I 4 OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 20, 1987 The Michigan Daily Sanhe e tchigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan LETTERS:-t Meese egg-throwing controversy rages Editor's note: Vol. XCVII, No. 101 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 I Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. A w ce e g t WelCOm--e resignation T HE RESIGNATION OF Pat Buchanan as White House Communications Director comes as a welcome relief to those who feel that messages emanating from the executive branch under his stewardship have served neither the country nor the president very ,well. It is no secret that Buchanan's personal political views are far to the right of the majority of his own party and that of the U.S. mainstream. In his eagerness to color White House commun- ications with his own opinions, Buchanan has been a source of divisiveness within the govern- ment. The biggest problem with Buchanan has been his repeated attempts to portray events of national concern as mere partisan bickering or communist duplicity. In early January, Buchanan led a pro-Reagan rally in Washington at which he defended Reagan's Iran- contra initiatives. Stating that the president wanted to get to the bottom of the scandal and get the answers out to the American public, he then went on to lash out at the legislators involved in the investigative process, labeling them "that liberal claque on the. hill" whose sole interest was in bringing down the Reagan presidency rather than ascertaining the cause and perpetrators of this foreign policy debacle. Realizing that among the harshest critics of Reagan's "iniative" have been such Republican legislators as Rep. William Broomfield (R-Mich) and Sen. David Durenburger (R-Min.), it seems that Buchanan is to the political right of the Republican platform. During last years Congressional debate on aid to the contras, Buchanan wrote a column carried by several major newspapers in which he berated those opposed to aiding the CIA-backed guerillas as being far more than "soft on communism." According to Buchanan, those who differed with the hardline stance were actually "co-guarantors of the Brezhnev Doctrine," insinuating that a large proportion of America's elected representatives were active communist sympathizers. "Whose side are you on?" he railed. To him it was simple, either one stands with "Ronald Reagan and the resistance, or with Daniel Ortega and the communists." Such demagoguery stunned even Republican legislators, who angrily denounced Buchanan's red-baiting as pure McCarthyism. In a free country, everyone is entitled to hold and freely espouse their own beliefs, even beliefs as extreme as Pat Buchanan's. But in a democracy, it is dangerous to allow a person of such extreme and marginal opinions to occupy a position of high prominence and influence when that person insists on coloring important national debates or concerns with their own peculiar bias. Hence the resignation of Pat Buchanan warrants commendation. It has been long overdue. The anonymous letters in the Daily ("Egg-throwers: It worked! 2/13/87) were by authors who originally requested anonymity. The editor on duty insisted on actual names for the letters and the two authors complied and left. Subsequently, the editor read the letters and decided to honor the authors' original request for anonymity. It is therefore the editor's responsibility that the two letters appeared without names. The Daily accepts anonymous letters in exceptional circum - stances in which publication of a letter would bring substantial harm to the author. Free speech for a To the Daily: I am responding to the letters printed in the Daily on February 13 concerning the Meese rally and the throwing of eggs by anti-Meese demonstrators. Marcus Eli Kalderon calls the organizers of the silent vigil which protested Attorney General Edwin Meese hypocrites. It is Marcus Kalderon who is the true hypocrite! He justifiably feels that Mr. Meese's ideas are misguided and do not uphold the constitution of the United States. To get his views heard Kalderon feels that he must trample upon the First Amendment rights of Edwin Meese and Gerald Ford to walk along a public sidewalk at a public university. Even though Mr. Ford is not a member of the present administration and has nothing to do with Meese's ides, he is still subject to a verbal assault and' a bombardment of snowballs. These protesters that you defend Mr. Kalderon will not even let a private citizen enjoy a night at his alma mater. They demand that everyone's civil rights must be upheld, but they refuse to allow Meese and Ford to exercise their civil rights. Is this fair? Is this the justice that you want, or is this the hypocrisy that you really believe in? Mr. Kalderon needs to remember that our country is based upon the ideals of liberty and equality. Among those ideals are freedom of speech and freedom of assembly. We have a Bill of Rights to the Constitution upholding these and other free - doms. As a citizen of this country Mr. Kalderon agrees to abide by this constitution and the laws that it provides. He should not think that he and the groups which he agrees with have the right to deny others which he agrees with have the right to deny others their basic civil rights. Let Mr. Meese say whatever he wants and let him assemble wherever he wants. Go ahead and protest his visit. Go ahead and march and chant, but don't take away the rights he is entitled to as a citizen of the United States. If you try to take away his rights then you are no better than he is! In response to "it's justified" written by Anonymous, I simply have to