V V V w w w i 0 w w w w w v w w :.I. Weneda, pil4,00 Te icianDal.~ table of contents 4B THE YEAR'S BEST PHOTOS From the pages of The Michigan Daily, relive the defining moments of the 2006- 2007 academic year. 6B THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT BUZZ Students in William "Buzz" Alexander's classes walk away with a passion for, prisoners' rights. Are they inspired by the cause, or is it the class? THE EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK with WALTER NOWINSKI A look at the big news events this week and how important they really are. Conveniently rated from one to 10. A PATRIOT ACT OF OUR OWN A FUNDRAISING MAVERICK In a justification that KarltRove would have Former Republican presidential front run- been proud of,the University cited a post-Sept. ner John .McCain reinforced his maverick 11 securitycrackdown when campus police reputation last week when hereported rais- removed 12 studentactivistsfromthe Flem- ing a paltry $10 million. Unfortunately for 0 10 ingAdministration Building. No word yet on 0 5 McCain, reporting poor fundraising is not 6 whether the Departmentof Public Safety is quite the way he wanted to set him selftapart monitoringactivists'e-mail accounts. from the other candidates. SO THAT THE GOVERNMENT CAN GOVERN The Supreme Court ruled this week that the Environmental Protection Agency does, in fact, have the authority to control carbon 10 emissions. The rulingwas a blow to the Bush Administration, which had argued that the regulatory agency's function was something other than regulating the environment. SPARE ANY CHANGE, MY GOOD, GOOD FRIEND? In a standoff with Republicans over how to fix the state's budget crisis, Gov. Granholm ordered state agencies to prepare for a pos- t0 sible government shutdown sometime next month. But a shutdown might have a bright side - perhaps it will force Granholm to show leadershipfor thefirst time during her tenure. uls ships 10rule 31: Penalties for poor attendance NI ASSOCIATION tsim OF MICHIGAN is a practice that , should end after 12th grade. rule 32: Starbucks is not a cultural hub. Buy LU your coffee there, not your books. rule 33: While apartment shop- w, CQlu ping, don't believe 1 t 9 landlords who tell you coin laundry enjoy! will be convenient. BUZZ From page 6B project and committed to prison reform long after graduation. Soell said Alexander's classes changed the course of her life by "180 degrees."Instead oflaw school, she is now looking to go into prison- er advocacy work when she gradu- ates at the end of the month. RC senior Laura Rosvrow, who first took Alexander's English 319 course her sophomore year, said it changed the way she thought about herself. She went on to con- duct workshops modeled off of Alexander's classes in Senegal when she studied abroad there her junior year. Like many of the students interviewed for this article, Rosv- row, who is basing her senior thesis partly on Alexander's course, spoke of her experiences in his class as a kind of life mission. She frequently referred to the Alexander's course and the Prison Creative Arts Proj- ect not as a class, but as "my work" or "the work." And like everyone interviewed for this article, she spoke collectively and with a sense of ownership of the Prison Creative Arts Project and everyone involved in it. Emi Kaneko, a first-year law stu- dent at Wayne State University, has been returning to help with the annual Prison Creative Arts Project exhibition since she graduated from the University in 2005. She said she wasn't sure if she would pursue a field of law that allowed her to advo- cate for prisoners yet, but that she needs to have volunteering with prisoners as a part of her life. "(Buzz) definitely influenced me the most with my long term life," she said "With what I need to do with my life." But not everyone who takes the class is comfortable with the culture that has grown up around the proj- ect. For some students, the tight- knit group is more disconcerting than enlightening. FOLLOWING BUZZ Alexander's courses are emotion- ally intense both inside the prisons and in the classrooms. He teaches in an informal setting and asks tough questions while allowing the stu- dents to do most of the talking. Soell described her English 310 class as being like a family - where you could share anything. other students echoed Soell's sentiment, describing Alexander's courses as an interment setting where you felt a strong bond with the other students. Alexander's teaching style - his intense questioning - also fostered a strong loyalty to him and a desire to meet his expectations among many students. "He has a lot of faith in people," Rosvrow said. "And that makes you rise to higher expectations." But after a while, talking to stu- dents involved with the Prison Cre- ative Arts Project starts to sound a bit like talking to Alexander him- self. And for some students, the strong message that pervades the classroom can create a sort of echo chamber that stifles some bigger questions. RC senior Caitlin Graziano, who took Alexander's English 319 course, said the class had a distinct culture and dynamic. She said this dynamic was partly related to the group's composition. "It's an enclave of really liberal women," Graziano said. "It's multi-white." But she said she was able to find her place in the group culture. "It is a group of people who work really hard and are very proud of what they do," Graziano said. "But I remain critical of the way that we talk, there is a rhetoric that gets eas- ily exchanged without any helpful criticism." Graziano said she had some friends who were involved in the project, but she grew discouraged with the group dynamic and left. "They loved their workshops and the mission of the group, but they got frustrated with this easy rheto- ric that people fall into," she said. For Graziano, the familiar- ity and echo-chamber mentality of what she said was a majority-white group became repetitive and stifled productive dialogue about the pris- on system. "I have had my fair share of criti- cisms," Graziano said. "Like why are all these kids following (Buzz)?" To the rest of the campus, see- ing Alexander's students simulate- executions in costume on the Diag and burst into classes to promote the Prison Creative Arts Project can raise some questions. Why are these students so passionate about this class? And isn't there something about the Prison Creative Arts Proj- ect that seems a bit cultish? Maybe there is. In the middle of an unpopular war, and amid a drought of student activism, it takes a particularly magnetic per- sonality to get students on the Diag protesting anything, let alone the well-being of prisoners. There's something more than a good cause, there's something about Alexander and his classes, that gets students to abandon their law careers for low- paying social work. It's a powerful feeling to learn about a problem one day and be told how to fix it the next. People come to college to find a purpose in life and for many, English 310 offers and ready-made answer. That might not be such abad thing. As part of a gen- eration fixated on success, many stu- dents who first enroll in Alexander's class might never have considered campaigning for social justice. Despite her reservations about the Prison Creative Arts Project subculture, Graziano stayed with the project and, like Soell, became another solider in Alexander's cam- paign to reform the prison system. "(Buzz) was pivotal to me," Gra- ziano said. "He certainly gave my life a momentum and a focus on prisor reform that Iam still sticking with."