4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 19, 1998 c be 91Irbigutn tiIg 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor 'When you compare where we were for eight months with where we are today ... these are huge victories for the American people.' - President Clinton commenting on the bipartisan budget recently passed by Congress KAAMRAN HAFEEZ As Ii' H A ENs& 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 Honorable behavior Honor Code helps students monitor themselves ANOTHER TER MINUTES. Tin~L WE'LL.LEAVE. . . A11 University students know that cheating is wrong and if they are caught doing so they might face serious consequences. But cheating is becoming harder to define and therefore harder to catch. Copying another student's home- work - even with that peer's permission -is clearly considered cheating; but other scenarios are not so cut and dry. Is signing in attendance for a friend who is skipping a discussion section cheating? What about programming information into a graphing calculator before an exam? Where should the line be drawn after collaboration of group work? The Honor Council is planning to give its Engineering Honor Code - guidelines under which Engineering students are responsible for watching behavior - a face-lift for the first time in nearly 80 years. The Honor Code stresses personal integrity, trust and cooperation among students and faculty. The Honor Council investigates every claim by students or instructors regarding any form of cheating or dishon- esty. Most Engineering students follow the Code very seriously. The new revisions will not change the ideology behind the Code, only specifics that must change with chang- ing times. The College of Engineering is a more open environment, unlike the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Engineering instructors are not required to proctor examinations. The code attempts to control for this lack of authority by instill- ing a sense of honesty in Engineering stu- dents. Partially due to the seriousness of the Honor Code, the standards of the College of Engineering are impressive and should be commended. While small schools, even within a large university, tend to have a sense of commu- nity and trust, the reality is that cheating happens in the Engineering program and even in much larger schools like LSA. LSA does not have uniform policies regarding cheating in its different departments. Most instructors monitor exams, and use tech- niques such as alternating seating and administering different exams to each stu- dent in order reduce the opportunity to cheat on tests. Cheating is not even includ- ed in the violations under the University's notorious Code of Student Conduct. Many instructors deal with situations themselves rather than report the violation to their department. Professors are probably saving time by doing so; University disciplinary processes take up a significant amount of time. But LSA should take a cue from the College of Engineering and beef up its stan- dards by making them uniform. The temptation to cheat may be on the rise, partially due to easier access to refer- ences. The University, along with other institutions nationwide, is learning to cope with a new threat to academic integrity: stu- dents plagiarizing material from the World Wide Web. Cutting and pasting text from the Web without permission is an increasing problem. Students should remember that their grades could be negatively affected by allowing their fellow students to cheat. A standard that addresses all types of cheating, including the use of unattrib- uted information from the Internet, must be created and enforced in LSA and all University academic divisions. It should be impressed upon students that ultimate- ly, despite regulations, it is up to them and their peers to monitor themselves. Bill Gates, our financial supreme being ashington, D.C.. will become the front line of one of the most historic battles of our time today as Bill Gates guards his vast Microsoft Empire from the advancing forces of federal government anti-trust regula-9 tors. The shots fired in the struggle will throughout the computer world for years to > come, possibly changing the way millions of people use soft- ware to access the information superhighway. Many of the nation's most SCOTT renowned com- HUNTER puter geeks will 0I. 1 IROU1' soon begin to 1'I_________ testify about the business tactics of Bill Gates. At issue today is whether Czar Gates, using all the muscle of his $14- billion Microsoft Corporation, illegally promoted his company's product, Internet Explorer, to monopolize theW Web browser market. The government's list of allegations paints a picture of the divine creator of Microsoft as a power-drunk com- puter geek spiraling out of control, bullying all the puny $5-billion com- panies like a big, bad cyberthug (because hey, he's got to find a way to feed his family, too). N To annihilate competitors such as Netscape Communications Corp., Microsoft is illegally binding itsq Internet Explorer to Windows 98, a soft- ware platform that comes installed on about 90 percent of all newpersonal computers. Bill takes a quarter of the market with this shady move. bill met illegally with Netscape a couple years back in an unsuccessful attempt to coerce the company to keep out of the Windows market. Bill coerced Internet service@ providers into signing contracts to dis- tribute Internet Explorer instead of Netscape or else! If all of this is true, you have to ask yourself: Why was he so successful? Why did so many rich, uptight CEOs just give into him, knowing fully well that he was breaking the law and violat- ing the spirit of competitive markets? Like Napoleon and Charlemagne, Bill Gates's name strikes fear into the hearts of all who come before him. His* celebrity as the ultimate financial supreme being fills