4 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 14, 1998 420 Maynard StreetL Ann Arbor, MI 48109 LA Edited and managed by E students at the JACK SCHILLACI University of Michigan Editorial Page Editor Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily FROM THE DAILY A secretcode Act could end the 'U"s secrecy 'We will remain ready to take military action if Mr. Milosevic fails to make good on his commitments this time.' - President Bill Clinton speaking about the urgency of the situation in the Balkans KAAMRAN HAFEEZ As IT HAPPENS After years of operating almost in complete secrecy, the Code of Student Conduct is finally exposed. With the recent passage of the Higher Education Act, no longer does the University's disciplinary Code have a legal excuse for passing judgement away from the eyes of the public. But this amendment to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act may affect cam- pus life much more than students would wish. Until this amendment was passed, the Code functioned virtually unchecked by the public. Students or administrators could file a complaint under the Code, thus instigating a full investigation. The Code acts as an internal discipline system that can enact punishments as severe as expulsion from the University. But it is vir- tually impossible to make sure the Code is doing its job well and passing fair judge- ment when its decisions are kept entirely private. With secret proceedings and deci- sions, precedents are never made, thus starting each case with a clean slate and giving overwhelming power to the faculty and administrators adjudicating the matter. Every once in a while, another story of the Code's failure to pass proper judge- ment would surface. But any action to prevent this from happening again is inhibited by the inability of case-by-case reviews to cite past proceedings. The new amendment to FERPA allows the University to release the information about cases involving the Code, therefore making it possible to check the collegiate court system. But it is difficult to decide precisely how much this could damage students' privacy. One part of the bill allows the University to call the parents of under- graduates who are caught drinking. This is definitely a violation of students' priva- cy. There is no reason to contact former guardians because of the behavior of adults. But in cases of violent crimes such as rape and assault, the outcome of these cases should be available to the public. The survivor of such crimes deserves to know that justice has been done while the campus community must be shown that such behavior is not acceptable and will be punished. A Code that functions in total secrecy has the power to pass any type of judgement it wishes. As the veil that has covered the Code is lifted, students will finally be able to see how well it can work. If there are any mistakes in Code judgements, they can now be pointed out and fixed. Whether or not there has been any bad decisions made by the Code in the past, the FERPA amend- ment is a step toward ensuring there will be no more. For now, the University is ambiguous about the affects that this bill will have on campus, with administrators and spokes- people speaking only about the pending discussions regarding this amendment. But with the Code up for review at the end of this semester, the new light shown on its proceedings will certainly influence how the Code functions in the future. The University should choose to use this amendment to check the Code and not to invade the privacy of students. The ability to release names or contact guardians does not mean that the University should no longer protect the privacy of its students. Rather, the amend- ment is best suited as a check on the Codej of Student Conduct. It it '1 WE N T." IMT RECENTLY( HE'S LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Public commitment Communities should increase involvement T his year, the Ann Arbor Public Schools are facing several major issues, including high school overcrowding, budget cuts and a search for a new superintendent. The public school district was criticized by many citizens last year when they were left out of the deci- sion-making process of an elementary school redistricting plan. Parents and residents who feel they are not involved in public school decisions their tax dollars support - and about schools their children attend - is an all- too-common occurrence. Some people feel alienated or intimidated by education- al jargon while others do not feel welcome or see how they can make a difference. Community interaction in the public school system must be more meaningful than buying cookies at school fundraisers. According to Gail Braverman, the com- munications director for the Michigan Association of School Boards, the number of married couples without children now exceeds the number of couples with chil- dren. Fewer people have school-age chil- dren and therefore, lack a vested interest in public education, making it more difficult to pass important public education issues. But all Ann Arbor residents pay school taxes and are thus indirectly supporting every course of action the school board takes. Paying school taxes likens residents to shareholders of a company; they should have a sincere interest in its success to bet- ter the product - their children's education. Braverman led a school board session last week on increasing support for public edu- cation. He said a growing number of people are becoming disenfranchised by public schools. Braverman advised the board to develop a plan for improving communication and involving the community in school deci- sions - a step in the right direction, although a little too late. School boards are elected by the community; thus, they should be acting in the public's best interest. The board has assigned some trustees to a subcommittee on communication. One of the tests of the district's emphasis on public participation will be the "High School Futures 2000" project. The district is form- ing a 35-member committee to study ways to relieve high school overcrowding and update the curriculum. Trustee Nicholas Roumel said some people think the committee's six slots reserved for parents and residents are not enough. Ann Arbor high schools are over- crowded and some students turn to area alternatives, like private, religious or char- ter schools for more personal attention. Sending students to other schools, however, does not resolve the problems with Ann Arbor's Pioneer and Huron High Schools. The committee should try to find a bal- ance that will allow it to involve as many people as possible and make decisions expediently. Parents should be aware of how their involvement in the public school system not only helps their children, but improves Ann Arbor's reputation and cre- ates a standard for other school districts to follow. Residents must not lose sight of how important a public school system is and they should be involved. It is impor- tant that the public know that it has an impact on decisions for their public schools. In a city that is home to a highly regarded public universities, nothing less should be expected. Hate-filled crimes must be stopped To THE DAILY: It saddens me to learn of the brutal of Mark Shepard, a student at the University of Wyoming. Mark was pis- tol-whipped and then tied to a wooden fence and left to die. I am almost confident that if this story were heard about 30 years ago, we would have automatically thought we were in the days of Jim Crow and this savage murder was the result of skin color. But this is 1998 and the same ideologies - those being political and religious - that institution- alized hatred-filled and heinous crimes against blacks and other racial minorities are now the tools of choice that are institu- tionalizing the same crimes against sexual minorities in this country. We are no longer dealing with lynchings on account of skin color but because of sexual and emotional pref- erence. The same wooden artifact that Mark Shepard was tied to and left to die, is the same wood that was placed against the backs of many African Americans. It is the same wood from which many African Americans were hung just because they loved interra- cially and just because of who they were. I am sure that it is the same wood the lifeless body of the African American Texan passed as it was dragged behind a motorist's pick up truck. When will we, as a com- munity, wake up and see the continuation of these same injustices, just in different forms? It is time to put aside those things that set us apart and make us different and embrace them. Those will be the only fabrics to hold us together as a people and a country. If we let our differ- ences tear us apart, then the same individuals that perse- cuted racial minorities in the name of religion and other ideologies, will surely be back. When looking at the attack on affirmative action and lack of services being provided to underrepresented racial and sexual minorities, it is obvious that they are already here. Do you hear them knocking? I do. It frightens me because I have always said that I would never wave the rain- bow flag, a flag symbolic to most homosexuals. Today I realize that if I choose not to wave that flag, then possibly no one else will. It is time we all wave a flag, regard- less of the color or print. It is time to say "no" to human persecution, be it physical or mental. So when you see those signs about the trans- forming of homosexualsto heterosexuals. ust take a moment to reflect on how easy it will be to transform the mind of self. KENNETH JONES LSA SENIOR Power out showed incompetence To THE DAILY: This letter is written to thank the University mainte- nance people for responding so quickly to the power fail- ure in Bursley Hall on Oct. 7. Losing power at 11I p.m. is nothing major, of course. It's not like anyone was working on their EECS 280 programming assignment right then. We were all just about ready to fall asleep, naturally. It's not like it was about 100 degrees in our rooms because our fans weren't working. We didn't really want to use our com- puters, TVs, microwaves, stereos or cordless phones that late at night. So thank you for waiting until lI a.m. the next morning to switch the circuit breaker to give our power back. We all slept so well last night without any fans cooling us down. I'm glad that the RAs, RDs and dorm security don't have keys to the circuit breaker panels. It's good to know that we have such efficient people assisting us when our fine buildings break down. MICHAEL PROSZKOW JOHN MCMAHON ENGINEERING SOPHOMORES Tickets are a way to make a 'fast buck' To THE DAILY: As a first-year graduate student and an avid college hockey fan, I was appalled to learn of the adjusted price increase for regular season hockey tickets effective this season. For four years I was fortu- nate enough to attend St. Lawrence University, a pri- vate liberal arts school in northern New York. Although very small in student enroll- ment when compared to the University, SLU has a Division I hockey program in the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference. For years, the Conference has not contained the power house teams often associated with the Central Collegiate Hockey Association or the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, but has still managed to remain quite competitive in the college hockey circuit (sending three of the 12 teams in the NCAA tournament). During my first three years at SLU the price of a regular season student ticket was a mere $2. At the commencement of my senior year, SLU's president made the decision to do away with charging any student admis- sion to regular season hockey games. Granted, SLU did not win the national champi- onship two out of the last three years, but they were runners up for the 1989 sea- son. Remarkably, the cost of student tickets remained just $2 for the following