4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 12, 2001 Ufie £ibiuttn PuiI 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 daily. letters(,umich.edu If only Jed Bartlett were the real president ... MIKE SPAHN PRA F(R RAIN I EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 GEOFFREY GAGNON Editor in Chief MICHAEL GRASS NICHOLAS WOOMER Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion offthe majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily t about 11:30 a.m. last Wednesday, a gunman showed up at the White House looking for our new leader, presumably wanting to tell W. a thing or two. The Secret Service did its job, taking the gunman out, without any injuries to bystanders or the president. Such actions, especially in a nation that we generally consider to be safe, are always, horrible, deplorable and jarring. Throw partisanship and Florida out the window - nobody wants the president hurt (at least I hope not). Dealing with people like Robert W. Pickett, the former IRS employee who showed up at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. with a gun, is a central issue in government today - people with mental illness aren't being treated correctly, and getting a gun is simply too easy. But as I read the reports that trickled in over the wire in the early afternoon last week, something caught my eye. First, it was just that the president was never in danger. But then, I read this: "President Bush was reported safe in his residence, exercising, at the time. Vice Presi- dent Dick Cheney was working in his office." Why was the President of the United States, in only his first month in office, taking an afternoon siesta and a jaunt on the tread- mill? Now, I'm no president, but I've watched a fair amount of "The West Wing" and I know that exercising mid- morning on a weekday isn't the best way to improve health care for impoverished children, nor deal with gun safety and mental illness. Jed Bartlett, TV's president, once thought of taking a break to go have a romp with his wife after quite a dry spell, but even that was foiled by some worldly matter. Does W. really have the time for these breaks? Again, I'm no president, but it seems there are some pressing issues he's not addressing. Again, back to Bartlett. He's constantly whirring between situation room meetings, talks with congressional leaders and heads of state, and you rarely see him pumping iron on a weekday. And sure, presidents have been known to take a break for 18 holes or an occasional jog, but this seems excessive. Where was G.W. early in the day on Election Day when he received word things weren't going well for him? Working out. Where did we see him over and over - when he wasn't at his posh Crawford ranch, that is - during the Florida deba- cle? Working out. And where is he nearly moments into his term, as a new leader is elected in Israel, cam- paign finance reform sits tabled for another month, the economy dips and gunmen are charging the White House? You guessed it. Working out. Who are this guy's main advisers - the people everyone said would truly lead this* administration? We've seen Powell, Rums- feld and Card all getting work done. But W. - he must be turning to Bally, GNC.. and Gold of Gold's Gym to help out on the main crisis of the day. I'm not saying don't take a break or don't work out. But the nation's problems don't take a break so you can check your heart rate. But then it hit me: We really did elect Dick Cheney to run this country, and W. to be the face of the nation. And I got scared. Cheney was working in his office.* Doing the work of the people, presumably. The work some people claim we elected George Bush to do. Only four more years - I just keep repeating that to myself when I awake in a cold sweat at night. Mike Spahn's column runs every other Monday. Give him feedback at www. michigandaily.com/forum/* or via e-mail at mspahn@unich.edu. "1 wouldn't want to work for e-business because they would pay me In stock options, and stock options don't pay for dinner' - LSA senior Marvin Benninghoff last Thursday on the future of e-business in the United States. One year after Tower occupation, 'U' has not addressed issues To THE DAILY: One year ago a group of students began an occupation of the Michigan Union tower which was able to accomplish what prior years of minority student complaints about University discrimination had not: Exposing the University's role in funding and support- ing organizations which heavily contributed to racism on campus and inequities in fund- ing programs for minority students. Addi- tionally, the occupation revealed the 'callousness that Michigamua, an historically solely white male, so-called "honor society" used in continuing a tradition of engaging in rituals using artifacts from Native American groups. After a strenuous and courageous occupa- tion of the Tower Society space by the Stu- dents of Color Coalition, negotiations resulted that led to the closing of the Tower space in the Michigan Union and efforts to closely monitor guidelines for allocation of space for student organizations. A 14-point petition contained many suggestions to improve opportunities for minority students and faculty that have yet to be addressed by the University administration, There is an eerie familiarity of the urgency of the Student of Color Coalition's actions with past actions by minority groups at the University for equal trdatment. Black students have led three Black Action Movements over the past 30 years at the University. It is a painful reminder that blacks and students of color have to rely on unpleasant and con- frontational events to