2B - The Michigan Daily Graduation Edition - Thursday, April 15, 1999 GRADUATION '99 TEACHING TURMOIL Code of conduct GSIs refuse to work, demand better wages introduced to 'U' Editor's note: This story originally ran in the April 8, 1996 edition of The Michigan Daily. Graduate Student Instructors at the University held a walkout again on March 10 and 11, 1998 to obtain higher wages and increased benefits. By Anupama Reddy Daily Staff Reporter Despite 38 hours of non-stop bar- gaining last week, the Graduate Employees Organization and University bargaining teams have left the table without reaching an agree- ment. The immediate result is a two-day GEO work stoppage beginning today. "It is not a protest. It is a picket line," said GEO spokesperson Pete Church. "If you cross the picket line, it's not a neutral statement. It's a state- ment against the individuals who are fighting for a living wage and a fair contract. It's a matter of social jus- tice." University chief negotiator Dan Gamble said he did not believe there was a clear definition of what cross- in a picket line meant. "A picket line is in the eyes of the be older," Gamble said. "It's all an individual's decision. I'm sure that everyone is not going to feel that deeply about it." University Provost J. Bernard Machen said the walk-out should not be observed by the University com- munity. "The strike is not in the best interest of the University and GEO" Machen said. "Our faculty and staff should not honor the strike." Some students said they understood GEO's position but questioned the timing and effectiveness of a two-day walk-out. "The way I see it is the (GSIs) deserve the pay raise," Engineering first-year student James Tallman said. "I'm paying money to go here, so I deserve the chance to go to class. "Especially being so close to exam time, it's really crucial that I go to class." LSA first-year student Kelly Klemstine agreed. "I understand that they aren't being treated the way they want to be treat- ed," Klemstine said. "I understand their problem, but I also think it is pretty close to exams. I wonder what a two-day work stoppage will do." But LSA senior La Tonya Sutton said she fully supported GEO's work stoppage because GSIs do much of the grading and teaching at the University. "I think GEO (members) do a lot of work," Sutton said. "They need to be respected and rewarded. I believe what they are asking for is not an unfair thing." The University and GEO engaged in non-stop bargaining beginning last Tuesday under the conditions of a Editor's note: This story originally ran in the Nov. 20, 1996 edition of The Michigan Daily. The Code of Student Conduct was reviewed in 1998 by both student and University committees and is still in place. By Amy Klein Daily Staff Reporter The new Code of Student Conduct became policy Friday when the University Board of Regents voted 7 to 1 to implement it permanently - - ' with a review in three years. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) was the only member of the board to vote against the policy. Baker has Baker opposed every code proposal the board has consid- ered. The Code replaces the Statement of Student Rights and Responsibilities, the interim non-academic conduct code that had been in place since 1993. A workgroup of eight students and consultants recommended the Code to the Office of Student Affairs in early October, and the policy has been revised with community input more than three times in the last month. "This is not a copy of anyone else's code of conduct," said Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen Hartford. "It is uniquely Michigan's." The new Code addresses the "values" of the University community, student rights and potential violations. The docu- ment includes procedures for resolving disputes through mediation and 12 sanc- tions. The regents asked Hartford in April to seek student input to draft a conduct code that was simple and non-legalistic, addressing critics' concerns with the last policy. Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) said the new Code successfully outlined student values. "This code stresses the norns of the academic community into which the stu- dents enter voluntarily," Power said. "It's not a punitive document - it stressed values first and education second. It's a huge improvement over earlier versions." Baker, who said he still objected to the Code, proposed a "sunset" clause be attached to the policy, which would have abandoned the Code in three years unless it was reviewed and re-imple- mented by a regents' vote. The clause was dismissed in favor of the review after three years. "There has been tremendous opposi- tion all through this process in the sense that if there is a code, there should be a minimal code," Baker said. "The regents would have been better served if we could have heard the arguments of stu- dents who object to the Code - and there are many." Anne Marie Ellison, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Students' Rights Commission, introduced the idea of a sunset clause at Thursday's public comments forum. Although