AA - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 30, 1995 tin tti1 JULY BECKER ON THE RECORD 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in chief JULIE BECKER JAMES M. NASH Editorial Page Editors On Detroit's streets tornkkt:" W~y illtlejires burn?' Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. Kangaroo court New code ignores necessary legal protections T he new Code of Student Conduct claims as intrinsic values student rights and constitutional protections. Yet the reality is that the proposed code falls far short of what the regents demanded from Vice President for Student Affairs Maureen A. Hartford: a less legalistic document that supports stu- dent rights. On the contrary, the code estab- lishes another pseudo-legal process that side- steps existing judicial law and gives the ad- ministration unspecified powers of counsel, judge and jury. Among the numerous flaws in the code's ambiguous wording is an egregious disre- gard for due process. The code proclaims that "students at the University have the same rights and protections under the Constitu- tions of the United States and the State of Michigan as other citizens." It goes on to affirm that "students have the right to be protected against capricious decision mak- ing by the University ... accordingly, this code will not deprive students of the appro- priate due process protections to which they are entitled." Yet the code later tramples on the due-process protections it promises. The procedures section reminds students that: "The resolution and appeal processes are administrative functions and are not subject to the same rules of civil or criminal proceed- ings." In other words, students are protected by the Constitution - everywhere but in code proceedings. "Due process" is no longer determined by judicial precedent, but by ad- ministrators and code writers. Students charged under the code may be deprived of housing or the right to an educa- tion while the cumbersome hearing process is under way - a "punishment before the verdict" mentality. The criminal court sys- tem, in contrast, guarantees a pre-trial hear- ing to determine whether the accused should be held in prison. Furthermore, just as in the original code, students lack the right to legal representation at the hearings during media- tion or arbitration. Appalling violations of due process con- tinue in the section on appeals. To fulfill the code's "educational" mission - akin to spanking a child to "educate" him or her - "An appeals process ... is available to each party." This provision leaves students vul- nerable even after an acquittal - a striking contrast to criminal courts. Under the code, the resolution coordinator and University administration have the power to sidestep the University's own judicial process should they deem the outcome unfavorable. The appeals process states vaguely that appeals may be filed if: "Evidence clearly does not support the findings, insufficient or excessive sanc- tions relative to the violation." This clause gives the University power to disregard the outcome of the process if it feels the punish- ment does not fit the crime. In a criminal court, by contrast, appeals may only be trig- gered by technical flaws in the trial itself. While state and federal requirements mandate a code, there is no justification for the University to establish its own quasi- legal system, stripped ofthe protections guar- anteed by the U.S. and Michigan constitu- tions. The new code piously claims to uphold the Constitution while actually subverting it. It is imperative that students continue to make their voices heard so that the Univer- sity Board of Regents will force Hartford back to the table to find a code that does just what it claims to do: protect students' consti- tutional rights. T oday is Oct. 30, another Monday in a string of bright fall days in Ann Arbor. It is the day before Halloween, which means costume parties, candy and caramel apples. And ifyou live in Detroit, it means Devil's Night. The grim tradition began in 1984, when -for some unexplained reason - a few Detroit citizens decided the night before Halloween was a good time to set aban- doned houses on fire. Two hundred ninety- seven buildings burned that night, a kind of twisted tribute to the power of matches and dead wood. In the years since, Detroit's schools, po- lice and city administration have engineered an all-out public relations campaign to stop the arson. They have been somewhat suc- cessful - 1991-93 saw about 65 fires each year, though last year the number skyrock- eted to 182 after what many deemed inad- equate preparation by new Mayor Dennis Archer. This all seems pretty remote to us in Ann Arbor, on a campus whose greatest aesthetic problem is the orange fence protecting us from construction. It also seems remote to the people in Southfield and Inkster and Sterling Heights, except when they pick up their newspapers the next morning and shake their heads over yet another depressing De- troit story. It seems remote to me, now. And in a way that frightens me. I spent the first 18 years of my life in Detroit, and I have spent the past three explaining that fact to acquaintances who didn'tthink there were any white peopte left in the city. Or, for that matter, any people at all. I always tell people I'm proud of where I'm from. And I am. But the first time I went home, my first year here, I drove across the city to see a friend. I drove past some of those abandoned houses, the ones that could be fodder for tonight's celebrants. And I looked around me with a new perspective - the perspective of one who lives someplace else. I didn't think that co'ld ever be me, but it is. More and more people live someplace else these days. What began as a trickle to suburbia after World War II became a flood after the 1967 riot. Even my parents, die- hard city backers, joined the exodus the year after I graduated high school. Pack the boxes and load up the van. And turn the lights out behind you. If