4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 18, 1995 e , Cu Ygttn ttil JEAN TWENGE THE ERASABLE PEN 1 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULE BECKER JAmEs NASH Editorial Page Editors 'Geekgate' and the drive to succeed at all costs 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. New evidence strengthens case against code ummer will come early to Ann Arbor this year. Along with sunshine and warm weather comes another seasonal tradition: dramatic policy shifts by the University ad- ministration -for good or ill. Meeting Thurs- day and Friday, the University Board of Regents should seize the opportunity to undo one of the University's most abominable policies. Several items relating to the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, other- wise known as the code, are on the board's agenda. The regents will first consider whether to make the code a permanent policy or to keep it in the current interim status. Though that status is largely symbolic -- the code has all the invasive power of a perma- ; nent policy - it at least requires the regents to review the document each year and con- ~sider its effect on students. While this is undoubtedly better than a permanent policy, the best decision would be to do what stu- dents have been demanding since the code's inception: toss the policy out entirely. When the code comes up for discussion at the meeting, University administrators will argue that it is mandated by law. That is true - to a point. Washington requires universi- ties receiving federal funds to implement a policy on alcohol and drugs, while state law mandates a sexual harassment policy. Nei- ther requires the all-encompassing behav- ioral guidelines included in the code. But students have known all along that there is no legislative mandate for a compre- hensive non-academic conduct code. Oppo- nents of the policy have argued all along that it's bad in theory. However, what students now know is that it is bad in practice as well. This year, there is ample new evidence of the code's incompatibility with student rights. The regents need only look to the Lavie- Welch hearing in January. From beginning to end, the case was a sad demonstration of the University's ineptitude in administering a quasi-judicial system. It started with a pro- tracted struggle over whether to hold an open hearing, and progressed to Judicial Advisor Mary Lou Antieau revealing her embarrass- ing ignorance of the code's workings. Other Scases, including the most recent involving University wrestlers, have also highlighted the problems that arise when the University attempts to duplicate or circumvent the U.S. legal system. The amendments hearing held in January only confirmed that the code is unworkable. After a rushed meeting in which speakers were given a mere 30 seconds to present their views, the panel rejected changes that would have added a small measure of fairness to the code procedure, including one that would have allowed attorneys to speak for accused students. Meanwhile, the panel approved amendments that make the policy more invasive. It passed proposals that - if ap- proved by the regents - would add murder and breach of hearing confidentiality to the list of punishable offenses. In addition, the panel approved a proposal to remove the 30- mile radius provision - giving the Univer- sity license to charge students for actions performed anywhere in the world. When these administration-supported amendments come up for approval Friday, the regents must show independence and reject them. If the regents are looking for an amend- ment worthy of approval, however, one MSA- supported proposal fits the bill. The so-called "Advisor Corps" would provide advisers for students involved in code cases. This pro- posal is an example of the one positive ele- ment to come out of the code's presence on campus: a heightened student activism and cooperation among student groups. MSA has lobbied the regents tirelessly against the policy, and a newly formed group, Students Against the Code, is staging a rally Thursday on the Diag to showcase student opposition. Students should attend this rally and the regents meeting on Friday. The administra- tion has consistently ignored student outcry against the code, and the time has come for students to take their case directly to the ones holding the ultimate power - the University Board of Regents. In its 2 1/2 years as an interim policy, the code has proven to be nothing but an unwel- come and illogical intrusion into students' lives. If the regents are to back up their claim that they share student concerns, they must take the one step that truly restores students' rights. At Friday's meeting, they must kill the code once and for all. It's finally happened. After years of NCAA violations, fixed games and ste- roids, the biggest cheating scandal in the Midwest now involves an academic com- petition. When the Academic Decathlon team from Steinmetz High School in Chicago won the state championship last month, it was called a Cinderella story: Triumphing over incredible odds, the city school man- aged to beat out perennial suburban win- ner Whitney Young. But Steinmetz' scores were literally too good to be true, jumping 200 points or more from the regional com- petition one month before. When Decath- lon officials asked the students to retake the tests, they refused. Still, the team and their coach denied that any cheating had taken place. Last week, several