w ' wV " SAP :w STORY' Continued from Page 11 Fleming makes clear in his memo to the regents of July 12 that the intent of deputization is to "vastly improve our capability to deal with disruptive acts." The use of deputized security officers to terminate disruptive acts is pre- sented as an alternative to relying on city police forces, which, according to the memo, necessitates "resorting to the civil or criminal law." But in an interview with the Daily on August 31, Sheriff Ronald Schebil said that he knew nothing about these expedient reasons for deputization, nor had he seen this memo to the regents, nor was he aware of Fleming's desire to avoid the use of city police in protest sit- uations. "[Fleming and the regents] have just basically requested that these two individuals be deputized in a limited fashion to exercise po- lice authority." Sheriff Schebil said that he was told - and that he believed - that the request for deputization reflected a genuine need for stepping up "basic police powers" which would serve to protect the safety of stu- dents on campus. "This is not an unusual request... Their primary job is going to be to protect life and property. And that's you. It makes you feel safe. I don't think that the University's doing this to make it tougher for public opinion or public expression." Schebil was also not aware that 25 student groups had formed a campaign in opposition to deputization on the grounds that University employees vested with the powers of arrest threaten rather than protect student rights. "I need to hear one voice from the Univer- sity of Michigan about what the request is. And at this point I have a request for limited deputization of these people." The Ann Arbor City Council, which oversees the Ann Arbor po- lice, has not yet officially discussed the issue of deputization, but two council members, Ann Marie Coleman (D-First Ward) and Jeff Epton (D-Third Ward), have already expressed their disapproval. Neither believes the University ad- ministration has been forthright in its stated reasons for needing depu- tized officers. Referring to Fleming's memo of July 12, Epton said, "This is so dishonest, so disingenuous. It would be appalling if it were not typical. The University is not equipped to protect the rights of free speech. The fact that Fleming says the University can do a better job [than city law enforcement] at protecting the rights of individuals amounts to either stupidity or lies." Citing cases where students have been abused by campus security and the police, Epton claimed that the University is in fact directly and indirectly engaged in acts of hostil- ity against student protesters. "The fact is the University has done nothing to promote political speech and open academic inquiry. But if they have had a change of heart," he continued, "it is a bizarre first step to create a police agency to protect that." Epton said he vehemently dis- agreed with Schebil's contention that deputization is designed to protect students. "The University hasn't stepped up protection of stu- dents. The University has stood by while students have been abused by police and campus security." Like Epton, Ann Coleman sus- pects the official reasons for deputization are not what they seem. As a campus minister and member of Guild House, Coleman has joined the Campaign for a Democratic Campus in their de- mand to rescind deputization. Coleman observed that too many things about it just don't add up. "I'm just not clear what's going on and why this is happening. I'm not convinced that two deputies make that much difference [in protest sit- uations]. Either they will have to deputize more people - which would be terrible - or they will have to call in other forces any- way." Whatever the real or ostensible reasons for its implementation, deputization betrays the mission of the University, according to Cole- man. "The University teaches not only by what it says, but by what it does. Deputization tells people this is a police institution. It's a matter of separation. The Univer- sity is about the business of educa- tion. It seems to me tragic that the University would get into the area of police force." Accountable to Whom? Partisans on both sides of the deputization controversy seem to agree that extending the powers of arrest to University employees irre- vocably changes the issue of ac- countability during a law enforce- ment situation. But there is little consensus as to exactly what these changes will be. The University administration firmly believes deputization en- hances accountability. In the July 12 memo, Fleming emphasized that the central problem with calling in the Ann Arbor police to terminate disruptive student protests is that they are not directly accountable to the University. "Once we ask the police to intervene, we no longer have any direct control over how the situation is handled." But if brutality or excessive force is