BILLS From page 1 proposed legislation. Novak and Thomas said creat- ing a system where voters have two addresses would be too complicat- ed and expensive for their offices to implement. "We view these bills as a step backwards," Novak said. "Right now it's pretty simple - you have one residence." Novak suggested ways of improving voting for students including automatically regis- tering 16-year-olds to vote when they get their drivers' licenses to eliminate the hassle of registering after their eighteenth birthday and allowing first-time voters to use absentee ballots. Novak said Warren's bills could lead to an increase in voter fraud and administrative errors because they would make it more difficult to track voters since the Secretary of State would have them in its database under two addresses. Warren said her research showed that voter fraud doesn't pose a significant threat to the state's voting process. "It's not voter fraud that's been a problem," she said. "What's more been a problem is low voter turn- out." Washtenaw County Clerk Larry Kestenbaum said he doesn't think the Secretary of State concerns about the bills are valid. The bills would not make admin- istering elections any more diffi- cult for Michigan clerks, he said. But Kestenbaum isn't in favor of repealing Rogers's Law either. He said he opposed the legis- lation when it was first passed because it seemed like a ploy by Rogers and Republican legislators to stifle student voters. Kestenbaum said he now approves of the system because students are realizing that chang- ing their permanent addresses isn't complicated. The state auto- matically changes people's driv- ers' license addresses when they register to vote at a new address. "I think there was a bit of a bug- a-boo that was created at first," Kestenbaum said. "Once people got over the fear of having their permanent address changed they were comfortable with it." Another concern Warren brought up in her proposal was the risk students face of losing their health insurance. Once students change their permanent address from their parents' residence, their status as their parents' dependant is jeopardized. Warren suggested a separate voter identification number that would follow voters if they move within the state, but said she would be open to a separate voting address that the state would send out on a sticker to be placed on the back of a driver's license. Public Policy junior Peri Weis- berg, LSA sophomore Kalen Pruss and LSA junior Neil Campbell tes- tified at the hearing in support of Warren's legislation. Pruss said that when she worked to register student voters last fall, the main problem she encountered was that many students are afraid of losing their healthcare. "There shouldn't be a fear," she said. "(Rogers's Law) is an unnec- essary obstacle." State Rep. Tom Pearce (R-Kent County) asked the students about the possibility of student voters altering local politics in a district where they will likely only live for a few years. "The same things can be said for voting in local districts," Pruss said. "A lot of students don't imme- diately move back." University alum Pete Woiwode, who chaired the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly's voter-registra- tion commission Voice Your Vote, also spoke in favor of Warren's legislation. The state should encourage young people to vote by making the process easier, Woiwode said PAST ATTEMPTS TO REPEAL ROGERS'S LAW In February 2000, the American Civil Liberties Union filed an unsuccessful lawsuit against Rogers's Law, less than12 months after it was enacted. Then-Mich- igan Student Assembly vice president Andy Coulouris represented MSA as co- plaintiff along with studentgovernments from across the state. In September 2004, state Sen. Liz Brater (D-Ann Arbor) proposed four bills that would repeal Rogers's Law and allow students to vote using an absentee ballot in their first election. The bills failed to be signed into law. CORRECTIONS Please report any error in the Daily to corrections@michigandaily.com. Monday, May 14, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3 Red flags in the classroom How profs deal with disturbing student writing By LAUREN SLETE Daily StaffReporter In contrast to many high school writing assignments in which ref- erences to destructive acts earn a student a pass to the school counselor, college writing courses allow students to explore life's darker side more freely. But in light of Virginia Tech shooter Cho-Seung Hui's disturb- ing work for a creative writing class that many believe foreshad- owed his violent behavior, the line between creative self-expression and a distressed warning sign is more blurry. Without an official policy to determine the difference between creative expression and psycho- logical instability, the University's creative writing professors are left on their own when deciding whether a student's dark or violent writing warrants intervention. English Prof. Keith Taylor said aggression in student writ- ing often reflects an interest in violence common among many people and isn't usually a cause for concern. "Eighteen-year-old boys love to deal with things getting shot," he said. English Prof. Patricia O'Dowd said she once encountered a stu- dent whose behavior and violent writing worried her and other stu- dents in the class. "I had the feeling he meant to be intimidating both to me and to the other students," she said. O'Dowd kept an eye on the stu- dent during class time and noti- fied the English Department of her concerns. 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