4A- The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 17, 2006 OPINION ai firhu r~ KATIE GARLINGHOUSE HO.S ARREST DoNN M. FRESARD Editor in Chief EMILY BEAM CHRISTOPHER ZBROZEK Editorial Page Editors ASHLEY DINGES Managing Editor THE ONLY WAY FLOW OF ILLEGAL tiU~INGA SEVEN*1UNEORE MILE LONG WALL Us ANO' mEX+O- Duke and Michigan MARA GAY COMMON SENSE 0 EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SINCE 1890 420 MAYNARD STREET ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily corn CAU .ME °RZY, .eOT I FEE LIE ONGRES5 (5 _ UNG MORE .5LAITEP TO: THE RGT Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their author. VIEWPOINT' Time to make the right choice BY JESSE LEVINE You now have time - 90 more days - from the start of your lease to find the right place to live. The lease-signing ordinance that passed should succeed, but we all - students, the University and the Ann Arbor City Council - have some work to do. Having the right roommates can make or break a year. Having a responsive landlord can make or break a year. The place where you eat, sleep and work can make or break a year. We hope giving you 90 more days (and hopefully a shopping peri- od) will help you make the right choice - mak- ing your year. So, here are the details: September 1 leases can be signed on December1. Landlords cannot legally show or sign a property until 90 days have passed. Landlords who violate the ordinance will be fined $1,000. Some have claimed that landlords will start signing leases under the table, violating the heart of the ordinance. In the fall, this may happen. But those who violate the law will be held accountable - to the tune of a $1,000 fine. There's nothing like enlightened self-interest to make sure a law will be followed. Students: Don't let strangers in your house, don't sign leases under the table and don't feel pressured to sign - because there is approxi- mately a 10-percent vacancy rate in Ann Arbor. An ordinance alone will not solve all Ann Arbor housing problems. You, as students, need to follow the law. That means refusing to allow "prospec- tive renters" into your homes before 90 days have passed on your lease, refraining from engaging in under-the-table agreements for new properties and remembering that Ann Arbor has approximately a 10-percent vacancy rate, so you shouldn't feel pressure to settle or sign right away. City Council: Upon the automatic review of the ordinance next year, strongly consider including a shopping period - it just makes logical sense. If you're leasing a car, you don't sign that lease the same day you take it for a test drive unless you're absolutely certain. You shop around. You try to find the best deal - to make the right choice. Sign- ing a housing lease should be no different. While the student committee was willing to compromise, we still feel that including a shopping period is the best public policy and should be included in the automatic review next year. There are hardly any downsides to a shopping period. Students are smart. We can handle two different dates: one to start shopping around, and one to be able to sign. As for the landlords, the cost of showing around prospective renters for about two weeks is not sig- nificant. Students, let's make our voices heard next year so Council can make the change and so we can make the right choice. We doubt that the landlords will all shift their leases en masse. The lease-signing ordinance can- not stop landlords from shifting September leases to May; the city can't legislate that. But here's why a shift is unlikely: The University will be moving its housing fair to sometime in mid-November, encouraging students to slightly delay signing on the dotted line. If landlords do collectively shift their leases, the blame for the "feeding frenzy" will lie squarely with the landlords, and the public will know who's trying to exploit whom. Working with City Council has been produc- tive. Council members Leigh Greden (D-Ward 3) and Wendy Woods (D-Ward 5) have been especially open to students. Also, Mayor John Hieftje has advocated for this ordinance from the beginning. Still, students need more. The Coun- cil should strongly consider including a shopping period when the ordinance is reviewed next year. We now have at least 90 days. Ninety days to figure out whom we want to live with next year. Ninety days to figure out whether our landlords will respond to our calls about leaky ceilings or broken thermostats. Ninety days to figure out if we want to re-sign. Ninety days to try to make the right choice and find the right place to live, so we don't have to worry about distractions, and can focus on, well, the complex and multifaceted lives we all live as students at the University. Levine is an LSA senior and last year's Michi- gan Student Assembly president. He is writing this viewpoint on behalf of the Ann Arbor City Council Student Relations Committee. t first I think my eyes are playing tricks on me. Surelyno one in his right mind would sport a blue Duke lacrosse shirt at a time like this, when allegations of gang rape stalk the team. My better logic tells me I should let it go, eat my lunch in peace and enjoy the beau- tiful, sunny, rare Ann Arbor day. But as we pass one another in the cafeteria at the Uni- versity we both call home, my mouth betrays my better judgement and I cannot help but blurt out, innocently, "I'm sorry - is that a Duke lacrosse shirt you're wearing?" He stops cold in his tracks and his eyes