seven seasons until its eventual dis- missal entirely. My point being thus: If SLU, with a student popula- tion of 2,000 and an arena seating capacity of less than half that of Michigan's, is capable of supporting a com- petitive hockey program, why does the University feel the need to excessively inflate ticket prices for an already ample-funded program with a much larger fanfare? This perplexing question has unfortunately lead to my inability to attend any Michigan hockey games this year (quite disappointing, considering I was greatly looking forward to doing so). I hope in future situations, the Athletic Department takes the students into greater con- sideration before attempting to make a fast buck. KEVIN SCHNEIDER RACft*AM Daily staff should take a trip to North Campus To THE DAILY: The University has both a College of Architecture and Urban Planning and a School of Art and Design. For seven, count 'em, seven years now, I have watched the Daily screw up that simple fact. In the Oct..7 paper, the Daily cited a quote to "Nathan Tracer, Art and Architecture Michigan Student Assembly Representative:'~ We are two separate edu- cational entities! Just because the two schools share a building doesn't mean they're the same body. That would be like me writing this letter to the "Michiganensian Daily Gargoyle" just because they're all in the publications building. The Daily needs to get some poster boards and write on them in big black marker that Art and Architecture are two separate entities. You'd think that 108 years of editorial freedom would have been enough time to send somebody to North Campus to figure it out. JOSH KEOUGH NATHAN TRACER SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE Graduate school essay questions * in a perfect world S eniors have a talent for self-obses- sion. We wax poetic about ye olde alma mater. We bore everyone to tears with tales of woe from the job market and graduate school. We are the baby boomers of the undergraduate system because we are only dimly aware that there are other peo- ple who exist on this campus too. And we have no regard for their *a importance. Narcissism hav- ing being explained, with a nice ablative, let's talk for a minute about grad- ILLEP uate school applica- 1-1I tions. This is the time of year when the mad rush to apply begins. Most of us have had four years to forget how stupid and irritating is it to apply for anything, especially in an aca- demic context. The questions are so bad. Does any- one really have a "moment that chang* your life?" Bear in mind that the admi- sions board doesn't want hear dhe "threesome" story that you keep boring your housemates with. Writing a thre to four page essay on "my philosophy of community service" is nothing you do for fun either. So I was thinking the whole process would be so much better if they would just ask the right questions instead of those Pollyanna, first-date cow chips. ® Business school: Do you likO money? I mean, really, really like money? Does the thought of a six-fig- ure salary give you an erection (or equivalent response)? Does your dreatn living room consist of $3,000 worth bf stereo equipment with two Celine Dion albums and a copy of every Disney soundtrack? Would you describe yor- self in 20 years as powerful, sterile and tasteless? Good. We thought so.'Mv to the next question. Essay question: You are the manager of a sheet metal stamping plant. One of your best customers has just placed a huge order. In order to fill it in 'tim, you'll have to force your employees o work unpaid overtime and remove the safety devices from the plant machney which, while increasing productivity, will almost certainly cause seeral worker deaths. If you fill the quota you will receive a bonus. Question: Whm do you hide the bodies? What -color Range Rover? S Law school: Do you like money, but still like to feel like a Soldier of the People? Do you own a "casual" pairof wingtips? Have you been on the Siud nt Council since kindergarten? Do yu evaluate people on the basis of thei- erence letters they can write for y ? Would you be happy continuing to ro the country from the inside out? Essay question: Goethe's "Faust" is about a man who sells his soul toithe Devil for a period of unlimited powi. Why is everyone so down on the guy Women's Studies: Doe tle thought of someone, somewhereZ a- ing fun that you don't approve of' dit you crazy? Do you think writing papers with titles such as "Lacan, Freud and Derrida: Modes of Thought and Metaphors of the Body" will en spousal abuse? Does Woody Allen't* masculinity frighten you? Can you'bbst balls with the power of your minds . Essay questions: Detail your planTdr mass, forced sperm collection and wholesale, subsequent execution. Men in zoos: Why or why not? Computer science: Have you given up on sex completely? Is your skin so white that your roommate can read-by it at night? Have you ever told a compu er-illiterate friend or relative that you' dating this nice girl named Laura Croft? Essay question: Have you ever kissed a girl? What was it like? Please? Environmental Studies/Natural Resource Management: Ffffffft. Dude, where's the lighter? Essay question: Don't you, like;hate it, when, you're, like, talking abut recycling or some shit like that apd someone's all, like, "Dude, like, what are you? Some kind of hippie?" Tha like, totally gets me bumithin Seriously. 0 Medical school: How would like all the fun of necrophilia with the respectability of a professional career? Were "fun" and "free time" just annoy- ances that you can do without? .. Essay question: Overachieving- A way of life, or a hobby to annoy your friends? ® Social Sciences: Could you go1 whole day without jargon? How about a half? Do you think the world should be free of sharp edges and bad luck? Try the social sciences. We have all the fun of dry theory and truncated sentences without the pesky verifiable, useful answers that the hard sciences are obsessed with. ., .. v _. , ,.,