Page 4 --The Michigan Daily- Wednesday, April 15, 1992 le I fr4IIU atiu 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 764-0550 Editor in Chief MATTHEW D. RENNIE Opinion Editors YAEL CITRO GEOFFREY EARLE AMITAVA MAZUMDAR Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan 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. r9'4A4T-/< J'1STi M PM7 PRNT' l- , l ,, t' Ar Ys .S Rl3 E4 j.JZ'1 ^l j(t-l t C(r T 3om 6C4i) t E Lptvoc ,r.. .' ,q-Av TE ,T' ,sqg7-,r v, /IE ,I4'41 C 4 F T o f'EK 4ci ~ 9g77.44* ~ 4HIG//L I-PAIIA/G "P/N ZR r.41,L r G ~O F1="O F:^ Tfta C r9kF . w47 IL5 ,qrg4,j ( " PA 47~-g4 _ \\\ \VT4- G~., ~j~z \Z 01 r~Tbt~~ xnpiyr~ F~. A yr on Bring police reform to the table T he Ann Arbor Police Department has dis- played a curious tendency to greet celebrating students with canisters of teargas or Mace. Until today,.Ann Arbor officials have done little to alle- viate the tensions that have resulted from a series of hostile encounters. This morning, however, Mayor Liz Brater, Police Chief Doug Smith and other city leaders will be meeting with student and administration representatives to begin discussing the community's problems. RobertVanHouweling, temporary chair ofthe Student Rights Commission (SRC), Andrew Mutch and Kate Klaus, the other student representatives, would do well to take advantage of this opportunity to articulate the contempt many students hold for current police methods. Ann Arbor did conduct an investigation after the South Quad incident, where city police maced individual Black students. The city reported that the police acted within reason. In response to the South University teargassing last fall, Michael Warren and the SRC released a report on the incident. The SRC concluded that the second police sweep and teargassing were inap- propriate, and issued some constructive alterna- tives. Warren, in his minority dissent, however, insisted that the students essentially deserved what the police gave them. Ann Arbor's dismissal of the SRC report's conclusions became evident, as riot police conducted ill-advised sweeps and lobbed teargas canisters at students a second time after the NCAA Championship Basketball game. Clearly, the SRC's reliance on reports has had few positive or productive consequences. While meeting with the administration and the mayor, Van Houwelling and student representa- tives should discuss the creation of a community oversight board for the Ann' Arbor Police. The board, consisting of representatives of the commu- nity, including students, could forge police depart- ment policy and hopefully could prevent furture confrontations with students. Until the Ann Arbor community is given greater voice in police activi- ties, the confrontations will continue. Mayor Brater demonstrated some initiative by organizing the meeting. But she won't realize the magnitude ofthe problem unless students attend to voice their concerns. If only a handful of represen- tatives are there, the city and the administration will find it easier to dismiss their demands. More- over, city officials must view the meeting with the urgency it deserves. Without significant changes in police department policy, this problem will not go away. Too often, the concerns of students remain unaddressed by the administration and the City Council. Students remain, in a sense, second-class citizens inAnnArbor. City and University officials need to be made aware that these conditions can not continue. The Assembly and the SRC have a job to do, and the students should be their to back them. f 1 0 ap .0 lp t ' T- T.rmT I m cq City dump wil To the Daily: Thank you for your excellent opinion column, "City Takes a Dump," on the subject of the proposed toxic waste landfill/ incinerator being touted in Augusta Township in southeast- ern Washtenaw County. Unlike the editors of many other Ann Arbor-based publications, you have the foresight to understand the impact on the larger area that would result from such an enormous project, and that such impact would not be limited only to the incinerator's immediate neighbors. According to information obtained by Michigan Citizens Against Toxic Substances (M- CATS), this incinerator would be one of the largest toxic waste incinerators in the world, three times the size of current."aver- age" rotary kiln incinerators. Experts estimate that the primary fallout area covers at least a twenty-mile radius around the site, and this fallout would consist of.many of the deadliest com- harm area Daly infates number pounds known to mankind. The appr.oximately 60 percent of waste remaining after burning would be buried in the 375-acre proposed landfill, 120 feet above the water supply of an estimated 8,300 nearby residents. - Those of us who have been active in the opposition to this proposal for the past several years find the relative lack of interest among Ann Arbor residents to be quite strange, and we sincerely hope that this will change once permit applications are filed and the threat becomes more "real." Although opposition to this proposal is nearly universal in the immediate area near the site (the City of Milan, Augusta Town- ship, etc.), at times we. fear that our numbers are not enough to stop this project alone, and that the people of Ann Arbor may not wake up in time. Thank you for your efforts