obtain a response to rea- sonable requests such as improvement in curriculum for students of color, recruitment and tenure for faculty of color and respect for the contributions of students and faculty of color on the University campus. So, despite efforts tc "dehumanize" the Students of Color Coalition, such as addressing them as "thugs," and despite the relative dismissal of SCC con- c+c o \ \ \; y \ 11 t or U Ur *Eg lo Ann Arbor life imitates Bambi cerns by University President Lee Bollinger, the changes that SCC demands for minority student and faculty still go' unmet. White stu- dents who occupy buildings and make demands for changes in University policy receive no such characterizations. Why is this so? It is time for the 14-point petition submit- ted to the University administration on strate- gies to improve the quality of life for students of color programs on campus to be given seri- ous review by University administration and the University Board of Regents who are elected to represent all students, regardless of their race, athletic ability, or economic status. Now is the time for the administration and regents to demonstrate to the campus that they have a genuine concern about improving the quality of life for students of color and reducing intolerance for racial and economic discrimination against minorities at the Uni- versity. Show minority students and faculty that you are prepared to offer a report to the University community that shows progress on the concerns expressed by the SCC in* their 14-point petition of nearly one year ago. SCC didn't occupy the tower just because they had time on their hands. AUDREY JACKSON Alumnus Evolution of Code shows how 'U' disregards students VIEWPOINT Five years ago, the Code of Student Conduct was the hot activist issue on campus (and arguably still would be, were it not for BAMN- led racial preferences hysteria). The recent histo- ry of the Code starts in the late '80s. The University developed a Policy on Discrimina- tion and Discriminatory Harassment of Students in the University Environment that is widely considered one of the most infamous University "speech codes." It was successfully challenged in court by a biopsychology graduate student who realized that if he taught certain theories in his class, he could be sanctioned for "victimiz- ing" or "harassing" his students. Ironically, the judge began his scathing decision against the University in Doe v. Uni- versity of Michigan with a quote from then- Law School Dean Lee Bollinger's book "The Tolerant Society." After this decision, the University drafted an Interim Speech Code that was scarcely better. The University has subsequently been forced to stop implementing speech codes. Nonetheless, the push for speech codes and for codes of non- academic conduct are somewhat interrelated. One early draft of a predecessor to the Code from 1992, for example, was characterized by the University general counsel as having "wisps of a hate speech code." A draft of a Statement of Student Rights There were three reviews: by the Office for Stu- dent Conflict Resolution, by MSA and an exter- nal review. The results were synthesized by a committee without student members and present- ed to the Regents over the summer. No student saw the report in its entirety until November 1999; I was one of the first as a member of the OSCR director search committee. These reviews did lead to a big improve- ment: A procedure for amending the Code. Thus, last winter, MSA had its first opportunity to suggest amendments to the Code since 1995! I served on MSA from 1997-2000, and can vouch that MSA does many idiot- Neady a year later, ic things. But answer. And I for on our Code amendments The accepted amei weren't among minor and sem them. With sub- substantively Im stantial input from several other representatives, the assembly hammered out a set of solid proposals. Nearly a year later, we have Bollinger's answer. And I for one am disappointed. The accepted amend-. ments are mostly minor or semantic and do not substantively improve the Code. MSA proposed many reasonable changes that were rejected. These include: adding ref- erences to other relevant policies in the Code so students could go look at them; specifying the Code pertains to "non-academic" behav- ior (protocols for academic offenses, like N Inc Ofd npd ment and not prosecuted due to lack of evi- dence. I've heard administrators rant ad naur seum that forcing students through both legal* and code proceedings is not "double jeop- ardy" in the conventional sense. They're right. It is nonetheless unfair and unnecessary and is perhaps our most misunderstood rec- ommendation involved the Code's scope. Our proposal made off-campus behavior sanctionable only if it posed a threat to any mem- ber of the University community. This change was not designed to stop the University from making off-campus safe. What we had in mind were minor we have Bollinger's offenses - D am disappointed. minor in posses- sion of alcohol Iments are mostly citations specifi- itic and do not cally - that irove the Code. occur off-cam- pus that the city deals with. The whole city of Ann Arbor barrier to Code jurisdiction is arbitrary and nonsensical. SRAC and Bollinger both misunderstood, x our amendment. We had minimal opportunity for dialogue with SRAC and none with* Bollinger. Bollinger's terse, almost patronizing rationale for rejecting our amendment, "Behav- ior which occurs either in or outside of Ann Arbor may nonetheless impact the University Community." pretty much indicates how seri- ously MSA was taken throughout the process. And SRAC only accepts proposed C6de :r. 1..'-