4- The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 1, 1995 (be £id"igun &tivg I 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES NASH Editorial Page Editors DAVID WArTrowsiSTANDING ON THE t Sometimes, a little bit of change can go a long way 0 4. 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. Twiddling thumbs Code amendments should be released M ore than four weeks ago, the University finally succeeded in convening a panel to hear amendments to the Statement of Stu- dent Rights and Responsibilities, otherwise known as the code. After three failed attempts at a meeting, a quorum -26 of the 50 student panelists - showed up at last to make changes to this code of non-academic conduct. What changes did they make? Nobody knows. At least, nobody except the panelists and people in the Office of Student Affairs, and they're not telling. Convening the hearing to consider amend- ments was a rare positive step in the long student-administration tangle over the code. Had this hearing failed once again to attract a quorum of panelists, any hope of amending the document - at least with student input - would have virtually died. However, the hear- ing itself was only a beginning. Only when the results are released can students know whether they will truly benefit from the changes. Several amendments were proposed at the hearing, covering everything from code juris- diction to the amendment process itself. Some amendments, such as allowing attorneys to speak for accused students, were reasonable and necessary. Others, such as expanding the code'sjurisdiction beyond the current 30-mile radius, were cause for worry. Speculation about the amendments has been plentiful, but until the results of the voting are revealed, specula- tion is all that can be expected. The delay in releasing the results is prepos- terous. Over the past month, Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford repeat- edly promised the amendments would be re- vealed "soon" - but all of February has gone by and students are still waiting. Before spring break, she promised to release the results at the beginning of this week. But they have yet to appear, and Hartford is now gone on a Carib- bean cruise. There is no good explanation for this wait. While compiling and organizing the amend- ments - the reason Hartford has blamed for the delay - is important, ample time has been given for that process. These amendments will have direct impact on students' lives, and informing students of the changes should be a high priority in the amendment process. Stu- dents must have a chance to review and react to the changes before they are taken to the University Board of Regents for final approval - which Hartford has stated she plans to do at the April regents' meeting. There are two possible explanations for the delay. Either Hartford does not place apriority on informing students of the changes, or she wants to hide the information to avoid dealing with student reaction. Either way, her behavior is unacceptable. Hartford's title is vice presi- dent for student affairs. She is neglecting her responsibility to students. For two years - since the code's imple- mentation in 1993- students have waited to make changes to the code. Through failed attempts at amendment hearings and the University's slowness in calling new meet- ings, amendment sponsors held out hope that their proposals would be reviewed. Now that changes to the code have finally been consid- ered, they must be released to the public. The wait has been far too long. A mong the 10 of us, we covered eight different majors, and probably 10 dif- ferent future professions. We mostly came from well-to-do backgrounds. And we all wondered what we can do about homelessness, so togetheron an alternative spring break, we went to Atlanta. Around me, there seemed to be a lot of people who didn't care about the homeless. Then there were those who cared, but didn't do anything about it. All the while, I saw how immense the problem is. And I realized that an immense problem surrounded by a bunch of people who don't care about solv- ing it leads to absolutely nothing. There are few things in life more frustrating that see- ing 20,000 homeless in one city and know- ing you can do little about it. Some people, however, care a lot. These are the people who spend a night each week making sure men get fed. They take care of kids while their mothers find work. They help men and women make resumes and get interviews. They fight legislation. They know the problem. These people help. If but just a little, they do help. Sometimes the help would come from those who can't help. I met Eugene in a shelter. He has a wife and three kids in New Orleans and still recalls having a home because it wasn't that long ago. Wandering through the park, he'd wonder why all the homeless lay on the benches. Like the rest of us, Eugene would keep walking. Sometimes he'd stop and give a dollar. What was he to do? Now Eugene is on the other side. Home- less, he has a lot of ideas on how to change things. They are good ideas, but who listens to Eugene? He told me he would coordinate a system between different shelters to pre- vent freeloading. I wish someone with power had Eugene's ideas. Eugene is one of 20,000 