0 Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 23, 1990 EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 C -s.9 NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor 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. Students' rights Organize against the move for deputized police Lif' R~dC 00 LP SWC 3 L? ' SEJzVK.F LP SegVICf- THE UNIVERSITY'S DECISION TO deputize its own police force has left students asking several questions about the process: Why did the regents decide to deputize the security officers this sum- mer, while most students were out of town? Why did they do this without asking for University student, faculty or staff input? Why did they ignore the 70 per- cent of the students who voted against the implementation deputization with- out student input? Why are they using the task force on safety and security's findings as justification for deputization when this is the only one of 12 suggestions made that is being pursued? Why do they now refuse to hold any forums for discussion of these is- sues? According to the regents, deputiza- tion is going to cost $1.5 million this year. Local law enforcement officials say this is an underestimate: within five years, the cost will reach between three and four million dollars per year. Currently the regents pay $500,000 per year to the Ann Arbor police department which provides a special campus police force. How will this affect students' lives besides a rise in tuition? Concerns such as these are the focus of Students' Rights Week. The events this week provide an opportunity for students to inform themselves about how tuition and campus life will be drastically affected by deputization. As deputization becomes more and more of a reality it is important that students join together and speak out against this regental move: Students' Rights Week is providing the arena in which this can occur. L2P SEROCE ~N4 Recycling may preserve more than the environment By Michael Hains depletable resource, but I conserved enerev rv, a r i ..nt.. ~ Students' Rights Week Sponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly NO GUNS! NO COPS! NO CODE. . Tuesday: Graduate Student Organizing: Past and Present 7:30 PM-Rackham E. Conference Room Wednesday: Howard Zinn-Student Activism: Challenging the Knowledge Factory. 6:00 PM-Rackham Lecture Hall Thursday: Student Power in the Nineties 7:30 PM-Rackham E. Conference Room Friday: Rally for Students' Rights 1:00 PM-On the Diag Party for Students' Rights Featuring the music of Rythm McFeud. 8:00 PM-E. Quad Half Way Inn In the loop Recycling people are very happy peo- ple, while "un-recyclers" are not. Unfortu- nately, one of many side effects to not re- cycling is manic depression, and in more extreme cases - schizophrenia. Holistic healers, psychologists, and many scien- tists have just recently begun to notice this phenomena. It is difficult to observe, because it's difficult to test with laboratory animals whose lifestyles don't require a wise use of resources. However, to the careful ob- server, (trained or untrained) the effects can be seen on a daily basis. For example: After my good friend Bob Smith fin- ished his Prego pasta sauce one day, he rinsed out the jar and placed it carefully (so it didn't shatter) into the recycling bin. Thereupon, Bob said to himself, "I feel good!! Not only did I save a portion of a Haines is a third-year student in the School of Natural Resources and lives at Luther Cooperative. in the process. Plus, now I don't feel like some slothful ignoramous who draws no connection between my lifestyle and the environment. Sometimes life is really giat'" Unfortunately, one of many side effects to not recycling is manic depression, and in more extreme cases - schizophrenia. Holistic healers, psychologists, and many scientists have just recently begun to notice this phenomena. ,aysl ater, ucy LUegan to ieei nau- seous over the guilt of her action. And af- ter weeks passed, her depressed behavior deepened until eventually Lucy plummeted into an abyssal state of psychological de- spair. Schizophrenic behavior resulted. On the opposite and pathetic end of the speturum is my cousin Lucy Jones. Ex- actly two years ago today, Lucy ate a can of tuna and said to herself, "I don't really care to crush the can and put it into the bin. For one thing, it would intrude on this fantasy world that I live in and be- sides, I'm much to lame to do something so cool." Currently, by day Lucy frantically runs from passerby to passerby ranting about how she founded Greenpeace and Earth First!, and by night Lucy hides out at a# local club thrashing her brains out to "speed metal" tunes. (Fortunately non-re- cyclling doesn't run in the family, huh). Anyway, please, don't be a "Lucy Jones" - recycle. If nothing else, it will keep you sane! University needs to deliver more than lip-service By Jennifer Austin I am an RA in West Quad. As a person and as part of my job, I am dedicated to the education of people, students in partic- ular. I am very excited this week because I have seen people who had no idea about what "gay" or this PAC week meant learn something, and I had something to do with it. I didn't set out to impose my views on them, but for the last six weeks I have been creating opportunities for them to learn about something new, or ask ques- tions about something they are not com- fortable about. was asked to be open-minded, investigate and be honest and fair in her reporting. She learned a lot doing this story, and though she still is not completely com- fortable with the issues, she recognizes the right of people to be heard and respected and to not be oppressed. I am very impressed with this woman. Society has been telling her all her life that homosexuality