Wednesday, August 2, 1995 - The Michigan Daily - 5 Joel s.b For a better U'... So, things are starting to finally wind down on the end o' the summer. And what a summer it has been. Being a student Orientation leader this past summer has given me more insight into how the University functions than I could ever have asked for. Or wanted. Evidently, I should be the picture- perfect "well-adjusted student" this fall. Registering over 1,000 new first-year students this summer has definitely put me into the academic end social mindset. I'm roaring for the fall - read: (fotball season - to begin. Now, withmy vastknowledge oftheUniversity, Ihavejust a few suggestionsonhow ithe bureaucracy can operate a little more smoothly. Or at least make the whole bureaucratic experience alot more exciting and fun to deal with. Let me begin. U Michigan is an expensive place. We all know that. But how much of a student's tuition really goes toward the $785 million the University claims it takes to run this place? In order to make students really know what they are getting for their tuition pllar, everything should be itemized. For a student Michigan, a bill might say something like: "Thank you for your payment of $4,000. It has been used to install three windows in Randall Physics lab."Ormaybel'llgetsomethinglike: "Mr. Knutson, in the future, please address all checks to Barney Fitzgibbons, the flower waterer of North Campus whose salary you will be paying directly. Think of the possibilities. I could have dinner with Barney's family, and maybe even enable his kin to attend college, where they would be used to pay for some Aw gravel in the parking lot by the Arb. The new 'teps on the Grad could have a hundred names of students who paid for them, which would go a long ways in making the 'U' just a bit more personable, walking on your firends and all. Phone CRISP is a vast improvement over the old systems of crochety old folks at CRISP who really didn't care if you were to keel over after not getting into any classes. But with the new technology, why does it still cost $80 to register? Somewhere in there, the 'U' should use the funds make registration more fun. The CRISP lady st doesn't cut it. Something like "Dial-a-porn- CRISP"would be fun.("Oh, baby, I've been waiting for you to call. Please press 1, to see where I can take you next! You know you want to continue, because it feels so good!") Or maybe you could fulfill a requirement by CRISPing in German. "Guten Tag. Welkommen zum Universitat von Michigan...). Or my personal favorite, Cottage Inn CRISP. ("Univeristy of Michigan, will you please hold? Okay, that'll be Math 115 with half ,usage and half ham, Chem 130, uh, would you mke Chem 125 with that? No? Breadsticks, then?") Placement testing. It needs to go beyond math, chemistry and foreign language. There needs to be a survival skills test. After all, there are just a few students who do not have what it takes to survive here in the university community. Let's just say, they are not quite ready for the social and civil aspects of Michigan. Here's the deal: You fail the test, you go to Michigan State. That simple. Example: "Is it a good idea to buy an open bottle of gin from a homeless person on the street for ersonal consumption?" Or, "You are boffing at the CCRB weight room, sweating and drooling like a pig on the pads. Do you bother to wipe off your bacteria infested perspiration and saliva from the machine, or do you just leave your mark?" And finally, "Do you watch Jenny Jones regularly? Really? Have you ever been a guest?" Wait list boot camp. How badly do you really want to get into that psych class? Three days of hard work might let you earn your spot: "Get up that rope, maggot! And who was Frued, anyway?! don't think you have the prereqs for this class! You are worthless! Move it! Move it!" And so on. Hey, that leaves only two lines. Thank God. It's time for a vacation from the 'U.' NoTALE QuoTABLE "Why did the police take so long to get here? Why didn't they do anything when they finally came? Why, why, why?" - Verlie Stewart, referring to the shooting of his daughter, Tamara Simple solutions to a complex problem LAST PART OF A SERIES lies in "building a social structure that will enable By Adrienne Janney parents to raise children to have a more productive "Adult crime, adult time," stated Gay. John population." Desparate parents will raise desparte Engler, addressing the Prosecuting Attorneys children;abusiveparentswillcreateabusivechildren. Association of Michigan. Ashe outlined his plan for And those children grow up to be adult members of juvenile justice reform he called juvenile offenders society. "predatory punks"opining that "what many of these At the discussion some questioned why truancy, punks need is not a social worker but a jail cell." asasolidindicatorofhigh risk, is notdeald with more Engler seems to have all the answers contained aggresively. Gerald Miller, apanelist anddirecstorof in his seven-part plan. Build a "punk prison," the.MichiganDepartrentofSocialServices,toldthe authorize "boot camps" and home detention with audience that DSS has its hands full with abuse/ electronic surveillance, lower the automatic waiver neglect cases. DSS cannot do anything about the age to 14, open juvenile records and greatly extend symptom - truancy, in this case - until it has the the powersof police, probatejudges andprosecutors. resourestortackethe rot of theproblem. The same "We must be conscious that some think our powers holds true for the rest of thejuvenile system, as well too broad," was Engler's ominous comment. as the adult system. "These children have to be who Only one part of Engler's plan held redeeming they are for observable, quantifiable reasons," said value: providing judges with a wider range of panelist and Rep. Michael Nye (D-Lansing). sentencing options forjuveniles. The current choice Pontiac probate judge and panelist Hon. Joan is between adult prison or juvenile detention. Judges Young spoke of"creating acntinuum"-buthowe absolutely needbetter alternatives. Legislators must If every child in an abuseneglect situation were do some creative planning to improve the situation. removed, there would be no place to put them. If the Other means could include programs in the funds for