4A - Friday, October10, 2014 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom ll A Gly idtpan Big Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandailycom MEGAN MCDONALD PETER SHAHIN and DANIEL WANG KATIE BURKE EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflectthe official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles snd illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. F ROM T HE DAILY A major wake up call Athletic Department must repair relationships viral campaign began earlier this week, urging students to boycott the kickoff of Michigan's home game against. Penn State Saturday. Originating from the comments section of MGoBlog, an online blog that chronicles Michigan Athletics, the boycott is a student response to a series of mistakes and failures from Athletic Director Dave Brandon and the University's Athletic Department. This list of grievances begins as early as 2009 - before Dave Brandon's tenure - and concludes as recently as two weeks ago. Student outrage has reached a peak, culminating with protests on the Diag and outside University President Mark Schlissel's house. Such an outburst is not easy to incite and should not be taken lightly. The University, the Athletic Department and Dave Brandon need to begin a serious push to win back the student body by implementing policies that can preemptively address potential crises. Ann Arbor's housing headache As we've entered October, I'm sure everyone's settling into theirapartments,housesand dorms. But don't feel too settled, because now's the time that you real- ly need to think : about housing. Simply put, a student's search for housing in Ann ' Arbor is ridicu- MICHAEL lous. Not only are SCHRAMM housing prices unreasonable rela- tive to what students at other col- leges pay, but the process of finding housing contains an unreasonable number of traps and difficulties. The process's stress stems from issues explained by basic economics. A culmination of factors - including the renovations in large student housing facilities like South Quad and West Quad, a consistent increase in admitted students and off-campus housing reaching or exceeding capacity - has created an excess demand that the housing supply struggles to meet. With so many students looking for housing, tenants in convenient locations can charge higher prices and expect students to sign leases in October or November. The expectation of signing a lease in October or November can lead to serious issues. You've lived in your current housing for a month or two, so you really haven't lived with your housemates or roommates long enough to know whether your liv- ing styles are similar. But you don't have the time to see how things play out. If you're even considering living with them, you have to immediately look into the possibility of living with them next year. If they're down, that's great, and you can renew your lease or find new housing and pray that you'll live well together for the next two years. However, this doesn't always happen, and sometimes your roommates want different housing experiences or already realize your living situation isn't suitable. This would be stressful in any circum- stance,but you don't reallyhave time to think your other options through. You only really have three weeks before all your friends solidify their plays, soi you have to scramble, and accept any housing offer you find - even if it's one that you don't want. This isn't even taking into con- sideration how much relationships can change in a year. If you sign an August-to-August lease in October, should be developed to stop these you have 11 months until you live sidestepping policies. The University with those people. Eleven months should advocate to the Ann Arbor of time can have a pretty significant City Council for a 100-day period as impact on a person's social life. You opposed to the current 70-day policy. could very well realize in January Additionally, rules should exist to or February that you would have prohibit students from touring or preferred to live with other people, signing May-to-May leases until particularly if you're a freshman or Dec. 15. These policies would allow sophomore who immediately signed students to sign leases during mid- a lease with people youbarely know. December at the earliest. Coupled But let's just assume that you find with exams and Winter Break, the right people to live with next students would likely not be able year. Now you can actually begin to sign a lease until they return for your housing search. However, this second semester. Having all of first is by no means a period of leisurely semester to brainstorm housing searching options to determine your groups would give students an bestfit.Youhave at most amonth and opportunity to make informed and a half to decide where you want to intelligent decisions. This could also live, so your search turns into a rabid decrease housing prices as landlords hunt to find a place that you don't may lower rent to attract, more hate, is located somewhere you want students given that they have less to live and falls within your budget. time for studentsto signleases. Unfortunately, you're not the only This policy change would also be person in your living group, and optimal as second semester is around each individual has different prefer- the time that the University opensup ences. These people are your friends, the process-for on-campus housing, though, so you don't want to step allowingstudentstorealisticallycon- on anyone's toes, and you also don't sider both possibilities. As it is now, if want to say anything that would a student chooses to live on-campus remove you from the group. These for the following year, they ,take a issues obviously arise in any hous- risk because if they don't get housing, ing situation, but the higher-priced the off-campus market is essentially student housing drained. in An 'Arbor Going to coupled with the Michigan expectation of Simply put, a student's already entails signing a lease . numerous so soon, elevates search