4 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 5, 1996 ct e firtchtgtttt t ttil 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan RONNIE GLASSBERG Editor in Chief ADRIENNE JANNEY ZACHARY M. RAIMI Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of the majority of the Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. FROM THE DAILY Bashing the hash law 'U' should not hinder tomorrow's rally NOTABLE QUOTABLE 'He was a loner. I don't think he really avoided people. He could talk to people in the usual types of conversations.' - University mathematics Prof Peter Duren, describing his former student, Theodore John Kaczynski, who the FBI arrested Wednesday, as a suspect in the Unabomber case JIM LASSER SHARP AS TOAST SORRY, THIS ISN'T REALLY '' 7?4lro THE CON TRACT WE WERE LOOKING FOR. '3 LT HEO L.ETTERS TO THE EDITOR It's spring, and up to 5,000 graying hip- pies, curious first-year students and vet- eran potheads will converge on the Diag tomorrow for the 25th Annual Hash Bash - provided they can find the money. Each year, the University requests an exorbitant deposit from Help Eliminate Marijuana A2, the organization sponsoring the rally to legalize marijuana. To obtain a permit, the group first must shell out a $600 security deposit and a $200 electricity deposit. Hash Bash makes a mess, but the University has another motivation: prevent- ing the demonstration. That is why the Department of Public Safety will increase its Diag patrol to make the ratio close to 100 spectators to one officer, although the cus- tomary ratio for large crowds is 750 to one. Fortunately, the University did not try to charge HEMP A2 a security deposit, as it did in some past years. The $800 deposit is strenuous enough on the group; DPS could back off as well. Hash Bash is crowded and joyful, similar to football Saturdays - but more peaceful. After all, students can spend their weekends however they choose - including blissful protest of a ridiculous law. Legalize it Marijuana has been illegal in the United States since the 1930s. The government classifies it as a drug in the same category as LSD and crack cocaine. While pot is undeniably a drug, its effects are much clos- er to those of alcohol than to other illegal substances. To outlaw it, while keeping alcohol legal for anyone over 21 years old, makes little sense. Those who oppose legalizing marijuana argue that the drug's dangers obligate the government to keep it out of citizens' hands - a flawed claim in several respects. First, researchers have debated pot's physical effects for years; the majority of researchers conclude pot is not physically addictive. While other studies may dispute this, no researcher has proved that marijuana is any more physically harmful than alcohol - and it is certainly not destructive in the same way other illegal drugs are. That leaves the potential for psychologi- cal addiction. Like alcohol and other chem- ical substances, that potential is present. Yet if this were justification for criminalization, the government would outlaw not only alco- hol but cigarettes, caffeine and a host of other products. Whether to use - or abuse - a substance is a personal choice. Many opponents believe to legalize pot is to condone its use. However, legalizing pot is to admit the right of adults to control what they do and do not put into their bod- ies. The government has no right to inter- fere in this choice. Furthermore, even the present illegal status of marijuana has not prevented peo- ple from using it. Instead, the thrill of breaking the law by using pot enhances its appeal, especially for teen-agers. Rather than pouring dollars into future law enforcement of an ineffective law, the gov- ernment would do much better if it legal- ized pot, heavily regulated its availability and usage, and imposed heavy "sin" taxes on its sale. The money could go to drug education and prevention programs - a much more worthy endeavor than fighting the losing battle against marijuana use. Legalizing pot will not create a peaceful world or solve all problems. But the gov- ernment has no more reason to ban mari- juana than it does espresso. And Ann Arborites would not want to live without espresso. Legal abortion RU-486 would give women more options woman's right to determine her ulti- mate reproductive destiny, though challenged, was established by laws that grant her the power of choice. The Federal Drug Administration announced this week that it would begin reviewing the effective- ness and safety of RU-486, an alternative method to traditional surgical termination when women opt to abort pregnancies. RU-486 is a hormone-packed pill that induces miscarriage within 24 to 48 hours of administration. The drug has a 98.7-per- cent success record for complete abortion. Side effects of RU-486 include cramping, nausea and hemorrhaging - the bleeding will subside within eight to 15 days. To avoid complications, medically trained staff should give RU-486 to a woman within her first or early second trimester of pregnancy, and only after a thorough initial exam. Since 1988, women in South America and Europe have had access to RU-486. In 1993, The New England Journal of Medicine found RU-486 to be "effective for the termination of early pregnancy in terms of success, tolerance, safety and practicali- ty." A safe, alternative option for women seeking to exercise a confirmed right has been suppressed and withheld from American women until now. Body politics, conservative tempers and coalition extrem- ism inhibited the testing and use of RU- 486. Hijacking a freedom to espouse a dis- senting view borders on criminalization. The lam ie clear. Abrtinn is1v02a consent laws, parental consent laws and