4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 12, 1994 (ibe £idtingzu il 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Jessie Halladay Editor in Chief Samuel Goodstein Flint Wainess 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. 'Once students get into classes, their life gets very complicated. Once we hit that first exam period, we're done.' -Judicial Adviser Mary Lou Antieau, explaining why students have not pre- sented revisions to the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities THESE NEW SktOES ARE 6 ONG y EAH, NO wWE CAN To HtLQp USWITH OUR LAY SE4A ArND 'f0G SS -,'TPKAiNiNC <' - AT 1 jt K 3E E o5-T AMArTHE'SAM j S j -I r' - -" a- The hidden danger Indecent Ci~y 'U' must improve safety on and off campus A little over a month ago, several "teams" consisting of students, University em- ployees and city officials participated inMSA's Campus Safety Awareness Walk-Through. Their mission: to locate and highlight particu- larly dangerous areas in and around campus. What they found was inadequate lighting, coupled with irresponsive security forces and numerous areas that were generally unsafe at night. Cited as particularly dangerous were the Medical Center and Markley area, North Cam- pus and the South Forest Avenue neighbor- hood. More important than uncovering broken streetlights and overgrown bushes, the Walk- Through participants exposed a problem that is getting worse, not better, over time. The sad fact is that walking across this campus people do not feel safe - and this is to some extent an accurate perception. This is not a secure cam- pus. One reason for this is the increasing amount of violent crime in this country among youths. Demographics have always been the best predictor of violent crime, and these indi- cators point to a society that will become increasingly violent. In the last several years those trend lines have begun to show them- selves, as they begun to touch towns like Ann Arbor for the first time. While the University has little control over this larger problem, it is possible to better shield the people of this school and city from its effects. To this end, the administration must make it a top priority to follow the proposaldrawn up by the Walk-Through participants. Of course, it is impossible to repair every broken street light or put apolice officer on every corner, but when whole areas of campus are plainly unsafe for walking at night, and blue light telephones have a response time of up to 25 minutes, it is obvious something must be done. Efforts must be made to correct at least the most glaring security oversights. In doing this, it is essential that the Univer- sity and city recognize their relationship and work together, pooling their human and capi- tal resources to combat the problem. The University's open campus makes it impos- sible to separate city life from University life. Some of the most unsafe neighborhoods, such as South Forest Avenue, are not University property, but rather places where large num- bers of students live. The city must therefore take responsibility along with the University in dealing with crime. It is true that the two entities have different procedures for dealing with the problem, and these must be ironed out, with the understanding that safety is the common goal. Additionally, the proposed idea of the University funding some city activities to this end is a good one. It would be in the University's best interest to use its greater financial muscle to support city efforts. The University's obligation to financially support the city is given added urgency by a recent city report that shows a sharp riseincrime. Police trace the increase to a reallocation of funds to solve the serial-rapist case, which has taxed the police department beyond its means. The University has balked at city requests for additional law-enforcement funds in the past. Despite the University's superior finan- cial resources, University officials apparently believe the city should bear the brunt of all law enforcement off campus. This logic ignores the University's obligation to its students - an obligation that is not limited to the geo- graphical boundaries of the campus. The cornerstone of a positive learning envi- ronment is security. In order to promote an atmosphere of freedom in which each person can grow and discover, people have to be able to feel like they can walk their campus at any time. Campus safety is no longer a peripheral issue. It is at the very heart of the academic and social life of the University and the city of Ann Arbor. Despite 'U' claims, Mandate is no panacea To the Daily: With all of the hype in the press regarding the recent Michigan Mandate update, and with my established "history" in this area at the University, I am compelled to make some comments. First, I believe that the head- lines in a recent Daily issue should have reflected the 65 percent graduation rate of Af- rican American studentsvs. the 85 percent rate for the overall University instead of the "high- est minority enrollment ever." Why not let the truth that hurts be the basis of the story rather than the truth that sounds best; not to take away from the suc- cesses achieved but rather to focus on the problem(s) to be addressed? I am pleased that more students of color are en- rolled, but if many are disenrolled or even signifi- cantly delayed in their gradua- tion, that needs to be addressed. Is that not the difference be- tween a news article and a Walt Harrison press release? The next article on the Man- date (Daily, 11/21/94) better highlighted the concerns, so much in fact that President (James J.) Duderstadt felt it important enough to make some statements. Perhaps that was a mistake! For example he stated that "It is a relative prob- lem. Our African American stu- dents graduate at a higher rate than white students at MSU!" So does that make it right or does it just make the president feel better? Certainly, to those Black students who do not graduate (35 percent), the graduation