Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 29, 1992 G E S iligan ailt 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764-0552 Editor in Chief MATTHEW D. RENNIE Opinion Editors YAEL CITRO GEOFFREY EAR ilE AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan Unsigned editorials represent a mnajority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Code is just a piece of a puzzle GEE...V1 $uEHEjHEEH...y- irGRAY0)-YOU SAI T** BAC IN-SC-- OL- SAS 17~i ~C p E--7 r 1i'.,: :: hs ~ - Judging by the turnout at the two hearings that Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartord convened, the general student body seems to have little interest in the controversial new "Statement on Students' Rights and Responsibili- ties." The apparent lack of interest may be a result of the high turn-over rate of students on campus. New first-year students and sophomores generally have little idea of what occurred on campus in the past years and many seniors knowledgeable and concerned about the administration's activities graduate and leave campus. All this makes the administration's attempts to regulate student be- havior that much easier. A history of the administration's activities shows that the enact- ment of the new code is not an unexpected or unique action. It is only one piece of a large and disturbing picture that should leave all students skeptical about the University's intentions. University President Harold Shapiro, James Duderstadt's predecessor, tried unsuccessfully to push through a comprehensive code of nonaca- demic conduct to set the parameters of student behavior. Learning from Shapiro's mistake, Duderstadt maintained the same policy goal, but used a different tactic. Rather than enacting an all- encompassing code, he systematically adopted independent polices - all meant to restrict student behavior. Among the highest priorities was changing the stretch from Rackham to the Graduate Library into a quiet, green mall. In 1990, the administration enacted a policy that allowed loud-speaker dem- onstrations only between 12 and 1 p.m., and only with the permission of the University. And for those demonstrations that brought on bad press - like the annual Hash Bash - the administration tried to crack down, prohibiting the assembly and fighting legal challenges in court. Couple that with the administrations no-shanty policy, and the Diag area becomes uncharacteris- tically apolitical, considering the University's ac- tivist past. Shanties are wooden structures which are spray-painted with political slogans. Two years ago, only three of a collection of shanties remained standing, and in 1991 these last relics were hauled away. Now University policy prohibits this form of peaceful expression, and the Diag is little more than a pretty place to sit down between classes. But the administration was not content to regu- late student behavior on the Diag - its influence had to extend into their homes. In 1988 the Univer- sity enacted its drug and alcohol policy, which punished students who used illegal substances in their ownhomes and sanctioned under-aged drink- ing. Simultaneously, the administration was work- ing on an overbroad sexual harassment and sexual assault policy. Since then, the federal government passed leg- islation requiring the enactment of the drug and alcohol and sexual assaultlharrassment policies, and the new comprehensive code has eliminated the need of the two separate policies. In addition, the University made an effort to ban hateful and hurtful speech by enacting a speech code in 1988. A federal court wisely struck down the speech code as a violation of the First Amend- ment in 1989, but the administration quickly fol- lowed with an interim code. When the Supreme Court ruled a similar Minnesota speech code un- constitutional, the administration backed down and rescinded the interim code. During the summer of 1990, the administration deputized its first armed police officers (who car- ried 9mm semi-automatic weapons) under the Washtenaw County Sheriff. But the administration preferred full control over the police and pro- ceeded to deputize them under the University Board of Regents. It held two hearings to consider public concerns, as required by law. The hearings were poorly advertised and scheduled on the Thursday and Friday before spring break, when many stu- dents were out of town. Moreover, when the hear- ings began, the regents responded to protestors by barring them from the hearings. In the end, less than 20 Ann Arbor residents and students had the opportunity to speak to the regents. The "Statement on Students' Rights and Re- sponsibilities" may mark the final battle of the administration's war on student rights. One need not be sympathetic to conspiracy theories to ques- tion the administration's motives. Only by putting the University's most recent action into context, can students recognize the persistent attack on students' rights. 