The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, October 1, 1991 - Page 3 ACLU head speaks on i e e 1 iert iles by Karen Pier The First Amendment and the Supreme Court may be headed for big trouble, said Howard Simon, ex- ecutive director of the Michigan American Civil Liberties Union. Simon spoke to about 30 people in Hutchins Hall last night as part of a series to celebrate the bicenten- s E° nial of the Bill of Rights. It was sponsored by the campus chapter of the ACLU and the University Civil w a Liberties Board. - §xN "To honor the Bill of Rights," ,k Simon said, "means to defend it ev- ery day.". The ACLU was created to en- force the Bill of Rights, Simon said. He said he is concerned that the judicial branch of the federal gov- ernment is now siding more andy a more with the executive branch. ~' For example, the Supreme Court ruled in Rust v. Sullivan that feder- * ally-funded clinics, nurses and doc- tors cannot mention abortion as an option to patients. That policy was created by the Reagan administra- tion and has been protected by President Bush. y "To me, it's mandatory medical malpractice," Simon said. Of Bush's nomination of Judge Clarence Thomas to the SupremeI Court, Simon said: "Bush is using race for very cynical reasons." n Simon said that although the ACLU remains officially neutral on the nomination of Thomas to the - Supreme Court, he finds him a '- "disgusting individual." "I find ,anybody disgusting who is a child of affirmative action, then ~~~opposesi" Thomas was admitted to Yale Law School under affirmative KRIsTOFFER GILLETTE/Daily action Slip sliding away He called Thomas "the only lawyer in the United States who Ann Arbor resident Tommy Bishop slides backward down a slide at never thought about Roe v. Wade." Island Park yesterday afternoon as his mother watches him. Psychiatry professor named *to institute new drug policies Zimmer, Brater debate city ward redistricting by Ken Walker Daily City Reporter In special session last night, the City Council passed a resolution setting a Nov. 4 deadline for the Ward Boundary Commission to complete a redistricting plan. The Council, however, will not approve mayoral nominations to the commission until its next meeting on Oct. 7. City Councilmember Kurt Zimmer (D-4th Ward) was the sole council member to oppose the reso- lution, introduced by Mayor Liz Brater. He argued that the commission would not have enough time to examine the available data. "If we don't have the time, the question is' could we end up with one of these plans that makes all 'safe wards' just because there's nothing else ready?" he said. Zimmer is concerned about "gerrymandering," or redistricting that would result in unfair compe- tition for Council spots. "The citi- zens won't have a choice," he said. "Whoever the caucus puts up, that's the person that will be elected." Brater said the main reason for the short time frame was to allow the two parties to organize their campaigns by the deadline in late December. However, Zimmer said the early November target date leaves an over-abundance of time for cam- paign preparations. "With the time frame we're talking about, we've still got a month and a half of addi- tional time, and people don't need a month and athalf to circulate peti- tions (for City Council elections). You could get several people and do it in an afternoon." Brater said she understood Zimmer's concerns about politi- cally-motivated redistricting. "Obviously it is a concern be- cause (redistricting) is a political process," she said. "But my objec- tive in this process is to conform as much as possible with the regula- tions as outlined in the City Charter." The Charter calls for five regu- larly-shaped wards conforming to natural boundaries (such as streets and rivers), and that the population be distributed as equitably as possible. "I think he was mostly disap- pointed that he was not appointed to the commission," she said of Zimmer's opposition. "We do our appointments by seniority." Zimmer said he should have been nominated. "I don't think there's anybody else who knows the data, or how to use it, as well as I do," he said. Zimmer said he would do every- thing withinhis power to pass a plan he thought to be reasonable. "I do believe that most of the people would like to see ... their vote actu- ally matter. "I am going to raise as big a fuss as I have to to get something that's somewhat reasonable." Mayoral nominations to the Commission included City Council- members Mark Ouimet (R-4th Ward) and Ann Marie Coleman (D- 1st Ward), former Councilmember Jim Blow, local attorney Tom Weider, Planning Commission Chairperson Sam Offen, and City Clerk Winnie Northcross. a e x Q SEND TODAY FOR OUR CATALOG! by Bethany Robertson Daily Administration Reporter Psychiatry professor Frederick Glaser was recently appointed to di- rect the implementation of policies recommended by the University Task Force on