narrow, moving over my body, looking me up and down. His glance is so quick, so sudden, so cleverly sinister that at first I'm not sure that it even happened at all. But then it punches me in the gut and I am overcome with the fear and shame of a horse as it is sold at auction. Still; there is nothing - absolutely nothing - that could have prepared me for the moment when he smiled smugly, proudly even, and said, "Yeah - yeah, actually - I am." Then he sat down with his boys and resumed his lunch, boasting loudly that the alleged rape victim had probably made up the story after being poorly tipped by the lacrosse team she was hired to dance for. The facts of the Duke case are still murky, and no charges have been filed yet. But the accuser is a mother and a student at North Carolina Central University in Durham, a historically black college just across town from the far more prestigious, expensive and overwhelmingly white Duke Univer- sity. Regardless of the case's outcome, the incident is significant: It has reminded us that issues of class and race continue to fes- ter just under the surface, as stubborn and entrenched as ever. Duke's administration has cancelled the remainder of the lacrosse season, though some say it took them too long to respond to the incident and that the university has failed to reach out to the greater Durham commu- nity. The lacrosse team, however, serves as a beacon of unity: Its 47 members - 46 of whom are white - tell prosecutors the same story, denying any wrongdoing and declaring that the allegations are nothing but lies. All of this, of course, is disturbing. But in the world we live in - and at the (northern) University we attend - we are no strangers to issues of gender, class and race; the word from Durham isn't exactly new news. Still, as my peer left me standing in the middle of the East Quad cafeteria, I was shocked. What is this sickness that compels a white male at the University to express solidarity with these 46 young men? Is it the oppression they have suffered and the exploitation they have endured? Or maybe it's the way history has dehumanized them, treated them as objects and made them into hypersexual criminals, beasts to be both shunned and feared. I want to sit down and enjoy my lunch too. I want to talk to my girls and feel the first rays of sun soak into my face. But it still hurts, it still gets under my skin, still makes something inside of me want to scream: "This is not okay, this is not right, we can do better, and we must!" But it's hard to care all the time. Just a couple semesters on this campus can bring to a head all the issues of gender, class and race most people experience in a lifetime. Constantly defending your peer's right to claim citizenship in the human race would be an exhausting feat. It has occurred to me that this cafete- ria encounter may not be such a big deal. It has, after all, only confirmed what I already knew - that sexism and hatred, prejudice and privilege are not Southern phenomena but are American phenomena, alive and well in every community in this country, the University included. Some- times I wonder if I should take a hint from some of my fellow Wolverines and care less, be outraged less, sleep better at night. What does "privilege" mean to most of us anyway? For too many students, these words are nothing but clich6s - merely the favorite terms of their social science professors. But in that one moment in the cafeteria those words were given life; they have never been more real for me. There is nothing hopeless about our situation. We are a campus of intelligent, good-hearted and otherwise rational young individuals. But all the privilege in the world cannot save us from ourselves if we do not believe, deep down in some uninfected part of us, that the Muslim woman with the headscarf deserves the same respect as the fraternity brother. I should mention that I have no regrets and that every day of my two years at the University has been an adventure. This campus will show you some incredible things if you allow it to. But the University can be exhausting as well. So many worlds 0 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR VIEWPOINT Ann Arbor and wind power BY JOHN HIEFTJE I wish to offer clarifications to the editorial Great mills, great times (04/06/2006). For more than a decade, Ann Arbor has been recognized as the leading city in Michi- gan in energy conservation and innovation. City conservation efforts have saved taxpay- ers millions of dollars, and these efforts con- tinue today. Ann Arbor is the first city in the United States to move to light-emitting diode streetlights. This technology will allow us to light the streets while using 60 percent less electricity. The city already produces 24 per- cent of the electricity needed to operate streetlights, water and sewage treatment, buildings, etc. Much of this comes from capturing methane gas from an old land- fill, and the rest comes from hydroelectric- ity. The city energy office worked with the private sector to establish bio-diesel fuel- ing stations in our area, and city vehicles have been running on B20 (20 percent bio- fuel) for some time. This summer, we will be shifting to B50. There is great potential to grow bio-fuels in the Greenbelt. Last summer, I asked my staff to begin research into how we could make even greater use of renewable energy, specifically wind power. We began talks with Noble Environ- mental Power about purchasing wind-gener- ated electricity