined to protest, because of recent advances such as increases in the overall Black standard of living. "Protest and progress do not sit easily together," Norton said. In yesterday's opening address, Dr. James Jackson, associate dean of the Rackham Graduate School, warned that Black civil rights gains may be eroded during the rest of the 1980s. "Blacks have in no way achieved parity with whites," he told the audience of about 100. Jackson said Blacks are making slower economic progress than whites, especially in total family wealth. Jackson said, as a result, social and economic issues are more press- ing to Blacks than political issues. "While Blacks are free to own a house in Grosse Pointe, it is not See MLK, Page 5 differ on c By STEVE KNOPPER Interim University President Robben Fleming's proposal to ad- minister academic sanctions for stu- dent harassment and discrimination his met with mixed reviews from the panel authorized to draft all such documents. Student members of the Univer- sity Council - appointed by former President Harold Shapiro to draft a code in 1984 - called the draft a "terrible misuse of power." But fac- ulty and administration representa- tives on the council said Fleming's decision to bypass the process was justified because of the council's slow progress in writing a code. For four years a panel of students, faculty members and administrators. have struggled unsuccessfully to draft a code of non-academic behav- ior. Fleming released his version of the guidelines Monday, after one week in office. The proposal would impose aca- demic probation or suspension as punishment for "discriminatory" be- havior and harassment. Fleming has not specified a timeline for imple- menting the policy, saying that he released the draft for community re- odedraft view. But community review is not es- sential to implementing the policy, according to University's Board of Regents' Bylaw 2.01, which grants presidential authority in all cases of promoting "maintenance of health, diligence, and order among the stu- dents." Fleming's proposal invokes this bylaw but ignores the conflicting bylaw 7.02, which states that any change in the rules of non-academic conduct must .be approved by the nine-member University Council. In a statement released yesterday, Council Co-Chair David Newblatt and student members Robert Bell and Blake Ringsmuth said Fleming "intends to ignore 7.02, the Univer- sity Council process, and simply pass this on his own..." "Bylaw 2.01 was never intended to be used as a loophole to pass a policy that is perceived by the President to be too controversial for the process outlined in bylaw 7.02," the statement said. Ringsmuth added, "This is clearly a code and it should have gone through 'U' Council.... (Fleming) See PANEL, Page 5 Daily Pt'fo b y ENLEV~ Georgetown Law Prof. Eleanor Holmes calls on minority students to use their educational advantages to help achieve equality for other minorities. , City homeles By JEFF ARCHER Ann Arbor's homeless come from several different backgrounds, but during frigid winter months they have one thing in common: they need a warm place to sleep. Beth Yaroch, administrative associate of the Shelter Association of Ann Arbor, said the number of homeless increases each year. A 1986 state task force report estimated that l there are between four and five hundred home- s find shelter during cold weather spells "Families and children are the fastest growing' group of homeless," Yaroch said. Paul Whitty, of the Arbor Haven staff, said, "We get a lot of men who've broken up with their families, some because of problems with alcohol." "One woman had to come in because the pipes froze up in her house. Another man here is fleeing domestic problems because of vio- lence," Whitty said. us they've been staying with a relative, but their landlord found out and they had to leave," Wilson said. The Shelter Association has approximately 50 beds available, while the Salvation Army's Arbor Haven shelter can accommodate about 18. The Ashley Street day shelter, also oper- ated by the Shelter Association, gives some of the homeless a warm place to spend the day. A rotating church shelter program, operat- 'A lot sleep in abandoned build- ings or cars. I know of one that sleeps in a cemetery.' - Beth Yaroch, Shelter Asso- iation administrative associate Funding for each of the programs comes