used against a student protester or some other abuse of rights occurs, to whom are the deputies - who are also employees of the Univer- sity - answerable? The question is not purely academic. In a highly publicized incident last November, University graduate student Harold Marcuse was struck and kicked in the groin by Public Safety officer Robert Patrick at a protest against the CIA. A suit against Patrick is still pending. During that same demonstration, Heatley (now depu- tized) blocked access to a doorway with his body and challenged stu- dent protesters to assault him. Sheriff Schebil gave two re- sponses to the question of ac- countability. First, he said, the let- ter of agreement with the Board of Regents ensures that Washtenaw County is exempt from liability in the event that wrongful acts are committed by any University offi- cers he deputizes. "Basically, it is a reassurance of agreement that the University is going to assume lia- bility and responsibility for the acts of these individuals." Second, Schebil continued, stu- dents should be reassured that it is the statutory right of the sheriff to withdraw the powers of deputization at any time for any reason. "If any abuses by University deputies do occur, you can be sure I will with- draw the powers of deputization immediately." Such promises are little comfort to members of the Campaign fo a Democratic Campus (CDC) and other student activists who wish to avoid becoming the next Weekend cover photo (or worse) even if it would prompt the sheriff to strip the deputies of their powers. CDC points out that accountability is a two-edged sword: a police force which answers only to the Univer- sity administration also allows the administration direct control over all aspects of the arresting officers. A position paper issued recently by CDC on student rights empha- sizes the selectivity of arrest that such accountability affords the University administration: "Depu- tized security can arrest any particular students that the admin- istration wants arrested... This obviously strengthens their coercive potential over protest." City Council members Epton and See COVER STORY, Page 19 death for God, wrought by Scorsese with tragic intensity, emphasizes the individual choice that makes personal belief meaningful and strong enough to sustain exposure to conflicting opinions. Since Christ must overcome temptation in order to attain divinity, every act becomes a triumphant struggle, an example to man. Grace must be struggled for as well; a prize of faith cannot be inher- ited and protected by ignorance - it must be won through difficult contemplation. But the protests of the already con- verted may have unwittingly furthered their own cause of enlisting new converts to spirituality, for the controversy will attract the people "who don't have a formal religious affiliation, or who have turned away from the Church" - in Martin Scorsese's own words, those for whom this film was truly made. "Most of us don't even understand calculus," says the director. "How can we say there is no God? How can we be so sure of anything?" Indeed, the blasphemous metaphor of The Last Temptation of Christ may the medium to inspire the cynical minds of our day to take on such questions. But really, the question of whether any of this actually happened is not su the issue. At its most powerful, cin- stc ema - like faith - can create a new, Jes illuminating image of life that mi becomes reality because people be- lieve it to be so. Existing or not, lea once it becomes truth in the mind it *f generates the power to make dreams m real. "I created the truth out of what to] people believed, what they needed," ap explains Paul (Harry Dean Stanton), PO cornerstone of the new Church, upon thi meeting the aged, dream-sequence Je- wi I I I I at the Heidelberg Reservations 995-8888 I Comedy Improvisatic - - - - >- - .: Willem Dafoe as Jesus. CHRIST Continued from Page 5 the theological blasphemy - at its most intense in the crucifixion scene's notorious dream sequence from which the film and book take their name. It is this part - where Christ, near death on the cross, is tempted by a vision of mortal life without painful sacrifice - that has inevitably drawn so much fire from those who believe in the literal interpretation of the Bible as true history and not metaphor, although the film states its fictional intention in a clear dis- claimer. But it is the message of this very sequence itself, at the crux of the film's theology, that illustrates why this one religious film should be seen and considered by all. Jesus' tortuous choice to accept For Exam Preparation Choose to EXCEL! " Learn to Anticipate the Exam " Improve Your Test-Taking Skills " Use Your Study Time More Effectively " Achieve Your Maximum Potential Score I OPEN 24HOURS 540 E.Liberty 761.4539 PAG 1 PA'G~~~~~~ W1EEkENi~/ EMEfr l6 '1488- W NDSPEMEi, 98 WEE I bSLr- TiEMBE'1 6 -#988-= w'