4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, January 27, 1994 Gbe £rdh4jrn fladl by Jim Usser 77=77: . 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DUBow Editor in Chief ANDREW LEVY Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. f _ I of rights process doesn't go . SSRR amendment Today, at 6P.M. in the Pendleton room of the Union, I the University administration is giving students a chance to propose amendments to the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities (SSRR). The SSRR has been in effect little over a year now, and only one amendment to this document would make sense. The Statement of Student Rights and Respon- sibilities must be amended to not exist. The SSRR was supposedly set up to deal with problems such as sexual harassment, sexual assault and other crimes. These are all serious problems, which must be dealt with seriously. The SSRR, how- ever, does nothing to improve students' protection from these actions. While these are significant prob- lemson campus, the SSRR is far from an equitable and effective solution. In fact, it is the opposite. The SSRR allows the University to suspend or expel students who commit non-academic offenses. It allows the University to circumvent the legal system of this country, which, admittedly, is far from perfect, but is at least set up to guarantee citizens certain basic rights. The SSRR has no provisions for similar student rights; it does not even allow accused students legal representation and denies that those accused be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. It is, plain and simple, an attempt by the administration to control students in the manner that parents control their chil- dren. The University claims the SSRR is a tool for the protection of student rights. If this is the case, why are there so few provisions for the rights of students in the document? Why are the hearings closed to the public? Moreover, how can students reasonably be expected to place their trust in student jurors who, because of strict anonymity rules, are trained by the adminis- tration and are, in practice, responsible only to the administration? The University would respond that the SSRR was set up not wholly as a punitive system, but as a means for students to work out their problems without resorting to litigation. But any system that allows for the suspension and expul- sion of students-- without providing solid protec- tions for the accused -is an affront to the rights that should be afforded to all University students. In the SSRR, the University administration in effect removes the protections granted students - as citizens of a democracy - and replaces them with a system in which students are tried by a Kangaroo Court - without even the benefit of legal representation. The University, in effect, has placed itself in locoparentis, through the use of this mockery of a court system. In this unjust system, the University itself picks the jurors, trains them, and supervises them - controlling the cop, the, judge and the jury. Students do not forfeit their basic rights along with their tuition dollars when. they enter this University, and the SSRR does just that.The SSRR must be overturedin order for students tohave any reasonable guarantee of their rights at the Univer- sity. Tonight in the Pendelton room of the Union, the student jurors involved with the system will be waiting to hear what the student body feels about the SSRR. The message should be clear: students demand their rights, and will not allow the Univer- sity administration to hold the powers of in loco parentisover them. The Statementof Student Rights and Responsibilities must be abolished. Stuen n r Moil [] lp01: By CRAIG GREENBERG To write that Brian Kight and I have been bought by the University administration is the most offensive and false thing the Daily has ever written. Brian and I hold ourselves to the highest moral and ethical standards in every aspect of our lives; to write that anyone could buy us or affect our decisions for any amount of money is not only unfair and unjustified, but untrue. I think if the Daily asked any of our, or your, colleagues and peers, the Daily would be told that its assertion are false. Brain and I were not only elected on our political platform, but also on our character; we have served the student body by not only implementing our platform issues, but by representing our fellow students with integrity, honesty, and courage. There is no need to defend our ethical values through specific examples; I will simply let Brian and my record speak for itself. Additionally, it is wrong to write that the Administration is providing the MSA leadership with tuition waivers to gain leverage over any MSA administration. The University already has enough potential leverage over MSA without spending an extra dime; ultimately, the University has total control over our office space and fee and, therefore, could reduce MSA's autonomy over these two resources. However, the likelihood of the University taking such action is as unlikely as them revoking their commitment to Greenberg is the President of the Michigan Student Assembly. providing a tuition waiver to all future MSA leaders. This was not a Craig Greenberg/Brian Kight tuition waiver, but an MSA tuition waiver enacted to encourage and enable more students to take a leadership role in our student government. Also, compensating