students confessed that they had been given the answers to the tests, and the full scope of the scandal was exposed at long last. A flood of indigna- tion followed. Letters to the editor la- mented the low morals of this generation of young people. An editorial in the Chicago Tribune marveled at how long they kept up their deception and took pity on them as chil- dren who were merely following an influ- ential mentor. On the front page, an edito- rial masquerading as a news article in the Tribune quoted an expert who blamed the entire mess on the adults involved, saying that academic competitions are fueled by teachers' and parents' constant pressure on the kids to win. Academic Decathlon is a grueling com- petition, a day of six tests on specific topics from every academic field in addi- tion to an essay, an interview, an indi- vidual speech and a "Super Quiz" held in front of an audience. Since the outline of material for the academic fields is given ahead of time, team members spend their summer and fall researching topics at the library, and their winters memorizing the material for the tests. It is the ultimate challenge for a student, an experience that is at once arduous, frustrating, time-con- suming and exhilarating. This, of course, also means it's nerdy and very uncool. In my high school, De- cathlon was not so affectionately known as "Geek Team." Although the Steinmetz students were wrong to cheat, it is amaz- ing to think that they thought Decathlon was important enough to cheat for. Cheat- ing to pass a class or get into college is one thing, but who wants to cheat to be known as the best of the geeks? It is a tiny spot of sunlight in a quagmire of deceit and de- ception: The Steinmetz students were will- ing to risk everything they had to be seen as smart and studious. How often does that happen in high schools today? The attention and criticism surround- ing the students and the competition is unbalanced in another way. In truth, they have merely accomplished what athletic teams have done for years - cheat and hope to get away with it. No one talks of abolishing baseball when players are ac- cused of fixing games, and football con- tinues despite the free prostitutes, the cars and the myriad other promises made to recruits at colleges across the nation. The expert who suggested that it's onlyg the parents who want the kids to participate in academic contests exhibits a similar blindness. Athletic competitions have been fueled by parental pressure and vicarious living for years, yet no one sits in their ivory tower shaking their heads at these misguided people who force their kids to play high school football. On the other side of things, the Steinmetz students who cheated robbed themselve( of something no football game could have given them: academic experience and knowledge that would help them in college and the rest of their lives. Being a member of an Academic Decathlon team - one who researched all of the material, learned it and didn't cheat - helped me sail through several difficult college courses at the Uni- versity of Chicago. My classes were fille with students from elite'high schools fro across the country, but Decathlon built on my mediocre Texas public high school education to make me into a competent student unafraid of art history, social sci- ence theory, physics, economics and li- brary research. Six years later, the research skills I learned in Decathlon are helping me write the literature review for my disserta- tion. The Steinmetz students managed ti break the "geek barrier" of high school life, actually wanting to be known as studious. In the end, however, theirs was an empty victory, with all the meaninglessness of winning; edge. and none of the glory of knowl- JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST . 1 YEAS, x-115 15 WORTXH 1 a I, 4 -Pvs" x 1, 7 i F05?- (C '-I.: NOTABLE QUOTABLE "This does not account for all crashes - some suggest as more women work, they are adopting more male-type behavior, drive more aggressively than they did." - Dawn Massie, an associate at the Transpor- tation Research Institutg explaining women 's driving habits F fobM 1 VIEWPOINT Students: Code won't leave-on its own The liberal vacuum Dearth of leadership dogs 'new' Democrats ewt Gingrich and the Republicans are N.' the toastof the town these days. Their "Contract With America" was largely pushed through the House, and the Speaker can now look back on his first 100 days of action as a triumph - the triumph of American conser- vatism over "outdated" New Deal and Great Society social liberalism. Most Americans, in light of the GOP landslides in recent elections and overwhelming media focus on the political right, would find it difficult to dispute his claim. But it is not a triumph - not yet. In fact, the ascent of the political right can be attributed to the absence of a viable political challenge from the left. But there is yet an opportunity for liberals to reclaim the debate before the right becomes entrenched. In the wake of 12 years of Reaganite government, Bill Clinton seemed to many like a breath of fresh air - a return to more traditionally liberal social values in America. But his "New Covenant," in which he and the Democratic party pledged to "put people first," today looks much more like the poli- cies of the Reagan-Bush era than any of his post World War 1-era Democratic predeces- r. vv Qe% f :*,m*nnr lm rai-nt:- -ica -v nowhere - and that's the problem. Potential