Page 4-The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 2, 1993 U be £irbi!Jau tailg 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan ' r r s JOSH DUBOw Editor in Chief YAEL M. CITRO ERIN LIZA EINHORN Opinion Editors -c'SoPSHE: SAW -THE Sto ENS 4.IONE M'ORE YEAR OF H 16 -70~ /r . ci \ ...- '".. r .. ~ _..... \\.= Unsigned editorials represent the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, signed articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. 0 A2 SCHOOLS School board should actively stop AIDS ... LAST WEEK, ON the one-year anniversary of Patrice Maurer's arrest for trespassing d illegally distributing condoms in Ann Arborpublic schools, the Ann Arbor Commit- tee for Defending Abortion Rights (AACDAR), repeated the offense inherhonor. In an effort to bring the issue of condom distribution in public schools to the forefront, this campus group entered Community and Pioneer High Schools attempting to pass out, free condoms. Receiving a warning, the group left school property and resorted to throwing prophylactics through the windows of depart- ing cars, as well as handing them out to pedes- tnans. AACDAR's actions were successful on two accounts-they not only distributed over 600 condoms, but they were able to draw state- wide attention to the Michigan law banning the distribution of birth-control in public schools. Some state legislators,including Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor), are now consid- ering introducing a bill that would lift the ban. Allowing condoms into Michigan public schools, as well as increasing sex and AIDS education, will save lives. The state-wide ban, which prohibits the distribution of any birth control device in public schools, was passed in 1977, ostensibly to combat growing sexual activity in teenag- ers. However, as Rivers pointed out, this was pre-AIDS and before the onslaught of sexu- ally transmitted diseases. Condoms are no longer merely considered birth control - outside of abstinence, using condoms is the safest approach to sex. Opposition to allowing condoms in schools stems from concemed parents who believe that easy access to condoms will promote sexual activity, and encourage students who are not sexually active to begin. However, according the National Institute of Health's 1991 report, 70 percent ofteenagers have already had sex by the time they reach the age of 17. In addition, 80 percent of teens having sex do not use any form of protection. The facts are clear students are having sex and they are not being safe about it. Ignonng the problem will not make it go away. Schools need to take active steps in educating students and preventing the spread of sexually transmitted diseases - especially AIDS. Condoms need to be made available for students. The embarrassment involved in pur- chasing condoms often deters teens from using them. Installing dispensers, or running school resource centers where students can get condoms, will minimize the effort involved in pursuing safe-sex. This, of course, will only work if it is accompanied by education. Currently, the Re- productive Health Curriculum Committee of the Ann Arbor schools is reviewing sexual education programs, and investigating ways to improve them. Without an essential increase in education, allowing condoms into public schools may have little effect. Once upon a time, parents didn't want their children having sex for fear of unwanted preg- nancies. Unfortunately, today the problem of AIDS is far more frightening. While making condoms available in public schools won't fix the problem, it is a step in the right direction. ..1 -. r /. 4 i J t f / M'I~CHIAN..DAILY 193 -, lrv' Nlf ,,y , _ __11 lx 11 lIX Face reality: there are political prisoners 0 by cJackson Ypsilanti resident Granted, it is difficult to summarize four different speeches in nine Daily column inches. Yet the Daily reporter who covered theJan. 20 speeches of several formerBlack Panthers, really missed the point. He put quotation marks around the phrase "political prisoners," and described the speakers' fight as one for "fair treatment." As if there really aren't political prisoners in the United States. As if it's just a matter of minor complaints. There are dozens of men and women in U.S.jails and prisons for their political acts, beliefs or associations. They are political prisoners. These come in several varieties, and people who recognize their existence argue about who qualifies. Most, broadly speaking, are of the left. (The far right also has activists in prison for their political acts.) Like Nelson Mandela before his re- lease, most do not qualify as Amnesty Inter- national "prisoners of conscience," because they advocated or engaged in violent or illegal acts. Some are imprisoned for heinous things that they did not do, having been framed due to their politics. Two examples: Geronimo ii Jaga (Pratt), the former Los Angeles Black Panther leader, was con- victed for a robbery and murder which took place when the FBI knew that he was at a Black Panther Party meeting 300 miles away. Mark Curtis, a Trotskyist and meatcutters' union activist, is imprisoned for an alleged rape that allegedly took place at the height of a labor struggle of which he was a leader, even though the alleged victim's story was improbable and there was none of the physical evidence which would have been present if he did what he was accused of doing. Some are imprisoned for their non-vio- lent acts, such as Pete Dougherty, a Roman Catholic priest doing time in Bay City for stepping over an imaginary line at an Air Force base to protest the presence of nuclear weapons there. Others are in for violent acts, such asLindaEvans, the formerMichi- gan/Ohio traveling organizer for the Stu- dents for a Democratic Society, who is doing time for, among other things, aiding in