to inform your readers of the situation. Kimberly Dunbar Michigan Citizens Against Toxic Substances To the Daily: Your article on the recent pro- abortion demonstration in Wash- ington ("Abortion Rights Demon- stration in Nation's Capital Draws 750,000") contained a major inaccuracy in its headline. Although the Daily cited a National Park Service estimate to justify its claim that 750,000 attended, both the Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press stated that the same source reported an attendance of only 500,000. The Daily overestimated by 50 percent, which is a fairly serious error. I hope that the misprint was due to carelessness and was not an attempt to misrepresent the facts and reinforce the Daily's own bias on this issue. Mark O. Stern LSA junior Police caused mayhem Engler L ast week, Gov. J would lower sta percent and place a ca year period. The bill, the House and the S insurance reforms prc feet citizens from ex industry. The bi-parti some relief from the premiums, were it n veto. The bill, which w 'epresentatives from E ize rates across Detr Initially rates would b and decreased in the c 'difference would bee There would be a rat for one year periods. step toward equalizi 1990 consumer stud discrepancies. Although it is clea appease big busines ailroads i ohn Engler vetoed a bill that many people in Detroit are wondering if the veto te auto insurance rates by 15 hadracialimplications as well.Studieshave shown ap on rate increases for a two- that rates within the Detroit city limits average which made it through both three times greater than those in most suburbs. The enate, was the first of many study also showed that northwest Detroit, a low- oposed by lawmakers to pro- income area, alone provides 40 percent of state- xploitation by the insurance wide revenue for two smaller insurance firms. To san effort would have offered some, Engler's veto showed that he has little con- sting of high auto insurance cern for the people who pay the most for insurance ot for the governor's callous in the state. Because of Engler's veto, many Michigan resi- vas sponsored by a group of dents may not receive needed reforms. Instead Detroit,wasintendedtoequal- they may get an alternative from an insurance oit and its surrounding area. company. AAA Michigan, the state's largest auto have increased in the suburbs insurer, announced that it would try to place its ity to ensure that a 10 percent own proposal on the November ballot so that established across the region. voters could decide for themselves. It is disturbing e freeze at the equalized level when an insurance company itself must press for The bill constituted the first reform where government has failed. ng rates in the state since a If the Governor insists on vetoing every attempt ly detailed the mountainous at insurance reform, and the only other options are from the insurance industry itself, the citizens r that Engler vetoed the bill to really have no choice at all. Expensive auto insur- s and insurance companies, ance is here to stay. - i tNorega, but ittle else heWar on Drugs.Atleast, that merely a link in the chain of drug suppliers - and Sent Bush would have us be- one which is easily replaced. His capture repre- conviction of Gen. Manuel sented a mere pause in this multi-billion dollar fanything has been gained by industry, and in retrospect, makes the U.S. drug cution of the former Panama- war look like a sham. er,the police actionhascaused The U.S. Justice Department spent $100 mil- orld prestige to suffer. lion on the seven-month trial to get Noriega's in 1989 when U.S. Armed conviction. The trial was a farce, sporting 20 nama and, after killing hun- convicted drug dealers as witnesses for the pros- people, managed to kidnap ecution.An appeal is expected, and rightfully so, in r drug trafficking, despite the light of the numerous legal potholes the left in its in a sovereign nation. The wake. One of the best reasons is that the judge, for s a clear violation of interna- that ever-ambiguous reason of national security, barred evidence that showed Noriega's coopera- of the "arrest" and conviction tion with the CIA and the Department of Defense eaching. What is to stop the while committing these crimes for which he was arresting Saddam Hussein, convicted. fi, or any other foreign leader Gen. Noriega should have been returned to ce? This principle, if taken to Panama long ago. The president's disregard- for would permit Iraq, Libya, and national sovereignty, Noriega's personal and legal President Bush under their rights, and the rights of the Panamanian people not to be bombed because of their dictator's CIA- tion does nothing to stop the backed activities combined make Noriega's con- e United States. Gen. Noriega viction wrong and immoral. More is at stake here. edellin drug cartel, but was than Bush's political stunt or the War on Drugs. Bush g W earewinningt is what Presid lieve following the Noriega. But little, if the capture and prose niandictator.Moreov the United States' w The story, began Forces went into Pa dreds of innocentr Noriega to try him fo fact that he resided Panama invasion wa tional law. The implicationsc of Noreiga are far-r United States from Moammar el-Gadha it considers a nuisan its logical extreme, v other niations to try laws. Noriega's