homeless in Atlanta, one of some 4 million in the nation. Every one of these people has his or her own story, his or her own predicament. And every person has a different solution. It is such an immense problem, I kept thinking. How will it ever be solved? Things began to fall into place with a simple remark from an un-simple man. Joe Houston, a counselor at the Task Force for the Homeless, gave a tour showing us cat holes, boarded-up homes, makeshift shacks and leveled low-income housing. He showed us how Atlanta is changing and whom it is screwing. He'd always tell us the good aspect of any change, and often it was good, but Joe's perspective was best because he knew the bad side, too. He knows the effects govern- ment action will have, and he thinks about its implications to everybody. Joe should be in city government. I wondered how we could pay him back for the insightful tour because we learned a great deal in two short hours. Yet two hours to show 10 college kids around Atlanta takes a large block from Joe's day. As he was leaving the van, he wished us good luck in our careers. "And may you have a social conscience in your careers, whatever they may be," he said. I realized our promise to do so was all the payment Joe desired. Most students on this campus will be graduating soon, some much sooner than others, and then we go into the real world. The real world has lots of problems; too often they seem overwhelming. It is tough to think that we cannot help everybody. And hanging on to the satisfac- tion of making a difference in your own way doesn't stop other injustice from continu- ing. I wish some Atlanta city officials had gone on an alternative spring break dealing with the homeless. They would know some of the guys involved in unjust labor pools and they would have met people they're arresting to make the city look better. Maybe they would think differently when making city laws. Maybe things would be better, if just by a little bit. I hope for social conscience in every- body; and I can control it in myself. In my profession, and in Karen's,- Kendra's, Rachel's, Carrie's, Kristin's, Oliver's, David's, Fred's and Deosil's, we will be making decisions that affect other people. Now we know a bit more about broad impli- cations. We befriended many homeless. We know their stories. Maybe we can help. Saving the satisfaction of knowing that I will change things within my realm of influence lessens the frustration. It's what I can hang onto. Things will be better, even if just by a little bit. S JiM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST -- C' - '-4 NOTABLE QUOTABLE I "It's an economic dagger pointed at the heart of the economy." - Kathleen McShea; press secretary to Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), on the balanced budget amendment Locking up the problem New prisons won't solve crime troubles T welve years and $1 billion after undertak- ing a statewide prison expansion, Michi- gan is exactly 12 years older and $1 billion porer than before. But is it safer? Not much, ,cording to crime statistics. As Michigan's prison population again swells to capacity, Gov. John Engler has stumbled on a not-so- novel "solution": Build more prisons. This politically popular but shortsighted measure will do little to remedy Michigan's crime problem. The money could be better spent elsewhere. Engler has asked the Legislature to spend $205 million to add 5,500 beds to the state's corrections system. His proposal comes in response to mounting pressure from local prison officials to head off predicted overcrowding in the system. Their concerns are legitimate, but Engler's response illustrates a fundamental misunderstanding about crime: Lock 'em up and crime will go away. The trouble is, it won't. Even though Michi- gan has the sixth-highest incarceration rate in the United States and ranks second in prison spending per capita, it has the 19th-highest crime rate. Violent crime has tapered off some- what, but not necessarily because of prison construction. In fact, 69 percent of prisoners now are incarcerated for property or drug crimes - up from 57 percent in 1979. The influx of nonviolent criminals is in- deed straining the state's prisons. Here in Washtenaw County, Sheriff Ron Schiebel an- nounced that some nonviolent prisoners would HOW TO CONTACT THEM bereleasedto ease overcrowding. While viewed by some as a solution to prison overpopula- tion, in reality Schiebel's move is a stopgap measure and nothing more. In the long term, the state must find solu- tions to the spiraling incarceration rate. Many nonviolent offenders are being needlessly jailed when there are better ways to pay their debt to society. It makes no sense to confine petty criminals to prison, where their stay behind bars will do little or nothing to rehabilitate, them. Furthermore, small-time drug offenders -the occasional marijuana smoker who harms no one but himself - should not be clogging the state's prisons and bleeding taxpayer money. Michigan's limited resources should be directed away from new prison construction to programs that prevent crime from taking place at all. Educating children in blighted urban schools is crucial to breaking the cycle of poverty and crime that feeds the prisoners' ranks. The