Page 4-The Michigan Daily- Tuesday, March 9, 1993 bE £kbigau Oadtl 420*Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Josii DuBOw Editor in Chief YAEL M. CITRO ERIN LIZA EINIIORN Opinion Editors S''I C'sA-r" : OoC ' f fC-rL.'LLX /I'M1 WHIAT 7z. YOO WAIf UPJTiL THe Go-r A 7TS~t-rz> M C1/tRG o o w N F" T Y W=EF 0 < vow yooRE : -rU lY,N & Ami lNh~ -04A -r IN f ", As v H .Q tit Unsigned editorials represent the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, signed articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. W.OW< /V1A4You've RFAIL-> 1-u~iF-D VER A i\IEVV GAF,-" \ - , i / fJ . ~ ^F THE CIRCUS BEGINS Student jury to rule on first Code charges W, GUESsT You' FlNAii >y GoT "IOUR PF'IlO I-rF S ,N NEX- TWEEih k/I-EN 7 HE 3R4CKEg FoR/ THE IVCA44 S C0M~j Ln7T"/'M-i 6o) u4&76Th?- L&- ,F4/L-F4D -te ;Ai- vE~~ ' - f''RFc/?MANc sIN TH-EC -rqTi Hofr GCo w 4 A 174cs 4b E KANGAROO COURT began its attack on Tstudent rights this week as the first three accusations were filed against students for allegedly violating the Statement of Student "Rights" and Responsibilities. Now that spe- cific allegations have been made under the wholly unjust conduct Code, it will be made clear why University students voted resound- ingly against the Code last November in a Michigan Student Assembly referendum. The Code, which passed the Board of Re- gents last November and went into effect Jan. 1, empowers'the University to punish students academically for non-academic actions. Ac- tions punishable by the Code include kidnap- ping, stalking, forced consumption of any liquid or solid and unlawful possession of alcohol or other drugs. Alleged drug sales, physical harassment and stalking are the charges currently being levied against the first three accused students. Univer- sity involvement in prosecuting these cases demonstrates the current Code serves no pur- pose other than to give the University authori- tarian power over students where U.S. law already applies. The first case to be examined involves the accusationofdrug sales. Drug dealers can easily be prosecuted under federal and state laws. While selling drugs is illegal, an individual vendor presents no imminent danger to the University community and bears little correla- tion to a student's academic conduct. The University can hand down sanctions for violating the Code including formalreprimands, SI NT HISTOl Campus quiet for Wom YOU KNOW we are in the middle of Women's History Month? Don't worry if you didn't - you can hardly be blamed. The University has been resoundingly silent about Women's History Month. With the exception of a few individual residence hall programs, very little has been community service and a University housing transfer or removal. The University administra- tion is naive to believe such punishments would thwart the activities of a drug dealer. But when dealing with the charge of physical harassment, the necessity of a code becomes more complex. Physical and sexual harassment are serious problems on this campus that need to be addressed. However, the first charge under the code was filed not by a survivor of sexual harassment, but by a male student who said he was physically harassed by another man, an Engineering stu- dent. While this is a serious charge, it is some- thing that could be handled more succinctly by local or University police. The stalking case raises even more serious questions about the Code. While an accused undergraduate student is about to be tried under the code for stalking a woman in the Union, a 22- year-old senior was arraigned in Washtenaw County court Feb. 18 for allegedly stalking a female student in the Union. All facts indicate that the student to be tried under the Code and the student arraigned for stalking are the same person. This means the student will be judged in two separate courts and may potentially face two separate punishments. The U.S. legal system is far from perfect. IftheUniversity considers itsmonth-old house of justice so superior it supersedes municipal law, it should have made suggestions to the U.S. Department of Justice and brought "justice" to the entire nation instead of limiting it to the area within 30 miles of campus. RY Zen's History Month that this campus cannot show even half of Flint's commitment with our much larger resources is nothing short of pathetic. It is easy to forget that women have their own separate, distinct history. In today's society, it is often taken for granted that women can get an education, vote and compete for jobs. But we cannot forget the women in history who defied social paradigms to make great contributions to society. Taking women's history for granted is dan- gerous because even though women have taken great strides, there is still a long way to go. Women -53 percent of the U.S. population - compose only six percentofthe U.S. Senate. And although women have access to most formerly male-dominated jobs, they are paid uniformly less than their male counterparts. If we become complacent about women's gains, we will lose the momentum for change. This is not to suggest we should celebrate women's history in March and ignore it the rest of the year. On the contrary, all facets of history should be recognized every day as part of human history. But Women's History Month - like Black History Month, orChicana/o HistoryMonth - is a time to celebrate the history of a group whose accomplishments have been downplayed