inion 4A - Wednesday, September 24, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MT 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF. GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. FROM THE DAILY The greener grass State must lead green revolution to cure economic woes t wasn't adultery or murder or Michael Moore that compelled the gods to smite the Great Lakes state with an abysmal econ- omy - it was hubris. Michigan's deified auto executives were arrogant enough to believe that their industry was invincible, even though its success was contingent upon the availability of a few limited resources. And now that their fatal flaw is out in the open, the state must ask itself how it can turn from tragedy to triumph. By investing more resources in the University Research Corridor, Michigan would be one step closer to that goal. NOTABLE QUOTABLE Take that $1 trillion you are using - trying to kill Muslims, and spend it instead on rebuilding Detroit." -Part of a resolution proposed by Ann Arbor resident Blaine Coleman, at last night's Michigan Student Assembly meeting. The resolution isn't under consideration by the body. ROSE JAFFE E-MAIL ROSE AT ROSEJAFF@UMICH.EDU 4- e +4ei -F h15L k ,r je. c In the eleventh hour In August, Michigan's unemployment rate rose to 8.9 percent as a result of the fal- tering auto industry. Compare that to the 6.1 percent national average. Manufactur- ing jobs are being lost left and right. Though concern is utterly appropriate, the argument of who is to blame for the state's economic woes comprises too much of the political discourse in Michigan. Partisan debate has overshadowed the greater discussion of how to solve the problems at hand. Fortunately, Michigan has an unlikely guide in Thomas Friedman, The New York Times columnist who spoke last week in Ypsilanti about the current energy crisis. According to Friedman, the United States can simultaneously solve the global issue of climate change and recharge its lagging economy simply by investing more resources in alternative energy programs. He argues that the next industrial boom will emerge from clean energy and clean water, and that the United States should be at the forefront of those industries. And Michigan should be forefront of the United States' transformation. Michigan has a surplus of seasoned manufacturing workers desperately in need of work, and a state government desperate to help them find jobs. Furthermore, the state's geography is ideal for harnessing the powerful winds coming off the lakes, most notably Lake Michigan. Michigan's capacity for solar energy is also remarkably large. Solar power provides a model that promotes bilateral job growth. Take the example of United Solar, a manufacturer of solar panels near Detroit. Emphasis on solar power would expand United Solar, and businesses like it, creating more manufacturing jobs. Even more jobs would be created on the implementation side, where workers would tend to the actual collection of energy. Who, then, should conquer the energy colossus and catalyze an industrial boom? The state has a set of heros already primed for the task athand.The University Research Corridor, which consists of the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Wayne State University, has the brainpower and research capacity to experiment with alternative forms of energy. The URC already has results to back it up, too. With a total expenditure of $1.38 billion, the URC has had a total economic impact of $13.3 billion on the state of Michigan and has yielded a whopping 126 patents in the past six years. But the capacity for changing the economy could be even greater if there were more funding. Similarly, a greater emphasis on energy research would start a domino effect for more creative and entrepreneurial drive toward alternative energy in the state. Economic prosperity and energy indepen- dence are unquestionably on the horizon for Michigan. But in order to reap either of these benefits, the state has to wake up and start sewing the necessary seeds within the rich soil of research. Troy Davis was supposed to die yesterday. He had been offered - and had refused - his last meal. He had his last meet- ing with 25 of his friends and family in the morning. He had appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court, and lost. He had appealed to the Georgia Board of Pardons and GARY Paroles, and lost. GRACA Basically, he had exhausted all of his options, except one. That one last resort turned out to be a lot more merciful than most peo- ple expected. Thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court, Troy Davis will stay alive for at least six more days. Though the state of Georgia planned to execute Davis at 7 p.m. yesterday, the high court issued a rare stay on his execution. Just two hours before Georgia pumped Davis full of chemicals, the U.S. Supreme Court swooped in to take him off of death's table. Though Davis isn't in the clear yet, what a majority of the justices likely saw yesterday in Davis's case was a tale of everything wrong with capital punishment. Ambiguous evi- dence, police coercion, racial bias - you name it, and this case has it. And behind it all was a trigger-happy state just itching to kill first and ask ques- tions later. In 1989, Davis, a black man, sup- posedly killed white Savannah police officer Mark MacPhail in a Burger King parking lot. As witnesses testi- fied at his 1991 trial, Davis and two of his friends picked a fight with a home- less man when MacPhail, who was off-duty, intervened. When MacPhail arrived, Davis, who had been hitting the man over the head with a pistol, turned on MacPhail and shot him three times: once in the face, once in the chest and once in the right thigh. A manhunt ensued, and four days later, Davis turned himself in. The "supposedly" is tacked on there for a reason. No physical evi- dence exists linking Davis to the murder. No DNA. No murder weapon. No gunpowder residue. The only evi- dence that led to Davis's conviction