the ban on Medicaid abortions already create a substantial roadblock to choice. Combined with small but potent abortion-inhibiting laws, the lack of abortion alternatives con- tributes to the destruction of a legal right to abortion. RU-486 would ease the process by allowing for privacy. Women enter the clin- ic, take a pill, return home and report back to the clinic a week later for a dose of prog- esterone and a check-up. For some women, the isolation of out-patient abortion is tor- turous; recipients of RU-486 may choose to remain at the clinic during abortion. For others, the support of family and of experi- encing the loss of their pregnancy in a more Concert review is childish TO THE DAILY: I am not an avid reader of the Daily Arts section, but when I came across Eugene Bowen's review of Tracy Chapman's concert ("Spirited tunes enchant crowd," 3/20/96), I thought perhaps it would be an interesting read. Unfortunately, the piece read like an 8th grader's ill- thought out movie review, scribbled furiously on a sheet of crumpled notebook paper and handed in at the last moment of an introductory journalism class. While the review intends to be favorable, it is plagued by back-handed compli- ments, beginning with the opening sentence: "Nobody in their right mind would attend a Tracy Chapman con- cert expecting to be greeted with outstanding vocals ... her voice is very plain." My question is this: If Bowen did not expect to hear a great vocalist, why would he bother to go to the con- cert? Chapman is indeed a marvelous vocalist; she is undoubtedly far more talent- ed than the screechy Mariah Carey with whom Bowen attempts to compare Chapman. Bowen's review does not demonstrate even a modicum of intelligence regarding the writing of concert reviews, much less basic journalism techniques. Did he actually attend the concert, or did he just look at the CD cover and copy down all of Chapman's lyrics in an effort to fill space? Nobody in their right mind would read another one of Bowen's reviews. I certain- ly won't. JANE HUGHES LSA JUNIOR Art dean: Design won't take away from art TO THE DAILY: There is no debate going on in the School of Art and Design about art versus tech- nology. All artists utilize technologies be they low tech or high. There exists no plan to replace traditional disci- plines with those that utilize new technologies. The plan is to supplement the old with the new so that students have access to and experience of both. We will always draw and work directly with our hands in paint, clay, metal ideas, issues, tools, tech- niques and art forms as a result of considering art in new ways. There is no plan to advance design at the expense of art. Design cannot be without art, and art is informed by design. The school and the University must have both. In our facul- ty search, each candidate is evaluated on capacity to con- tribute to the entire school, and not to just an area of per- sonal expertise. We are seeking a new kind of artist who is deeply invested in a particular area but who is also interested in exploring, reconsidering, redefining and reinventing art forms and ways of making intellectual inquiry through visual means. There is no intent to weaken,reduceor eliminate fine art. (Indeed, I am in the middle of contrac- tual arrangements that will bring internationally-known fine artists to the school on a regular basis beginning next fall.) There is no intent to replace fine arts disciplines with design disciplines. Statements found in recent Daily articles that imply such replacement are simply untrue and do not represent the reality of what is going on in this changing and developing school. The facts are that half of the students in the school are design students, and due to the attrition, there are four faculty positions available in design that need to be filled if students are to have instruction next September. These are not new posi- tions, simply replacement for faculty who have already left or who are about to leave the University. As for the other three fac- ulty positions available, I believe that the entire school will benefit if artists repre- senting new genre are recruit- ed. New genre artists can bring both traditional and contemporary art forms and technologies to us, which will benefit all students in the school. Change is difficult. Change makes people anx- ious and uneasy. However, not changing, not trying, not exploring new ways of seeing thinking and creating is a scenario that should make everyone even more anxious and uneasy. And it is not acceptable behavior in a ster- ling research university like ours. The School of Art and Design will change and develop and assume its right- ful prominent role in this University and nationally - have no doubt. We simply must remember that disagree- ment is inevitable and we need not automatically lead to anger and disrespect. erage of Michigan's only national championship in this season of high expectations -- this year's hockey team's success. No team at this University deserves more of the nation's respect, or this University's respect, more than Red Berenson's hockey team. The past couple of years have been tough for Berenson - living up to the mystique of Wolverine hock- ey teams of the 1950s and 1960s, improving a tarnished image and a struggling hock- ey team, conquering heart- break losses in the past three years of the NCAA hockey tournament. However, there was noth- ing better for Berenson than his 300th victory, and this team's national champi- onship. Morrison, Botterill, Turco, Halko and Hilton, along with the rest of the team, deserved this. It is a shame former greats like Steve Shields and Mike Knubble could not share in the bliss. This was