student leaders is not a novel idea, but is the norm around the entire country. In fact, the majority of Big Ten and Pac Ten student governments leaders receive much than this plan calls for. Compensating all dedicated and hard-working student leaders is important. It is time that the University recognize its student leadership and encourage and enable all of its students to strive towards a position of leadership. Many students do not have the opportunity to work towards and hold a position of leadership in a student organization because of their financial status. I am confident that many of these hard-working students could serve our student body very well; however, they do not have the chance. Leading a student organization is not only one of the most valuable educational experiences that a student will have while at the University, but is also one of the most time consuming. It is time that the criteria for being a student leader are one's experience, knowledge, dedication, and ability- not one's financial status. Awarding a tuition waiver to the MSA President and Vice President should not be perceived as a bad thing, but should be accepted as a first step-the University's first step in properly acknowledging the importance of all student leaders. MSA's leaders were first compensated because MSA is the campus-wide student government and, therefore arguably, the most important student organization. Once the details were worked out, a new plan to compensate more student leaders would be enacted. If we all work together, a student leadership scholarship fund will be a reality in the near future. Students who do not hold positions of leadership should also support this initiative and all further initiatives to compensate your student leaders. The benefits to you of having the best leadership of the student body is enormous. Student leaders on this campus greatly affect all of our lives; not only do we confront the administration when necessary, but we also work with each other programming and planning campus-wide events and implementing policies which affect us all. However, the response to this plan has not been entirely positive . from our constituents. Therefore, while I still believe that awarding a tuition waiver to the MSA leadership is appropriate, Brian and I will not accept the tuition waivers at this time. Instead, we are proposing ballot questions concerning this issue to be voted on in the next MSA Elections on March 22-23. We will decide whether or not to accept the waivers based on the results of the ballot questions. Brian and I believe that the only appropriate way to deal with this issue is to let the entire student body decide. The Shtte of the Unioan Clinton must fight for security for all Americans A fter the recession of 1982, the U.S. economy. began to grow. President Reagan's approval ratings started to climb and the general mood in the country was one of satisfaction. But this boon was as misleading as Reagan's infamous question to the American people during his 1984 campaign: "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?" A sound economy had been a misleading statistic that allowed status quo politics to reign. And when the smoke and mirrors of the 80's blew over, the average American was cornered by a troubling realization: simple security was a dream of the past. Security doesn't seem like too much to ask for. To be able to take a sick child to the doctor, to have dinner on the table at night, to able to find asecure job if one has the desire to do so- these are the bedrocks of security and they should be basic rights of citi- zenry. President Clinton seems to understand this. Not since Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal and the Great Society of Lyndon Johnson has a president under- taken such an ambitious social agenda. "The Amerb can dream has been slipping away," he noted in Tuesday night's State of the Union address, speaking passionately and at length about -among other things - health care, crime and welfare reform. For once, there was a president on the podium that didn't adapt the rhetoric of exclusion. Even while voicing his support for tougher welfare restrictions, he cor- rectly noted the symbiotic relationship between pov- erty and welfare reform by promoting the expanded Earned Income Tax Credit from last year's budget: "It will lift 15,000,000 families out of poverty .. Now that's real welfare reform." Ofcurse, Clintonisfar from perfect.Someof his numbers are inflated and his actions often fall far short of his preacher-like rhetoric. Moreover, many of his positions on welfare reform and family values take a page from the old conservative handbook and it has yet to be seen if he will stick by his philosophi- cal guns on health care. But hopefully his State of the Union address will be a harbinger for a new wave of hope and security. The 58 million Americans that do not have health insurance for varying amounts of time each year must find strength in Clinton's prom- ise to veto any health-care reform that doesn't prom- ise universal coverage.;And howcouldtheAmerican worker not be encouraged by a president that faces the onerous truth: "For 20 years, the wages of working people have been stagnant." The political situation is now ripe to bring a legacy of security to fruition. Clinton's approval rating is hovering at about 54 percent - its highest point