michigandaily.com New Student Edition C OMMENTARY SECTION B WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2000 r MIKE SPAHN Affinnative action is vital to V *School Daze: Don 't let 'em pass you by like sitting on my couch. I like sitting on my porch. In fact, I think I like sitting around doing nothing -- or near noth- ing - as much as possible. And college is just the place to do that. In high school, seven hours of class per day is the norm; in college, some people only have seven hours of class a week. Long week- ends, "personal days," sleep-ins and a countless number of other excuses allow a college student the freedom they desire to sit around and do nothing. I like to say that college allows a student all the rights with none of the responsibilities. From early autumn discussions about bowl prospects for the Michigan football team to cold winter nights at Showcase Cinema to sunny spring mornings on the University Golf Course, there exist a bountiful number of ways to avoid studying and get involved in more stimulating collegiate activities. And getting involved is the name of the game in college. For some people, getting involved means more video games, more sleep, more beer or simply more indulgence. Although these opportunities must be cherished through- out the college years, being consumed by them is a mistake far too many students make and regret on graduation day. These past-times are time honored and will never die. e tudents will skip class to have a March barbecue for the rest of time, but it's important to look at the bigger picture and remember that this is the time to learn new things and get involved with new organizations that could change your life, or at least help define it. The Diag on a near-daily basis is flooded with people propagating their cause, club or culture, offering each student a chance to get involved with something that could prove to be the defining aspect of their college career. "Protest racism, join a fraternity or sorority, make people laugh, write poetry, promote AIDS awareness, play ultimate Frisbee, help chil- dren, come see a play, vote for me." 0 These opportunities engulf the early days of college; it can get pretty overwhelming. But that's what a major, public uni- versity is all about. A lot of people say that going to school at a Big Ten uni- versity - with thousands of students, huge lecture halls and high expectations - is too daunting. They say smaller schools can cater to a student's needs, offer opportunities to meet and know professors and provide a better opportunity to make friends. But a student at the University of Michigan makes a dif- 'erent choice, choosing to attend what seems more like a mental institution than an institution of higher learning on many days. And the only way to deal with that insanity is to become part of it, get involved in it and learn to love it. Former Michigan football coach Bo Schembechler once said, "Those who stay will be champions." Everyone at the University lives by that motto. But simply staying and sur- viving is not enough. A higher bar has been set for students at this University, and opportunities to pass that bar are plen- tiful. These years will provide opportunities unseen to decades of students at this University. * Political campaigns, protesters, the Greek system and a host of other organizations will vie for the time of new stu- dents during the early days of September. The freedom to do nothing will pull everyone away from those groups, but that's a dangerous prospect. Passing on opportunities in the early days of college could set a tone for the rest of a college career. Opportunities to get involved will present themselves. Opportunities to try new things, meet new people, learn new facts, join new organizations and have new experiences are - round every corner. That certainly includes eating pizza six imes in a week and taking a long weekend to go to an away football game, but there's more to it than that. There's a lot more to college than books, papers and finals. But that part, as odd as it is to say, is the easy part. Everybody has to go to class and study enough to pass, but no one forces outside experiences on a student. Those choices are personal and take a little effort. But that effort goes a long way in the end. - Daily Editor-in-Chief Mike Spahn can be reached via e-mail at mispahn(gjumich.edu. By Peter Cunniffe Daily EditorialI Writer One of the most contentious issues cur- rently being debated in the University com- munity and across the country is the University's use of race as a factor in its admissions process. The College of Literature, Science and the Arts' and the Law School's use of policies designed to promote a diverse learning environment are currently being challenged in federal court by two class action lawsuits spearheaded by the Washington D.C.-based legal advocacy group, the Center for Individual Rights. The CIR has mounted an aggressive legal push to dismantle affirmative action at universities around the country. It was the driving force in ending affirmative action at Texas universities and is also currently suing numerous other universi- ties, school districts, governmental agen- cies and other organizations in an attempt to not only fight affirmative action, but end any and every program targeted specifically at minorities or women. Things such as scholarships and research grants designed for minorities and women and even funding of women's sports are under attack from the CIR. The primary plaintiffs in the lawsuits against the University, unsuccessful LSA applicants Jennifer Gratz and Patrick Hamacher and unsuccessful Law School applicant Barbara Grutter believe that the use of race as a factor in the admissions processes