01 MINISTRATION t t 11 fly 'K, ,,..may *- eta , " .1 f ITSj(sj ST E01 Life, death, abortion? To the Daily:.' As a pro-life Republican opposing capital punishment, I agree with the gist of the Sept. 16 political cartoon. But if you think it's hypocritical to be pro-life and pro-death-penalty, what are you implying about abortion? Think about it... David Hansen Second-year law student Letter offends sorority women To the Daily: If Mr. Chapman was trying to make a diplomatic point about noise violations in his Sept. 28 letter to the Daily, "Greek Brats," it was completely lost in his offensive, slanderous piece of propaganda. Mr. Chapman, your sterotypical, pretentious judge- mnents of sorority women engag- ing in "fake friendships" obvi- ously stem from a deep insecurity within yourself, possibly that of .being a senior and clearly having never spoken with one sorority woman. As a matter of fact, Kappa Kappa Gamma didn't even drive convertibles on Bid Day. Were your eyes closed as tightly as your mind? I sense a twinge of envy in your arrogant, self-righteous statements, Mr. Chapman, for how many true friendships could you possibly have based on the closed-minded beliefs displayed in your letter? Lord help how racist and homophobic you must be, in addition to anti-female. Cori Jakubiak Pledge Trainer, Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority, LSA junior The Daily encourages its readers to write. All letters should be 150 words or less. All op-ed pieces should be 3,000 characters. Submissions should be typed and sent to: the Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI 48109; or via MTS to: the Michigan Daily, Letters to the Editor. To the Daily: It is unfortunate to see the Daily criticize one of the few democratic student-run organiza- tions on campus ("Does the ICC have your money" 9/24/92). While it may be true that the Inter-Cooperative Council (ICC) could handle share returns in a more timely fashion, state legislation would be the worst possible solution to such a complex problem. The writer of the editorial failed to mention the many internal recourses that ICC members have, such as talking to their house president, presenting a proposal to the Finance Committee, speaking at the Board of Directors meeting or just plain raising hell. Landlords do not rebate your rent at the end of the year, as the ICC does. The $200 in shares are a member's stake in the co- operative and may be sacrificed to pay off a member's debt. If the security deposit law were applied to ICC shares as the Daily proposed, the ICC in turn could raise the required share purchase to $500. This would go against our stated purpose of providing low-cost housing. I urge dissatis- fied members to talk to their elected representatives so that we may effect a democratic solution from within the ICC. The Daily editorial page should turn its unwarranted attention to the large elitist and sexist student organizations on campus that receive University and Alumni support while the Co- ops remain 99 percent self- supporting. Student dollars support the ICC, unlike the Michigan Daily, and the ICC does not have any Duderstadt appoin- tees on its board. Harley Savage ICC member Editors' note: the Michigan Daily recieves no University funding. Criticism of ICC undeserved 01 A letter to a tall, blond guy 0 S 0 S 0 _cc To the tall, blond guy who was walking down State St. last Friday afternoon: I am pretty angry at you. You probably don't remember why, you probably don't even remem- ber who I am. I'll attempt to refresh your memory but I have a feeling that you, like a lot of other guys in this world will still be clueless. Here goes nothing. After finishing a few errands on a very nice Friday afternoon I was walking back to my dorm thinking of my weekend plans. Two University-employed men walked by me going the opposite direction, looked me up and down and commented, "Mmm- hmm they's is some nice lookin' shorts you have on!" You were right behind them and didn't make matters any better by looking me up and down as well and then laughing! Looking down I noticed that I had received that "lovely compli- ment" because my very normal looking shorts had been showing a few inches more leg than normal because my book bag had latched itself on to them. I turned around and the first two men were out of sight but I could see you sauntering along the way. "What was so funny!" I yelled at your retreating back but you didn't hear me. It's not like I have a very loud voice, and you weren't exactly waiting around to receive my reaction. Well, if you had I would have liked to tell you how totally rude, and out of line you were. I may pass you any number of times during my remaining years here and will never recognize you but if I did I would criticize your inadequate physique, incredibly geeky style of dress, sickly complexion and any other thing that doesn't make you any less of a person but which would humili- ate you and make you feel pretty insecure about yourself. Unfortunately, every female in the world and I deal with street harassment daily, and we are getting pretty tired of it! Julie Robinson LSA junior MIA families: casualties of war Many Americans believe U.S. intervention in the Vietnamese civil war went on too long; now there is evidence that the peace may have been concluded too soon. Ongoing hearings on Capitol Hill last week elicited disturbing acknowl- edgments