convic flow of drugsinto th did not run the Me To the Daily: Forrest Green III not only missed reading a few lines of the poster for George Reisman's speech, but seems to have added some of his own as well (4/9/92). There is no statement anywhere in the poster that Western civiliza- tion is reserved for "(white) society." In fact, the very first line of the description of the speech states "Western thought and culture are not defined by geography or race, but rather are a body of knowledge and values open to everyone." The "true definition of racism," Mr. Green, is the notion that the essential worth of a person (or a culture) is determined by race. The multiculturalist's method of defining the worth of ideas and values solely on the basis of the racial background of their originators is by definition 100- percent racist, and is no different in principle from the Nazi idea of Aryan science versus Jewish science; that is, each race to its own version of the truth. Nor does the poster anywhere single out only "non-white" cultures as being barbaric. The fact is that everyone, whatever like Michigan To the Daily: As I was walking to the Union recently, I spotted Michigan's five basketball-playing freshmen leaving South Quad. I immedi- ately turned my head to catch a glimpse of this group that led the Wolverines to the Final Four. My day had been brightened. I had just seen the most talked and written about fivespme in basketball. I had just seen celebrities. I must be in Holly- wood. Hollywood and Ann Arbor are two distant, geographically and aesthetically opposite cities. However throughout my six months here in Ann Arbor, I have noticed one similarity: media Green misrepresents truth their racial or ethnic background, is descended from savages at some point, whether their ancestors lived in Africa or England or Russia. The advocates of ethnocentric educational principles are trying to equate the cultures of those barbaric ancestors with modern Western civilization, as if pagan supersti- tions are the equal of science, or "oral traditions" are the equal of written language, or rule by tribal chieftains is the equal of indi- vidual rights, or a subsistence level existence is as good as a life with supermarkets, cars, and hospitals. In each of these cases the latter is either a tenet of, or a product of, Western civilization. Mr. Green is also wrong when he states that "the truth needs no defending." The truth is under constant attack; the only way to insure that it is not buried under an avalanche of lies and distor- tions is through constant vigi- lance. The multiculturalism movement in education repre- sents yet another battle in this war. Steve Mytyk University graduate, sports a lot South Quad Cafeteria. I have seen Skrepenak, Grbac and most of the others walking on campus. I have been in class with Shields and the Fab Five, I have spoken with Jackson at the Dairy Mart. I met and got a personal autograph from Desmond at Angell Hall. I talked to Steve Fisher at the Kappa Sigma basketball rally. At the same rally, I got my picture taken with Webber. I have not gone to great lengths or gone out of my way to meet these people. I have gone about my daily routine and have found that meeting these celebri- ties just comes naturally. These stars are accessible. When I meet them on campus, I view them as To the Daily: I was horrified when I under- stood the implications of Police Chief Douglas Smith's comment (about the use of teargas against students). "When we start getting injured, the call is pretty easy to make (4/8/92)" This man must be fired. It is certainly an irrespon- sible person who, at any time, finds the use of teargas "pretty easy." Mayhem becomes policy. It was dangerous to be on South University on the April 6.I was there, and there were people at that time who wished to dQ me physical harm. Every one of these violent persons wore a police uniform. No student hurt me; the police teargassed me twice. Because of these events I will never again trust or assist the police force of any city. Indeed, in retrospect, I wish that I had been able to physically defend myself against these uniformed hood- lums, these tax-supported hooli- gans. - To whom must I turn for protection from those who serve and protect? Andrew Goodspeed LSA sophomore NORML ban wrong To the Daily: I find the University's excuse to ban NORML from use of the Diag inconsistent if not bordering on authoritarian. Its primary- rationale for rejecting the pro marijuana legalization rally is a supposed threat to public safety. Well, that's a very neat and easy excuse but obviously does not reflect the University's past record with respect to public safety of Ann Arbor residents or University students. I recall that in 1989, following our basketball team's victory in the NCAA tournament, there ensued a riot throughout the city in which thousands of dollars of damage was done to Ann Arbor stores and businesses. Not too long ago a riot broke out on South University following a victory of the University's football team. Obviously the football and basketball teams were not responsible for theseacts of mayhem and destruction. And violence is not the point of the NORML rally. NORML applied for the right to speak on the Diag 0 .... 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