was witness testimonies - primarily the nine testimonies from the state's witnesses. Itturnsoutthose witnessesweren't all that reliable. Since the trial, seven of the nine have gone back on their statements. Many now claim the police coerced them into ratting out Davis. In one, Antoine Williams now claims that police officers told him to read and sign a statement implicating, Davis as the killer. The thing is, Wil- liams can't read. If a case built on crumbling evi- dence isn't already bad enough, it gets worse. Many people don't just think Davis is innocent; they found the real culprit to prove it. At least nine witnesses have said they saw Davis's friend, Sylvester Coles, mur- der MacPhail. Coincidentally, Coles is one of the two remaining witness- es for the prosecution who haven't recanted their testimony against Davis. What's left is a shaky case that Georgia wants to end the easy way. This is why, despite knowing that the U.S. Supreme Court originally sched- uled to decide Davis's appeal next week, Georgia scheduled Davis's exe- cution for yesterday. That forced the Supreme Court to hold an emergency conference yesterday to issue a stay of execution until Monday. It shouldn't be too surprising that Georgia tried to hurry up and kill Davis before a decision was made, though. The possibility of innocence isn't a big priority for states allowing capital punishment. Since 1973, eight prisoners wait- ing on Georgia's death row have been exonerated. Since 1976, Georgia has executed 43 prisoners. That means roughly 15.7 percent of the prison- ers either executed or scheduled to be executed were innocent. When a state is making the irreversible deci- sion to take someone's life, getting it wrong more than 15 percent of the time is incredible. It makes you won- der about how many mo're of those 43 men were innocent but not lucky enough to prove it. Georgia prisoner avoids execution - for today. And then there is the racial dis- crimination that pervades capi- tal punishment in this country. In Davis's case, a black man shota white cop. Statically, that's just asking-for a death sentence. In numerous stud- ies, including a 1990 study by the U.S. Government Accountability Office finding that a victim's race influenced the likelihood that the death sentence , would be given, researchers have found that both the race of the per- petrator and the victim dispropor- tionately matter. Black men are more likely to be given the death penalty, and criminals who kill white people are more likely to be given the death penalty. Saying that Davis is another example of this would be unfair - but these things should be considered. Troy Davis got really lucky yester- day. But our justice system shouldn't be based on luck. Gary Graca is the editorial page editor. He can be reached at gmgraca@umich.edu. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Harun Buljina, Emmarie Huetteman, Emily Michels, Kate Peabody, Robert Soave, Imran Syed Sr SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU Homophobia in the Greek system won't end overnight TO THE DAILY: In response to the Daily's article Monday about fostering better LGBT understanding in the Greek system (Encouraging Greek tolerance, 09/22/2008), forgive me if I say I'll believe it when I see it. Two years ago, when I was a sophomore living in East Quad, I turned onto East Univer- sity Avenue, followed by two (clearly intoxicated) fraternity brothers. How did I know they were Greek? By the Greek letters on their clothes. As the two got closer to me, and noticed the pride ribbon on my backpack,they began to speed up, hurling homophobic epithets and threats of physical violence at me. Had I not been so near to East Quad, I shudder to think what might have happened to me that night. This is notto saythatall members of the Greek system are gay-bashers. It is simply meant to illustrate the (perceived) climate of homophobia in the Greek system, and the fact that one incident like that changed my entire perception of what it is to be Greek. According to the study cited in the article, even the majority of Greeks perceive that their housemates wouldn't react well to living with an openly gay person, so it can't just be me imagining this. Which brings me to my final point. I wonder how differently the campus community would react ifa majority of Greeks were uncomfortable living with an African American, an Asian or a Jew. It's hard not to feel that the uproar would have been greater and much more immediate not only from the student body but from the admin- istration. I applaud the Lambda Alliance for what it is attempting to do, and I sincerely hope that it works. But I think it's going to take a lot more than ally training. After all, every student at the University sat through the exact same seminars about tolerance during Orientation. It's going to take years of education and real consequences for homophobic language and behavior. It will also, unfortunately, mean the sacrificed dignity of more than a few LGBT students as they break down barriers for the rest of us. Baird Campbell RC senior GM deserves more creditfor development of Chevy Volt TO THE DAILY: Usually when I read inane viewpoints on the editorial page, I laugh and do the Sudoku. This time I could not stay silent. In his column about General Motors' effortstogogreeen (Goinggreen against the family, 09/22/2008), Imran Syed claimed that the Chevy Volt is "technically" a hybrid, as if he had done some research into the subject. If Syed had, he would have discovered thatthe Volt is an electric car because the battery always powers the motor, which runs the drivetrain, the definingfeature ofelectricvehicles.Onlywhenthe internal combustion engine and the battery-pow- ered motor run the drivetrain - either together or intermittently - is the vehicle ahybrid vehicle, like the Prius. On the Volt, the internal combus- tion engine runs a generator that recharges the battery and doesn'trunthe drivetrain. Also, I think that GM has clearly made up