4A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 17, 2002 OP/ED aloe lCirbigatn ituiI 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 letters@michigandaily.com EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 JON SCHWARTZ Editor in Chief JOHANNA HANINK 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. NOTABLE QUOTABLE We never had such cooperation in everything as we have with the current administration." - Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, describing his government's relationship with the Bush administration as quoted yesterday by The Associated Press. . ... . JENNIFER GREENE NN' CORNE I I I -1 V-&W 0 Mol w o r-k d % a s1 e f +.cl n .i O r la .S t s 1ik , . 14 four Ctdj 5 OfI Lwhole Ocier 1's176c~~ w L e . K e n & .. .UhV v o 00 0 01 nier G ree i~ *I Locking up the right people BRENDA ABDELALL TH TOKEN Eam t took nearly a decade to find the Unabomber, and the only reason why he was found was because his sister called the FBI. What about the anthrax mailer? Still on the loose. What about the man who set off a bomb at the Atlanta Olympics? Never found. We now have the psychotic Belt- way Sniper and we even know what van he drives yet we still can't seem to figure out where the hell he is. That is just ridiculous. Law enforcement officials are sup- posed to be making the streets safer for everyone. They can boast an overflowing prison population in attempts to make it seem as if they have been sweeping crimi- nals off of the streets. However, a quick peek into any prison or local jail will indeed prove that our streets are not any safer now that these 'criminals' are behind bars. What the local Washtenaw County jail boasts is drug addicts, individuals that hurt themselves by drinking too much and who pump their bodies full of drugs. Rehabilita- tion programs are what these individuals need, not a four-by-four cell. The with- drawal symptoms that these individuals will incur in jail will only lead them to seek more drugs and alcohol the minute they get out, thus never solving any sort of problem. Another look into the jail and you will find a vast amount of poverty stricken and mentally ill individuals. I blame the mentally ill population on the recent Engler administration. After slashing men- tal health funding to the bare minimum, our jails are overflowing with inmates who have turned to drugs and alcohol to ease their minds. Candidates are already hijack- ing the sniper case and putting gun control on their platforms. What they should put on their platforms is some serious restruc- turing of governmental funding for drug rehabilitation and the poor through improved social service agencies. Indeed our system is set up to keep the poor poor and the rich rich. Enron execs with their Versace wearing lawyers will get off with a minimum sentence, while the poverty stricken cashier at Meijer who stole food for her children will receive some pro-bono lawyer she met five min- utes before her trial and will receive a sen- tence, leaving her children to suffer in foster care. A little rich snob in one of my classes had the nerve to say, "She stole, she should get punished." Yes, I under- stand that stealing is wrong, but we have to look at why she stole. Why is she poor? Why isn't she on welfare? Why is she in the situation she is in? Looking toward the reasons behind why people do the things they do will prove to be much more beneficial to soci- . ety. I guarantee that by keeping that woman behind bars, the problem will not be remedied. Once she is out of jail, she will have difficulty reintegrating into soci- ety. She won't be able to rent an apartment after having a criminal sentence; she will have difficulty finding a job and she will most likely not get her children back. This will lead to more suffering for her, and she will perhaps turn toward drugs to ease her pain and towards stealing food to survive. Her children will most likely continue their life in poverty, and they will most likely end up in the same situation as their moth- er. Hence the poor stay poor and the rich stay rich. This is because the root problem is never remedied. Sending people to prison and jail is a mere Band-Aid to soci- ety's greater wounds. It may be easy for government officials to point the blame at gun control laws and toward improper drug enforcement and legislation. However, the finger should really be pointed at ourselves. Locking people up behind bars imay be a temporary solution but real restorative change needs to be made from within. Often times, this particylar sector of society is ignored and a blind-eye is turned. Restorative justice needs to be implemented, and not retribu- tive justice. Instead of punishing these individuals, we should see what we can do to help their situation and how to prevent future problems from occurring. What our government should invest in are the scores of social service organizations. It is imper- ative that these organizations receive the financial support necessary to survive. It really makes one wonder if the crimi- nal justice system is doing society any good, or if it only exacerbates and perpetu- ates the current problems of society They can easily arrest and detain individuals that are poor on drugs or who have no evidence against them. But, when it comes to seri- ous threats, we just can't seem to find the perpetrators. My suggestion to those that live in the Washington area: Keep your helmet and bulletproof vest on; this one may take a while. Brenda Abdelall can be reached at babdelal@umich.edu. The first 77 days DAVID ENDERS WEiR SClENCE it's customary to wait 100 days to - assess a presidency. But since we've seen lately on a national level how far