4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 8, 1994 Ueiritgan Duig 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JEssB HALLADAY Editor in Chief SAM GOODSTEiN FUNr WArEss Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board.. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Ad mnrativ e overload Committee recommends LS&A honor code 'Point of order: the point of order is out of order.' -Outgoing MSA Rep. Devon Bodoh, in a deft display of parliamentary politics at Tuesday's MSA meeting - COFFE E 01 1 PROF. MARSEE WIH EN INA COF-EE S.HOP. I. WEAR 'BLAcK. 2 E A69y' AT AMERICAN SOCT OR ,OVERNME NT. \ - II1e Fast forward, for a moment, to finals week, and imagine that you are on your way to take an exam. Forthepurpose of this scenario, also imagine that you plan to cheat on this test. Sitting down, prepared to start writing, you are startled to find that on the exam passed out to you, there is a cover sheet. Before you begin the test, you are forced to sign this sheet, promising that you have not and will not cheat. Would this alter your actions in any way? Common sense says no; the University says, in effect, yes. For students of engineering, this proce- dure would be nothing new -a sort of honor code is already in place in that as well as other schools. For LS&A students, however, no such code exists. According to the LS&A Joint Faculty/Student Policy Committee, this must change. But the recommendations of the Commit- tee, which consisted of eight faculty members and five students, go beyond mere honor codes. Chaired by David Schoem, from the LS&A Dean's Office, the misguided Com- mittee recommended hiring yet another ad- ministrator to watch over this code. Supposedly, these changes are needed because the current academic conduct code is weighted against faculty members. The Com- mittee opined that since it is very time-con- suming for faculty to compile and present evidence against alleged cheaters, faculty members often opt to simply not enter the judiciary process. And this is quite true. Faculty members often feel like they are the ones on trial during judiciary hearings, and this is a problem. However, it is quite typical of the Univer- sity to try to alleviate looming problems not with simple reforms, but by hiring new ad- ministrators. Moreover, the faculty problem may not be as big as some have made it out to be. The judiciary process is about more than eradicat- ing cheating from the University campus. The process is also about ensuring that stu- dents accused of cheating get a fair shake. The process as it stands now is not perfect, but it is pretty fair. Accused students go on "trial" only before a "jury" of their peers. Self- governance is the backbone of any functional community, and bringing aboard a new ad- ministrator - or "case investigator" as the Committee calls the position-would serve to tear apart the fabric of this system. The Committee wants this investigator to be an objective witness that will allow faculty to step out of theprocess. But this is not realistic. What will happen is that the University will have hired itself a slick prosecutor, an indi- vidual whose job consists of gathering evi- dence against students. His or her salary, of course, will come straight from the public trough. The problems with the Committee's re- port go beyond suggestions. The theory be- hind the suggestions are also flawed. In its report, the Committee has absolutely no docu- mentation of widespread cheating in LS&A. Instead, the Committee relies on national statistics and anecdotal evidence. It then takes this shady platform and uses it to say that deep structural reform is needed. Not all of the Committee's reforms are problematic. The creation of an Administra- tive Hearing, as an option for accused stu- dents is a good idea. However, any gains are overshadowed by some of the ludicrous sug- gestions of the Committee. Students don't need a new administrator working to prosecute them. Students don't need a cover sheet honor code that, at the very least, would lead to the death of many trees. And students surely don't need to ease the burden on faculty by shifting the burden to themselves. ADVICE magazine data inaccurate To the Daily: ADVICE Magazine is a course guide which utilizes the evaluations filled out by students each term with the idea that students will be informed of what others thought about a particular class and/or instructor. Eight of the questions which students are asked to rank between 1 and 5 are averaged by class and printed in ADVICE. This project has been ongoing since the Fall of 1980 and has met many successes and pitfalls throughout the past 13 years. Last Tuesday, March 22, ADVICE was released on campus for the first time in two years. Changes in MTS had prevented the ADVICE program from functioning properly. In the meantime, the ADVICE staff moved ADVICE from MTS to a database program on a Macintosh. The database seemed to run perfectly on last fall's data, and the information was placed into our 22nd publication and distributed in several buildings across campus. Unfortunately, the information printed in this issue of ADVICE is incorrect. The database program on the Macintosh jumbled the numbers for the responses to the questions. For most records, the questions listed do not properly correspond with the numerical rankings: Please be advised that, as a result, the information for all courses except those in the School of Business is not accurate and should be disregarded. The ADVICE staff apologizes for this error, and regrets any problems or confusion that it may have caused. We have taken several steps to remedy this situation. As soon