Alcohol and Other Drugs. Glaser, who is also director of the University Substance Abuse Center, brings both clinical and re- search experience to the position, said Joan Lound, assistant to the Vice Provost for Medical Affairs. Glaser was co-chair of the commit- tee that wrote the recommenda- tions. "He's been able to get a better understanding of the University with his experience on the task force," Lound said. Glaser has a solid background working with substance abuse prob- lems, Lound added, and is especially familiar with a method known as "treatment matching." The process aims to coordinate treatment plans with diagnosis to produce the best solution for a specific problem. The task force, whose recom- mendations Glaser will now work to implement, began examining the problem of alcohol and other drugs on campus in the spring of 1989. General acknowledgement of the conditions at Michigan, as well as passage of Drug Free Work Place and Drug Free Schools legislation, encouraged the University to exam- ine the problem, said Jackie Camp- bell, an administrator at the Sub- stance Abuse Center. "The University is required to have some prevention and assistance as a result of that legislation," Campbell said. She added that the costs associated with drug and alco- hol problems were becoming large. In addition, Lound said that stu- dent problems occurring on campus at the time may have brought atten- THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Northwalk, North Campus safety M eetungs walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-1:30 Time and Relative Dimensions in a.m. and Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Ann Arbor, weekly mtg. 2439 Mason, 8 Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763- p.m. WALK. Center Party, mass mtg. Union, Crow- SPARK Revolutionary History Se- foot Rm, 7 p.m. ries. "Revolution Sweeps Europe, Armenian Students' Cultural Asso- 1848,"MLB, rm B122, 7-8. clation, mtg. Union, Welker Rm, 7 p.m. Greek Dancing Lessons. Union, rm Socially Active Latino Students As- 2209 A & B, 7 p.m. sociation (SALSA), mass mtg. Union, Cycling Club Ride. Meet in front of rm 1209,7 p.m. Hill Auditorium, 4 p.m. Art Students League (ASL). Art and ECB Peer Writing Tutors. An- Architecture Bldg, Studio 1054, 5:30. gell/Mason Computing Center, 7-11. Church Street, 7-9. Speakers U-M Swim Club, Tuesday workout.I M "Sex and Spirit: A Study of Body and Pool, 6:30-8:30. Soul," League, rm 2, 3:30-5 p.m. Women's Rugby, Tuesday practice. Mitchell Field, 5:45-8 p.m. Furtherm ore Rally to Stop Thomas Confirmation. Safewalk, night-time safety walking Union steps, noon. service. Sun-Thur, 8 p.m.-1:20 a.m. and Career Planning and Placement. tion to the problem. "One of the pieces may well have been the problems they had after the NCAA championship on South University," she said. A riot erupted after the Wolverines won the 1989 NCAA Basketball Cham- pionship. Two weeks ago, the night before the Notre Dame football game, police used tear-gas on crowds of students in what they called an attempt to prevent a similar incident. The task force studied three parts of the University: students, faculty and staff. In making recommenda- tions, particularly for students, the University is trying to avoid taking on a parental role, Lound said. "We want to be respectful of (students') rights as adults, and yet we want everyone on campus to be responsible," she explained. Glaser was out of town for the week and unavailable for comment. Publications boardmeets with new members by Philip Cohen Daily News Editor The Board for Student Publica- tions seated several new members at its meeting last night. The Board, which is an agency of the University Board of Regents, oversees three student publications: the Daily, the Michiganensian yearbook, and the Gargoyle humor magazine. The board's new co-chairs, ap- pointed by University President James Duderstadt, are Leon Jaroff, a contributing editor at Time maga- zine and managing editor of the Daily in 1950, and Social Work Pro- Study in one of Syracuse University's academic programs in England, France, Italy, Spain, Germany (Fall 1992) and Australia (Spring 1992)! Grants are available for a semester, a year, or a summer of study abroad. i a Quality by design. Name Address City State Zip Phone School SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS ABROAD 119 Euciid Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-4170 (800)235-DIPA (3472) The shipbuilders of two centuries ago under- stood the value of desigrnng quality into even the smallest part. For them, quality was a tra- dition, passed on from generation to genera. tion. We appreciate that at Watkins-Johnson because we have our own tradition of quali- ty-a commitment that goes back to our founding over 30 years ago.: On-Campus Interviews: Tuesday and Wednesday, October 8 & 9 Disciplines: *EE ePhysics Engineering *ME t a s a 4 1 ..........