for housing in responsibili- the need to find Ann Arbor ties. Students something - struggle jug- whether it's per- is ridiculous. gling school, fect or just OK. organizations These issues and their social are significant, life. With all and I think the of these issues University should be advocating for going on, housing should be the least changesinleasingpoliciestoalleviate of students' concerns, but neverthe- the situation. No, the University less remains one. This is my third cannot do anythingto guarantee that year of experiencing an unreason- housingwillbe effortless,butit could able amount of housing stress cou- fight for regulations if it really cared pled with hearing about how all my about students' well-being. Codes friends are stressed out. And from exist in Ann Arbor that prohibit what I hear, this isn't something renters from allowing anyone to sign that students at schools with more a lease or view housing until 70 days relaxed housing markets experience. after current leasers have lived in the After spending six years renovat- property. However, landlords can ing on-campus facilities without allow unattended viewing of housing making efforts to alleviate the extra units and force students to sign pre- students in the off-campus market, lease agreements in order to sidestep I hope that the University (or time these, "odes.. Furthermore, ;with force, with .political .clout) makes the options of May-to-May leases, an effort to alleviate some of these some renters don't need to sidestep issues. the policies and can immediately find students to sign a lease within Michael Schramm can be reached the first weeks of school. Rules at mschramm@umich.edu. Perhaps the most alarming fault was the perceived mishandling of the sexual assault case involving former Michigan kicker Brendan Gibbons. Though Gibbons was accused of sexual assault on Nov. 22, 2009, he was not suspended from play until more than four years later, in December of 2013. This delay in confronting the issue revealed a clear flaw in the system that various University units have since had to remedy - including upholding the Student Sexual Misconduct Policy. The Athletic Department played a significant role in mistreating the situation by concealing Gibbons' separation from, the University. After the Office of Student Conflict Resolution issued Gibbons' suspension Dec. 19, 2013, a copy of the expulsion letter signed by Gibbons was faxed from the Athletic Department on the same date. This indicates that athletic officials were aware of the separation at that time at the latest. Only a very serious breakdown in communication would explain Brandon's ignorance of the separation at this point. However, at the Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl Dec. 28, Michigan Coach Brady Hoke claimed that Gibbons would not play because of a "family matter." Hoke also stated that Gibbons would not participate in the regular- season finale against Ohio State due to an undisclosed injury. Again, either the Athletic Department had a very troubling problem with communication, Brandon failed to inform Hoke of the situation or Hoke's statements were made up. Regardless, Hoke's indirect manner of addressing the questions, as well as providing false information, brings to light an institutional problem within the Department. The U.S. Department of Education has since opened a federal investigation into the University's handling of the case. The Department's Office for Civil Rights is now reviewing whether or not the University violated the Title IX legislation in relation to the Gibbons case, as well as sexual assault and harassment on campus in general. The fact that the Athletic Department and University bungled a situation so seriously as to draw the attention of federal investigators aligns with its repetitive lack of transparency and questionable procedures. Ticket pricing and policies have also angered students and non-students alike. The increase in the cost for season tickets, coupled with the weakest home schedule in recent memory, makes the Athletic Department seem out of touch with the reality of fans unable to afford tickets. The switch to general admission seating for students last season also caused students to lose trust in the department's ability to make decisions regarding student ticket policy, as the system was a failure that had to be altered again in short order, this time with the Central Student Government and the departmentworking together to institute the new policy in place for this year. The Athletic Department's failure to include student input from the beginning not only manifests in negative opinion, but smothers school spirit and future fans of University athletics. Most recently, the Shane Morris incident has driven student patience to the brink. By allowing a concussed sophomore quarterback to continue to play, the Michigan Football program put a 20-year-old's life at risk. Morris' injury showed that sideline medical policies - which have since been updated - weren't thorough enough to protect student health. While Brandon has said that it was a miscommunication and a "mistake that cannot occur again," the fact that it happened at all suggests incompetence, as negligence is an unacceptable excuse for risking student lives. Brandon and the Athletic Department need to be proactive rather than reactive. The Athletic Department's communication issues were not isolated to the field. After the game, Brandon and Hoke publicly contradicted each other multiple times, the most concerning of which was when they were spoke of Morris' condition. The fact that a group of students is willing to sacrifice the public image of the University to institute a boycott at this Saturday's game is a clear example that student opinion of the Athletic Department under Dave Brandon has hit an extreme low point. The Department has lost support of fans with its ticket pricing and policy, and the support of sports fans and non-fans alike with its handling of the Gibbons incident and Morris injury. This