4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, December 1, 1994 c~be A idrigatn ~ 'It's about sex, drugs, love, war. It's all those extremes.' 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 - Tammy Jacobs, director of MUSKET's "Hair" 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. Delaying aman Administration stalls on Code amendments Another semester is about to close on an unamended Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, commonly known as the Code. Unlike last semester, when the adminis- tration at least attempted to allow amendments to pass through, this term officials have been completely inactive in furthering the passing of amendments. While students never approved of the Code, they have compromised with the administration in creating an amendment pro- cess satisfactory to all. However, the purpose of compromise is negated by the administration's failure to keep up its end of the bargain. Last year, attempts to pass amendments to the Code encountered many problems. Out of 50 randomly selected student jurors, a quorum of 26 jurors is necessary to vote on proposed amendments. As it turned out, that was not an easy number to gather together. At one meet- ing 23 students showed - making it close but still three short. Dangerous weather conditions on some occasions also prevented jurors from attending. Ignoring the past three beautiful months, the administration has not yet scheduled an- other amendment hearing. Reportedly, the next date will not be sooner than late January. While the amendment process is clearly problematic, it is currently the only leverage students have with the Code, and administrators must be willing to accommodate them. The failure to schedule a hearing this semester is reprehen- sible-and now, enough time has been wasted that immediate action is essential. A meeting should be held upon the start of classes in January. If the weather or a low number of jurors prevents a vote, then a new date needs to be rescheduled promptly. This process has to be continuous and consistent until the objec- tives are accomplished, and the amendments can be forwarded for a Board of Regents vote. Speed is imperative in this situation be- cause the Code directly affects the lives of students. Its jurisdiction covers anything that takes place within 30 miles of the 'M' on the Diag - an area stretching through, for in- stance, Ypsilanti. Therefore, under the Code what students do in the privacy of their own homes could affect their status at the Univer-, sity. Furthermore, the Code presents guide- lines to adult students that no other adult is expected to live up to. While the student body overwhelmingly disapproves of this in loco parentis measure, many students are willing to work with the administration to make the Code more ame- nable to their needs. A particular issue of concern is opening up the proceedings of Code hearings. The current Code structure allows for closed hearings - in other words, there is no student check to determine whether the system functions fairly. Similarly, the records of such hearings need to be available and censored only enough to protect students' identities. Protecting the name of an indi- vidual is reasonable. Keeping entire incidents shrouded from public view by presenting Code records with a dearth of information is an invitation to violations of individual rights. If the Code has to exist, it must be implemented in a way that safeguards student rights. Previous case law indicates that universi- ties have a right to dismiss students under proceedings like the Code -- therefore, the Code cannot be attacked on broad legal grounds. However, students feel that the pa- ternal tenets of the Code are unreasonable for adult citizens. The administration is further insulting the intelligence of the student body by delaying important changes to the un- wanted document. Although students were willing to compromise in this matter, the administration does not seem to be willing to cooperate. The wait has been long enough - it is time to act. Grading proposal makes wrong assumptions Giving away guns Misguided proposal to relax criteria must fail n its last session before the newly elected lawmakers take office, the Michigan Legis- lature is turning its attention to the problem of crime. Because this is a lame-duck session, the potential to pass effective crime legislation is probably increased. Unfortunately, however, a few proposals are being made that, if passed, will prove highly detrimental to the safety of citizens. Prominent among these is a proposal to modify the current state gun control laws written by Rep. Alan Cropsey (R-DeWitt). Cropsey's bill provides for a number of significant changes to the laws regulating the purchase of guns. Presently, applicants for firearms permits are reviewed by a county board consisting of the Sheriff, State Police officers, a prosecutor and three reviewers ap- pointed by the county commission. The board is allowed to use discretion in approving or denying a permit. The proposal would elimi- nate the State Police from the board, and would set narrow criteria for boards to use when considering applications. Rather than helping to solve the problem of crime in this state, the only significant thing this bill would do is make it easier to legally buy a gun. That wouldn't be such a grave problem in most instances. However, the cur- rent composition of the board exists because law-enforcement officers are considered duly qualified to judge whether an individual is competent to carry a concealed weapon. As Macomb County Prosecutor Carl Marlinga has noted, most concealed weapon applicants are not denied this privilege now-itis merely those few candidates that demonstrate incom- petence to carry a weapon. An individual, say, every