4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 12, 1999 Edited and managed by EmiLY ACHENBAUM NICK WooER students at the e Editor in Chief Editorial Page Editor q University of Michigan EF Une ieL 0/5011c not 7k , cd ck ditorft ( ,, t c/ L , o,;tie0)ioni o/the 420 Maynard Street nooorit/ othe Daiii/cso aunl ord. All olher tt I'lieteand Ann Arbor, MI 48109 (c"""""nsdo"' o " C"I7)'i""l" "J' 1 '''"theo "'oi itnThe/1' Ill h "ct",t Del/ T he conflict between the City of Ann Arbor and motorists in general may be slowly strangling the city's now-vital down- town area. Last Tuesday a group of University students and faculty conducted both focus groups and interviews with a diverse range of Ann Arborites in the hopes of gathering suggestions to help revitalize the State Street area of downtown Ann Arbor. City officials should seriously consid- er the study's findings and use them to improve downtown. Members of the State Street Area Association prompted the study when they approached the University in the fall of 1998 after it was announced that the Downtown Development Authority would appropriate $1.5 million to improve the area. This group, along with the DDA and the University itself, paid for the study as an inquiry into how the downtown area could be better developed. This group presented the results of its study to the city officials, as well as several Ann Arbor officials should consider study businesses in the State Street area. The find- ings recommended that portions of State Street, as well as adjoining roads, such as Thompson St., Liberty St., Maynard St., and North University Avenue should allow two- way traffic. The State Street Association believes that making the streets two-way will both increase accessibility to their businesses (as well as the parking structures near their busi- nesses) and make the area more pedestrian- friendly by reducing automobile speeds, as drivers tend to speed on one-way streets. Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon has stated that she is considering pedestrian improve- ments, but that no decisions can be made regarding this proposal until the formal report is filed next January. Mayor Sheldon should implement this plan as soon as possible. In the past few years the downtown area of Ann Arbor has fallen into a steady decline as both cheaper and more accessible property has become available in the suburbs and the outskirts of the city itself This has led to the demise of several city fixtures such as Schoolkids' Records and' Campus Bike and Toy. Merchants and businesses simply do not see the need to remain in the downtown area when the suburbs have become cheap- er, and often more profitable, places to do business because they attract more cus- tomers. The State Street area is a perfect case study of this problem: it is an area that is unfriendly to traffic with its one-way streets, isolating businesses from customers that an directed to more convenient establishment away from the city center. Moreover, pedes trians must deal with drivers who race alo the one-vay streets as if they were on a track instead of a major thoroughfare fo: both people and automobiles, intimidatins people away from the bustle and hustle oft dangerous downtown pedestrian environ ment. While two-way streets, less pedestriar impediments, and more parking structur signs will not cure the problem of suburban ization in Ann Arbor, it may help stem th flow of consumers to the suburbs anc encourage businesses to remain downto a as well as attract more people so Ann Arbp multitude of centralized businesscs, thus pre- serving the city's urban heart. Ann Arboi cannot afford to lose the downtown region t outlying areas, or it may lose one of its mair attractions to students and visitors fron around the world, and that would destroy the character of the city itself. Catc ing up Clinton's plan for poor areas has potential e as n a pan Jail sentences for breast bearers are too harsh T he statistics are well known to almost everyone in one form or another; the United States is currently experiencing the longest period of eco- nomic growth in its history. The statistics are impressive. As of last year, the budget surplus was $70 bil- lion - the largest surplus on record. And since President Clinton took office in 1992, economic growth has averaged 3.5 percent a year. The blanket of prosperity hasn't spread to everyone. Clinton's tour of the nation's poorest areas, which concluded last Friday, reminded the nation that the economic progress it has achieved pales in comparison to what it still has left to accomplish. With the help of Clinton's plan to extend private sector support into poorer areas, the nation can start to make the blanket a little wider. Beginning in Kentucky, Clinton's tour took him through stops in Mississippi, East St. Louis and a Native American reservation in South Dakota before fin- ishing up his cross-country trip in California. The statistics from these areas are grim: In some areas of Kentucky, as the New York Times reported, the unemploy- ment rate is 80 percent worse than the national average. And, also