common folk with both veneration and dread. Computer geeks worship Him. Businesspeople worship Him. Commoners all enshrine Him in their LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Lawful discrimination Supreme Court should review unfair decision Supreme Court order this past Tuesday unfair distinction. It was the only reason- allowed the city of Cincinnati to add able judgment. an amendment to its constitution banning the protection of homosexuals from dis- crimination. The new measure states that no policies can be initiated that grant gays and lesbians the right to take legal action against discrimination regarding employ- ment, housing or the like. It also denies any person the right to minority status or prefer- ential treatment based on his or her sexual orientation. Opponents of the .amendment and sup- porters of gay rights were outraged at the court's action, and understandably so. But even more infuriating was the fact that this order came just two years after the Supreme Court struck down a similar amendment to the Colorado state constitution. In 1996, the Court called Colorado's movement uncon- stitutional, noting that it promoted inequal- ity. That movement was nearly identical to Cincinnati's, save for the fact that it was on a state rather than a municipal level. Regardless, the two amendments resulted in entirely opposing decisions. The Court's reasons for striking down Colorado's 1996 amendment were clear. To ^deny a specific minority the same rights and privileges granted to other minority groups in the United States is to label them unequal in the eyes of the law. There is no doubt that homosexuals have been and will be discriminated against as much as women, African Americans and all other recognized minorities. They will be unfair- ly denied jobs and homes based solely on their sexual orientation. The Supreme Court realized that this would be the case, and The Court's passive acceptance of Cincinnati's recent amendment contradicts the aforementioned reasonable judgement. Gays and lesbians in the city of Cincinnati have, in effect, had their civil rights retract- ed. Anti-discrimination policies are in place to ensure that all people are treated equally in decisions regarding their way of life - most often their housing or employ- ment. To enact a law that denies homosex- uals even the possibility of forming one such policy is to accept the fact that they can be treated unequally without conse- quence. The Supreme Court's action is difficult to comprehend as an isolated incident. It is even more difficult, however, in light of the opposite r.uling that was made so recently in Colorado. The only plausible explanation would be to cite the one notable difference in the two amend- ments: one was on a state level and the other, municipal. Between the two orders, the court has, in essence, decided that a city may deny a certain group of citizens their rights, but a state may not. The logic here is equivo- cal. A more likely explanation is that there simply has been a lapse in the move- ment to protect a deserving minority group in the United States. Homosexuals will now undoubtedly be the victims of increased discrimination in Cincinnati, considering the lack of consequence. Surely, however, the movement to grant them the rights they deserve is far from over. It has merely been prolonged by an Uneducated votes are not worth it To THE DAILY: I am writing in light of the Oct. 15 letter ("Third- party candidates deserve votes") by Edward Chusid I can understand Chusid's frustrations in reference to partisan politics, but by no means is the solution to vote for third-party candidates blindly. Shall we do this to spite the Democrats and Republicans, will this give us (the public) the last laugh? I don't think so. This is not the solution. In the end, the pub- lic will be hurt. I think that Chusid over- emphasizes the role the Clinton scandal is having in how effective or good our representatives are. ust because a Republican repre- sentative is standing with fel- low party members on this particular issue doesn't make him or her ineffective in other scopes of legislation. As for taking a lead, I see no relationship between the Clinton scandal and a party not demonstrating its leader- ship abilities. I agree with Chusid in urg- ing students to use the vote that they have. But do not use it blindly. Vote for a candidate because you believe that he or she has the best ideas and/or values. It is everyone's right not just to vote but to make an educated vote. For example, don't vote for Gov. Engler just because he is a Republican or because Democratic candidate Geoffrey Fieger can be seen as a lunatic, but because you believe Engler has what it takes to do well. When it comes down to it, we need to vote for the best person out there,whether they be Democrat, Republican or any other party. Don't use the excuse of political parties to make an uneducated vote. IY AHMAD LSA SENIOR Latin prof. inspired students To THE DAILY: The Oct. 12 Daily article, "Memorial honors former Latin prof," skillfully con- veyed what made him so important in the lives of many of his students, col- leagues and friends: his abili- ty to exist in several places at once, which was indeed leg- endary. Equally worth comment- ing on, however, is the way Prof. Knudsvig helped stu- dents spot Latin in the here my eyes to the fun factor inherent in the analysis of word formation: English word formation. This in turn was the source of my current research interests, and I thank him for helping me find my calling. Is Latin still alive? It is for those lucky enough to come to it in a learnable spir- it. And we are all fortunate that it is alive, given Latin's dominant contribution to the English word hoard; it is hard to imagine real linguistic competence arising in some- one who hasn't done so. Not that the