out of hand things can get if you don't criticize the peo- ple in charge quickly enough, I figured I'd weigh in now. When Mary Sue Coleman became Univer- sity President, she said her top priorities would be fundraising and recruitment. That's good. The University needs money. It needs to fill the holes left by administrators and faculty who bailed when Lee Bollinger left. Thus far, Coleman has been true to her word. Spots in both the administration and the Life Sciences Initiative have been filled. She jumped the gun on the issue of divestment from Israel, but that was probably to assuage donors, so it stays in line with her principles. Besides fundraising and recruitment, Coleman has thrown her support behind affir- mative action and written long, long, long e- mails no one reads. She supported having a vigil on Sept. 11 and has energetically affirmed her commitment to free speech. It makes me wish she would take a real stance. Coleman has said a lot, but none of the positions she has taken have been anything other than exactly what they are supposed to be. (She supports free speech? You don't say. And I don't want to hear the argument that her stance on divestment was coura- geous. Courageous would have been not saying anything and being called an anti- Semite for it.) Overall, the first 77 days have been rather boring. Couldn't she at least have a fun run? A silly walk? Isn't there some position in the LSI for which Jocelyn Elders could be considered? As a member of the Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics, she is well-versed in the problems facing college athletics and the NCAA. She has suggested the NBA's fledgling developmental league begin accepting players at age 17 instead of 20 (so players uninterested in getting a degree wouldn't have to bother pre- tending). She has the rare chance to raise such questions as president of a school with one of the largest, best-known, most commercially successful athletic departments in the world. There are issues Coleman tackled at Iowa I'd prefer she didn't pursue at the University. Coleman took over as Iowa's president in 1995, shortly after a fraternity pledge died from alcohol poisoning. From that point, she led a crusade to curb drinking on campus, earning her the nickname "Chief Nanny" from some observers. Her victories included all Iowa fraternity houses going dry and pres- suring a liquor store into not opening in a neighborhood populated by students. Maybe if she asks nicely, the boys at Sgt. Pepper's or In-and-Out (it's so close to East Quad you can crawl there in a drunken stupor) will hit the road so their buildings can be occu- pied by another Famous Famigs or head shop. On the flip side, maybe Coleman can resuscitate the Task Force on Alcohol and Other Drugs, which studied the problems of drug use and binge drinking on campus and made recommendations to Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs E. Royster Harper two years ago about how to deal with such problems. To be fair, the University was precluded from taking action on any rec- ommendations by the task force because it was (and still is) being used as a control group in a study on drinking, in which other schools were given money to put into anti-drinking campaigns while the University was given none. Meanwhile, one student died from alcohol poisoning and a number go to the hospital each weekend after drinking. I suppose I'll be happy if the stuff she says starts sounding a little less like what she thinks people want to hear. Example: "When you are in my world, you realize that people look to the (University) as a trendsetter and that is exciting for me," Coleman has said. "I would not have left Iowa for anywhere other than Michigan." And Bollinger wouldn't have left Michigan for anywhere but Columbia. I sat down with Coleman yesterday and asked her about most of these issues. She's friendly and personable. But every answer was patently the same: she's open to dialogue, she wants to hear what people have to think, she's excited about being here. But she seems reluc- tant to put forth anything that might ruffle feath- ers. She's an academic turned politician, which may be the worst kind. When I asked her about problems facing the NCAA, first she said the top priority should be the well-being of the players. She added that care should be taken to make sure there players are focused on acade- mics. And what have we learned? Nothing. In the end, it might not matter. No one will pay much attention to issues like these if Coleman is forced to deal with the same financial problems at Michigan she had at Iowa. She was commended there for her abil- ity to cut the budget (laying off faculty and staff and increasing class size) and smile through hefty tuition increases. So if the state's impending budget deficit causes the same sort of situation here, she'll be right at home. Time to get back to fundraising. 01 David Enders canbe reached"at denders@umich.edu. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Dean of Students: Campus acted maturely in response to conference, protesters To THE DAILY: This nast weekelcnd- I ioinedIa nuimber conversations that I heard in the League, in the Union, on the Diag and elsewhere, I also heard an extraordinary depth of understanding about international issues. I heard people debating strongly held beliefs with civility and respect. What I did not hear - nor did any of my colleagues who were in attendance at all the I am proud to be a part of this remark- able community and to have seen firsthand on Saturday and Sunday the kind of exam- ple our students can set. ED WILLIS Dean of Students with real change. 1 . I 4 # 1 47r. , .. v s . .4 v..1 4;+