is wrong and immoral, but now she is questioning that. I am very disappointed, however that I can't say the same for everyone at the University. Although the regents are elected by res- idents of the state, I feel it is absolutely Bush's Presidency may AS THE BUSH PRESIDENCY AP- proaches its first midterm, it appears bereft of what the President himself once referred to as "the vision thing." Bush's record number of flip-flops over the past two weeks on budget matters such as taxes and emergency spending bills coincide with Americans' increasing sense that nobody in Washington has any sense of how to tame the budget monster. But what is truly enraging Ameri- cans is not so much his confusion over how to get what he wants, but what he actually does want. Bush's proposed budget, continuing in the Reaganomic tradition, soaks the poor to aid the rich. The proposal places no surtax on millionaires, but drastically cuts medi- care funding. Defense spending would not be cut, but large increases in taxes for the poor, the middle class and the elderly would occur. And, most fla- grantly, the budget entails a 100 per- cent increase in the gasoline tax accom- panied by $3.5 billion in tax breaks to the oil companies for "exploration." Bush's refusal to make significant concessions on these points, along with his determination to hold the gov- ernment, the budget, and this nation's precarious economy hostage in order to get his way rightly galls a nation facing rising unemployment, declining stan- dards of living, and the prospect of stagflation. One of the reasons for that potential stagflation is the U.S. intervention in K the Gulf, which now has a price tag of $1 billion per month, and which grows opndi1~tiy mrp ynniv b he dip v lead the nation to crisis way of life"; that explanation was too vague and contradictory. Next Bush tried to tell us that we were in the Gulf to protect "our" re- sources, until his pundits made it clear that few Americans relished dying in the Saudi sands for Exxon, let alone for the Europeans and Japanese, who depend on Middle Eastern oil much more than the United States does. Both Europe and Japan obtain over half their oil from the Middle East; for Washing- ton, the comparable figure is 11 per- cent. Even more alarming than Bush's in- ability to justify U.S. intervention are his litany of missed opportunities to solve the brewing Iraq-Kuwait crisis before it exploded. As early as Feb. 24, Saddam Hussein gave a speech in Amman laying out quite clearly what was to come. More significant is the now infa- mous meeting between Hussein and the U.S. Ambassador April Glaspie one week before the invasion and one day after Iraqi tanks began to mass at the Kuwaiti border. The ambassador made it clear that were Hussein to invade, her country would view the matter as an "internal dispute" to be solved by the Arab world. In Washington that same day, Bush's Undersecretary of State for the Middle East John Kelly staved off Congress' call for sanctions against Iraq by pointing to Hussein's "improvement." A week later, Iraq's tanks rolled into Kuwait City. Missing or ignoring these signals will cost the United States billions of Althought the regents are elected by residents of the state, I feel it is absolutely ridiculous that they are allowed to make such incredibly homophobic statements. If they had said something racist or sexist, would that have been allowed, too? other student, the regents want the power to expel them. Why is our administration, which creates these rules and policies, ex- empt? Another question I have is for the mak- ers of such anti-discrimination policies, including Housing and Affirmative Action administrative staffs. Why can't they put into action all of the words that they gen- erate on paper? Why don't they attend these rallies, marches, workshops, pro-* grams, and demonstrations? How are we supposed to believe all this rhetoric that we are handed if there is no support with actions? How am I sup- posed to speak for this University and for the Housing Division on issues related to harassment and discrimination if they don't back up what I say? It's time for the leaders of this Univer- sity to make a stand and not beat around* the political bush. I don't want diplomatic answers, I want action. Real action. Until this happens, members of frater- nities will continue to run through the halls harassing women, people will con- tinue to beat people up outside bars, peo- ple will be continually denied (good) ser- vice at restaurants, people will continue to be made to feel like outsiders and inferiors in their classes and have to live with it so they can get a good grade, we will con-* tinue to have unrepresentative enrollment and employment statistics. I have been open to their questions about my sexuality, explained to them the goals of PAC week, the need for gay rights to be recognized (both here and na- tionally), and many other things. One of my residents did a story for WCBN radio about National Coming Out Day, which was something she knew nothing about. But as part of her job, she. Austin is an LSA Senior and is a Resident Advisor in West Quad. ridiculous that they are allowed to make such incredibly homophobic statements. If they had said something racist or sexist, would that have been allowed too? How far will Regent Deane Baker be allowed to push his racist, sexist, and anti-gay feel- ings? As a student and employee of the Uni- versity, and a resident of Michigan, I do not want his views to come alive in more oppressive rules, by-laws, or neglect. When students discriminate or harass an- ..MCanadaconttiuesit's jil'trosst-Ao~tof wAnuc -o L 10 Oagn't you LA i., tir /Now'/ {.H~OSE jVA'%-AnS, We 4.AVI .~it~ RESERVATION An tr ek endr au flV I_