University would presume to insist on real linguistic competence being achieved by its students - at least by its undergradu- ates. After all, what fraternity, sorority or student peer group would care to boast of that kind of academic excellence today, when fighting in the street is so much more plan- gent a way of establishing your credentials in the University community? (Latin plangens, plangent-, present participle of plangere, to strike, lament.) JEFFREY CLEVENGER RACKHAM Christians should first look inward TO THE DAILY: I write this in response to an Oct. 15 article in the Daily ("Kansas church to picket Shepard funeral"). The views expressed therein both sad- den and frustrate me, as they are views held by far too many "Christians." It upsets me that certain people will name themselves Christians while ignoring the very essence of Christ's teachings. For these people, I have but one thing to say: Read your Bible. I am a Christian. I do not presume to know the mind of God, but I can read, and I can understand what my Bible tells me. First and foremost, the Christian religion is about love; love for all people, no matter who they may be. Jesus stated this when he said, "Love your neighbor as yourself"' A simple enough statement, but one that many Christians still fail to grasp. This does not mean "Love your neighbor if he is nice to you, has the same religion as you or agrees with your opinions." Plain and sim- ple, your job is to love every- one regardless. My Bible-may tell me that homosexuality is a sin, but it also tells me that dishonesty, hate and murder are sins as well. All sin is contrary to God's instruction and it is not the job of any Christian to rank that sin nor to punish it. way, some of us forgot what that example is. So before you Christians (and you know who you are) start examining the actions of oth- ers, take a long look at your own lives and ask yourself, "Am I living like Jesus?" You probably aren't, and you're giving the rest of us a bad name. JAMES MILLER LSA JUNIOR Crime at Kresge is 'sickening' To THE DAILY: I was horrified to read of the recent theft of research samples at the Kresge build- ing reported in the Friday Oct. 16 "Crime Notes." Tucked in with the ever- laughable crimes was one of a very serious nature. Though the Daily obviously has left- wing ideals and probably opposes the uses of animals in research, this is definitely a piece of news that warrant- ed further coverage. Kresge is not the sort of building that one would casu- ally waltz through and think, "Oh gee, a freezer.dWith mouse brains inside? Wouldn't it be fun to steal them?" Anyone who has any business being inside Kresge in the first place would most likely respect the research, not sabotage it. Whoever committed this crime knew exactly how and where to lash out at their enemies, and they went straight for the jugular. No perpetrator was appre- hended, but animal rights activists are probably to blame since they are the only ones who could possibly see this act as being worthwhile. Too often they put animal life above human life and fail to see the.big picture or even a clear one. Animal life is still very precious, but these mice both lived for nothing and died in vain. Who knows how much time that scientist invested in his or her experi- ment? Humans who suffer from the virus being studied now have that much longer to wait for a cure or treatment. This was a sickening, pre- meditated act that has far greater costs than most peo- ple realize. Animals used in long-term research have unbelievable net worth and incalculable value to the field of medicine. Though initially inexpensive, in the long run, the mice and rats can be worth hundreds of dollars or more. The precious research money that funded this stolen research was wasted. Indeed, people who strongly believe in the progress of medical science PCs. After all, we're talking about a man so rich and powerful, he could have each of us exterminated with two clicks* of his left mouse button. Though many people choose to paint a horrible picture ofrBill Gates the Greedy Geek, he is really not much different than you or me. Just imagine for a second that you have $50 billion in your checking account$at First Federal (yet another monopoly). You earn more interest in 30 seconds than most small countries earn in a year. Do the rules of lowly common people mean anything to you? You think to yourself: "What's the worst they can do? Fine me!" You sit back in your Beamer and laugh maniacally on your way to the country club. Anyone can be consumed by power. Personally, if I had $50 billion dollars and a near-complete monopoly on the most lucrative industry in the world, I would make it a point to systematically flout every rule, and watch the wretched masses writhe with frustration, knowing* that they could do nothing to stop me. But that is precisely the problem. The Federal Trade Commission waited far too long to set up a thor- ough investigation of Microsoft's busi- ness practices. Early this decade, responding to complaints of a monop- oly from Microsoft's rivals, the gov- ernment held a cursory investigation of Bill's activities, but let him escape unscathed when he changed the details of a contract or two. In the ensuing years, Bill earned interest. His kingdom grew, wielding more and more influence over the soft- ware market. And companies became less able to resist his influence. The Federal Trade Commission, with its anti-trust regulations, exists to pre- vent such monopolies from coming to power. Had it put the smack down a while ago, it could have prevented Microsoft from amassing enough power to brazenly slap around all the competi- tion. And today's trial might not even be in motion. Microsoft and Bill Gates have given the world many great products, many ways to waste an afternoon on mind- d~ulling cr atiity and ma lec lptronic I