according to the New York Times, 60 percent of young people in the areas Clinton visited are neither working nor in school. Clinton realizes thtt fedeial aid alone cannot ute these atttetlts, and instead has dM ised an effective pian to promote private seete r inestoent in poorer areav by oltering incentives to partictpting cotnpantcs,. Cliiiton's venture capital pirogt , 0. called New Markets Initiative, is expect- ed to generate $5 billion in private sector investments by offering $1 billion in Federal tax incentives. This is a positive plan that will encourage companies to invest in the United States, instead of taking their business overseas. Clinton's plan has received the normal amount of criticism, with naysayers' calls of "too little, too late." Syndicated columnist Carl Rowan dubbed the poverty tour an "act of futili- ty." Referring to similar quests by Robert Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson to extend economic prosperity to the poorer sec- tions of the nation, Rowan remarked that "the same areas are mired in the same joblessness and hopelessness." Still, since Lyndon Johnson made a trip to the Appalachian region, the Appalachian Regional commission reports that the poverty rate, once at 31 percent, has dropped to 15 percent, just two points higher than the national aver- age. With $5 billion in expected invest- ments form the private sector, there is reason to believe that the improvement will continue. Clinton's plan is a step in the right direction. With significant incentives from the government, American companies will be encouraged to invest in the poorer areas of the country. It may be that more will need to be done, but Clinton's plan is still a much-needed advancement for America's poorest areas. So long as C lirston's focus is mtintaitne in the fttire id the ceuntry's f lrgttenC 1- eis are not fisrgtten gintI tileei hope for the econoemiclly disadsantagid. regins. Some mllay say "teo little tOO late," pertups it is hetter to say "1etter I ite than never."t O0 fficials in East Lansing Mich., ought to refer to the old adage "two wrongs do not equal one right." Both the city and Michigan State University have taken a hard line in the wake of last March's embarrassing riots. In their push to punish as many rioters as possi- ble the city and MSU have stepped way out of line. The city first attempted to subpoena photos and videotape from the Lansing State Journal and local television sta- tions respectively -- threatening them with the possibility of search and seizure by police if they did not comply. Now East Lansing is doing the same with female MSU students who bared their breasts during the riots. While the charge of indecent exposure can land an individual in prison, this rarely happens in cases similar to those of Eva Roberts 19, and Stephanie Kent 19, who both served short prison terms for lifting their shirts during the riots as they were held aloft by cheering men. None of the men have been prosecuted. District Judge Richard Ball, who sen- tenced Roberts, admitted to Detroit News columnist Laura Berman that East Lansing's ordinances did not even define what exactly constituted "indecent expo- sure" and instead invoked former United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart's conment on pornography: "I know it whet I se it." A tough ctackdoi CII everyone who police cal prove as evci r''tely involved in tite March riOts mayV ildeed preyen t e miutbeirsts afteinaii, tast [at sin cificias ea po11int oue ,etris like Chia iwvhih itas no experieed std.ent-i ntIe tumii since > ms- cred e pr-deminely pitesters imre than ten years ago. It may be easy to justify harsh law- enforcement tactics on grounds of effi- ciency, but it is another matter entirely to validate those tactics on moral grounds. East Lansing is not going to recll its once-enviable reputation as a pro- gressive city of freethinkers bytsending young women to prison for an act that is completely legal in the most of Europe. Even in the United States, the women would likely be prosecuted lightly or not at all under different circumstances - Roberts was expecting this pattern would hold when she showed up at her trial date, only to be sentenced to ) days in jail (of which she served 17), starting immediately. It is certainly understandable why East Lansing officials are so short on sympathy - rioters caused millions of dollars of physical damage and struck a long-lasting blow to the reputations of East Lansing, MSU and the of all of their respective affiliates. What shocked that country and the world about the riots in March was not so much the "lewd" behavior of so* women, but the property damage that was caused mostly by certain men. The attitudes of Roberts and Kent towards what was happening around them may be objectionable, but it is actions, not attitudes that have embar- rassed East Lansing and MSU and it is the actions of some that night that should be dalt with harshi. The reh riot, as coltetmptble @l irr spe .l is was, shic d not be an ered by East Lansig vs ith equally conem'nptible and irrespoN.ibie egal measures