corrections were transferred to prevention, community, intensive one-on-one rehanilitation, largenumbersofpotentialyunrehabilitatedoffenders diffeiryentessecurity in juvenile facilities, would be on the street. If every misdemeanor gets a different levels of liferisentencen esfaietyies'll be dumin eol into more couseling, more education and especially a life sentence, soiety w dumping peopeito support program for those on their way out of the psons by the thousands, and paying through the juvenile justice system. nose to support that policy. And if every social Elected officials worry a great deal about the deviant were sentenced to death, society would have short run, ignoring the long run. In the adult system, to keep killing its members indefinitely. examples of this are rampant: truth in sentencing, In conclusion the panel discussion, Feld "three strikes and you're out," the death penalty - mentionedthree"magic wand" solutions. "Iwishfor policies that sound good, but compound the problem needs to havple to have a future," he said. America in the end. They don't address the complexity of th people because "as long as itis clear to themthat no problem. "IfIcouldgetoneidea across topeople,it's oe cabout e the as no reaso to ca to avoid simple solutions," Washtenaw County about anybody elsee" Prosecutor Brian Mackie said earlier this summer. Fealsowishedtoprohibittheprivateownership Engler believes that it is as easy as putting tools Fedag , and to deal withissues such as racial society used to have back in the tool box. Joseph andgunsanteaith ises w as racial Barbrifomerlabela~outy nd social justice, saying that race was sidestepped PAAM president, pointedout,y Prosecutorandpast throughout the disussion. "We are now reaping the is a lot different thanin 1975." It is not a matter of harvest of 25 years of social policy," he observed. sgoing back to the imaginary golden years of PanelistandWayneCounty AssistantProsecutor going ba Crie isanew poen o Andrea Solak, conservative and tough till the end, However, crime becoming a mreprevalent concluded,"What I'd like to see is peaceinthehome. problem. For example, the number of adjudicated A child who learns violence from the people they love simply becomes apracticer and it's uncivilized sex offenders is increasing steadily, even rapidly. for us tomarehs (these children)." Whether more are bringing it to the forefront, or thefruoaeoue(tese cren)." crimes are actually occurring more is not clear. But Solak couldn't be more right. panelist and University of Minnesota law Professor -Janney is ati LSAjinior Barry Feld was on track when he said the solution and a Daily editorial page editor +*"c I y Ma wimsa 10 C C_ ENDWMET' N DOWE T Fait FR HE OR TH E NTT L) HUMN+Tf SA s ioAcp"T Nicholas J. Cotsonika/Nickels Hiroshima's lesson The letter arrived in Ann Arbor 55 years ago, largely unnoticed. University physicist George E. Uhlenbeck received letters from his old friend at the University of California-Berkeley all the time, and few could understand them anyway. All the talk of atoms and elements would confuse, if not bore, an untrained reader. This time however, the message was clear. "So I think it really not too improbable that a ten centimeter cube of uranium deuteride ... might very well blow itself o hell," J. Robert Oppenheimer wrote. The bomb began its birth. Oppenheimer's ominous attitude only hinted at the destruction to come. Hiroshima would be laid waste by "Little Boy" on Aug. 6, 1945, and Nagasaki would be leveled three days later. And Oppenheimer, along with the rest of the United States, knew that his conscience was doomed. Remembrance. Fifty years later, Hiroshima still haunts us. It should. The murder of so many innocent people should not go away. Time and rebuilding cannot replace lost souls. Calling to mind those miserable days of 1945 reminds us that we are not always good. Stars and stripes can be bullies too. This does not mean that the use of nuclear weapons at the end of World War II was a poor decision. President Harry S. Truman knew victory would be acheived, and after long years of bloody fighting, chose the quickest way and least costly way out. Later, when the Soviet Union gained nuclear capability, we knew to respect the bomb. Without the lessons of Hiroshima, events like the Korean War and the Cuban Missile Crisis might have rearranged the planet. Using the bomb taught us never to use it again. Remembrance. It is wrong, however, to say the Japanese deserved it. Yes, Japan did strike Pearl Harbor without warning. Yes, Axis powers did rape and pillage China and the Phillipines. Yes, the Japanese did instigate war militarily. But in any history class at this University, you learn about who fights wars, who dies and who commands. Leaders may puff out their chests and order offensives, but itsis rare to find a infantryman with grand ideological notions of why he is fighting. And as for civilians, they were at home watching, just like we did in 1991. Those who died, and those who survived, paid a price. War demands that. Yet, after the ships and planes are put in mothballs, we should examine our massacres. War demands that too. Hiroshima reminds us of all our slaughters. Dresden. Danang. Berlin. Baghdad. In all, thousands of innocent people died, and at times, they perished for little more than revenge. The Smithsonian exhibit that was to comemorate the bombing was scrapped. Too sympathetic to the Japanese. Too unfair. Too this or that. In Hiroshima, they don't like to surface the memories either. The plaque that marks Ground Zero, where the blinding flash centered, is small and hardly noticeable. Bikers ride by without paying too much attention. No remembrance. That is dangerous. When pride blocks objective memories 50 years after an event, there is a problem. Those of us who were not around then need to pay attention. The wounds must be ripped open again, deep looks need to be taken. We need to be reminded of what we're capable of. So don't pass by these anniversary articles this week. When Oppenheimer wrote Uhlenbeck, your life was altered. It began with a letter right on this campus and it could happen again - right here. For your children, learn about it. Look at the pictures. See the scars. Sit. Stare. Read. Remember .. for your sake.