Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 12, 1990 (71e I:IridigandalQ EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 ARTS 763 0379 PHOTO 764 0552 NEWS 764 0552 SPORTS 747 3336 OPINION 747 2814 WEEKEND 747 4630 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. C I (4'C wapmm: ;N l f v 11 4 0 A big mess Students, 'U' can't ignore the environment ONE OF THE BENEFITS OF ATTENDING A university as large and as prestigious as the University of Michigan is the presence of a vocal and diverse student body. One of the best ways to express differing mes- sages is through advertising points of view - through posters, chalk on the sidewalks and in classrooms, or a number of other ways. While the messages are important, their means of deliverance causes unnecessary waste on campus. With the country's reawakening of concern for the environment - especially in light of Earth Day - the University community should be more sensitive to our surroundings. The waste caused by posting flyers around campus is tremen- dous; the University spends $400,000 a year to clean up posters. The volume of paper accumulated on the bulletin boards in the fishbowl alone is unimaginable. The bulletin board is cleaned weekly, but the refuse is thrown away, not recycled. Include all the other boards around campus, including all the bathroom stalls, all the classrooms, all the kiosks, and all the other places people post, and the result is a disgusting amount of garbage that is not being recycled. If a group is sponsoring an event it finds particularly important, it will post on the sidewalks. No one cleans these fly- ers up. They are kicked up or washed away and further harm the environment. This is not to say that student groups should stop advertising their events; pro- moting and encouraging the exchange of ideas is the most important mission of any university. But people who publicize events should clean up their own posters responsibly. Ripping down posters takes less time than taping them up, and a group could make a sweep of the campus immediately following their event to make sure their posters are taken down, recycled, and not left to be thrown away. Additionally, the University should be- gin recycling its refuse. In addition to the posters it removes, the University pro- duces unnecessary waste in dorms, cafete- rias, classrooms - essentially all areas of the institution. As landfill space becomes more scarce and the University continues to produce unbelievable amounts of garbage, the situation will only continue to get more dire. Though recycling efforts have begun, the University needs to make waste reduction a priority. The environment is something which the world has been abusing for thousands of years. Just in the past few years, people have begun to realize that we cannot take our surroundings for granted if we are to have a healthy planet in the years to come. The campus is a perfect place for students to begin to take action to reverse the trends of a deteriorating environment. There is no reason why students shouldn't take an interest. It's very nice to claim to be an environmentalist, but unless actions are put behind the words, the words mean very little. a1 v4}( YDU1~TAlT VANTS 7 g5 1 *-OVE CAP1riS FWM YNWlERSWTY roa. ROTC restrictions are necessary and legal Campus police need autonomy By William J. Gregor Normally, I permit the Daily's editorial remarks about the Army or ROTC to pass without comment. However, I believe it is important that I respond to the Daily's call for our expulsion; not because I believe expulsion is likely, but because, as an academic unit of this university, it is sometimes necessary to school the stu- dents in subjects they scrupulously avoid. The Constitution of the United States grants the Congress the sole power to raise and support armies and to make rules for the government and regulation of the land and naval forces. Although the power to appoint officers of the militia (national guard) was reserved to the states, the mili- tia are governed by the discipline pre- scribed by Congress. Consequently, the recruitment, educa- tion, and training of officers is exclusively a federal matter. This is an important fact to note, because the recruitment policies of the United States vary from time to time according to manpower requirements and national security needs. When manpower needs were high and conscription the means of recruiting, avowing homosexuality did not exempt individuals from induction - see the movie Biloxi Blues. This was true for a number of reasons, not the least of which is claiming homosexual tendencies would be too convenient a dodge from military service. In those circumstances a patter of homosexual sexual conduct had to be shown for a recruit to escape induction. Many of the recent court cases dealing with homosexuals in the military have in- volved servicemembers who first enlisted under a similar rule. However, as man- power requirements and defense budgets shrink, the Army and the armed forces in general become more selective, routinely restricting enlistments. The ancient term for this is delectus, from the Latin deligo, to choose, select. The policy concerning Gregor is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army, and chair of the University's Army Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program. the eligibility of homosexuals is just one manifestation of this principle. Modern armies succeed in generating combat power through a combination of specialized training and discipline. Individ- ual genius is superfluous to overall per- formance. That is why a liberal society, which focuses on the individual, finds mil- itary organizations so hostile. In evaluat- ing recruits, the Army is not simply con- cerned with physical and mental skills and fitness, but also, suitability, a disposition to the discipline. Under this rubric fall all those disorders and neglects prejudicial to good order. In an organization which holds a monopoly on violence, care must be taken to ensure proper restraint. Offenses involving sexual conduct are of particular concerns. Military commanders are frequently called upon to deal with matters arising from sexual conduct. In ages when reli- gious precepts and public values shaped behavior, the commander could rely on a considerable amount of self-discipline to Though individual homosexuals may be amenable to military discipline and able to live discreetly in military units, there