the bombing of the U.S. Capitol building to protest the invasion of Grenada. Most U.S. political prisoners are Black. They include many former Black Panthers who have been incarcerated for over 20 years. The most endangered African Ameri- can political prisoner is former Black Pan- ther and former president of the Philadel- phia chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists, Mumia Abu-Jamal, who sits on Pennsylvania's death row. Some are imprisoned for defending themselves from racist violence. Norma Jean Croy, a Shasta Indian, was present when rural California police, shouting ra- cial epithets, opened fire on alleged shop- lifters. Her brother took a rifle and killed one of the cops, but was acquitted on the basis of self-defense. Norma Jean, who was tried separately, and by all accounts killed no- body, got a life sentence. Gary Tyler, a Blackman, isin Louisiana's AngolaPrison, having been locked up since he was a 17- year-old high school student whose school bus was attacked by a rock-throwing mob of whites, one of whom was shot to death. A number are behind bars for taking up arms to end U.S. colonial domination of their countries. These include a number of Puerto Rican independence activists, many of whom demand prisoner of war status under the Geneva convention and appli- cable U.N. resolutions. Four men accused of murder in furtherance of their struggle of Virgin Islands independence have been imprisoned for many years. A number of others are held in U.S. prisons for their acts of anti-colonial solidarity, particularly for smuggling arms to the Irish Republican Army. Leonard Peltier, an activist with the American Indian Movement, may be our country's best known political prisoner. He is not the only Native American behind bars for political actions or associations. Several people are in military prisons because they refused orders to fight in Op- eration Desert Storm. Over 200 Haitians, whohave beenjudged tohave well-founded claims for refugee status, but who are in- fected bytheHV virus,are being heldatthe Guantanamo Bay Navy base. Those who spoke at the Power Center do not merely advocate better food and living conditions for political prisoners. They, and I, demand a general amnesty. While this may seem like a utopian demand in this "law and order" era,it'snot. Recently GovernorEnglerreleased Michigan's long- est-held political prisoner, former Black Panther Ahmad Abdur-Rahman, after 21 years of imprisonment. In many of the world's more repressive countries, it is nor- mal for an election to be accompanied by an amnesty for political prisoners, including those who took up arms against the regime. It's time for the Daily to drop the de- rogatory quotation marks and face reality. There are political prisoners in the United States. .. permit free speech for student journalists THE ANN ARBOR School Board voted Wednesday to enact a three-point policy that clamps down on the free- dom of the press Ann Arbor high school students used to know. The policy gives the school principal and publication advisor the right to final review of school-sponsored publications, and limits the distribution of non-school sponsored publications. Addi- tionally, the policy holds the threat of puni- tive action over the heads of student writers who choose to print "unethical" material. It also reinforces restrictions placed on student use of school facilities for non-school spon- sored activities, going so far as to require them to obtain permission to advertise on school grounds. School board member Hayward Richardson uses the excuse that school pub- lications act as "teaching and learning ve- hicles," to argue that "ultimate authority should rest with the school and not with the students." What this policy constitutes is censorship. Although the school has had few complaints regarding offensive material in school-sponsored publications, the board fears that it may have to answer such com- plaints in the future. "Teaching and learning vehicles," should teach students how to think. But the school board, by supporting this censorship, has silenced student voices and halted student pens. By imposing limits on students, the school is failing in its responsibility to pro- duce citizens who think freely, make edu- cated decisions and can realize the results of their efforts. The student publications policy does not prohibit non-school sponsored publications. However, by restricting use of school facili- ties and prohibiting fundraising and on-cam- pus publicity forpublications, the school board is effectively choking non-school sponsored publications out of existence. Without exten- sive economic resources for computers, sup- plies and printing, (It cost Huron high school's Independent Emory $600 to produce one issue) it is impossible for students to put out a quality newspaper. The school board's paranoia could also subject the school board to litigation. By "protecting" students and parents from a wide range of thoughts, each school accepts re- sponsibility for everything printed in a stu- dent publication. This could have dire conse- quences for the district, which will have to encourage advisors and principals to scruti- nize publications with the care of a candidate who will be held responsible for every word in a prepared speech. Consequently, though the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Hazelwood School District vs. Kuhlmeier gives school principals the right to review publications before going to print, the board's decision to exercise that right carries a tremendous legal responsibility. Students from the high school and univer- sity levels have protested the school board's decree. Hopefully, pressure will force its mem- bers to rethink a policy which puts an end to freedom of the press as previously enjoyed by Ann Arbor public school students. 