say that he needs to quicky find a better way to express his views before he severely injures someone at one of his rallies and ends up in jail. Maybe ending up in jail is Anonymous's goal. Maybe he thinks that his jailing will help advance "the cause" which he speaks so irascibly about. It is highly doubtful that Anonymous will be able to make good on his (or quite possibly her) threat of stealing others why should anyone or any government respect your opinion? Anonymous sounds very bitter about the present situation in the he world. I am sorry he feels that way, but he has to realize that violently expressing his ideas will not work. Remember Martin Luther King said "hate the ideas,'love the person."Do not be bitter but be thankful that you live in a country where your right to protest exits. Be thankful you live in a country where protesters, no matter how abhorrent their views, are not systematically shot. If this was the policy in our country Anonymous would have long since been murdered for the views that he so fashionably holds. Think of how many other countries would have thrown you in a dark, dank prison wants to change things in this country I feel he should channel his violent anger into a more peaceful and productive form of protest. --James Perry February 13 Eggers: get a job To the Daily: I read your letters defending the heroic (though why anonymous?) egg-throwers with great amusement. I was unaware of how humorous the defense of McCarthyite actions could be. "I-threw snow." If that bold a proclamation doesn't inspire hero worship then the concept has no meaning. I also greatly enjoyed the Ramboesque boast "I personally have thrown away thousands of Michigan Reviews." I stand in utter awe of you. Your mommy must be very proud. How many do you have to throwaay to become an "ace"? I am sorry that you "detest beingcalled a leftist," if it is any solace to you Howard Cosell probably detests being called "loudmouth". I was also distraught torlearn that you "cannot afford to compete in this 'open' free information society." Maybe you should petition for a negative checkoff on next year's SVF. By the way, this is not "the nineties." It can't have taken you that long to write your letter, after all you "excel academically." Even if you do "excel academically," I doubt that you will "take" my job someday, since it is improbable that McDonnell Douglas Corp. would hire you. . If the only difference that Anonymous February 12 can think, of between his/her "institution" and that of the Nazis in Germany is their relative influence, then he/she had better attempt to rethink his/ her political views. You can do better than that, I know you can. -Bernard Anthony Mann February 14 Self-breeding' violence To the Daily: For the second time in less than two weeks we are appalled at the behavior of our fellow students. Regarding the anonymous letter of Feb. 13 entitled "It's justified," we are shocked and offended to read the hypocrisy of this faceless member of our community. Perhaps the most revolting fact about this letter is the association of Martin Luther King with this group of egg throwers who believe that changecan only occur through violence. The thought of violence as a means of initiating change destroys any possibility of a bright future. violent attitude, the author virtually becomes a part of the hate and violence that per - sonifies the KKK. This barbaric attitude cannot and must not be tolerated. In the future, the Daily should more closely consider the publishing of anonymous and inflammatory material. This undermines the newspaper's credibility. -Janna M. Boiten Robert Choi Cathleen A. Cunningham Michael Foster Daniel J. Herr Michelle Hertzberg Richard S. Hull James A. Ottevaere II Vineet Sahgal Nicholas P. Scavone Jr. Frank Serrapere Stacy E. Singer Jason H. Winocour Susan Zweig February 16 Silence doesn' t work To the Daily: I don't usually write letters, but your February 9 editorial, "Don't Egg Him On," was so phenomenally stupid that I must react. You claim "The actions of a few people who threw eggs and snowballs prevented the students of the University from adequately conveying their message to the nation." What kind of backwards logic are you using? Ford and Meese getting pelted made CNN national news. Without valid active protest there wouldn't even have been a paragraph in the Free Press, let alone national coverage. Riots get the coverage and force the changes. Ed Meese and his cronies want to extinguish free speech (among other things) through prohibitions and pornography and unrestrained police surveillance. How ironic that Steve Korliss tried to take over the protest and silence its members. "In any crowd of 400 people, you can't control every - body," Steve lamented. _I protested Meese for my own reasons and resent this clown's efforts to control and channel my anger. Steve had the protesters march ineffectually around the block while the enemies snuck in through the back; he detained hundreds in the Law Quad while Ed and Jerry brazenly smiled and sauntered into the Museum of Art. What the students need to get their point across is more confrontation and fewer self-righteous self-appointed spokesmen and cowards who protest to make themselves feel good and advance their political careers. While Korliss and him impotent horde celebrated powerlessness in their educational forum, another group of protesters received a truly valuable education. They learned that a crowd of students has power. They can strike fear into the hearts of federal agents. They can rescue a captured fellow demonstrator unjustifiably detained by Meese's thugs. They can bean an ex-presidentt (It seems they actually did not hit Ford, see "Scrambled Stories," Daily, 11 February - ed.), who once was one of the most powerful men in the world (and gets a pretty good pension) with garbage, making him scurry like a shit-encrustedd rat to safety and dinner. And for all this we get on TV. What did Korliss's friends learn that they didn't already know? Nothing. Except that they are not as universally adored and respected policies, fight them. Or fuck off. Letters published on February 11 called us juvenile etc. C'mon -sticks and stone can break my bones, and eggs can ruin Ford's suit, but your words just make us laugh, the same way silent protests amuse cynical professional politicians. Nanny Nanny. -Benjamin Sowers February 11 Expel egg-throwers 4 Ailing school system To the Daily- I was appalled, but particularly surprised, by the letters in the Daily of February 13 attempting to justify the attacks on President Ford and Edwin Meese. I was equally appalled by the attitude of ishe campus security official who during the incident, sought only to protect the dignitaries, giving no consideration ,to trying to arrest the perpetrators. The thugs who hurled eggs and snowballs at Ford and Meese have no place in the University community. Indeed, any student, or faculty or staff member, who initiates violence (to be distinguished frn4 self-defense) for any reason, personal or political, should be promptly expelled or fired. Violence is deplorable in any social milieu, but it is com - pletely intolerable at an institution' dedicated tp intellectual activity. How can scholars and students lie expected to formulate and evaluate ideas, knowing tht self-appointed censors ae waiting to physically attack anyone who reaches t'e "wrong" conclusions? If the University Administration intends tb tolerate ideologically motivated violence, it may as well e fully consistent. Why not urgp Ulrich's and Barnes & Noble p take all the books, computr disks, etc. off the shelves ankl replace them with weapons anji ammunition? In the course qf an afternoon, academic debates that have raged for years coulI be "settled," once and for all. ih the Psychology Department, for example, the Behaviorists and the Freudians could shodt it out, while over in thu Evolutionary Biology, thp Gradualists could square offi against the Punctuated Equilibrium advocates. Many students and faculty would1 undoubtedly prefer this to the tedious process of writing and grading exams and term papers. After all, why struggle to develop a quick mind, when a quick trigger finger could do just as well? -Joseph H. Manson February 15 Eggers: grow up To the Daily: I just hope all you guys who wrote in about how proud you are that stupid, cowardty crap like egg throwingg took place at a protest at the Law School are happy. Everybody who condones such dis- respectful, immature, any violent actions is no bettr than the men throughout history who assassinated presidents and started wars all in the name of making a state' - ment and voicing ther opinions. It disgusts me tht supposedly intelligent, educated,rprivileged students t a major university who gathered to protest in the name of justice and peace expressed themselves by most oppressive, unjust, violent means. Your hypocrisy is just another example of the isi:- dious aspect of our society. And to you, Mr. Anonymous so nroud of Yourself for hiirline ACCORDING TO THE NEW YORK Times, in a recent study of the fourth-largest public school district in America (Houston, Texas), 25 percent of school dropouts are among the top quarter of their classes in reading and mathematics scores. Something is obviously wrong with the education system. In the United States, not enough emphasis is put on education. Many of these "gifted kids" are dropping out for reasons that can easily be corrected. Maybe the educators should listen to the students. Then, the educators might understand why the students dropout. One obvious problem is that good teachers are a scarce commodity in the public school systems. Due to the low salaries they receive, the best educators (especially in mathematics and science) are taking their skills elsewhere in the business market where there is better pay. The low salaries of teachers are an insult to many of these people who have spent years studying. In addition, teaching is a talent that not everyone has. Being able to communicate with and teach people is not a learned characteristic. The best teachers are those that care about their students and are able to transfer their understanding of a topic to these-students. In addition, the school districts should test the ability of their teachers. Incompetent teachers should not be able to continue boring students to the point that they dropout. Special programs that involve students in areas that interest them or in areas different from those regularly taught to them could help keep their interest in school. These programs should involve students in activities outside class with projects and activities. These special programs need not segregate so-called gifted children from other children to succeed. The new programs need only interest the students. The alienation of youth in the school system has a profound effect on society as a whole because America is wasting it's greatest resource, the brilliant minds of the future. The fact that these children are dropping out because they are bored is absolutely unforgivable. If citizens put a minimal amount of concern into the education of children and finally pay fair wages to the teachers, the education system will finally show some long needed improvement. The Daily welcomes letters from its