Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 29, 1990 Mil tIdi i-guu Bailt EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Viewpoint rAND I LRThDj( fG5P'1T WS INCMcNT V.-L (AtNfl/1YTC IH DONE,- tZK. (F , LWE& xAVMINcHIS REiCoz 1,V&_ W~l HO N HuiL. D~iZP i--IE 1fAUPCNS AM)J -PLAY 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. From the Daily Safety concerns? 'U' actions go beyond task force's suggestions THE UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION justifies creating its own police force 'by pointing to the recommendations put forth by its own task force on campus safety. Although deputization was only one of 12 tentative suggestions the task force made, within days plans for a 24- person force were drawn up. The other 11 suggestions were conveniently passed over - until recent student pressure forced the administration to promise to fund these projects. But even the task force itself never advocated the immediate introduction of a full University policeforce. Prof. Harris McClamroch, a member of the task force, recently expressed concern that the administration was going be- hind the backs of staff, faculty and stu- dents. He also said the immediate intro- duction of a full security force was not part of the recommendations; he envi- sioned officers being armed incremen- tally, one or two at a time, with their performance continually being as- sessed. But caution and thoughtfulness concerning such a vital issue are not on the administration's agenda. Ironically, the University doesn't need to deputize more security in order to determine their effect. Two officers have been deputized at the University since 1988, and there is no evidence safety has improved at all. The whole issue of police harassment, in which both deputized University security offi- cers were complicit, was ignored. For a report that was meant to consider all aspects of student safety on campus, this was a glaring, irresponsible omis- sion. That the administration is blatantly ignoring the task force's recommenda- tions in order to railroad through the implementation of its own police force highlights its total lack of concern for real student safety. There is a clear need for more dis- cussion and debate, but this is exactly what the administration wishes to avoid. Walter Harrison, executive di- rector of University Relations, has suggested that any public forums would "generate more heat." He is right; they would force mem- bers of the administration to admit that their actions over the last five months have little to do with increasing student safety, and everything to do with regu- lating students' lives. But if students want real safety on campus, "generating more heat" against the ad- ministration's intransigence is probably their only hope. The Earle is insensitive to gay men and lesbiang By Tracy Ore and Barbara Vicory "Come enjoy a glass of wine or quiet dinner in the intimate surroundings of The Earle." This statement of purpose found in The Earle's advertisements was not adhered to on the night of Oct. 13. While my partner and I were enjoying a quiet dinner on that Michigan vs. Michigan State home game night at this restaurant, a group of at least six drunken men and women entered The Earle, yelling over the crowd "Go State! State won! Lighten Up!" Although I, myself, was not affected by the outcome of the game, I asked them to quiet down and preserve the atmosphere. When the ruckus continued, and no man- agerial staff appeared, I approached the crowd, reminding them that this is a quiet restaurant, saying that we were trying to enjoy our dinner and asked if they could keep their celebration to themselves, con- spicuously avoiding the use of profanity. The most boisterous of the crowd, a man, stood up. He spit in my face. He said, "Screw you bitch!" Then he turned to the crowd and said "Did you hear that? She said fuck to me." A woman at the table said to me, "Calm down sweetie." My partner overheard, "She was wrong" and "That stuff belongs in gay bars" from a nearby table. This was di- rected toward our lesbian sexual orienta- tion, as we had briefly held hands during dinner. The manager approached their table and I left. My partner told a member of the wait staff that they should remove the group and explained the situation. The wait staff member ran to the manager. Al- though the manager/owner, Dennis Wil- son, approached their table immediately, the group did not leave for some time. When they eventually exited, yelling over- the crowd at us, no attempt was made to silence them. After speaking to many of the wait staff, we were made aware of the fact that this is not an isolated incident but rather a pattern exhibited by Wilson. We are left to feel that this restaurant's management and ownership is not committed to making a pleasant atmosphere for lesbians, gay men, and women. Since many of The Earle's patronage is comprised of membe of the above communities, this incide and indicator of mismanagement must not go unnoticed. We, therefore, expect the following: We are left to feel that this restaurant's management and ownership is not committed to making a pleasant atmosphere for lesbians, gay men, and women. Wilson did not approach our table until I flagged him twice. This incident was handled horren- dously. Although we appreciate the staff's quick and sensitive response to us, Wilson did not voluntarily or immediately visit our table or offer an apology. He was more concerned with the return patronage of this boisterous table than that of two lesbian women who are regular customers. After our dinner, we confronted Wil- son. As he had not offered an apology or any means of compensation, had not im- mediately telephoned the police, or in any way tried to validate our position to both this group and his other patrons, we threatened not to return. In an attempt to silence us, Wilson offered an insincere apology and our next dinner on the house. Written apologies, including a state- ment whereby The Earle declares its com- rmitmen.t to providing a safe and pleasant atmosphere for lesbians, gay men, and women. The owners, management, and staff must attend workshops, arranged through the Sexual Assault Prevention and Aware- ness Center and the Lesbian and Gay Male Programs Office. These workshops wi include education on