or ignored. The University should understand this and make March a time of honor and celebration of women's history. Walking alone is everyone's freedom 0 Brian and I had been hanging out in his dorm room and listening to music. It was pretty late by the time I dragged myself off the futon and decided to go home. "I'll call NightRide for you," he offered. "That's okay, I'll walk," I said, trying to think up an excuse. "Are you sure? You'll be okay?" He I I On the Fence I said, "I'll pay if that's a problem ... would you like me to drive you?" "No, I want to walk home," I said. "I can't explain. It's important to me." "As long as you feel safe," he said as I left. Out into the cold air. The snow was crunchy underfoot. Meryn Caddell sang in my mind: "VUP tup VUP tup Take the chance that only chancy chicks would take and walk through your cold neighbor- hood..." The music caught the rhythm of my footsteps as I walked across campus. "VUP tup VUP tup walk through your cold neighborhood with icy heels and clicks they make ..." It was cold. I wrapped my arms tight around me, trying to shut out the wind. It was quiet, especially once I got off campus. Porch swings creaked. A dog barked somewhere and I jumped involun- tarily. A shadow leapt across the sidewalk and my body jerked to an alert, adrenaline pounding in my ears. VUP tup VUP tup. "Why is this important to me?" I won- dered. It is cold out here, it is dark out here, Iam awoman walkingaloneatnight. Imagi- nary men lurk behind bushes and around corners. This is not safe. I thoughtback tohigh school, when I had wanted to hike the Appalachian Trail one summer. My father had forbidden me to go, saying it was too dangerous for me to hike alone, that he was afraid I would be raped. That it wasn't safe. When I had wantedtogo toEuropeafter my senior year it had been the same thing. That I was too young. When I had wanted to go to Chicago for the weekend with a friend. That it wasn't safe. When I had wanted to stay out an hour pastmy curfew on homecoming night. That it was too late. When I had wanted to go out to a coffee shop alone at night. In Grand Rapids. That I'd get raped. "VUP tup VUP tup ... with icy heels and clicks they make but don't get raped ...knock on wood' This fear of rape instilled by my father has haunted me for a s long as I can remem- ber. It has proscribed my actions - what I may and may not do, where I may and may not go. It has made it impossible for me to do many things I dearly wanted to do-things my brother did in high school without cen- sure from my parents, things he did without even thinking about them. Like hiking alone, or staying out until 3 a.m. or sleeping over at houses of friends of the opposite sex. Now, as I walk alone at night, I think to myself that it is more than just the necessity of getting home. I could get Safewalked, I could call Night Ride. But I walk alone instead. Why? I like the thinking space. The twenty minutes it takes me to walk home are enough to sort out my ideas about the day, to think about what to have for dinner, to plan what I have to do for tomorrow. I like not having to talk to people I don't know about things I don't care about. I like looking at the trees and the snow and contemplating the nature of beauty. But that's not all of it. I think I have a need to prove my freedom to myself. To say to myself that men, who have 'created the problem of rape, are not going to keep me "in my place" through a fear of violence. That I can go wherever I want and do whatever I want, because I am an adult person, and that being a woman does not mean that certain freedoms are forbidden to me. Brian asked if I felt safe. Of course I don't feel safe. Four times I have been chased by men on the street: at twelve, at fifteen, at sixteen and at nineteen. At eigh- teena man followed me homeand gotinside my house. At twenty I was surrounded by a group of skinheads on State Street. Even though nothing really violent everhappened, each of these experiences was terrifying. Foreach one, my family and friends blamed me forbeing in the wrong place at the wrong time, and most of all, for being alone. I am not trying to criticize Safewalk or Night Ride, or any of those other organiza- tions. On the contrary, I think they fulfill an important need. ButI also feel that for me,personally, to let the fear of violence dictate my actions would be saying to myself that the men who have threatened me have won, that they have power over me, that they can control me through a fear of assault.I cannot let that happen. And so (VUP tup VUP tup) I walk alone at night. It may not be safe, but to me it is vitally important. *1 planned in celebration ofthemonth -no speak- ers, no ex- hibits, not even a "spe- cial" dinner in the resi- Women's History Month MARCH dence halls similar to the one offered during Black History Month. This is sad. It is especially sad when we compare our- selves to the University's Flint campus, where students and staff are celebrating Women's History Month with a myriad of activities. The Women's CenteratFlinthas abudgetof $7,000 for these activities and has devoted a great deal of time to planning lectures, movie series, art exhibits and other festivities. Although the Flint campus has a much smaller staff and student body than Ann Arbor, they have demonstrated the importance of Women's History Month by making its cel- ebration a priority intheir community. The fact