criteria that can be officially set checks out, yet it is still clear that the person being reviewed should not have a gun. Cropsey's bill, if passed, will effectively increase the number of people of questionable background walking Michigan's streets with firearms in hand. In addition, law enforcement groups say that the proposal would force officers to consider everyone armed at a crime scene. It would make it so easy to get a permit that the permit would, in officers' eyes, carry no legal weight. The proponents of the bill consist mainly of anti-gun control interests such as the Na- tional Rifle association (NRA). They cite abuses in the current system as reasons for loosening the criteria for gun permits. It is true that a review board now has total discretion in granting or denying a permit, and therefore abuses are possible. In the words of NRA spokesperson "they can deny you a permit if they don't like the way you part your hair." However, these occurrences are infrequent if not rare, and are not sufficient reason for so vastly changing the criteria. Despite the pos- sibility for taking advantage, the current laws help to keep guns out of the hands of criminals and those who may be temporarily unstable, and that positive outweighs any abuses that now exist. The Cropsey bill if passed into law would not, as some critics have stated, drastically increase violent crime rates in the state. Other states have passed modified versions of the Cropsey bill, and crime rates have not changed in any statistically significant fashion. But it would put weapons into the hands of those To the Daily: I write this in response to Mr. Matthew Dennison Mor- gan ("New grading system to combat racism," 11/23/94). I wish you could see, Mr. Mor- gan, how angry I am. I squirm as I write this. I'm glad the solution is so easy. This ques- tion that has tugged at my mind for the 18 years I have lived in Detroit and have been a think- ing person can be solved by your grade-multiplier. Wow. O.K., so maybe adoption of your grading system would "bring the University signifi- cantly closer to the goal of equally high graduation rates among the various ethnic groups that vibrantly enrich this fine campus." It's nice to see someone taking such a long- term view. Ha! Now if you had Liberals incapable of governing To the Daily: Just like Proposal A last school year, some Democrats will not stop whining when they lose and have to cry to the Daily. While the leaders of the Col- lege Dems took the high road, refusing to be rhetorical, obvi- ously this was not good enough for Mr. Verani, with his letter of November 15th ("Speaker Gingrich takes office"). The problem with his argument seems evident when he de- scribes Earth Day 1970 as one of the "landmark events" in our nation's progress. Most Ameri- cans do not see Earth Day as one of those cataclysmic events that shook the world. So to criti- cize Mr. Gingrich for disliking Earth Day seems incredibly trivial. However, Mr. Verani then goes on to put words in Mr. Gingrich's mouth that are as incorrect as they are repul- sive. To suggest that Mr. Gingrich would like us to rees- tablish the "separate but equal" doctrine is not only a flat out lie but another useless attempt to portrayRepublicans as racist. The Republican party is trying to reach out to minorities, for they have been most hurt by the radical liberal social programs of the past. Yet anytime a mi- nority joins our party they are outcast and called names wor- thy of the KKK by people who supposedly preach "tolerance." Mr. Verani's summary and out- come analysis of the Contract with America has no factual basis and if you want to see cnmnn iiOeP ncinl enfd- introduced your suggestion as a temporary bandage instead of a correction for "inherent bias," that would be a different story. Do you realize what it sounds like you're saying? To disadvantaged people: Go to your under-funded schools, Live in your dangerous neigh- borhoods. Grow up in your whirls of social and economic problems. Then come to this University, and your life will be wonderful because we will multiply your grades by some factor greater than one. And to the majority: Keep your wealth and power and comfort. It's inherent to our capitalist sys- tem. Fund your own schools, not theirs. Multiply theirgrades and keep them quiet. Don't worry about actually educat- ing them. And please keep fur- ther from your mind the idea of people are skeptical of liberal "Crime Bills." The liberalsjust don't get it, and that is why they failed so miserably a few weeks ago. The Republicans made a pact with the people to change government, encourage responsibility and lower the burden government places on people. A religious right take- over? No, a common sense takeover that the American people obviously wanted on Nov. 8th. Mark Fletcher LSA Junior President, U-M College Republicans PC advocates attempt the impossible To the Daily: I thought I should clarify what I wrote last Monday about the Markley Multicultural Ac- tivities Council. I did not imply that neither the MMAC nor the three gay students were unbusiness-like in their deal- ings with each other over the "Male Rent-a Friend" event. The "lack of reason and matu- rity" of which I wrote refers not to the behavior during me- diation but the instance of po- litical correctness that appears to have prevailed here. If one doesn'tagree with me thatmost PC is crazy and infantile, one mightmisconstruemy remarks, which is a fault of mine. My argument depends solely on the information in the Daily article written by Katie Hutchins two weeks ago; I claim to know nothing else anot MMACo r nv of their people actually learning to- gether. Most importantly, be careful when hiring aMichigan graduate. You don't know the real elevation of their