C~' lEt tti News: 76-DAILY Display Ads: 7640554 Classified Ads: 764-0557 One hundred eightyears of editorilfreedom Monday October 12, 1998 U, MSA examine Code implementation By Katie Piona Daily Staff Reporter In January three years after the University Board of Regents adopted the Code of Student Conduct - the board will be handed a report detailing how well the procedures of the iversity-wide policy are working. The Code is the University's internal disciplinary system, based on a set of val- ues - including dignity, diversity, safety and honesty - the University enforces to create a scholarly environment. Students can be disciplined under the Code for any number of violations, such as physically and sexually harm- ing another person, misusing alcohol and other drugs or tampering with University property. They can receive sanctions ranging from educational projects to expulsion, although fewer than 15 students have been suspended or expelled under the Code. It is intended to be educational in nature and less legalistic than state or federal statues, Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford said. The Code was drafted out of the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, which served as a tem- porary discipline policy from 1993-96. "The regents asked us to come up with a code that was more simple and less legalistic," Hartford said. That was the task of the 1995 all-student commit- tee that drafted what would later become the Code, she said. Sean Esteban McCabe, who now heads the Office of Student Conflict Resolution that oversees the Code, was one of eight students who drafted the Code. "It was a complete redrafting," McCabe said. "The intent was to define standards for our community based on shared values." The student drafting committee forwarded its policy to Hartford, who modified it and handed it over to the regents, who approved it and enacted the new policy in January 1996. Since then, the University has processed more than 150 Code cases consisting of 450 alleged violations. The two most common types of alleged violations fall under the cat- egories of "stealing, vandalizing, damaging, destroying or defacing University property or the property of others" and "physically harming another person including acts such as killing, assaulting or battering." Code review * When the regents adopted the Code in January 1996, they scheduled the 1998 review. The Office of Student Conflict Resolution staff completed the first part of the three-phase review in May. During the first phase, the office's staff evaluated the effectiveness of the Code process. See REVIEW, Page 12A As the Code comes under review this semester, the Daily plans to bring the campus L. complete coverage. This is the first of many articles that will appear in the Daily exam- ining the Code's effectiveness and legal weight. Look at how the current Code differs from past University policiesof student conduct in the Friday Focus on Oct. 16. See page 114 for the complete text of the Code. I NCAA: Ray two to miss more By Mark Snyder Daily SportsEditor Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr annour Friday that Marcus Ray will return to Wolverines immediately after serving a three-v suspension for improper contact with an agent. the senior still must sit out two more game appease the NCAA. "We are glad this situation is over with," 4 said, "because it has been a distraction, and now can move forward and try to have the type of f ball team and season that we would like to hav Carr's positive attitude toward Ray's reinsi ment for practices was tempered by revelation Ray's wrongdoings. The problems stem from Ray's association'v sports agent James Gould, whose offices are ba in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ray got in hot water for his association u Gould during a trip in which he flew from Columbus, Ohio, home to a jazz festiva Cincinnati this past July. Two friends of Ray's mother who were on trip stayed at the Cincinnati Hyatt Regency he but at checkout time were unable to pay for tl rooms. Ray then contacted Gould and asked hin pay for the rooms, which he did. "We have an agent, James Gould oul Cincinnati, Ohio, who knowingly violated NC, rules," Carr said. "I intend to write the NFL Pla Association and ask that they take disciplii action because Marcus has obviously had Michigan career impacted by a man who knowi ly violated rules." The women who stayed in the rooms,v refused to be identified in the Athletic Departrr inquiry, must pay the balance of the roo, $327.26. Athletic Director Tom Gosss Michigan Compliance Director Derrick Gragg ensure the women make the payment. Initially, the Athletic Department did believe the hotel incident violated NCAA re because neither Ray nor his mother received direct benefits from the payment. So Michigan's initial report, the violation was outlined. In an addendum, the Athl( Department declared that because the won were friends of Ray's mother, it was a violation NCAA bylaw 12.3.1.2. The concert itself was also a point of conteni games '200 students celebrate Focusing on community service, more than 200 