rate of whites at MSU is inconsequential! After all, is the objective of the Man- date to outshine other institu- tions or to address the problem by doing the best possible here for our students. Moreover, the president's statement that the lower graduation rate was likely due to African American stu- dents coming from city schools with less funding was quite disturbing. If that is the case why doesn't the University exert more effort to support those students to the level that might be required? From my experience, when this lack of support is coupled with the of- ten hostile climate for African American students, the "re- volving door is kept open." In the same article, Lester Monts acknowledges the prob- lems and concerns but offers no solutions. If the Office of the Vice Provost for Academic and Multicultural Affairs can offer no solutions or even means for addressing these problems that are so well de- fined, from where and when will help come? It is time the administration not only ac- knowledges the problems as they continue to be identified but offers some substantive ways to address them. A first step to do so is to quit provid- ing deceptive information. An example is the statement in the Mandate update that 36 per- cent of the incoming Medical School class are students of color. Based on the four ethnic groups identified in the man- date this number may indeed be correct; however Asian Americans are not underrepresented in the sci- ences and since a major objec- tive is to address under-repre- sentation, it is totally inappro- priate to cite this number of 36 percent without acknowledg- ment of the included groups (i.e. underrepresented vs. non- underrepresented students of color). While addressing this sub- ject, I was most disappointed that a similar type of "let's not acknowledge the racism" atti- tude was displayed in the letter to the Daily from an Engineer- ing student criticizing Mr. Bowen's earlier letter. The stu- dent not only doubted the rac- ist nature of "The Bell Curve," but went on to suggest that per- haps Derrick Bell was indeed the racist. Well, no matter how one defines racism, including one of King's definitions: "a doctrine of the congenital infe- riority and worthlessness of a people," "The Bell Curve" is a racist document and to suggest that Bell is a racist because he makes such statements that truly identifies how pervasive and permanent racism is, only rein- forces Mr. Bell's assertions that whites want to stay in control, i.e. in that "dominant circle." One way to do this, as demon- strated by the administration, is to control the way that informa- tion (e.g. Mandate) is provided. Another, as demonstrated by the student, is not to acknowl- edge racism when it stares one in the face. We have such a long way to go; however if we begin by trying to understand racism, and acknowledge that it is indeed alive and well here at the Uni- versity, measures may then be taken to address it. In fact, Dr. Bernice King in her recent visit here stated that information gathering, including a history of attitudes and philosophies, is most critical in dealing with racism. Perhaps to help this along, President Duderstadt, his ex- ecutive officers, that Engi- neering student, as well as oth- ers might do some reading (e.g. Derrick Bell's "Faces at the Bottom of the Well," King's "Why We Can't Wait" and "Where Do We Go From Here" and Cornel West's "Race Mat- ters) to gain a perspective from some individuals who do in- deed acknowledge the perva- siveness of racism and who of- fer some ways to address it. Thomas D. Landefeld Associate professor, department of pharmacol- ogy proposition For starters, I want to congratu- late the Latino/a groups on this cam- pus for doing last week what all the rest of us should have been doing all along --taking a stand, organizing, making their voices heard and act- ing for change. On a campus where it some- times seems student-organized movements-usually weak to non- existent in the first place -ine'vita- bly end in disappointment and disil- lusion (read: deputization, the code, tuition hikes), the victories and shows of unity by groups like Alianza, La Voz Mexicana the So- ciety for Hispanic Engineers and the Latino fraternity Sigma Lambda Beta are encouraging and relieving. Thursday, these groups success- fully petitioned the Residence Halls Association (RHA) to boycott Cali- fornia table grapes. Thousands of migrant workers in California (mostly Mexican and often undocu- mented) have suffered health prob- lems as a result of the pesticides used to increase the grape yield. Supporters around the world refuse to buy grapes from California. Due to the organized efforts of Michigan's Latino/a groups, dorm cafeterias have promised to honor the recommendations of RHA and join the movement to discontinue the purchase of California grapes. Friday, many of these same groupsjoined with the newly formed M-STOP 187 (Michigan Students Opposed to California Proposition 187) to produce one of the largest shows of student political and social action since the Gulf War. The racist ballot proposal over- whelmingly supported by Califor- nia voters Nov. 8 would refuse basic health services and education to il- legal immigrants and their children. The proposition has scary national ramifications both because it repre- sents a resurgence of anti-immigrant scapegoating for problems like crime and unemployment and be- cause what happens in California often becomes a national trend. I therefore supported the rally, but very cynically told my friend (who told me about it) that she was dreaming if she really believed more than 10 people would show up for a rally on a cold, snowy day in the middle of term paper season to pro- test something happening 2,500 miles away. But as about 200 students filled the Diag, I quickly ate my words. It's hard to say what makes a protest against Prop. 187 draw 200 students (still not all that many con sidering we're a school of 30,000 but impressive compared to pro- tests of the past