U' neglects students for research - REAST-FEEDING Florida permits breast-feeding in public E FLORIDA SENATE last week boldly of legislation due to assumptions that few moth- passed a bill that finally guarantees moth- ers have been harassed or arrested while breast- ers the right to breast-feed their babies in feeding. But immediately after the Florida Sen- public without the threat of arrest or harassment ate endorsed the new law, Senate phones were from law enforcement officers. The move - flooded with calls from around the state from unprecedented in this country-has been over- women who have received ill-treatment for nur- looked by both federal and municipal govern- turing their child in a public area, who had been ments. State Senator Lana Pollack (D-Ann Ar- afraid to speak out. bor) said no similarlegislation has been consid- These women said they had previously kept eredinMichigan.Infact,shesaid,beforeFlorida silent because they did not want to spend the enacted its new law, she had heard no discussion money on court fees or lawyers since all states of the subject consideredbreast-feeding underthe vague guide- The U.S. SurgeonGeneralhas recommended lines of indecent exposure statutes. Other moth- breast-feeding to be the healthiest way to nur- ers, feeling too intimidated to breast feed in ture a baby. It is scary to think that in 1993, public, have expressed fears that by coming Florida is the only state with a law that exempts forward with a complaint, they would have been nursing mothers from obscenity statutes and stigmatized. openly endorses breast-feeding as the preferred It is ironic to note that all states - except To the Daily: This is essentially an open letter to all students and faculty on things that should concern one and all. I will graduate this May (if this letter doesn't change that) and I am reflecting on whether my $60,000 (roughly) was money well spent. I will admit that I am satisfied with professors and teaching assistants on the whole. Other things, how- ever, cause me grief. I began my college career attending the number eight rated undergraduate institution in the land. I feel, however, in an effort to make this a research oriented institution by the James Duderstadt era, I will be ending my career at a university ranked in the twenties. It seems that with so many undergraduates, around 24,000 (correct me if I'm wrong), some emphasis should be placed on under- graduate academics. Having spent such a large amount of money in the past four years, I feel my academic accomplishments should be awarded with appropriate acknowledgement on my diploma. All LSA under- graduates will receive diplomas that either say "Bachelor of Science" or "Bachelor of Arts." I feel my monetary contribution to the university bank account should at least merit acknowledgement of my major field of study. Further, L like many other graduating seniors, have earned degrees in more than one concentra- tion, but will only receive one diploma. Could the cost of printing one diploma be so great that the University could not give proper credit to an individual who has fulfilled the requirements for a second degree? I doubt it. The University is, without a doubt, just another bureau- cracy, creating nothing but increased opportunity for disenchantment for the entire University setting. If I am to pay tuition that increases annually at a percentage twice that of the inflation rate, I deserve to see results. I feel I've seen nothing but increased research expenditures and lessened emphasis on undergraduate academics. Research is definitely important to the academic community, but not at the expense of undergradu- ate academics, which remain the heart and soul of the University setting. It's time that the under- graduates, and all students for that matter, receive the undivided attention of the university figureheads. This is still an institute of higher learning created for the people, for the students. Make it that way. Reed Bingaman LSA Senior Both sides wrong in Meizlish/Brown debate To the Daily: I was relieved to read Jackie Coolidge's letter, "Meizlish/Brown incident out of hand" (2/9193), in the Daily. I had begun to think that no one on this campus supported free speech in this episode without having as their motivation the perpetua- tion of the sort of boorish conservative attitude demon- strated by Brown's clueless example and response. Look, Shawn, you're not nailing another Luther's list to the church door; the fact that you are permitted to usethe example you did by the Constitution does not make it less sophomoric or irritating. Since virtually everyone in the world has condemned Debbie Meizlish's handling of the incident already, I will confine myself to saying that I unconditionally support free speech. That is why I agree with Coolidge that if the code is implemented we will be subjected not only to overreactions such as 0 0 Don't base judgment on sexual orientation To the Daily: What is it about some heterosexuals that causes them to think of themselves as fully rounded humandbeings, with ambitions, hopes and drams, This judgment of sexual activity aside, I think Ms. Reed ought to ask herself why she feels the need to "balance the free advertising' the Daily supposedly gives homosexual/ society because of their sexual orientation" is certainly arguable. Was Whitman a greater poet for being homosexual? Cole Porter a greater song writer? Tennes- i i