University students and others participated in the second annual Ghandi Day of Service on Saturday. Sponsored by the Indian American Student Association and Project SERVE, the event commemorated the life of India's late Mahatma Ghandi and carried on his legacy of non-violent political expression and com- munity activism. "On this day, you can reclaim (Ghandi's) words for your own ... we not only honor his life, but we honor his deeds," said E. Royster Harper, dean of students, in a speech given on the Diag prior to the community service events held at 25~ sites in Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti and Metro Detroit. Vijay Prasad, the event's featured speaker and professor at Connecticut's Trinity College, spoke on Ghandi's lega- cy and American civil rights pioneer Martin Luther King, Jr. "If we don't keep the memory of Ghandi and Dr. King alive, then we have participated in the extermination of non-violence," Prasad said. Acting on Ghandi's words is more important than believing in them, Prasad said. The Day of Service is "a better memorial (to Ghandi) than a statue." Michigan football safety Marcus Ray addresses members of the press Friday at Schembechler Hall concerning his NCAA violations. Ray obtained tickets to the July 24 concert at Cinergy Field through Star Bank, a Cincinnati bank where Ray borrowed money to obtain an insurance policy. The policy, legal in the eyes of the NCAA, enabled Ray to insure himself against injury. The two tickets admitted Ray and his mother to the festival and allowed them to sit in the compa- ny's skybox. In the eyes of the NCAA, that is con- sidered a.i "extra benefit" above and beyond what other student-athletes receive. Because Ray and his mother consumed the food and drink available in the suite, they violated rule 16.02.3 of the NCAA bylaws. Ray will commit restitution for the incident by paying $150 to local Ann Arbor charities. Ray attended Friday's press conference, but only read a prepared statement. "This experience has humbled me and I now realize that I have to use good judgment at all times," Ray said. "I want the world to know that I have never had the intent to accept gifts or favors from any professional sports agent or their repre- sentatives. I love Michigan, make no mistake about it. I had no intent on embarrassing this pro- See RAY, Page 7A After the speeches, participants went to assigned community service sites. At Arbor Hospice, Day of Service par- ticipants planted fields of daffodils while others did landscaping work at the Huron Services for Youth. "Ghandi did a great thing and what we can do is give back to our community," said Palak Sheth, an LSA first-year stu- dent. Another group helped out at Knit Wits, a project that takes scraps of polar fleece See GHANDI, Page 2A U.S. ready for airstike ELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - U.S. bombers moved oposition for possible NATO airstrikes on Yugoslavia and a U.S. envoy accelerated talks with President Slobodan Milosevic yesterday after reporting no change in the leader's tough stand on Kosovo. Richard Holbrooke and Milosevic held discussions late into the night yesterday, meeting for the sixth time in seven days in talks that signaled U.S. determination to search for a peaceful way out of the deadlock. Holbrooke said early yesterday that he would "continue an intense effort to find a peaceful, acceptablelly verifiable npliance system as an alternative to the other choice" - meaning the use of force. But he also said NATO would meet today to authorize action if his mediation effort fails. In Washington, national security adviser Sandy Berger told CNN that Milosevic "is not in compliance as of this point:' "He can come into compliance or he can face military action by NATO" at any time, Berger said. En garde! Students to rally for indigenous people By Nika Schulte Daily Staff Reporter Today, as the nation recognizes Christopher Columbus' voyage to America, University students plan to walk out of class at 11:45 a.m. and gather on the Diag at noon to cele- brate Indigenous People's Day. Student groups such as the Native American Students Association and Alianza hope to use the event as a springboard for advancing aware- ness of Native American issues on campus. Although the rally will acknowl- edge past struggles faced by Native Americans, the focus will be on making campus improvements to benefit the more than 220 -Native American students in the University community. student's pride in their culture. "Over the years, assimilation has been replaced with a conscious deci- sion to change back," Martin said. "Our parent's generation was raised to say they were not Native Americans. Now this generation embraces their culture and is trying to rebuild it." Native American students hope to embrace and learn more about the native culture through developing a Native American Studies Department. Although the department of American culture offers classes on Native American studies, Joe Reilly, co-chair of NASA, said a separate department is essential to a school that emphasizes diversity. "There is a lot of talk about diver- I '' , :: m