of those schools illegally dis- criminates against them. Both of the lawsuits will be tried in the federal court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The suit against LSA is sched- uled to go to trial this fall and the suit against the Law School is scheduled to be tried this winter. The commendable goal of the University's consideration of race in admissions is the promotion of diversity on campus. Diversity is one of the reasons that this is a world-class institution o-f higher learning. The opportunity to exam- ine ideas from as many viewpoints as pos- sible is indispensable to a quality academ- ic environment. Learning and the advancement of knowledge is severely limited when people from different back- grounds, with differing viewpoints, life experiences and understandings of the world are not present. In order for students at this university to truly learn, they have to be exposed to ideas and people that allow them to expe- rience perspectives beyond those of their own race, class, geographic region and culture. The point of education is to broaden one's knowledge and insight, an unattainable goal in an insular institution that does not strive for diversity. How can one better understand the world when sur- rounded only by people like themselves? And though it is an important goal of the University, racial diversity is only one of the many considerations in the highly complex method by which applicants are assessed. When judging applicants, the University takes into account high school grades, standardized test scores, content of a student's curriculum, co-curricular activities, essays, letters of recommenda- tion, the quality of their high school, whether any relatives attended the University, athletic ability and socioeco- nomic status in addition to race. Policies designed to boost the number of underrepresented minorities may appear to be unfair to some prospective students at first glance, but many of the other factors used in admissions decisions clearly favor non-minority applicants. The University's consideration of the quality of an applicant's high school is obviously beneficial to students from wealthier, and See ACTION, Page 28 No CoDE Code of Student Conduct infringes on stude nts' rights, should be eli'nated By Josh Wickerham Daily Editorial Writer Brought up under careful parental guise, life at the University appears com- pletely open to your own design. You've escaped the watchful gaze of community, church, friends, high school and estab- lished concern to embark on the path seen or unseen. New morals, new ideas and new experiences await you. But where your parents, and even the laws of this nation left off, the University supple- ments your college experiences with a set of arbitrary values designed to establish, "civility, dignity, diversity, education, equality, freedom, honesty and safety." This is the Code of Student Conduct and it makes these values part and parcel of the University's exclusive community. While developing a set of moral ideals is well within the bounds of the University's administrative goals, the Code is a heavy-handed attempt to legis- late these values. And no institution - much less a public university - has the right or necessity to act parentally. Yet the Code is not just an abstraction. It is a set of rules for governing student conduct, complete with its own legal sys- tem. With the Code in place, the University oversteps its bounds in attempting to legislate decency outside the justice system. Because the justice system is already established and has had centuries of fine-tuning, the Code is by its very construction an inferior substi- tute. The problem, though, is that too few students know what the Code legislates, how it prosecutes students or how it tram- ples their rights. Fewer than 15 percent of students can identify the Code, even though every incoming first-year student is required to sign away many of their constitutional rights before they tan reg- ister for classes. Education about the Code lies outside the classroom, so let's address the problems with the Code from several angles. First, the University has too much power in deciding what is a punishable offense. Students can be charged under The Code for violations of law, even when they have already faced civil or criminal trials in governmental court sys- tems. They can also be called into ques- tion by receiving police reports. This means that students involved in peaceful protests -- if asked by police to leave - could find themselves face to face with one of the Code's arbitrators. The University also sidesteps important legal measures designed to protect the rights of the prosecuted. Two years ago, Jason Brooks, an offen- sive lineman on the football team, was placed under six sanctions by the University for an incident involving a female student. Brooks had already resolved fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charges brought against him in the Washtenaw County court system. This amounts to double jeopardy, a viola- tion of a fundamental legal doctrine. The federal, state and local court systems -are more than equipped to deal with prob- lems of law as they arise. The University has no need and no right to use its own BRAD QUINN/Daily Word from the Fleming Building spells out campus law with the Code of Student Conduct. system above and beyond what is called lished, as those involved in proceedings for by law. are kept in the dark about previous pun- Students can also be prosecuted under ishment and procedures. Likewise, mem- the Code if char-ges are brought upon bers of the community are unable to them by other students. Reasonable doubt carry out reviews of the system, except in the jury pool is replaced by looser