is no compelling reason to invite disorder. are going to be involuntarily separated from active duty, there is little need to tap this very limited pool of manpower. The policy is expedient. In a similar vein, the policy of recruit- ing officers from public and private uni- versities is expedient. The Congress and the states find it important to ensure offi- cers have an undergraduate college educa- tion and that they bring with them what- ever particular qualities are gained by train- ing on those campuses. Whether this pol- icy is prudent or not is a matter of specu- lation, but in terms of raising an army it is clearly not essential. For example, most of the officers who fought in World War II were raised from the ranks and received their commissions from officer candidate school. Nevertheless, the cadets and mid- shipmen at the University of Michigan are proud, competent, patriotic, disciplined in- dividuals not to be confused with the low- income, mercenary wimps described in a Daily editorial. From the preceding discussion it The MSU Department of Safety needs a certain amount of autonomy to operate effectively. If a bill before the Michigan House of Representatives passes, they will soon get their wish. Passage of the bill would allow Michi- gan public university trustees to empower campus police with the same powers as other police agencies... Opponents of the bill say it will cause a reduction in student rights because trustees would have too much authority. Some say it will only be inviting a situation similar to the 1970 Kent State protest killings. This argument is ridiculous. Four Kent State students were killed when outside forces such as the Ohio national Guard were called in to contain the protests. The bill does not give campus officers free reign to crush student rallies or break into a student's, room without probable cause. DPS will not become Hitler's SS. What the bill will do is allow those who know the campus best to handle the situation. - The State News Michigan State University March 30 prevent disorder. However, Americans are increasingly less discreet in their sexual behavior and flaunt what heretofore was private. Consequently, commanders have had to rely on military law rather than moral restraint to maintain order. In this context, it is fortunate that so- ciety still permits a reasonable amount of formal separation between the sexes. Commands maintain detailed policies on fraternization to prevent both the abuse of office and incidents of sexual harassment. Despite command scrutiny, however, inci- dents occur which have a corrosive effect on units and occupy command attention. Homosexual offenses have a similar ef- fect, but no such formal separation is pos- sible. Though individual homosexuals may be amenable to military discipline and able to live discreetly in military units, there is no compelling reason to in- vite disorder. At a time when over 20,000 qualified soldiers and hundreds of officers should be clear that the real issue is not military discrimination against homosexu- als. Homophobia does not animate recruit- ing criteria. The real issue is political. Campus activists have couched the argu- ment in "moral" terms to mask their hos- tility toward military institutions and their autonomy in setting entrance standards. No one can seriously support the induc- tion of homosexuals out of a general con- cern that by excluding homosexuals the armed forces lacks sufficient combat power 9 to perform its national security missions. Military policy, especially in a repub- lic, is almost always driven by expedience. It is also clear from recent court decisions that the policy barring homosexuals from the military is both lawful and constitu- tional. The question for the student body, therefore, is not whether ROTC goes or stays. It is broader. If a university unit can be expelled because its policies are lawful and constitutional, is any unit or anyone protected? Student Bill of Rights protects all students To the Daily, Since I am the author of the recently- approved Student Group Bill of Rights, I thought I would take some time to clear up some misconceptions about it. The Bill of Rights was written in re- sponse to MSA's derecognition of Tagar and the Cornerstone Christian Fellowship. It was put on the MSA ballot by campus petition with over 1,100 people signing. In essence, the Bill of Rights defines for groups what rights they have under MSA's constitution. This is necessary be- cause currently, student groups have no rights under MSA, and MSA is free to de- cide for itself what rights individual groups should have. In the past, MSA has abused this right by derecognizing those groups it deems "politically unacceptable." MSA derec- ognized Tagar because of their Zionist be- liefs, and MSA derecognized CCF because of their Christian beliefs. trines, resolve their own disputes, and de-. termine their own institution." This pas- sage was taken directly from U.S. Supreme Court decisions. Many have mistakenly called this "abusive rights... giving groups the right to discriminate." Had they read closer, they would realize that it does not give student groups the right to discriminate, but in- stead eliminates MSA's right to discrimi- nate against those organizations it does not like. It prevents MSA from becoming the Orwellian "big brother" by telling groups what they should believe, and it guaran- tees to all student groups equal rights in accordance with those given to us by the U.S. Constitution and Supreme Court. Bryan Mistele Engineering Senior Drug legalization is not the right answer To the Dai. Radio should educate To the Daily: It brings me untold pleasure to share with you my vast appreciation for Dr. Arwulf's illuminating programs on propa- gandistic music (WCBN-FM), particularly the one on Nazi propaganda material from the World War II period. Considering the pernicious element of racism that lingers even now in the hearts and minds of so many people on campus and in the Ann Arbor community, we are indeed fortunate to have this kind of educational program- ming available on the air. What better way to instruct ourselves on the problem of racial and ethnic intol- erance than by publicly examining some of the most repugnant examples of intol- erance, made all the more insidious by the veil of "art" under which its terrible cre- ators attempted to pass it off? Keep it up Arwulf, and Radio Free Ann Arbor! Along the same lines, the station . ...