for them too. My special thanks go to (The Michigan Daily sports staff) for its constant belief this season in the Wolverine's hockey program and its glori- fication of the coach that put it all together. This championship was not only a win for the team, it was also a victory for the University. Maybe the nation will finally wake up to Michigan hockey. Maybe this University will, too. Good job! Go Blue! JEFF BuvAsS LSA SOPHOMORE MSAAATU are working together to help students To THE DAILY: A student's letter printed in the Daily recently ("Rose lacks integrity," 3/21/96) may have created an inaccurate impression that the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union opposed Fiona Rose's candi- dacy. For the record, the AATU neither supported nor opposed any candidate. In the past, the AATU has been crippled by funding changes related to partisan maneuvering on the Michigan Student Assembly. This year has been bless- edly free of such controversy and we aim to keep it that way. As a non-profit student group serving all University student tenants, the AATU relies on MSA funding to nrovide valuable and uniaue McIN rOSH CLASSICS Secret societies.s Don 't 'Michout' on all the fun and excitement I n case you missed it, about two weeks ago somebody with way to much time on his hands fired off an mail message to several thousand of his closest friends regarding three secret societies on this campus. The secret societies exist, he conclud- ed, and they occu- py the top floors of the Michigan Union. Umm ... thanks I think. This guy ~- skipped BRENT Orientation, right, MCINTOSH when they told us all that stuff? These "secret" societies are about as secret as Ted Kennedy's drinking problem. Did this guy really think the best floors of the coolest building on campus were ... unoccu- pied? Umm ... do the words "beaco front property" and "Kansas" come to mind? In his defense, every few years there's a little frenzy over these soci- eties, which smack of you-wish-you- were-me-ism; our e-mailer has even more serious concerns about Michiguama, the men-only society that claims to represent the 25 best men on campus. Michiguama, he says, is racist, sexist, elitist and sever, other loaded words ending with "istY Now students are getting e-mail urg- ing protest of the societies' existence. I've even heard several people saying that the societies should be abolished. Yeah, abolish them ... then bring fraternity hazing to a screeching halt, stop underage drinking, rid the cam- pus of Jeep Cherokees driven by ath- letes and New Jersey girls, and end world hunger. Hey, I'd like to teach world to sing in perfect harmony, but ain't gonna happen. I have a better idea. Remember how cool it was when your grade-school club drew lots of attention by taking Old Mr. Rosenberg hostage and leav- ing his dentures for the police to find? Remember how it wasn't so cool any- more when everybody on your block had a club and all the old people you knew had been taken hostage? Well, the same thing applies 0 secret societies: the more clubs, the less cool. Once we're all members of secret societies, Michigamua won't be quite so cool. Therefore, it is every student's duty to become a member of a secret soci- ety. Among the best 25 men on cam- pus? Join Michigamua. Among the worst 25 men in the business school? Join Michmanagement and get elect to MSA. Feel alienated from toda modern society and need a shoulder to lean on? Join Michunderstood, form a militia, buy a machine gun and act paranoid. The possibilities are endless, really. , for one, am joining SwingandaMich, the society for those of us who couldn't hit a baseball if it were laying in the road and we were driving monster trucks. For those peo- ple who have a similar deficiency the basketball court, there Michajumpshot. Patron saint: Willie Mitchell. Do people often think that you're Yasser Arafat and wonder what you're doing in Ann Arbor? Michtakenldentity is just the club for you. Societies, though, aren't limited to inherent characteristics. They range across interests and likenesses U thought, also. For the 25 men on campus who most hate women, there's Michogyny; for petty criminals, there's Michdemeanor. The two groups will often meet to roam campus stealing purses, scrawling "Chicks Suck" graf- fiti and otherwise harassing women. Fanatical Trekkies will find it emi- nently logical to join MichterSpock; paranoid delusionals who belie7 horses speak to them will find th anodyne inMichterEd. No one's really sure what Michnomer does. Women, too, can start secret soci- eties. Do you have a beautiful fake tan, huge white teeth (like, for example, Mr. Ed's?) and the ability to make up spontaneous tripe about how you "just want to solve the world's problems, then act in movies?" Well, then - here she comes, MichAmerica. If you'd like to do the same thing on a smaller scale, try MichMichichippi. Forming our own clubs is our path to freedom from the tyranny of evil a patural manner - as opposed to an operat- ing room extraction under local or general anesthesia - provides a poignant sense of closure. Under current law, each woman techni- cally has reproductive control her body, but in actuality the right is limited. FDA approval of RU-486 will begin to correct this. Ideally, protection and birth control would alleviate the need for abortion. As this is not the reality, women need options. Though the advent and availability of alternative abortive measures will not cush- ion the pain and fear a woman may feel when she discovers an unwanted pregnancy, RU-486 will allow her greater latitude in deciding how she will handle this wrench- ing dilemma. If the FDA examines the pos- itive results of the drug in other countries