state also must take more responsi- bility for soon-to-be released prisoners, who all too often are returned to the streets without rehabilitation or a proper transition process. Jail is and should be central to the nation's criminal justice system. But funds should not be dumped into the black hole of prisons when they can be put into education and crime prevention. Engler's so-called solution will not fix the problem of crime in Michigan. Instead, it shoves it out of the spotlight without taking any real action toward improvement. VIEWPOINT Bosnian Mobile 'U' hits close to home By Ephraim R. Gerstein Most of us, upon seeing yet another article on the former Yugoslavia, brush over it on our way to the sports section. Yet amid the seemingly meaningless carnage, glimmers of hope some- times emerge that exemplify the individual and very human struggle to bring something posi- tive to this war-torn area. The Mobile University of Bosnia is one that hits close to home. This idea was the brainchild of John Fine, a professor here at the University, and other mem- bers of the U.S. and world aca- demic community. In commit- ting to this project, they hope to continue the flow of intellectual life in the region despite the cur- rent civil and military strife. In Gerstein is an LSA first-year student and a member of the Daily editorial stafff the hope of providing academic contacts for Bosnian intellectu- als, the Mobile University will likely conduct workshops in vari- ous branches of the humanities and sciences. This newspaper, particularly on the editorial page, has a his- tory of covering events in the republics of former Yugoslavia; it is a precedent that we have set. It's a good thing we did, because the events going on in this region represent the single greatest act of ethnic genocide and civil strife since World War II. What goes on in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovinais absolutely acam- pus issue. As thinking individu- als, and members of the world community, our focus extends beyond the Diag, beyond Ann Arbor, and this struggle in Eu- rope is definitely our problem. Unfortunately, when Americans study the events of this region, we tend to lose our sense of per- spective. We get so mired in U.N. - protocols and U.S. foreign policy that we forget that this civil war is in many ways an individual struggle. There are people like every one of us who wake up each morning to the sounds of shelling and machine guns, who know little or nothing of world policy, who merely want to live in peace. Around the world, there are people who see this calamity as a human crisis, and they are trying to do their part, no matter how great or small, to improve the lives of people there. One such person is John Fine. His efforts, and those of his colleagues, will not stop the violence. They will not put food on the table of a family starving because supplies cannot pass over the besieged roads leading to Sarajevo. They will, however, give Bosnian students the chance to get an education. They will keep intellectual thought alive in this area of physical and moral break- down. They may even provide Bosnia with leaders for the future once peace finally comes to the region. Perhaps most important as far as we are concerned: One of our professors, a member of our com- munity, is risking his safety and comfort to help people who are in many ways exactly like all of us, but for their unfortunate situ* ation. That is the main reason why this issue-is so important, and that is why it deserves our attention. I would like to applaud Prof. Fine and his colleagues for their efforts, and express the hope that they reach fruition. He deserves thanks for his service to us -as citizens of this world. 0 LETTERS Congress, 'U' should not give approval to homosexual activity State Rep. Mary Schroer (D-52nd district, North Campus) 99 Olds Plaza Building Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 373-1792 State Rep. Uz Brater (D-53rd district, Central Campus) 412 Roosevelt Building Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 373-2577 To the Daily: I am writing in response to your editorial titled, "The Senate Playground" (2/8/95) and the "Kiss-In" on the Diag. In your editorial, you unfairly criticize Republicans Jesse Helms and Dick Armey for their "anti-gay" actions. You claim the lic officials about homosexuality is tolerable and probably neces- sary. However, you are crossing the line when you advocate people to adopt the homosexual lifestyle. You evidently failed to con- sider the fact that it is homo- sexual and bisexual men who - rial staff at the Daily continues to pass reckless and thoughtless judgement on issues of great im- portance. I recommend you not jump to conclusions without hav- ing the slightest notion of what the implicationsmightbe. Aqual- ity of excellent journalism is to present both sides of an issue - the Queer Unity Project and the LGBPO to organize an event such as the "Kiss-In," is an uttershame. This is a gross injustice to thei of M reputation and heterosexual students, who, like myself, were subjected to witness two male§ embrace and kiss each other, while walking to class. Indecent State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Washtenaw County) _,