you listen to those who move away, they all have good reasons. Better schools. Less crime. Cleaner neighborhoods. There are lots of things the suburbs offer that Detroit does not. It might not be so bad, if all people took with them when they left was their possessions. But we take more than that. We take our involvement. It's human nature, after all. We are al- ways more interested in what directly af- fects us, and Detroit's burned-out buildings and schools with metal detectors don't seem to fit that bill. You can do just about anything in the suburbs, from shop to see movies to attend synagogue. What's over there for us anyway? A losing baseball team? What's there for us? People are there. The middle-class teen-agers who will be running the world, right along us, 20 years from now. The people on welfare, about whom conservatives like to howl but hate to deal with on a personal level. It's easy to blame Detroit's residents for its decline: They should care more about their city. They shouldn't do drugs. They shouldn't set fires. What about us? Where is our responsi- bility here? It lies in our personal choices. Individuals alone cannot save Detroit -the city is crying out for economic revitaliza- tion, from empowerment zones to casinos to a better Tiger Stadium. But economic efforts cannot take hold unless people are willing to grab onto them. We who reap the benefits of the Univer- sity of Michigan too often fqrget the city that put Michigan on the map. A few days ago, someone commented to me what a shame it was that this great area had such a pit at its center. Yes, it is a shame. But our responsi- bility does not stop with acknowledging that. We who will soon emerge from our education thriving members of the middle class are the ones with much of the power to turn Detroit around. Through our education, through our money, through our caring. The city cries out for us. We can answer that cry. Or we can let the fire illuminate the streets, as we turn out the lights and drive away. - Julie Becker can be reached over e- mail at jhb@umich.edu. ,, JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST 'Tom~my iSEFTs TH E MOST CANDYB ECAUSE HE HAS ThE Jc).s~J?~rI' LETTER E 1 T' ER NOTABLE QUOTABLE 1 don't care where you are, who you are, what your politics are, people want to balance the budget.' - Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole (R- Kan.), on the Senate's passage of the federal budget Saturday Halfway there State tuition plan a shadow of its former self Michigan's prepaid college tuition plan will reopen next month, offering con- tracts for the first time in five years. The Michigan Education Trust board agreed last week to offer MET contracts at prices about double those offered in 1990, the last enroll- ment period of the original program. How- ever, these new price levels - and other aspects of the new program - will place MET out ofthe reach of many it was intended to benefit. MET was created in 1988 by then-Gov. James Blanchard as a state-guaranteed hedge against tuition inflation. The main attraction ofthe program was the tuition guarantee: The plan would cover the full tuition and fees at any state university, no matter the cost. Dur- ing its last enrollment period, costs for a four- year plan ranged from approximately $6,500 to $9,000, depending on the age of the child enrolled. Additionally, the plan offered an install- ment plan, so that someone enrolling in the program would not have to come up with the full cost immediately. The program was in- tended to help working- and middle-class parents fund their children's education. With its tax break - parents were exempted from taxes on the invested money - and tuition guarantee, the old MET helped thousands fund their education safely and affordably. Gov. John Engler ended the program, calling it underfunded, when he took office in 1991--after more than 55,000 people had purchased contracts. However, the recent resolution of tax problems with the fund's investments put funding fears to rest, clear- ing the way for reopening the program. The new MET contracts now cost $19,808 for four years of tuition at any Michigan public university. Tuition benefits at state universities other than the University of Michigan or Michigan State University would be $15,060. Unlike the previous MET pro- gram, where the price of enrolling a child declined with the child's age, the price is now the same regardless of how old the child is. The revamped program does not offer an installment plan through the state. To foot the extravagant bill, contract purchasers must get loans on their own. And the state does not guarantee full payment of tuition like the old program: If the fund falls short, whatever money remains in the fund would be returned to contract purchasers, destroying their plans for college payment. There is virtually no way a working-class family can pay for the MET - essentially defeating the program's goal. In addition, the central purpose of the plan, the tuition guar- antee, has been abandoned. Most families cannot afford the risk of their investment not covering tuition costs. The new, overpriced MET contracts pro- hibit working- and middle-class families from participating in the program. The new MET will not address the problem it was meant to solve: an affordable and guaranteed method of funding education. While the MET board deserves applause for reopening the pro- gram, the state must give serious consider- ation to meeting the original goals of MET. Dial-in critics uninformed To the Daily: There has been much said lately about the new ITD dial-in charging. As a consultant at ITD, I want to defend my employer on this point. My response is mostly to the editorial "Syntax error" in the Daily on Wednesday, Oct. 18. There is a lot of misinformation in that editorial. Although opin- ions should be written freely, edi- torials, especially those written by the Daily staff, should be sure their opinions are based upon the facts. "Syntax error" says, "While