as the problems with the issue were discovered, the ADVICE staff collected as many copies as it could recover from sites around campus. All copies of the magazine which the staff did not manage to retrieve should be returned to MSA or recycled. We will also be issuing a letter of apology to all departments included in the issue. The staff is analyzing the problems with the database and a correction will be implemented as soon as possible. Please watch for a new edition of ADVICE which hopefully will be released before CRISP is finished (this one will be correct!). If you have any questions, comments, or concerns regarding this matter, please contact ADVICE at 763-3241. COLLEEN TIGHE ADVICE Director Daily MSA coverage is insufficient To the Daily: I have been extremely disappointed in the Daily's coverage of MSA activities. Important issues have been glossed over and neglected. With this type of shoddy coverage, it is no wonder that many in the student body react apathetically to the MSA, and that the MSA can act without any shred of accountability. During the MSA meetings on March 22 and March 29, there was a deliberate and systematic attempt to silence those voices in favor of the AATU. At the March 22 meeting, many people could not speak in the allotted constituent's time. Craig Greenberg, president of the MSA, ignored motions to extend constituent's time, and in then decided to adjourn the meeting. At the March 29 meeting, the MSA deliberately changed the agenda order so that they could vote on the funding the AATU without listening to the many students and constituents who had come to the meeting to speak about that very issue. These anti-democratic actions of the MSA were not reported in an adequate manner by the Daily. In the past couple of months, the MSA has engaged in actions which have violated certain people's civil rights, and there is now a possibility of various civil rights and contractual lawsuits against the MSA. The low-key coverage which the Daily has given to these important issues is unacceptable, and represent a breach in the the responsibility to journalism which the Daily carries. KEVIN LEE Rackham first-year student Look on the bright side To the Daily: Like many graduating seniors, I was less than thrilled to learn that Cathy Guisewite is our commencement speaker. But for those seniors who wake up every morning and scream, I offer a bit of perspective: They could have picked Sally Struthers. JASON JUSTIAN LSA senior Prejudice: its unseen effects Every now and then, many like to fantasize about a world where hatreds such as racism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia and a host ofotherprejudices don't exist. We've all done this, imagining a time or place where the color of one's skin, the country of one's birth and the God one worships play no part in shaping people's opinions of one another. Fantasies are nice as they are the warehouses of hope. However, we live in a time far from ideal. As such, discrimination and prejudice, twm plagues of the modern world, exist everywhere. They are weeds, constantly spreading their roots in the soil of our thoughts and beliefs. Regardless of the various evils which sprout from them, prejudice and discrimination, ironically, may serve a significant purpose which makes their existence important. Discrimination is a monster. Although people are grouped in a variety of prejudicial ways, all types of prejudices serve a common purpose - to deny a particular group of people their humanity by making them sound, appear and feel subhuman. Through discrimination, Blacks become "niggers," women become "bitches" and Asians become "chinks." However, from discrimination comes more than simply the stereotypical epithets we've heard (and used), prejudiced violenceand the like. Just as discrimination exists, so do those who refuse to allow the prejudicial views and actions of others intimidate them from proclaiming and rejoicing in their heritages, whose richness and variety grace our land. We've all heard the saying that something worth having is worth fighting for. I assert that discrimination is a catalyst which drives many people, especially the historically underrepresented and oppressed, to acknowledge and proclaim their ancestry. From the establishment of NOW to the building of the Holocaust Museum to even something as seemingly simple as a young Black child reading a book about ancient Egyptians, people have risen en masse to learn their individual histories and rebuke those who dare question the valid contributions of their ancestors to the modernworld. A world void of discrimination sounds good. Who wouldn't want to live in a world where people of all backgrounds live in mutual harmony? However, I fear that if prejudice didn't exist, peoplewould grow so comfortable with the "oneness" of mankind, they would lose individuality. This would be a fate worse than death. I dream of the day when we can all live as one. I support the idea that we are members of the human race first. But we are more than just a mass of organisms constituting a large human race. We are individuals with a variety of histories, beliefs and goals. Our individuality is, in many ways, a product of our racial, national, religious and gender differences. Never should the histories of our distinctive cultures be forgotten. Discrimination is a tool used by those seekingto smotherthe origins of the creative contributions of minorities and their ancestors. It also helps to assure that we never forget our, or any other, ethnic history by driving those of uswhose heritages are being attacked or overlooked to fight back by acknowledging our past and refusing to