three years). Latinos have traditionally been a disenfranchised group - many are ineligible to vote or choose not to. But insults like Prop. 187 are the kinds of things that politicize people, pull them out of the political wood- work and make them impossible to ignore in the next election. This is all particularly relevant today - two days after President Clinton fired the only intelligent, person with abackbone in his wishy- washy, wanna-be Republican ad- ministration. He canned Surgeon General Joycelyn Elders because she supposedly made some offen- sive comment about masturbation not being the most evil thing ever to haunt civilization. It's obvious the comment was just a trumped-up excuse to elimi- nate one of the people who stood in the way of the President's strategy to gain popularity by moving fur- ther to the right. His paid pundits say the Novem- ber Republican victory was a sign of national conservatism. But really it was a sign of the S+ S Grapes of wrath 'U' students protest racism against immigrants Students in their noon classes Friday may have heard the commotion on the Diag by the student rally against California's Proposition 187. This bill slid onto the No- vember ballot in one of those pseudo-populist initiatives made famous in the Golden State and was voted in, along with those pesky Republicans. But the threat of Prop. 187 is much greater than a shift in party identification - enough that this legislation is being con- tested in court, if necessary all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. It is heartening to watch students take a stand against such blatantly unconstitutional band-aids. In short, Proposition 187 prevents illegal immigrants from attending California schools or receiving non-emergency medical care. The problems with this idea are obvious. First, preventing immigrants from getting an educa- tion only worsens the situation the conserva- tives are complaining about. Uneducated people will have no alternative but to turn to the streets. Second, Prop. 187 is a public health disaster. It cuts off medical benefits that pre- vent the spread of diseases, thereby endanger- ing the entire community On campus, groups have begun to organize against this injustice. Hats off to those who coordinated and took part in the rally. The impromptu group is called STOP 187 and focuses on ending racism against and scapegoating of immigrants. Participants marched from the Diag, down State Street and Liberty to the Federal Building, where four grants is the California table grape boycott in residence halls that passed last week. Besides the organizer of the boycott, United Farm Workers, four Latino/a groups moved this action forward - Alianza, La Doz Mexicana, the Society for Hispanic Engineers and Sigma Lamda Beta, a Latino fraternity. Strong alli- ances are being formed on this campus. However, grapes are only a token of progress. Other industries are guilty of the same labor practices, and several other prod- ucts are produced with questionable worker protections, including sugar, Michigan cher- ries - and the list continues, for migrant workers are integrated into America's economy everywhere as a virtually free labor force. As Friday was also International Human Rights Day, speakers at the rally focused not only on Prop. 187, but the larger ramifications of the passage of such laws. In an international context, the treatment of immigrant workers is as poor in Europe as it is in the United States. Organizers of the rally stress education as a means ofending these practices. Many people do not realize who is doing the dirty work. Stepping on people is not the way to fuel an economy. Immigrants' chances would be in- creased greatly if they were incorporated into the American economy on equal footing - not crushed under the stampede of society. The past week at the University demonstrates what everyone should be doing: taking action against these unfair and sometimes racist prac- 'America the Fascist' rears its ugly head again To the Daily: The recent elections and the continuing trend towards fas- cism and right-wing Nazi-like politics evidenced by measures like Proposition 187 and the Republican Personal Respon- sibility Act which seeks to slash welfare benefits require a re- sponse by students who find these tendencies disgusting. Newt Gingrich, a leader of the New Right Reich has said that we need to "calmly and quietly reassert Americancivilization." In my opinion, American civi- lization, in the sense in which Newt and sick assholes like the College Republicans view it, should never have been "as- serted" in the first place, and deserve only criticism and yeast" while corporations and their wealthy stockholders and CEOs make millions. The en- vironment is nothing but raw materials to be converted into polluted sewage by profit-mak- ing bastards subsidized by the American government. America is a racist country, a sexist country, a stupid coun- try. Americans' greatest cul- tural pursuit is to watch foot- ball on Sundays andgetwasted in sports bars. As an example of the dis- gusting abomination known as American civilization I will re- late this story. Yesterday, there was a protest in opposition to Proposition 187, a sick piece of statutory trash enacted by a bunch of Nazi-like Republi- -rm in Cn1fnwrin nA ti a cm ened by the actions of the gov- ernment and its big business allies as threats to their own unjustified privilege. So, when Newt says let's reassert American civilization I say tell it to the Native Ameri- cans that were given infected blankets, tell it to the people in Latin America that were tor- tured by U.S.-trained troops, tell it to little Vietnamese kids burned with Napalm, tell it to victims of South African apart- heid which was supported by Reagan as a way of combating communism, in short, tell it to all the other ordinary people that this country loves to mur- der, oppress, destroy and starve to death all in the name of free- dom, democracy and the Ameri- ra~n wavi If Newut and hic fellow