when significant pressures are exerted or standards' of guilt. "Clear and convinc- the community is mobilized. ing" is gall that is needed to convict stu- President Bollinger now has the right to dents by a jury of six peers. According to make changes to The Code. The Michigan Gwyn 1ulswit, then assistant resolution Student Assembly, the University's govern- coordinator for the Office of Student ing body, also has the right to propose Conflict Resolution, the office in charge amendments to The Code. of administering and prosecuting under The Code is an unnecessary measure the code, students trained as prosecutors aimed at controlling the student body. are required to assume "in their hearts Students must call for its abolishment. and minds," that defendants committed a Such measures proved helpful in 1995 violation of the Code. What happened to when The Code was rewritten to be more the usual "innocent until proven guilty" respectful of student rights. It was only mentality? through an active student movement with, The Code is the University's own signature drives and protests outside the abstraction that has none of the checks of . administration building that action was a real, legal system. Students are denied taken. If any action is to be taken, it must legal representation. Meetings are held in be from pressure exerted by the student secrecy and information is not released. body to get rid of this attack on student Therefore, legal precedent is never estab- rights. How tobee 44 0 h, good," you may be thinking, "A column about how to avoid the dreaded first year weight gain!" Weight loss/maintenance tips, information that is important your first year of college, right? Women, could there be anything worse than gaining 15 pounds your first year at the University? Well of course there is. Here's why. For those of us coming from high- achieving back- grounds (here at the University, that's a large majority of us) being thin and attrac- tive is usually includ- ed as an expected a c h i e v e m e n t, whether we place that pressure on our- selves, or others do. It's no wonder we become obsessed with our bodies. The hell is going on with our bodies, fat starts Studies on c to be redistributed, and by the time we're that up to 20 p 18, we've usually got the curves that we're ing disorders.f supposed to have. Unfortunately we're gling with bi taught that these curves are not natural or women spendi good or attractive, but things to look at food and their with disgust, things to get rid of. How may think, ane many conversations have you had with oth- vanity or ego; ers about how you don't like your bodies? and never thi Dieting has become a strange bonding rit- For some of us ual for women, and unfortunately one that from a reality can be unhealthy - both psychologically such as an uni and physically. not be able toc Like me, there are some of us who took but you can co this fear of gaining weight to an extreme, get lots of cor those who developed eating disorders. Developinga When I was a first-dear student, I was one socially sancti of the women who was too obsessed with think of-- Ic the scale and how many calories I consumed people said tot to enjoy the very cool experience of being at Have you lost college. Not only was I miserable the first weight to start year of school, but the first two and a half It's good to bet years. I was one of the unlucky ones to have ter what the co battled both anorexia and bulimia for three Aniston and. years, and then struggled through a tough loss in the last recovery. Now much older and confident what I mean. T about my body and how I look, I think it's eating disorder iin ornntto hln nt~~herz 1l'rcum nmio o n fr n~,nrtql it's, r' "ii college women have shown ercent have diagnosable eat- Anorexic, bulimic or strug- nge eating disorder,' these their days obsessing about weight. Despite what many eating disorder is not about it's about poor self-esteem nking you're good enough. it was an attempted escape that was less than stellar, iappy family life. You may control your Dad's drinking, introl your weight. And you pliments if you're thin. an eating disorder is the only oned mental illness I can don't remember how many me, "Wow, you look great! weight?" I was never over- with, but that didn't matter. thin in this society, no mat- ost. Take a look at Jennifer Lara Flynn-Boyle's weight few years and you can see he cost is high for many, as rs have the highest rate of ,V IntI ilt l nr'SS about calories or fat too often, or are really worried when you think you may have gained a couple pounds, sit down for a minute and evaluate if this is a problem for you. Even if you don't have an eating disorder, having some sort of disordered eating, or subclinical problem, can impact your life negatively as well. It is not normal to be on a diet. It is not a good thing to hate your thighs or think that your butt is too fat no matter what you do. Fight the media and diet industry's brain- washing attempts at convincing you that you are not a good person If you weigh moire than 105 pounds. And, God forbid, if you're not, don't buy some ridiculous or dangerous product to make you the "ideal" weight (don't get me started on Metabolife or the Adkin's diet). So pay attention to the pressures and become a critical consumer. Work on lik- ing yourself no matter what the scale says. If your friend has a problem, talk to her about it. Beat the Freshman Fifteen by not worrying about it. If you're concerned about eating or body image issues, there is help on campus. Call ("'c11 1ncrimyintrAi N cl,.".icmirn.'ii" rxrir'r'cnt Freshman Fjfteen Michelle Bolek :4 k diet and fashion industries gain billions of Ani lor nm prx, ,cnr nfF nof' ,nmn'n,: ncpinri- I I 1 * 6 P 'r ri t/ m