outcry and negative sentiment cannot be ignored by the Athletic Department, which must now bring about substantive change to rebuild lost trust. An open letter to President Obama EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS Devin Eggert, David Harris, Rachel John, Nivedita Karki, Jacob Karafa, Jordyn Kay, Aarica Marsh, Megan McDonald, Victoria Noble, Allison Raeck, Melissa Scholke, Michael Schramm, Matthew Seligman, Paul Sherman, Linh Vu, Meher Walia, Mary Kate Winn, Daniel Wang, Derek Wolfe All signs point to a cover-up, but I want to give the White House a chance to explain itself." - Rep Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah), chairman of a House oversight subcommittee investigating the Secret Service prostitution scandal, said after the release of new information in the case To Mr. Obama, To Mr. Obama, I address my letter to you in earnest. I write in the full faith that one day, somehow, you will read it. I write you as an American. But I do not write you as my president. I write you as no OMAR one else will, for MAHMOOD the war criminal that you are. Of course, being a war criminal is a prerequisite for taking residence in the White House. The CIA, under LBJ and Nixon, would keep akill list of Viet Cong members. In a covert operation called the Phoenix, they would send out assassins to check off those names. So you are hardly being creative. Instead, !you have earned your place in a long-standing American tradition, and are on the wrongside of history. Decades from now, students of history will remember you as the drone president. What I remember of the Vietnam War from my history class is not the valor ofthe Americans in the jungle. I remember the piles of dead villagers all reported by our soldiers as Viet Cong members. Squadrons of American soldiers would rifle through the villages and count dead babies and even pet dogs amongthe terrorists they had killed. No American can walk out of history class with his head held high. We have blood on our hands.: What you are doing, Mr. Obama, is even more sinister. You deliver death in the most cowardly of ways. And you revel in it. At the White House Correspondents' Dinner in 2010, you dressed up in your tux- edo and bow tie and flirted with the crowd. The Jonas Brothers were there, and we learned that Sasha and Malia were big fans. But you warned them to tread carefully. "Boys, I have two words for you," you said. "Predator drones ... you will never see it coming." I dare you, Mr.Obama, tolook into the eyes of any on whose fathers an taken away and cra But you persist in ror. In 2011, the 350 drone operate fighter jet pilots. N operator have to] And never does have to see the fac killing. Instead the a red body on the once his body isr Hellfire missile, t watch as it bleeds o In military slang, call their victims " This is how y Rehman's grandn out picking okra i ing fields of Kh] Pakistan and Afg steppes of great grandmother was was ready to pick not yet ripe, and f ed she was a tei was engulfed in ness, and when they subsided her grandmoth- er was dead. Momina Bibi had been flung a league away, so badly disfigured that the villag- ers would not let her sons see her body. She was a grandmother of nine. The childre scared of blue sl drones will see th Only five mem were there to hi when she visitedy You've chosen Ma stani poster child, don't need anothe probably is awkw the eyes of a littleI mother you killec eyes, Mr. Obama. The Bureau Journalism has do procure from you those you have k ie of the children them well hidden. I think it might be d mothers you've best to not tell how many you have ck that same joke. killed, and how many more whose your reign of ter- lives you have ripped apart. Not only Air Force trained because they can't be told, but that to ors and only 250 quantify death is more the practice lever does a drone of the politicians and cynics that leave the ground. defend your drone program. a drone operator But I do have to address my e of the man he is detractors, simply because they are target appears as in power. Some, such as Douglas heat sensor, and Murray of the Henry Jackson ripped apart by a Society, argue that you should be the operator can congratulated for having "landed on sut and turns blue. the most efficient means known to drone operators kill Western enemies while harming bug splats." as few potential friends as possible." ou killed Nabila Another, Norton Schwartz, retired mother. She was U.S. Air Force general and former n the never-end- chief of staff of the Air For e,, was yber in between just as eloquent in declaring that ;hanistan on the your drone program "minimizes mountains. Her loss of life for friendly forces and telling her which maximizes the opportunity to avoid k and which was needless casualties of friendlies; in or that you decid- other words, collateral damage." But rrorist. The field so what, I ask, if drones minimize flames and dark- civilian casualties? So what if they are surgical and precise? Your program can Decades from now, only be justified with such students of history will jargon, because the plain truth remember you as the belies it. These drone president. megalomaniacs ' have turned warfare into ratios, into a trolley problem, n of Khyber are and humanity is lost. ky, because your Those who defend the program em. profess that terrorist cells are bers of Congress being decapitated. But they have no ear Nabila speak ground to stand on - if anything, 'ou in the Capitol. it helps recruitment. Decapitating lala as your Paki- organizations has historically been and I suppose you ineffective and counterintuitive. r. In any case, it One needs only point to the assas- vard to look into sination of Chechen leaders by the girl whose grand- Russian government from 2002 to d. She has hazel 2006. As explains Professor Audrey Kurth Cronin of George Mason Uni- of Investigative versity's School of Public Policy, the one well to try to conflict changed from a "separatist the numbers of insurgency to a broader illed. You've kept See OBAMA, Page 5A lk a