almighty GPA god. I don't think your idea smacks of "reverse racism" and I share your quest for a solu- tion. To your question, "Is it fair for someone to grow up in the midst of alcoholism, job- lessness, drug abuse, or drive- by shootings?" I say never. These things don't have to be an "inherent bias" of our sys- tem, although you seem to be resigned to that fact. We only need to see where problems start, instead of giving grown human beings pacifiers to suck on. Andrea Urble SNRE first-year student This leads me to ask of the three gay men, "Did you seek admission so you could DATE or BEFRIEND the volunteer- ing rentees?" If you wanted to make friends, you should have simply left, realizing the event really wasn'tforplatonic friend- makers. But being PC, you'd rather cast aside reason in favor of abitch session over wording. If you were angling for some- thing closer to a date, you'd have to acknowledge that it wouldn't be fair to rent a het- erosexual who wouldn't be comfortable being tucked in bed by a guy. You could quietly lodge a concern with the coun- cil about the absence of a "Gay Rent-a-Friend", but being PC you'd rather bust your way into the existing affair, making a fuss. I stated in my last letter that almost no activity in life is equally suited to be partaken by all people. Anything a human being does is going to displease someone, somewhere. Any ac- tivity that the Markley Multi- cultural Activities Council sponsors is going to displease someone, somewhere. But MMAC can please almost ev- erybody with a range of spon- sored activities so that some- thing can catch the eye of ev- eryone. If MMAC establishes fund-raisers suited exclusively for homosexuals, blacks, women, rich white males, etc. that should be fine as long as everyone gets a chance to do something. But if gays don't fit in at "Male Rent-a-Friend", don't waste time and effort at- tempting the impossible. Another look at Nov. 8 Three weeks after the GOP elec- toral landslide, the standard conven- tional wisdom the mainstream media have produced so far - that Nov. 8 was a simple repudiation of the Democrats and their agenda - has revealed the poverty of our current political discourse. Have political commentators addressed anything but the superficial, the stratagem, the content-less horse race, voters' irri- tation and impatience with big gov- ernment? So why has the South been conquered by'Gingrich Republicans, who advocate an economic, social and cultural conservative orthodoxy Why can't even a DNC-style South- ern liberalism attract the Bubbas of the electorate? Why do most white males now believe it is anathema to punch Democrat and support an alien "Other" - gays, feminists, poor people, blacks and urbanites? Presi- dent Clinton's spinmeisters weren't that far off when they opined that the swing to the GOP represented an- other endorsement of "change." But an intellectually richer, more substantive interpretation of the elec- tion does exist, and it can be found in a political philosophy called "a poli- tics of meaning." This viewpoint holds that the success of the Repub- licans and its union-like base, the "radical religious right," can be at- tributed to their effective addressing of the social, spiritual, ethical, val- ues-based needs of the American body politic, while the Democratic Left has largely ceded the values discourse to intolerant, religious ul- traconservatives on the Right. For liberals, this was the recipe for disas-* ter on Nov. 8 that split the New Deal coalition, and forced the Dems into minority status in the House for the first time since 1946. To say that something of a spiri- tual and ethical vacuum pervades American society and politics would be to put it lightly. And as real wages and mean family income stagnate, the electorate is struggling to align its9 societal, familial and personal hopes and fears with a political message that recognizes this. The youthful, energetic Clinton presidential cam- paign in '92 touched on Americans' quest for change and hope that the cycle ofpessimismcould be reversed by a candidate who seemed to feel the pulse of the American psyche and soma, who was prepared to take poli- tics into a new era, crossing the old, worn-out boundaries that divide and separate. Bill Clinton activated this "politics of meaning" schema, and raised the hopes and spirits of mil- lions. But unfortunately, in his two years in the White House, Clinton and the congressional Democrats have failed to clearly lay out its prin- ciples, became bogged down in un satisfactory political compromises and projected a hazy, shiftless politi- cal image. Says Michael Lerner of the Jewish bimonthly Tikkun: "While Clinton and the Democrats have wasted two years mucking around.. the Right has been at work in the larger society, powerfully promot- ing its own sectarian perspective and convincing people that its worldviews can help explain the problems they face in daily life." If the proponents of a politics of meaning can infuse liberalism with a more holistic, universally ethical, humane political philosophy, much of the ammunition and sound bites of the "radical right" could be effec- tively countered. I would much rather have liberals or the moderate Center talking about family values than Dan Quayle or Jesse Helms. Liberals can responsibly invoke apolitics of mean- ing that addresses the needs and con- cerns of the vast American middle class and invoke this discourse to respond to an American society that is in decline due to raging violence, familial dysfunction, considerable so- cioeconomic divisions between thel rich and poor and the lack of eco- nomic opportunity for many in our increasingly technocratic world. Above all, liberalshcannot and must not shy away from honest, com- Michael R. Wheaton Engineering Junior