the new fee is not exorbitant, it sends a message: Now that Ethernet is here, dial-in services are being downgraded ...." This is flatly wrong. The Information Technology Division has greatly expanded dial-in access over the summer, allowing more lines, more modems and faster modems. Still more modems are being added. There used to be only pub- lic lines, where anyone and his brother within the Ann Arbor area could dial in; now ITD has set up two "private" lines which are for University students only. "Syntax error" later says, ". . dial-in systems should be main- tained and strengthened ... there is a need for new projects, such as the addition of new ports and serv- ers for dial-in use ..." ITD is indeed doing this. In the same issue, there was a letter from a junior, Ali Asad Lotia, ("ITD dialin policy unfair") that also complained about the ITD dial-in policy. I thank him for being more informed than the authors of the Daily editorial. In that letter he says, "The introduc- private modem pools. It has to pay for the phone lines, upgrade the modems and pay someone full-time to make sure the system is kept running. Another extra expense to ITD. Now, each student is given $11.50 each month to spend on computing needs, like e-mail, printing, etc. If that money is not used, it just sits there; ITD cannot use it unless the student is billed, and the student cannot use it ex- cept to spend on "computing re- sources." The choice is either ask for more money from the Univer- sity to pay for and upgrade the modem pools (charging every- one more tuition, even those who paid the extra to use Ethernet or don't dial in at all), lower the quality/quantity of services to everyone on campus to get money to pay for it (again, punishing everyone, even if they do not use dial-in access) or charge the people who do use it, so they help pay for the expenses, upkeep and increase in services. Which makes more sense? Also, the $4.40 charge is merely a minimum; it does not limit students to 40 hours per month. If a student is online 45 hours per month, ITD will charge him or her for the extra five hours over the $4.40, in the same way printing is charged for. Finally, both the editorial and the letter said that dial-in services were tra- ditionally free. This is not true. Back when the University was on MTS, students were charged MTS dollars for dial-in access. When they upgraded to UMCE, they couldn't charge initially because the system was not set up to do so. There were a few years in between that students got some- thing for nothing, and now it is back to the way it was. had been preaching on the Diag Thursday afternoon, and made no distinction between my photo and that of the other extremists. More importantly, the photo that they chose to print shows me with my finger in the air, as if"preach- ing" to the crowd. To further en- hance the effect of the bold, red headline, the picture ofme was in full color, center page, above the fold. Clearly I am being depicted as a member of this cult. One might easily derive from the pri- ority this photo was given that I was among the leaders of this hate-mongering cult. Unfortu- nately, nothing could be further from the truth! Anyone who was on the Diag that afternoon can tell you that I was vehemently attack- ing the ridiculous assertions Paul Stamm and his companions were making. I challenged Stamm's lies about AIDS, gays and women. Anyone who was a witness that day can attest that I put a lot of energy into exposing him as a fraud, hypocrite and bigot. You can imagine my distress when I saw myself clearly depicted as an important figure in the "preach- ing" that was done that day. I hold no animosity toward the Daily, or any of the staff who may have been responsible for the error. This is a student publi- cation, and as a student, I too have made some egregious mis- takes. Yet this particular mistake has potentially devastating effects that must somehow be undone. I value in the extreme my credibil- ity and status as a serious student at this University, and am con- cerned in the extreme that with- out some kind of highly visible clarification my credibility could be jeopardized. I also have plans for work in the public sector, and given the trends in today's politi- cal world, a misunderstanding of mongering religious extremist! For this reason I have asked that the Daily print this letter, so that my picture might at least be asso- ciated with views that are my own. Now, let me briefly speak of the Duel on the Diag. I strongly endorse the First Amendment, and respect Mr. Stamm's prima facie. right to speak his mind on the, Diag. I would argue strongly on behalf of his basic right to preach his peculiar brand of religion, and' would expect nothing less from this University. However, I be- lieve that the fundamental right to freedom of expression carries with it a responsibility to the pol- ity which grants that right. In pr- der to avoid a lengthy constitu- tional argument about rights, however, I will concede that Stamm was within his rights to be on the Diag. As soon as I grant him this right, he will likely claim that his religious beliefs impose upon him a moral obligation to warn the nonbelievers ofthe world about the error of life as a sinner. Armed with the constitutional right to speak, and the moral im- perative to warn the wicked, many a street preacher has been granted access and audience on the Diag, and Stamm should not, in general, be denied the same access. However if the speech is barely disguised hate speech, cast- ing insult and disparagement upon whole groups of people, I find it unacceptable and intolerable. We, the citizens of the Uni- versity community, have a re- sponsibility to do as I have done, and will continue to do. Chal- lenge Stamm's prejudice, bigotry and hatred wherever you see it. I am not anti-Christian, and do not wish to challenge Chris- tianity. However I am vehemently opposed to those who attempt to HOW TO CONTACT THEM Gov. John Engler P.O. Rox 30013