let it die. As long as prejudice exists, those prejudiced against will continue to fight it. As long as we continue to fight prejudice, the rich diaspora of traditions which grace our nation shall never be taken away from us. 0 0 Saving the tenants' union Finally, the AATU fiasco has ended, in the right way Students can breathe a sigh of relief. The long, draining AATU controversy has come to an end; hopefully, we can finally close this chapter and move on. On Tuesday night, MSA representatives voted to return to the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union $11,000. Be- cause of communication problems between the Michigan Party leadership and AATU Director Pattrice Maurer, this money had recently lost its entitlement status and been moved into MSA's Budget Priorities Com- mittee. After months of rocky relations with the tenants' union, juvenile bickering be- tween MSA representatives over the issue and unsubstantiated pleas to cut AATU's funding, MSA has finally come to its senses and Voted to restore necessary resources to the AATU - resources that should never have been denied them in the first place. The AATU is an invaluable student ser- vice; it is one of the most tangible benefits available to students, and it should not be subject to the political whims ofthe day. From the beginning, outgoing MSA leaders Craig Greenberg and Brian Kight never quite grasped this. They, and some others on the Assembly, became so wrapped up in the few idiosyncra- sies of the tenants' union that they lost sight of the quintessential role it plays in the commu- nity. MSA's reasoning for cutting AATU's funds was absurd in the first place, asserting that AATU should be penalized because it failed to submit paperwork on time. This mistake, that clearly resulted because of mis- communication, is an unfounded - if not a ridiculous-motivationfor denying students one of their most essential resources. While it may be true that AATU is somewhat unorga- nized-as Greenberg and Kight claim-this all of its resources. Moreover, as former MSA Rep. Tobias Zimmerman brought up at Tuesday's meet- ing, earlier in the year MSA froze AATU's funds over a disagreement about the appoint- ment of MSA members to the AATU Board. Since the funds were frozen, it could be argued that Maurer's deadline for submitting the paperwork would have had to be ex- tended, as MSA was temporarily failing to provide the tenants' union with already guar- anteed money. Therefore ,Greenberg and Kight's complaints about Maurer breaking the deadline would become moot. The Michi- gan Party leadership was prepared to slash AATU's funding over a supposed breach-of- contract. But hadn't MSA violated its con- tract with the tenants' union earlier in the year? Although Greenberg did not vote on the resolution to restore AATU's funding, it is good to see his tenure ending on an optimistic note -one in which order has been restored and all operating procedures returned to nor- mal. Now that this issue has been put to rest, the new officers have a clean slate on which to begin tackling new agendas and urgent matters that desperately need attention. Is- sues such as campus safety, the Diag Policy and the code can now come to the forefront. It is distressing that Neenan and Stern were two of the 13 assembly members that were not in support of AATU. Fortunately, they lost, and the issue will not bring further aggravation into their new term. The rest of the goals on their platform are extremely important - and less controversial. As we say good-bye to Greenberg, we also say fare- well to the AATU issue. We look forward to a new term, and are glad to see that this source -C.. ......i,,, . - ... -. . 1_., Take Back the Night decision 01 By JENNY BRENNAN I am one of the 30-some organizers for the April 9th Take Back the Night rally and march. I'd like to explain some of the thoughts that went into our deciding to include men at the end of this year's march, and offer a response to some of the debate that has been going on in the pages of the Daily and among friends concerning what this decision symbolizes. The umbrella organization that plans this annual march is called the Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape; although we are a student organization at the University of Michigan, we acknowledge our responsibility to the wider Ann Arbor community. Our organizers are both women since we work by consensus, we decided to skirt the enormous issue of what we wanted Take Back the Night to stand for, for every person seems to see it differently: as a night to feel safe and strong on the streets among women, as an anti-sexism march, as a time for both male and female survivors to stand together, as a demonstration of outrage against sexual assault. We all had ample opportunity to voice our opinions but then focused as a group on decision- making. Consensus was blocked in both directions (both for and against men marching), but we found a common agreement in having men and women join together about four women's-only march to City Hall with an extended mixed march to briefly follow. Unfortunately, Ann Arbor authorities would not allow us to amend the march route. Therefore, at this time, we can suggest only that women be aware of the point at which men will join the march, and using this knowledge, seek the most comfortable place for themselves within the group. If the turnout is as great as in past years, the women towards the front of the march will be at City Hall enjoying the dance party before the male marchers can join the march's tail end. Take Back the Night belongs to this community, not just to the Ann Arbor Coalition Against Rape. To I