liberal leaders who emerged at the time of the 1992 presidential election - Tom Harkin and Jerry Brown, for example - saw an initial surge of support, but quickly fell off the political map as Clinton clinched the nomination. The only truly liberal Demo- crats with any visibility, Jesse Jackson and Ted Kennedy, launched unsuccessful bids for the White House in the '80s. Their inter- est and ability to galvanize a national liberal coalition are clearly in doubt. With all the talk of a "center" third party being formed, it would seem that the true void in American politics lies not in the center, but on the left. Unless the Democratic Party takes an unlikely move and reclaims the mantle of both social liberalism and eco- nomic liberalism, the left will have to mobi- lize itself -or risk the final triumph of which Mr. Gingrich speaks. As if to concede defeat, the party leadership has shied away from the label "liberal" since it was used to smear presidential candidate Michael Dukakis in 1988. If only in the interest of a renewed politi- cal debate, America needs liberals. But as 1t'n a..flf nnn-t..nn . n trf f rnt *:fl nr By Anne Marie Elison While the students of the University cram for their finals, the regents will be making deci- sions that could affect the course of our academic lives at the Uni- versity of Michigan. It is time to pay attention to events transpir- ing around us: We have an op- portunity to affect the policies and practices .of the Statement of Student Rights and Respon- sibilities, known as the code. Several years ago, a federal mandate came down to univer- sities requiring that they have two basic policies: a policy on drug and alcohol use and a policy on sexual assault. The Univer- sity used this opportunity to for- mulate a pervasive code of non- academic behavior. Today, the alcohol and drug policy remains separate from the code. Instead, the code addresses infractions of law, which would fall under jurisdiction of the American judicial system - which is far better equipped to deal with unacceptable conduct than is our University. The code defines unacceptable behavior, estab- lishes a way of addressing it and sanctioning those found to vio- late community standards. Over the last two decades, ment with the relatively weak federal mandates. Others will tell you that it's a more just administration of disciplinary action, because now the presi- dent can't just arbitrarily toss you out of school - a claim that remains to be seen, particularly in light of the Jake Baker case. Some say that the 1960s and '70s on this campus were some- how "too free" - and the code is an attempt to get back to a more moderate campus life. You might also be told that because you chose to attend this Univer- sity, you have agreed to a higher standard of acceptable behav- ior; the university community is better than society on the whole, and the University has a right to hold students to a higher standard, not simply academi- cally, but also personally. (The academic code is not at issue here - that is the place of the University. But regulating indi- viduals' behavior outside of classes, and even off campus, is another thing entirely. Univer- sities are not supposed to act as judicial and punitive bodies.) Others think of the code as a leveler of social and cultural differences - a notion that strikes me as having serious rac- ings and amendment hearings are completely untouchable. Panelists are "randomly" cho- sen by the administration, trained by the administration, and guided by the administra- tors in their deliberations. The problem is, there are no checks on this system. Panelists are strictly anonymous, parts of their training sessions (despite the Open Meetings Act) are closed to unobtrusive observ- ers, they are led to believe that they are "experts" on the code and the same administrator who trains them (Judicial Advisor Mary Lou Antieau) presides over code hearings, presents the administration's amendments to the code and presides over closed panel deliberations. In addition, the panelists have been able to meet in deliberations without quorum - certainly not a practice described in the code's procedures. Not only is the code inher- ently undemocratic and unjust, it is expensive. First, the entire Office of the Judicial Affairs Advisor was established ex- pressly to administer the code and its procedures. Beyond the salaries and work -study dollars spent there, equals the in-state tuition of six students for an entire acadenr- year. And that's just one case. The University investigates at least 300 cases a year, hearing about 100. The code is an attempt to sanitize the educational process, which, in turn, destroys it. How can our community thrive on free and open debate when tth University sees itself as a pun - tive body? When the code and its supporting policies are used to squelch free speech, elimi- nate due.process and dictate our community's values, anyone who cares about the value of education has cause for con- cern. At the regents meeting Ap 20 and 21, the University will try to make the code (with the revisions made by the panelists in the January amendment hear- ing) a permanent fixture in the life of the students. That would entail extending the 30-mile ju- risdictional radius to an infinite radius for the code, meanin that even if a Michigan stud in Rome over the summer and a local wants to charge you under the code, he can. The University and unac- countable panelists hold your