4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 8, 1994 191F UT le 13qqvwpwwtllu 11 420 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. 'We are close. We are not going to lose the House, and we are not going to lose the Senate if people come out to vote.' --Democratic Party advisor Tony Coehlo on today's midterm elections 0 ' r lo- % Il m n m m im m ,.. ShY Crime and punishment Misdemeanors to be replaced by civil offenses O n this campus, a student can receive 10 to 60 days imprisonment, a fine not more than $50, or both for an offense as minor as skateboarding. A new proposal to the Board of Regents would change this by lowering sev- eral misdemeanors -criminal offenses -to civil infractions, the equivalent of a speeding ticket. Instead of the current harsh punish- ments, the consequences of these offenses would be a fine of up to $50. The Board of Regents should approve this proposal for sev- eral reasons. First, it would take the burden off of the Washtenaw County Prosecutor's Office and give the responsibility to the Department of Public Safety. As a criminal offense, each case has to be seen in court. Excessive paperwork is generated, and this process serves only to add yet another layer of bureaucracy. The number of misdemeanors that come through the overburdened Prosecutor's Office does not seem justified by the seriousness of the offenses. Nor does the law have a legitimate basis for remaining in place. The ordinance is based on anobscure 1905 statute. After almost90years, it is time to reevaluate the effectiveness of the law. A committee did just that for one year prior to making this proposal. After examin- ing how the ordinance works it was decided that new proposal would be more effective. According to the Prosecutor's Office, crimes wouldbe easier to prove as civil offenses rather than as criminal misdemeanors. One major concern of this proposed change is that the lax punishments will encourage students to violate the law more often. However, the Prosecutor's Office believes that DPS will write as many tickets as they do now. The difference would be that students are not subjected to jail time. In addition, a civil offense does not go on an individual's permanent record. Minor violations which no one considers truly criminal do not need to stay with a person throughout life. A criminal record seems ri- diculously extreme for having a pet without a leash, or a pet in an area where pets are not allowed. Or, for that matter, littering on cam- pus, improper sales and solicitations and skate- board riding. Disorderly conduct - a broad category - and alcohol possession and con- sumption are also included. Stringent punishments only serve to sup- port an outdated system. The consequences are far too austere for the circumstances. Paper- work and bureaucracy are piled high. It is virtually impossible for a student to get a fair punishment in the current system. With the new proposal in place the system will be more efficient and more fair for all those involved. Certainly students do not need to be treated as hardened criminals. Investigation of the serial rapist breeds fear To the Daily: As a black male student on the University of Michigan campus and a concerned citi- zen, I was staggered by the revelation in Frank C. Lee's article in Monday's Daily (10/ 31/94) that there were 500 po- tential suspects targeted for investigation as the serial rap- ist. I sincerely hope that Mr. Lee got his statistics wrong, and I hope that the Ann Arbor Police Department has soundly chastised him, if indeed this is not a true indication of how the investigation is proceeding. Five-hundred black suspects, and I emphasize black suspects since this is the information we are being told, would almost cover all the black males at the University, not to mention black males who purportedly fit the printed description -- a description I might add that keeps changing. I do not wish to suggest that the rapist is a University of Michigan stu- dent, but five-hundred sus- pects, of which two-hundred have been cleared is a very large number and says some- thing about how numbers are used to reassure us that some- thing is being done. Is anyone supposed to feel secure in the knowledge that 500 black males are viewed as rape sus- pects? This is tantamount to saying that the police have no suspects and casts a net of fear, paranoia and racial mistrust over the entire city. Are women really supposed to feel relieved that all light skinned black males of a certain height and weight are suspect? Is the black community, small as it is, sup- posed to just lookthe other way while 500men are underinves- tigation? I think not. I have watched this scenario develop over the past months with a growing sense of trepi- dation, paranoia and fear. Our entire community is gripped by fearand suspicion. I have stifled my own fears and tried to stay on task with my studies and continue to have some kind of life. But 500 black males, of a certain height and weight are targeted for investigation and are, were, potential suspects. If this is really going on and two- hundred have already been questioned and sent on their way, then this method of con- ducting a thorough investiga- tion is beginning to sound like persecution and everyone in the community should be on guard. Who are these men? How are they being targeted? What ques- tions are they being asked? What happens if they are not cooperative or don't have the money or resources to defend themselves? Are they being tested to see if their DNA matches the rapist? Will