I 0 Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 29, 1990 et idigau 1ailQ EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 NOAH FINKEL Editor in Chief DAVID SCHWARTZ Opinion Editor Unsigned editorials represent a mnajority of the Daily' s Editorial Board. A ll other cartoons,j signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. From the Daily Favoring research 'U' must rediscover the benefit of good teaching DREW WESTEN'S INTRODUCTION to Psychology course is well-known, even to Michigan high school students. He is both friendly to students as well as a charismatic lecturer, maintaining students' interest throughout class. But his assaults on Freud may not be heard for much longer. According to widespread rumors circulating through- out the Psychology Department, Wes- ten has not received tenure and will leave the University quite soon, due in large part to pressure from the Univer- sity to more actively pursue research. It is a sad state of affairs when a university turns away professors who are both qualified and interesting. A majority of students who have attended his class have left with nothing but praise for Westen. He makes psychol- ogy interesting, often illustrating theo- ries and concepts in terms of everyday situations. In fact, many of his former students have become psychology ma- jors. The University seems to ignore teaching, and concentrate instead on re- search and reputation. In the adminis- tration's view, professors are supposed to be researchers first and capable lec- turers second. To clearly deliver the major concepts and ideologies of the syllabus to the class is not as important as keeping up on the latest studies and initiating new ways of looking at old research. Therefore, by this theory, it is better to have professors who bore their students into a deep slumber in the classroom than to have able orators who inspire their class to laugh and ask insightful questions. This mentality is absurd. When stu- dents know their professors actually care if they understand the material, they feel more comfortable about ask- ing questions about unclear areas and other issues relevant to the course. In this manner, students better understand the material presented to them. It no longer seems simply a weight on their shoulders, or information to be memo- rized and regurgitated during finals, but interesting concepts that may be applied to life. If professors are to spend the bulk of their time performing research, they will not have sufficient time to plan such things as detailed lecture sched- ules, additional meeting times with teaching assistants, extended office hours during exam times, and so on. If the University is asking its professors to be full-time researchers, they must consequently alienate themselves from the students. This situation, especially in the case of introductory courses, is especially detrimental, since if a student fails to clearly understand key concepts in the introductory class, there will be a definite aversion to taking upper-level courses in that field. In considering research as the pri- mary factor for tenure, another problem is brought to light: who decides what counts as research? Analyzing the mating behavior of blindfolded seagulls may be research to one person but not to another. If the definition of research is left to the University, some adjunct professors run the risk of having their painstaking studies being dismissed as unqualified and their status as "actively researching professors" questioned. Therefore, the University is faced with two extremes. At one side is giv- ing tenure to those professors who are charismatic speakers and explain their material well. However, these profes- sors may not be aware of new devel- opments in their field, thus allowing their material to become dated. On the other side, tenure could be granted to those professors who perform schol- arly research, developing new theories in their respective fields. But these professors may fail to keep the stu- dents' interest and fail to deliver clear concepts to their students. The only viable choice is to weigh these two factors, but begin to give in- creased importance to lecturing ability. The main objective of a university is to give its students a clear understanding of a number of different fields. Research can be conducted at research firms and think-tanks. Besides, it be- comes very hard to perform research that is both enlightening and new in regular intervals. Ideally, the University will attract professors who are successful re- searchers, well-respected in their fields, and popular and interesting lec- turers. But often this is not possible. By making it policy to give prefer- ence to professors capable of lecturing instead of simple scholarly researchers, the University benefits in producing a highly educated student body, and thereby attracting more students to ap- ply. In this manner, professors like Drew Westen would stay to further en- lighten students, instead of being chased off by the whip of research. tC r U " up Viewpoint Y&WFX I4Ep1eAY I R S1~S w 8. I NK Legalize marijuana to win war on drugs By Andrew M. Levy Earlier this month, William Bennett resigned from his post as Director of the National Drug Policy Administration ("Drug Czar") to become chair of the Republican National Committee. While this move received little media attention, it is symbolic of the failure of the United States government to deal with what President Bush one year ago called "our Nation's highest domestic priority." The "drug war" fought previously by the Reagan Administration, and more re- cently by President Bush's administration, has proven to be a failure, and its strate- gies need to be rethought. The only strat- egy that would work, and the one that should be adopted, is the decriminalization of marijuana. Billions of dollars are spent by the government each year on drug enforce- ment, interdiction, rehabilitation, and edu- cation. A sizeable portion of that money is spent to combat marijuana use, impor- tation, cultivation, and abuse. A compe- tent decriminalization program would refo- cus the drug war on more illicit drugs, while increasing the amount of money spent on rehabilitation and education. Such a program would consist of three basic tenets: Make the sale, possession, and con- sumption of marijuana