its mind to go green since itchas staked its entire rep- utation on the Volt, whether its vice president of vehicle development accepts the underlying envi- ronmental argument or not. Brandon Gipper Business School graduate student Diag libel has no place in either side of campaign TO THE DAILY: On Monday, students awoke to see that the Diag had been chalked over with slogans support- ing John McCain. Some of the slogans lashed out against Barack Obama in offensive, crude ways. The slander left behind on the Diag amounts to little more than dirty campaigning and fear tac- tics, which are not representative of the caliber of dialogue we expect at the University. We demand that this sort of dirty campaign- ing cease on campus. The College Democrats and the College Republicans have collaborated by presenting dueling viewpoints in the Daily and in co-sponsoring debates. We have worked hard to keep this election focused on the issues impor- tant to students. Muddying the waters with false- hoods quickly scrawled on the pavement only cheapens your voice. We call on supporters of both John McCain and Barack Obama to keep this campaign positive and in good humor. Offensive slogans, like those on the Diag on Monday, will not be tolerated by either campaign. If you would like to engage in a campus dialogue we invite you to attend our first College Democrats and College Republicans debate on Oct. 9, or attend either organization's weekly meeting. This election is far too crucial to be deni- grated by dishonesty and hysterics. Let us work together to strengthen the United States through a respectful, issue-oriented campaign. Nathaniel Eli Coats Styer and Brady Smith The letter writers are respective chairs of the University's chapters of the CollegeDemocrats and Republicans. JENNIFER COWHY |VIEWPOINT Live, work and learn in Detroit When I was sitting at the Semester in Detroit table dur- ing Festifall, someone came to the table and asked "Dude, does that come with a gun?" That question made me seri- ously mull over why it was that I decided to spend next semester in the city of Detroit. What I found was that the reasons are numerous and personal. I have served on the Semester in Detroit student team for the past eight months, and in that time I have become convinced of the program's uniqueness. The program's concept grew from small group of students in one of Prof. Stephen Ward's Urban Studies classes. The concept came into fruition, though, through a grassroots student initia- tive in conjunction with a deep dedication and passion from professors and administrators. , These students and faculty realized there are many service-learning opportunities on campus that give stu- dents the opportunity to learn from a community through service. But these folks also recognized that none of these existing opportunities allow students to truly become engaged in the community they are serving. Semester in Detroit's motto on the other hand is to live, learn, work and engage in the city. . Living:By living inthe city I amhelping, I'm convinced that my work will make a bigger impact, because I will be serving my own community. Moreover, this allows me to better appreciate the issues currently facing the city, since those issues will become increasingly relevant to my daily life. Working and engaging: At the heart of the Semester in Detroit program is a 15-20 hour per week internship in an area that a student is passionate about. The fact t4at this semester allows students to explore their own pas- sions speaks to how individualized this program can be for motivated students. Students will be able to engage in classes, internships and activities that appeal to them, thereby making this an incredible opportunity to create an individualized semester. Learning: I don't know that there is a better place to learn from right now than the city of Detroit. Detroit is the perfect example of a city eroded by Northern rac- ism, political scandal and a reliance on a single industry. Detroit is also a city rich in history, culture and commu- nity. It is a city full of people and organizations full of , hope and committed to turning things around. I have a great deal to learn from such people. This type of learning opportunity in conjunction with three classes promises that I will take away more from this experience than I can possibly predict. On a personal note, when I was in high school, I par- ticipated in a summer program that sought to educate high school students about the cycle of poverty and social responsibilities while also (hopefully) spurring a pas- sion for social justice. This program completely altered everything I knew. By rebuilding homes on the east side of Saginaw, working at local agencies, spending time in the courthouse listening to arraignments and talking to county prosecutors, listening to and reflecting on social teachings, participating in activities that made me ques- tion the beliefs and values I held and having small group discussions, I began to both figuratively and literally tear down walls. As I tore down fences and porches, ripped up decaying floors and put up new drywall and paint, Iput a human face on the abstract concept of poverty - and in doing so my whole world changed. This experience helped me understand my own priv- ilege. I realized the prejudices I held and stereotypes I believed. I discovered my love and compassion for people. I found my passion for the issues associated with urban poverty. I recognized that I learn the most by interact- ing with people. And I met people I continue to cherish and admire. It is my'sincere hope and belief that Semester in Detroit can offer this same experience: an opportuni- ty to grow, learn, work with others committed to social change, engage in the community and feel passionate about the work I do. Semester in Detroit is holding an informational meet- ing tonight at 6 p.m. in Angell Hall, Aud. D. For more information please visit www.semesterindetroit.com. Jennifer Cowhy is an LSA sophomore. .+