for Ann Arbor. Last September, I issued the Mayor's Green Energy Challenge, setting a goal for city gov- ernment to use 20-percent renewable energy by 2010 along with a 20 percent reduction in greenhouse gas production. For the city as a whole, I set a goal to use 20 percent renew- able energy by 2015. In December, we invit- ed the University to join us in a green energy purchasing partnership. Since November, we have been working with executives of DTE Energy toward the goal of moving wind- generated energy across its grid to light and power our city. In February, the City Energy Commission submitted an excellent progress report, and I raised the bar to 30 percent renewable energy for city government by 2010. Last month, City Council passed a resolution calling for Michi- gan to follow the lead of 22 other states and establish a Renewable Energy Portfolio Stan- dard to move our state forward. City government can reach 30 percent renewable energy by 2010 without wind power from Michigan's Thumb, but with it, we can make even greater strides. I greatly appreciate the Daily's advocacy for renewable energy. Michigan will soon need more electricity, and there is tremendous potential for wind energy in our state. The question is not simply should we build wind- mills, but rather: Should we build two more mercury-spewing, greenhouse-gas producing, coal-fired plants, two new nuclear plants or clean, green windmills? Hieftje is the mayor of Ann Arbor and an adjunct professor in the School of Public Policy. Secrecy prevents secret soci- eties from goal of service TO THE DAILY: The group formerly known as Michigamua has taken significant steps to rectify its past abuses of Native American culture, but the intrinsic nature of a secret society is in conflict with many of the University's ideals. There is a difference between humility and anonymity, between closed mem- bership and elitism and between benefiting the University and benefiting a select few. I urge the group formerly known as Michigamua and other secret societies to carefully consider their secrecy and recruitment methods. Elizabeth Tappan Engineering junior The letter writer is the president of the Society of Women Engineers and the Class of 2007 engineering president. This letter expresses only her personal views and is not on behalf of is not on behalf of any groups of which she is a member. Coke's turn to ILO for investigation in good faith TO THE DAILY: In response to the viewpoint by Adri Mill- er, Lindsey Rogers and Jason Bates regarding the University's business with the Coca-Cola Company (Coke restored behind students' backs, 04/13/2006), I would like to make a couple of important clarifications regarding the company's relationship with the International Labor Organi- zation. The ILO, founded in 1919, has a structure in which workers and employers participate as equal partners with governments to promote and protect social justice, human and labor rights. It is disappointing that the authors would claim the very structure that has enabled the ILO to have such a remarkable, positive global impact - an impact that has helped ensure the freedom to join unions and the recognition of collective bargain- ing, helped abolish forced labor and eliminate child labor and helped ensure the equal treatment in the workplace that otherwise would not be I have a deep respect for the ILO's structure and mission, and I am fully confident that the ILO will conduct an unbiased, independent investiga- tion of Coca-Cola's labor relations and workers' rights practices in Colombia. I believe anyone who is familiar with the ILO will also attest to its qualifications, credentials and independence. Edward E. Potter The letter writer is the Coca-Cola Com- pany's director of global workplace relations and worker accountability. Same logic for ending minor says tear down Big House To THE DAILY: I am perplexed by the LSA Curriculum Committee's decision to suspend the Span- ish minor. Associate Dean Robert Megginson explains in the article (LSA bids farewell to Spanish minor, 04/13/2006) that the program is "suffering from its own success," and that due to a lack of resources, the Department of Romance Languages has found it infeasible to continue to accommodate the high number of students interested in minoring in Spanish. I don't doubt this is a real problem for the department; I've been on my fair share of waitlists for upper-level Spanish courses. It is clear that the program is in need of some adjustments and likely more funding. But that a large percentage of the student body is inter- ested in learning Spanish should not be sur- prising, considering how useful the language has become in everyday life. Is it just me, or does the decision to elimi- nate a program as the solution to a problem of overcrowding seem entirely illogical and absurd? If the demand for the Spanish minor has increased beyond the department's capac- ity to accommodate it, shouldn't the University focus on expanding this capacity, rather than canceling the minor altogether? By this logic, the University should have torn down the Big House years ago for a lack of seats. That a University with such extensive resources would elect to eliminate a staple of Editorial Board Members: Amy Anspach, Andrew Bielak, Kevin Bunkley, Gabrielle D'Angelo, Whitney Dibo, Milly Dick, Sara Eber, Jesse Forester, Mara Gay, Jared Goldberg, Mark Kuehn, Frank Manlev. Kirstv McNamara, Suhael Momin, Raiiv Prabhakar. Katherine Seid, Gavin