legal, regulated much the way alcohol is. License mari- juana-vending stores separately, and require the presence of a police officer in all such Levy is an LSA first-year student and a member of the Daily Opinion Staff. outlets (such as is required in package liquor stores in Ohio) to prevent sale to minors. Impose a substantial federal tax on each ounce of marijuana. The revenue from this tax would be earmarked for recir- culation into the reformulated drug war, with the majority of the money for drug education and rehabilitation programs. Empower employers to regulate use by workers. For example, the drug could "rebellious" motivation to using the drug, use will taper down significantly. Many also fear that the society will overrun by drug-crazed lunatics in impor tant positions (i.e. a doctor doing an oper- ation while under the influence). Strict regulation by employers will curb this, and in reality the danger is no higher than that of a society overrun by alcoholics. Further, people point to the addictive qualities of marijuana, and the health The "drug war" has proven to be a failure, and its strategies need to be rethought. The only strategy that would work, and the one that should be adopted, is the decriminalization of marijuana. not be used in the workplace, but could be used outside the workplace in the way that alcohol is today. Imposing this new strategy would en- able the government to reconcentrate its energy on more dangerous drugs, control the quality and quantity of the marijuana that is circulated, and take the organized crime element out of the sale of mari- juana. There are many arguments that attempt to diminish this stance. Many believe that marijuana use will increase once it is de- criminalized. This may be true for the short-term; however, when the novelty wears off, and there is no longer a threat that its use poses. In fact, there is compelling medical evidence that mari- juana is less addictive, less impairing, and less of a long-term medical threat than al- cohol. The time has come to concentrate the drug war in areas where it is necessary and where it will be effective. The current ef- fort has proven ineffective in all areas thus far, especially in controlling the use an* distribution of marijuana. The government must realize that continuing the futile farce that is the nation's drug policy will only ensure its failure. Decriminalize mar- ijuana now - it will pay off in the future. Daily ignores positive side -of Action party To the Editor: We have sat back and listened and read lies perpetuated by the Daily for the past three months, but in light of the editorial concerning Action and room allocations, we feel our silence must be broken ("Office space debacle reflects on Action leadership," 11/12/90). To begin with, the room allocation fi- asco was the sole deliberation of one per- son, Budget Priorities Committee Chair Charles Dudley. Dudley is in no way affil- iated with Action. He acted according to his own political agenda, which has yet to become apparent to anyone. We accept responsibility for Dudley's decision insofar as we are members of MSA. However, unlike the University, MSA doesn't have its own police force to monitor the moves of every member of the assembly and it is difficult to know what Dudley or anyone will do - until, of course, we read it in the highly sensa- tionalist articles published by the Daily the following day. The situation was rectified promptly and efficiently by Jennifer Van Valey and two members of the MSA office staff. Our apologies to student groups who had to endure coming to a standing room only MSA meeting to straighten out the re- maining logistics. But it is important to know that in spite of Dudley's unknown intentions, all groups were allocated rooms, regardless of their political affilia- tions or the fact that many more student organizations requested rooms than last year. Perhaps if the Daily would quit push- ing its (as usual) sensationalist political agenda, students would have a chance to read about things MSA is doing for them. For instance, members affiliated with last year's Action party have been productive on the assembly. We have worked relent- lessly on the fight against deputization and the Code, networked with other student groups, helped organize and assemble speakers and events for World AIDS Awareness Week, sponsored environmen- tal rallies, barred styrofoam in MSA, worked on developing a reusable MSA Lug-a-Mug for the campus area, sponsored a women's issues calendar, helped student* groups flyer, and other relevant activities. Please don't believe everything or even a majority of what you read in the Daily. Like everyone else, it has its own agenda that it forces upon readers, rarely giving voice to opposing views. Paula Church Corey Dolgan Jennifer Dykema Aberdeen Marsh0 MSA members, Action Party ARD AS ESID aEN Keep alive protest's student solidarity To the Daily: As activists in the University and Ann Arbor communities, we were pleased and encouraged to see so many people at the anti-deputization protest. It was heartening to see so many students supporting a movement for our common rights, repre- sentation, and protection. It did not escape our attention that a disproportionately large number of those in attendance, and especially those in ac- tivist and leadership roles, were lesbians and gay men. These people spoke at the rally, led protestors into the building, and helped keep the doors open throughout much of the protest. We write this letter to make two things clear. First, that lesbians and gay men were out in force in support of this protest and were glad to do it. Second, while depq- tization of campus security certainly will have a negative effect on lesbians and gay men, as well as everyone else, it is not a primary focus of a struggle for lesbian and I gay civil rights. We do not even have a guarantee of our rights on this campus and we are illegal in this state. Lesbians and gay men, in all of their diversity, willingly give their sup- port to other movements. We-just hope that in the future when we put pressure on the University to include sexual orienta- tion in its anti-discrimination bylaw that we can count on the support of you who stood with us on Thursday, as we collec-0 tively damainiipAtha~t thiv T Tnivemtdo ,i~the i :i s" iii .. '' d'A ti I