0 OPINION Page 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Thursday, January 5, 1989 Scenes from Fall The Michigan Daily '88 Vol. IC, No. 68 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M! 48109 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. Anything changed? 01 Through a series of meetings which excluded student input, the University regents selected James Duderstadt to be the eleventh president of the Univer- sity. Duderstadt ranked last out of ten candidates on students' lists. In spite of this, Regent Dean Baker told the frst choice candidate, Vartan Gregorian, hot to apply to Michigan. Though this Orocess occurred before the fa semester even began, it set a precedet of closed doors and failure to address student concerns which continued throughout the term. The "New" Administration Over the summer, interim President Robben Fleming acted as an enforcer for many of the unpopular edicts for the administration which shaped the fall semester. The implementation of the student protest code, the tuition in- crease, and the deputization of campus police were established by Fleming in an attempt to create the necessary con- trolling apparatus while sheltering the nascent Duderstadt administration. In another instance of inside-track hiring and promotion, the regents ap- pointed Dean Vest of engineering to Provost. In a school where business and research are already the dominant focuses, two engineers occupying the most powerful decision making posi- tions poses a threat to the quality of undergraduate education. Another familiar administrative face this fall was Regent Dean Baker, who was re-elected for his third eight year term. This will insure that he has served longer than any other University official: 24 years. Baker's vicious at- tacks on gay men and lesbians shows lack of concern for students and hu- manity alike. In one of the few triumphs of student activism the last semester, LSA dean Peter Steiner resigned after much pub- lic pressure and a sit-in in his office. These actions came in response to the insistence that the University should become a place where minorities would naturally flock. ' The fall 1988 semester saw the first use of the discriminatory acts policy which applies solely to students. This policy allows students to prosecute each other for racist acts via the administration. Even with the passage of a faculty conduct code, the administration itself remains beyond scrutiny while harboring racist administrators and using race and class-biased admissions procedures. Student Struggles Despite the increased administrative control over students' lives, the term was marked by several progressive achievements. The Ella Baker/Nelson Mandela Center for anti-racist educa- tion was opened. Two new courses were added to the LSA curriculum - a pilot course which could become a mandatory course on racism and an 'introductory course on lesbian issues. The FBI cancelled several recruiting appointments under threat of planned protest. An anonymous group painted nearly 300 slogans reading "A woman was raped here" all over Ann Arbor in an attempt to raise public awareness about violence against women. The Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC) started a 24 hour crisis line, and participated, with other women's advocacy groups, in the organization of the Court Watch program. Racism, sexism, and homophobia appeared in several forms throughout the term. The list includes homophobic flyers circulated in the law quad; the song "God Hates A Queer" sung on the diag; distribution of several racist flyers; a racist incident at the Kappa Sigma fraternity; the Daily printing three generic descriptions of a supposed rapist, and vandalism of the Palestinian Solidarity Committee and Free South Africa Coordinating Com- mittee shanties. None of the above, however, is sig- nificant when compared with the ad- ministration's constant lies and inability to deal with the demands of its own students. The Office of the President (among others) issued a report, "One Year Later: A Commitment to Diversity and Leadership" Annual Report on Mi- nority Affairs 1987-88" which claimed several non-existent programs as suc- cesses for the minority community while excluding acknowledgement of the student organizations which had pushed the agenda to its current point.When Latino students confronted the administration on the report they were abused by newly deputized Uni- versity Public Safety officers who slammed some of the activists' arms in the door and locked others in the stair- well. The first casualties of the newly dep- utized safety officers were four Daily writers arrested in front of Hill Auditorium while protesting Duder- stadt's inauguration.While the univer- sity is unable to prevent vandals and arsonists from destroying the shanties, it routinely blocks students from par- ticipating in university politics and can post a 24 hour guard on property of the University sailing team or the airplane which inhabits the diag once a semester. New contracts for the graduate stu- dents employee organization and the AFSCME workers received marginal advancement. The university main- tained a ten term rule for teaching as- sistents and AFSCME wage and bene- fit increase combined were less than the rate of inflation. At the same time, fac- ulty salaries went up 7.3% on average, administrative salaries increased an av- erage of 5 to7% and the tuition in- creased 8 to 12.2% which forced many less financially able students to leave the University. What Next? In all, the administration triumphed with big victories in police power, University funding, and major coups in the propaganda war: the University Record and the Ann Arbor News pro- vided daily praise of anything Duder- stadt and his administration could in- vent. For student power to return to the fore, the focus needs to shift to admin- istrative discrimination and militarism. Tactical differences between student groups or individuals must not interfere with creating a unified front against oppressive administrative policies. Students must forward their agenda pro-actively, rather than merely reacting to administrative initiatives.1988 proved that the university is still re- sponsive to its image - and not much else. In 1989, students need to work together to force the university to change more than its image. 6 ROBIN LOZNAK/Daily MSA President Michael Phillips protests the closed-door search for President James Duderstadt. "~ it ;;'; <.: Spray-painted graffiti, an attempt to raise rape awareness on campus. The graffiti was immediately erased by the University. K S1 k F f «~JESSICA GREENE ifDaily A student protests the Daily's minorityJcoverage, particularly the printing of two police composites of alleged rapists. JESSICA GREENE/Daily Students are prevented from- speaking with President Duderstadt about the University's factually incorrect Minority Afrairs Report. L!!3 / )lYalll 1 /rtivtill vt rtnn in .^inti n/Y nnn iivfn y f vvenvM .-r n rY :in'~ ~