0 HOMELESS RIGHTS Student tests Daily censors To the Daily: I understand that you pride yourselves on your policy of printing all of the letters that you receive, regardless of how offensive they might be. I was wondering if you would print this letter even if I wrote this: [censored]. Just curious. Steven Levinson LSA sophomore Women can make own moral decisions To the Daily: Apparently it hasn't occurred to Howard Scully ("Pro-choicers prevent choice," 1/25/93) just how little anybody cares what he thinks about abortion. It is so easy for him to dish out the shame, never having to live with child-bearing issues the way women do. It probably also hasn't dawned on Mr. Scully that women (the vast majority of whom are pro-choice) might actually have the mental and spiritual capacity to make their own moral decisions and control their own lives. Even under the least culturally oppressive circumstances, choosing to terminate one's own fetus might already be the most difficult decision for a woman to make, regardless To the Daily: I applaud President Bill Clinton's action in supporting international population control schemes. The President's actions, however, only scratch the surface of the dilemma facing developing nations. If the President is truly committed to population management, the United States will have to address the issue of international development in its totality. Two of the main areas which must be addressed is environmental management and the status of women. The crises facing may developing nations: political instability, war, drought, famine and overpopulation can be, in part, attributed to the global community's inappro- priate use of natural resources. The earth has the capacity to sustain our population, if we use resources in a responsible fashion. To insure the survival of the U.S. economy and the growth of the world economy, we must realize that economic and social development is inextricably linked to the responsible exploitation and preservation of the environ- ment. President Clinton and Vice President Al Gore must assume leadership roles restructuring the domestic and international economy to insure long-term economic growth for citizens while preserving the ecosystem which supports the global economy. While addressing the environmental needs of society, the President must address pressing human needs, with particular attention paid to the status of women in the developing world. Women in the develop- ing world play an important role in the economic and social life of their nations. In some parts, women account for 90 percent of food and goods produced which are consumed by the private household. Despite this, women continue to be oppressed, persecuted and denied access because of their gender. All the efforts of development organizations and developing world governments to improve the economic, status and plight of women is addressed by the international community. The President cannot be deterred from tackling this issue because of supposed religious and cultural "traditions" of certain societies. If the President is commit- ted to preserving the United States' leadership role in the global community he will expand U.S. foreign policy initiatives to include sustain- able economic developments and the plight of women throughout the world. Trooper Sanders LSA junior Clinton must aid world's women 0 0 0 Detroit law prohibits begging, kills speech D ESPITE SUPREME COURT precedents declaring the city street a quintessential forum for exercising first amendment rights, the City of Detroit recently decided to' control both the content and presentation of expression for the homeless. Holding signs requesting donations from passers-by, or of- feringto "workforfood" is one ofthe few ways homeless individuals have been able exercise free speech. However, recent enforcement of an archaic city ordinance that prohibits beg- ging on city streets eliminates this option. This action directly threatens human rights and sets a dangerous precedent that could lead to other free speech restrictions. In response to robberies committed by people posing as beggars, Detroit Police Chief tanley Knox recently announced he would hein enfnorino the 1nno-standing law Pennle consistent with other laws prohibiting farmore dangerous crimes. Only the homeless person, representing the most profound failure of our social order, is singled out and eliminated from the social consciousness. The ordinance en- ables a threat posed by a few to prevent the majority from engaging inlegitimate activities. This ordinance unduly restricts the rights of the homeless. It directly defies a multitude of Supreme Court decisions declaring the street a quintessential public forum where free speech is held in the highest esteem. Although subway begging rights were de- nied in a recent New York Appellate Court ruling - Young vs. New York Metropolitan Transit Authority - the court primarily ob- jected to the location of the begging, not to the activity. The judges recognized the street as the beet fornm fnr heainor nrntectedu nder the 'Language censors' offensive An open letter to President Duderstadt: I am sure that your attention was directed to a recent editorial in the Wall Street Journal entitled "Language Censors." The piece quotes Debbie Meizlish as having been was offended by the reference to "Dave Stud," I wonder what she thinks of the biblical passage involving another David: "Let there be sought for my lord (David) a young virgin and let her stand before the king, and let her cherish him, and let her in thy bosom, a place of free expression and inquiry. If a professor finds a student has exceeded the standard of acceptable good tastes, criticism would be appropriate. But, never should one be censored or threatened with legal action, unless he has truly committed -