every- one breathe a sigh of relief once someone is formally charged? Will rape still be crime or will everyone just go back to a nice peaceful sleep? This is a dan- gerous situation. There is a heinous criminal in our midst, who visits on us his predatory instincts. Are the police retaliating by rounding up 500 black suspects? The usual suspects? The women who have been victimized by this fiend deserve to know, as well as the rest of us, that the police are doing their job. But 500 suspects is not a reassuring statistic. It is frightening. It is frightening because if the po- lice, in their efforts to catch this criminal, exacerbate the situa- tion by further creating an at- mosphere whereby a consider- able portion of one community is now systematically being singled out and rounded up, everyone loses. For men and women alike, blacks and whites, there is no comfort for anyone in knowing that 500 black men and possible more are slowly being sifted through the criminal justice system to ferret out the rapist. I sincerely hope that each and everyone of us will monitor this situation and ourselves carefully before we know it led to a period of racial hostility and open con- frontation. Steven Rabinowitz University student Parking problems University punishes students for lack ofparking Fear of a conservative election day Most Americans eagerly await election day. After tonight, they'll finally be able to watch television in peace. Just about any commercial is bet- ter than some of the political ads besieging us this fall in Michigan. Every time I watch Spence Abraham pick up his kid and then go on to attack programs which benefit chil- dren, I switch channels in a desper- ate attempt to find the guy who's been in Antarctica while Reggie Miller was buying Wheaties (you know which one I mean). More frightening than Abraham, however, is our short memory. Re- publican candidates across the county are sliding into office on platforms that would make Ronald Reagan proud. We seem to have forgotten the deficit, the cuts in social pro- grams, the intolerance and the hy- pocrisyofthe 1980s.Theentire coun- try now "does not recall" Iran-Contra. Our memory has slipped so far, in fact, that Oliver North could be sitting in the Senate a few months from now. Larry Sabato, a professor of government at the University of Virginia, puts it bluntly: "What's unusual about this race is that North is a convicted felon." But it seems that all's fair in love, war and family values. Especially in North's case, the issue is no longer economics, or de- fense,orcivil liberties.His raceepito- mizes what has become a battle for America'ssoul: aculturalwarwhich pits Fundamentalist Christian con- servatives against more progressive voters. James Hunter, author of"Culture Wars," compares the two groups' differences to the ideological con- flicts of the Civil War: eachcomes to the battle with unbending ideas about "the meaning of life (and) right and wrong." Even the Republican party feels the strain, trying, to mediate between its more mainstream wing and this new Moral Majority. Politi- cians like North may mention eco- nomic issues, but their basic cultural message frightens even some eco- nomic conservatives and libertarians. At a rally in Virginia recently, North held a copy of the Bible aloft. "I'm now 51, and this is the only book I've ever read cover to cover more than once," he said. "What we have here is an opportunity ... to restore those biblical values in which (the nation's founders) believed so strongly."'Earlier, he attacked social programs such as the Great Society, saying that people should instead turn to "the Creator" and the Bible's doctrines. Not only has North forgotten Christ's compassion for the poor, but it now appears that the down- trodden should look to God for free handouts. He also forgets that the majority of the nation's founders weren't Christians, but fairly non- religious Deists. But it's an appeal that draws cheers every time, true or not. As the Church Lady would say, "How conveeeeenient." Growing up in Irving, Texas in the 1980s, I was 10 before I knew that 'taxandspendDemocrat" wasn't one word. (I had similar trouble with "thoselibearlsinCongress.") What's more frightening is the cultural world I lived in: before I left for college in Chicago, I had never met a Jewish person, or a Hindu, or a Muslim. I had never met a feminist or another moderate or liberal my age. My class- mates argued that all gay people should be quarantined to stop the spread of AIDS, and agay teacher of mine was fired. The Fundamentalist Christians I went to school with were even convinced that Catholics were not true Christians. 0ne of the worst aspects of Ann Arbor life is parking. It is a problem anytime, any- where. Parking in parking lots, metered spots, garages, on side streets - parking is a never- ending hassle. Space is scarce during business hours, school hours, athletic events, evenings and weekends. However, the University's methods ofdeal- ing with this problem are startlingly uncoop- erative. University staff members have to pay exorbitant yearly parking rates in order to receive a parking space sometimes far from the building where they work. Students barely have a chance at any type of parking space - even commuters end up in ridiculous parking situations. Many drivers are left to take their chances finding a metered spot, and quite possibly finding a meter maid as well. The difficulty extends to North Campus. Last month commuters who park in the Gla- cier Way commuter lot discovered