harassment and rap- language. We, lesbians, gay men, and women, are tired of being treated as "second-class citizens" in establishments. If the above expectations are not met, The Earle can expect social actions from these communi- ties. The writers are Rackham graduo dents. Ore is president of Rackha dent Government. ate stu- am Stu- Letters tU 3, Daily alumni react to Board dispute University police at South Dakota State University handcuff a partygoer last weekend. Can similar police treatment be expected from University of Michigan cops? Domestic violence Attend a vigil to help halt the battering of women To the Daily: I am a 1977 graduate of the University and a former editor of the Daily. I am dis- turbed to hear that the Board for Student Publications, through its secretary, has usurped the role and authorities in both business and editorial matters that histori- cally and rightfully belong to the students. For me and hundreds of others, the Daily was a real world experience, more valuable than the theories and book work of the classroom. It was at the Daily where the experiences and lessons of real life were discovered and learned. At the Daily we were free to make mis- takes. And we made many. But that free- dom to try, fail, and try again allowed me and all those who I worked with to be- come successful in ways that would not have been possible otherwise. The experiences were equally important for the students handling the business op- erations of the Daily. They are now being denied the opportunity to make basic deci- sions. The role of the Board for Student Pub- lications should be one of making sure the Daily lives within its means and that no one is stealing its funds. When it goes be- yond this limited role, the independence and integrity of the Daily, which have made it unique among college newspapers, is in peril. I have discussed this matter with cur- rent Daily editors and with fellow Daily alumni. I am in full support of the de- mands of the student editors. Timothy F. Schick University graduate '77 Administrator, Local 41 Providence Newspaper Guild Board threatens Daily editorial traditions To the Daily: The celebration of the Daily's 100th anniversary has been marred by contro- versy about editorial freedom. When I left Ann Arbor in 1966, I looked forward to celebrating both the paper's 100th an- niversary and 100 Years of Editorial Free- dom on its masthead. Nancy McGlothlin, the general man- ager of the Student Publications Building, apparently has overstepped her authority - both in terms of the Daily's tradition of editorial freedom and in the procedures of professional journalism. In high quality newspapers, the busi- TRADITIONALLY THE HOME HAS been exempt from the jurisdiction of the legal system, where marital prob- lems are considered "above the law." Men who abuse their wives have gone unpunished, and thus violence in the home has gone largely unreported. This attitude must change. Violence against women is not going to disappear within a system that condones it. The fact that 50 percent of women in the United States suffer from this violence is tragic. What com- pounds this tragedy is the escalation of this violence into the murder of 2,000 to 4,000 women in the United States revery year. An in-depth study of all one-on-one murder cases from 1980- 1984 found that more than half of all female victims were killed by male partners. Battered women are killed by their the tragedy is usually portrayed as an unintentional "crime of passion" caused by the man's intense love for the woman and his inability to live without her. This is a dangerously false view of a murder that is, in fact, the ultimate expression of the batterer's need to control the woman's behavior. This false view allows men to-es- cape punishment through a system that punishes the innocent and sets the guilty free. Abusive men who kill their female partners serve an average of two to six years in prison - hardlya fitting sentence for murder. On the other hand, men of color and those without money are punished much more severely for this same crime. Within a society that produces men who need to control their partners through violence, the best we can do is to take strength from the memory of the ness side is separate from the editorial side. The business side has considerable influence on the product through the pa- per's budget, the size of the news hole and the production schedule. But a paper's business managers do not control purel editorial decisions such as deadlines lea- ing to the close of an edition or the use of a travel budget once the amount for the fiscal year has been set. Maurice Rinkel, McGlothlin's prede- cessor when I worked at the Daily, did not interfere with editorial matters. His job was to prov:'de financial management skills studenis did not have because of a lack of training and experience. He was part of the business environment in whic: student reporters and editors worked. The Daily always will need a skilled business manager - but not one that in- terferes with editorial matters. I hope the student staff and the Board for Student Publications can work out a job description for the general manager that follows the norms of high quality journalism and the Daily's tradition of edi- torial freedom. Phil SutiP Daily staffer, 1960-64 Board for Student Pubs., 1965-66 be respected and praised, while people's basic human rights are ignored. If the war in Lebanon is going to end - though I do not see it ending - by having 40,000 Syrian troops on Lebanese land (more than the Lebanese Army itself), by having pro-Syrian puppets as president, prime minister, government members, Syria threatens peace To the Daily: The day after General Michel Aoun announced that he would fight until the last breath in defense of Lebanese Independence, he surrendered and took refuge at the French Embassy. Like may other Lebanese politicians and Syrian-installed puppets, brought to his area of East Beirut hundreds of- pro-Syrian militiamen to steal, harass, frighten and arrest civilians, regardless of their political affiliation. Another good step toward peace and independence! Today, the Syrians control over 70 percent of Lebanon and face no organized opposition besides some PLO supporters in Sidon and the Israelis in some parts of the south. Perfect