she has firmly opposed the code, Ellison said she would accept a policy with a sunset clause because it would allow the regents to test the statement before implementing it permanently. FILE PHOTO/Daily University Graduate Student instructors staged a work stoppage in April 1996 following a 38-hour bargaining session with University officials to obtain better wages. media blackout and closed discus- sions to non-bargaining members of GEO. When the marathon bargaining session ended Friday, both parties spoke about the session. GEO President Scott Dexter said the negotiations reached a stalemate on the issues of wages and interna- tional graduate student instructor training. "The University was unwilling to bargain on a mandatory subject of bargaining - international GSIs," Dexter said. "They also said they would refuse to bargain on wages until (international) GSI training was dropped. That's illegal according to state law." I 'JERU SALEM, Fri ends, family grieve for murdered LSA senior GARDEN $1 OFF any falafel sandwich Limit 1 Per Person Per Order 307 S. Fifth Ave. Editor's note: This story originally ran in the Sept. 27, 1997 edition of The Michigan Daily. By Stephanie Hepburn and Mike Spahn Daily Staff Reporters LSA senior Tamara Sonya Williams pleaded for her life yesterday, but noth- ing would stop her boyfriend. Not even the threat of a campus police officer's bullet. The 20-year-old ran bleeding upstairs from her basement and desperately knocked on a neighbor's window before she was stabbed to death about 200 feet "All I know is that two young lives have been stamped out for nothing." - Yvonne Williams Tamara Williams mother I I Phone #: 734-995-5060 I 1 exp. 12-31-991 --- ---------- . - - ----- - -- - - - - - - 1 p o 0 0 °// ( from the front door of her North Campus apartment complex - where a Department of Public Safety officer fatally shot Kevin Nelson after he refused to drop the knife. Yesterday's shooting marks the first time a DPS officer fired a weapon while on duty. "My daughter was a people person," said her mother, Yvonne Williams, of Detroit. "All I know is that two young lives have been starpped out for nhing." The stabbing and shooting left the campus in shock yesterday as news spread quickly as more than 40 reporters swarmed around campus. A scheduled LSA fund-raising celebration was can- celed and a vigil outside Williams' home drew about 150 people, including University President Lee Bollinger. "All of us are horrified at what, by all accounts, appears to have been a vicious criminal assault," Bollinger said. But yesterday's apparent case of domestic violence was not the first Williams had to face. In 1995, after cam- pus police were called twice to Williams' home, Nelson was convicted of domestic assault and battery and was put on pro- bation. The same year, Williams pro- cured a restraining order against him, said Leo Heatley, DPS director. Neighbors said they heard the couple fighting as recently as three weeks ago. Williams, a "talented and gifted" stu- dent who would have celebrated her 21st birthday Monday, had planned to graduate in May with a general studies degree and was deciding whether to apply to law school or the University's School of Social Work. She had even ordered a class ring. A hard worker, student and mother, she balanced classes with a part-time job at LSA Media Services while rais- ing her 2 and a 1/2-year-old daughter. "It's so amazing what type of person she was;' said Tamika Pennamon, her best friend and LSA senior. "She was in school, worked and raised her daughter. Any little thing she could do, she would." But Williams' life ended in tragedy when her live-in boyfriend stabbed her to death early yesterday morning at her home in the Northwood apartment building complex. The incident caused such an enormous amount of commo- tion that numerous neighbors called 911 for help and tried to break up the dispute with baseball bats. "We are both going to burn in hell," screamed Nelson as he repeatedly stabbed Williams, according to Chris Baumann, 27, a neighbor. Other neighbors heard similar "irra- tional yelling." "He was yelling, 'I had enough of you. Look what you made me do,"' said Desmond Flagg, 16. When police arrived at the 2200 block of Stone Drive, they found Nelson, 26, outside the home, standing over Williams and repeatedly stabbing her, DPS officials said. The responding officer, a 2-year veteran with the cam- pus police fired two shots, killing Nelson, who is not affiliated with the University. The officer, who's name will not be released until an investigation is con- cluded, was put on administrative leave according to standard DPS policy. Vice President for University Relations Walter Harrison spoke at yes- terday's press conference about the tragic loss to the community and the University. "Grief and sadness (is what) the whole University feels," Harrison said. "A talented and gifted senior at the University was a loss to the entire University of Michigan. All of us grieve with her family during this sad period." 1200 S. 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