that their spots had been taken by employees of the VA Hospital. With atypical lackofcommon sense, the University sold the same parking spots to both VA employees and commuters. To further aggravate the situation, the Uni- versity ticketed the displaced commuters for parking on the grass. Grievances were made through appropriate channels, and the Univer- sity agreed not to ticket the commuters for parking on the grass in the Glacier Way com- muter lot. However, the next time the com- muters needed a place to park, they found that the grass had been painted over with orange "No parking" signs, a childish response for such a prestigious institution with plentiful resources. Meanwhile the Hayward and Hubbard lots -lots that are closer to student buildings than other parking locations -were sitting empty. With some prodding, the University relo- cated the VA employees to the Hayward and Hubbard lots. This solution is better than noth- ing. However, it would make more sense to put the VA employees in the Glacier Way lot, closer to their workplace. Then the commuters could use the Hayward and Hubbard lots, bring- ing the students much closer to their classes. In this scenario, an entire bus route would be eliminated - there would be no need for it. And, more importantly, it would increase safety by cutting out a 20-minute walk, often in the dark. As if the parking atrocities on North Cam- pus are not enough, the University is proposing to raise its ticket rates. An expired meter ticket will go from $3 to $10. The proposed fee is twice that of the city's current rate, and more than threetimes the University's current charge. Other parking violations will be double the current University rate - from $10 to $20. These new penalties will only result in the University making more money off of stu- dents, who are in a bad position when it comes to parking to begin with. It will do nothing to solve the current parking problems. After all, students are not just parking on University property to hang out and take up space. They are here getting an education. If there were better parking alternatives, students would not need to extend their allotted meter time, or park on the grass. The University needs to stop punishing students for its abomi- nable parking situation. Fischer also on far-right As a senior at the Univer- sity I have never felt compelled to write a letter of dissent to the Daily editorial staff. But the Daily's endorsement of An- drea Fischer represents such a lack of knowledge and logic, and if successful posses such a threat to all aspects of the Uni- versity that I feel obligated to respond. Your endorsement of An- drea Fischer over Paul Brown is groundless and shows an irresponsible ignorance of the candidates and what they be- lieve in. Your attack on Re- publican candidate Dan Horning as being a disciple of the radical right is correct but this description applies even more to Andrea Fischer. Fischer'sown signed and docu- mented platforms states her total opposition to any gun control law, abortion under any circumstance and more perti- nent to the University and my fellow students, her belief and wish that creationism should be taught and given equal time to evolution. Even David Duke would considerAndrea Fischer to be a disciple of the radical right. On the issue of tuition raises both Brown and Waters have worked to keep tuition down and increase the amount of stu- dent aid available. In fact tu- ition has only gone up as state funding has plummeted. This fiscal responsibility has resulted in the high level of educational resources, quality of professors and over all quality of educa- tion unlike any other time in the history of this University. Sec- ondly, to criticize Brown for voting in favor of administra- tive recommendations over- looks the fact that Brown was responsible for highering those very qualified and successful administrators, and two those recommendations have almost always proven to be the right ones. You correctly commend Regent Waters for his under- ,standing of the importance of having aheterogeneous student body but you do not acknowl- edge Regent Brown's equal devotion to this belief. During Regent Paul Brown's leader- ship on the Board the Univer- sity has developed programs thathave successfully increased minority enrollment by 216 percent and female members of the faculty by 190 percent., In a final show of stupidity you slap all students like my- self who live north of your cen- ter of your universe (Ann Ar- bor) by criticizing Brown for the fact that he lives in northern Michigan. If you are not aware the Board of Regents are sup- posed to represent the citizens of the whole state of Michigan and as the only regent or candi- date from northern Michigan I find his residence to be a posi- tive. In the ultimate act of hy- pocrisy you criticize Brown for living in northern Michigan while you commend Fischer for her plan to rent an apart- ment in Ann Arbor. You obvi- ously did not ask Fischer why she wanted an apartment when she lives about an hour away. The reason is that she is getting married and is moving to live with her husband in Florida, and the only reason she is get- ting an apartment is that for her to legally be a regent she must have a Michigan residence. The choice today is clear: reelect Paul Brown and James Waters to the University Board of Regents. Michael Bride Engineering senior I 4 Governor: Howard Wolpe (D) U.S. Senate: Bob Carr (D) U.S. House 13th District: Lynn Rivers (D) State Senate 18th District: Alma Wheeler Smith (D) i