from former secretaries of defense that American servicemen were possibly left behind in Southeast Asia after the Paris peace accords, de- spite President Richard Nixon's assurances to the contrary. Deception by the Nixon administration is nothing new, yet it is appalling that POWs may have been abandoned for domestic political expe- diency. In separate testimony before the Select Senate Committee on POW/MIA Affairs, Melvin Laird, secretary of defense through 1973, and James Schlesinger, CIA director and Laird's successor at the Pentagon, stated that they had information at the time of the peace accords suggesting that POWs were alive in Vietnam. Nixon withheld this information from the U.S. public and worse, from the families involved. Further, Nixon's secretary of state, Henry Kissinger, continues to duck the accusation that he swept information under the rug in order to con- clude the peace negotiations quickly. He blames anti-war efforts for his inability to press for a fuller accounting of the information. Rather than pass- ing the buck to anti-war demonstrators, Kissinger should accept responsibility for his mistakes and cooperate fully with the Committee. With 2,266 Americans listed as missing from the Indochina war, Nixon said in March 1973 that "all of our American POWs are on their way home." That was true only in the sense that all of the POWs whose identities and locations were But newly-revealed documents show that as many as 350 U.S. personnel were missing or cap- tured in Laos. The Pentagon had solid information on 20 pilots who were downed in Laos, but only 10 were released from captivity. Part of the problem, perhaps, was that the Lao- tian government was not included in the peace process. A recalcitrant Vietnamese government may have resolved to conceal information on POWs held in Viet Cong camps in Laos. For many years, U.S. authorities continued to receive reports of sightings of persons presumed to be Americans. The Pentagon believed that the Vietnamese government wanted ransom for these individuals - a theory that has since been discred- ited. U.S. missions to Southeast Asia have investi- gated this charge, but the results - at least accord- ing to unclassified information - have been in- conclusive. Still, in the hopes of pressuring the Vietnamese government to provide information on the whereabouts or fate of MIAs, Washington has wisely withheld diplomatic recognition and for- eign aid. Many now believe that POWs are being held in Laos or Vietnam by groups outside the govern- ment. However, the U.S. is correct in holding the Vietnamese government responsible for the ac- counting of personnel, since it may have informa- tion inaccessible to U.S. intelligence efforts; some areas of Vietnam have never been opened to U.S. inspectors. The POW/MIA debacle is one more ugly legacy of a brutal war and a duplicitous administration. Whether U.S. servicemen are at to date being held against their will in SoutheastAsia is debatable, but the government owes it to their families to do University needs code to stem assault by Sue Kaufmann In any community of 35,000 people, there are inevitably in- stances of behavior that hurts oth- ers, sometimes seriously. Student communities are no exception. Stu- dents, staff and faculty at theUniversity currently have very limited protection from violent, . - assaultive, ha- rassing or discriminatory behavior by students. The University is re- quired by law to proscribe some kinds of behavior by students and to offer protection and relief to vic- tims of some of those proscribed behaviors. For 10 vears. a the women's most others at that time, I assumed that students would come forward primarily to tell of being harassed by faculty members. Over time, I learned that women students were in at least as much danger from their male peers as they were from staff and faculty. Sexual assaultisan all-too-com- mon experience on any university campus, including this one. Inci- dents described by women students at the University as sexual harass- ment perpetrated by fellow students include: acquaintance rape, stalk- ing, publicly biting women's but- tocks, persistent, graphically ob- scene comments about women's bodies, and personally humiliating cartoons or drawings posted on bulletin boards or included on fly- ers. Women faculty members also :-rr-- inl: cae~.:ka .CAV ~. h rne The legal system cannot do the whole job. Most complaints that are likely to be brought forward under the proposed statement are not likely to be prosecuted. Environments hos- tile to women cannot be changed through the courts alone. Universi- ties have the obligation and the re- sponsibility to use many creative means to foster environments that are inclusive and supportive for all. The S tatementof Student Rights and Responsibilities providesafoun- dation - enabling the University to protect its members in cases of vio- lent, assaultive, or threatening be- havior and promoting educational remedies and mediation in the much more frequent cases of demeaning or discriminatory behavior.Experi- ence on this campus and others indi- cates that formal procedures are lilc. a .tohA er roha..-n-ac.'n 0 1