since his election a little over one year ago.And some formof health care reform has wide support on both sides of the aisle. But until the evils of poverty and despair are eradicated, a long political struggle remains ahead. The blueprintis now inplace. President Clintonmust not look back. Charges of r By ADAM HEBERT It seems that discovering racism where it does not exist is a pastime of select members of minority groups. While certainly not as blatant or prevalent as in the past, racism is still alive and well in the United States, and finding and putting an end to it is an important goal. Existing problems of racism, prejudice and discrimination are not enough for some people though, who feel compelled to create further problems where there are none, actually hurting the mission of equality in the process. Two articles from 1/13/94 illustrate this point - the Stanley Slaughter piece, and the piece on the threatened boycott of NCAA basketball games by the Black Coaches Association (BCA). The BCA is planning a boycott of games in response to "a vote at the NCAA convention against restoring a 14th scholarship in Division I men's basketball." Members of the BCA feel this discriminates against Black student-athletes, when in fact it is simply a cost-saving move. "There comes a point where you have to take a standl," said Washington State coach Kelvin Sampson. Take a stand against what? Scholarships are expensive, that is the reason why the number was cut from 15 to 13 in the first place, to reduce the strain on overstressed racism unfounded 0 New condom ads not comprehensive forms of financial aid. In addition to the move simply not being racist as claimed, the BCA protests send the wrong message. It reiterates the old idea that sports are the way to opportunity, when in fact this is true for a very select few, whether schools have 13 scholarships or 23. The best route to college and opportunity is through academics, an option which is available to all. Disadvantaged students should have hard work and study stressed, because these are the surest ways to success, not being the 14th best basketball player on a given team. Mr. Slaughter similarly finds alleged racism where it does not exist. He goes even further though, by committing the same sorts of "attacks" that he despises, encouraging division instead of harmony. The examples of "racism" that Mr. Slaughter finds: "negation of programs such as the University Research Opportunity Program, which were specifically set up to recognize and combat the disenfranchisement of 'disadvantaged minority students' acquire research positions (sic)." This claim ignores the fact that any student at this University is going to have equal opportunities for research and everything else. The case can also certainly be made that no one at the University of Michigan second example. This policy may be too restrictive, and it also may affect Black organizations disproportionately, but it is not racist. It was created in response to acts of violence in the Union by people who were not students, so the policy was needed. We cannot have people getting stabbed in the Union. Furthermore, the policy may inconvenience some groups, but since students can still being in guests, I do not see how it could "severely weaken organizations." Last was the example of "Black Lounges" becoming "Multicultural Lounges." This is simply a reduction of the level of preferential treatment, not racism. First, what's wrong with "Student" lounges, and why can't everybody use them? Second, if minority lounges are necessary, why should Blacks have them but not Hispanics or Native Americans? Blacks may have initiated the creation of these lounges, but that is no reason for them to be exclusive property. Black-only lounges would create segregation, something which already exists too much on this campus. Mr. Slaughter concludes by saying that "the University's 'Dream' is another attack on African students not only on this campus, but nationally. Students at the University must ... combat Euro-American When Dave and Maddie finally "did the deed" on "Moonlighting" back in the '80s, audiences never saw Dave interrupt sex to put on a condom. In fact, mentioning or dealing with safe sex realities on television was almost non-existent until last week's unveiling of three new com- mercials promoting condom use as a way to fight the spread of AIDS. The ads, created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are a major step forward in sparking Pennsyalvania's Department of Health hotline, reported AIDS cases inceased by 1,459 percent during the Reagan/ Bush years. Obviously, the Victorin-era moral tactics went limp during the fast-living '80s. It's about time the government talked straight about this epidemic and how to prevent it. Although the ads are refreshing becuase the CDC recognizes condoms as the more realistic AIDS prevention, they still fall short in addressing the realities of modern - leaves out a majority of Ameri- cans. And since television is on 24 hours a day, the ads should be shown all day, the ads should be shown all day, instead of the selected times they are no. Only Fox, a network targeting programming at younger viewers, had agreed to show the three spots with no time restrictions. The restrictions shouldn't end there. It's too bad the ads only fea- ture of straight couples. Secretary of Helath and Human Services Donna