~C.ampaign The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 19, 1996 - 7A . Dole criticizes films for glorifying heroin abuse jie Washington Post EST HILLS, Calif. - Bob Dole, who is making teen drug use a defining issue of his campaign, scolded the entertainment industry yesterday for glorifying heroin and slammed President Clinton for showing "moral confusion" on drug issues. In his third trip to Los Angeles to attack the purported moral failures of the entertainment industry, Dole sin- gled out the 1993 American film "Pulp tion" and the newly released Scottish film "Trainspotting" as "wide- ly 'praised movies ... that feature the romance of heroin." . Dole has not seen either film, but has read reviews, according to his press secretary Nelson Warfield, who repeat- ed a campaign refrain from two earlier Hollywood-bashing trips by saying, "You don't have to look in every trash n to know there is garbage inside." ole delivered his speech at Chaminade College Preparatory High School, a private school in an affluent and mostly Republican suburb of Los Angeles County, about 20 miles north- west of Hollywood. The Catholic school is starting its second year of using drug- and gun-sniffing dogs for random classroom searches. "I have a message to the fashion, music and film industries, Dole said, what his campaign described as a ktor policy address. "Take your influ- ence seriously.... Stop the commercial- ization of drug abuse. Stop the glorifi- cation of slow suicide. ... Not because you are afraid of public outrage, but because you are responsible adults, with duties and standards." While the entertainment industry was the initial target of Dole's ire, the GOP candidate reserved his most cut- ting comments for Clinton, who he said has "sent up a white flag of surrender" on illegal drug use and who he accused of "a naked failure of leadership." In the most pointed language he has used against the president on the drug issue in the campaign, Dole charged that Clinton has sent "an implicit mes- sage to parents and children" on drugs that is "casual, permissive and liberal." "Sometimes this implicit message has become very direct and directed at children themselves. Bill Clinton, you'll remember, was asked on MTV, before an audi- ence of teen- agers, if he would inhale marijuana given the chance again. Laughing, he told them, 'Sure, if I could, - |- I tried before.' "Teenagers, many struggling Dole with the lure of drugs, have seen a United States presi- dent make light of his own experimen- tation with drugs. "A president is supposed to show the way. This president has shown moral confusion," Dole said. Dole followed up on his criticism by unveiling a new anti-drug slogan that is a variation of the "Just Do It" of the Nike athletic shoe company. "Just Don't Do It;' Dole said. "We will repeat this message as often as it takes. ... When we are accused of being simplis- tic and repetitive, we will repeat it again." Dole's stop here was part of a three- state western swing that has focused on the issues of crime and drugs, which polls say are major worries of the elec- torate. The campaign, at least for the moment, has shifted its emphasis away from the massive tax cut that had been the dominant message of Dole's cam- paign. Polls show that a majority of vot- ers do not believe Dole's claim that he can cut individual tax rates by 15 per- cent while balancing the budget. Criticism of Clinton on the drug issue sharpened last month after federal figures showed a dramatic increase in teen drug use between 1992 and 1995. While acknowledging that drug use among the young is a growing problem, the Clinton campaign counters by say- ing that Dole, as senator, voted against Clinton proposals to increase drug edu- cation and treatment for the young. By coming to center of the entertain- ment industry - an industry that has been lavish in its support of Clinton, Dole attempted to contrast his self-pro- claimed "moral clarity" against what he said is a "conspiracy of silence" by Clinton, the elite media and the enter- tainment industry. Dole quoted the main character in "Trainspotting," the film about young working-class heroin addicts in Scotland: "I choose not to choose life. I choose something else. And the rea- sons? There are no reasons. Who needs reasons when you've got heroin" Dole said he has seen reviews of the film that described it as "the first funny, upbeat look at heroin addictions." "Just what America needs," Dole noted. The other film Dole mentioned, "Pulp Fiction," shows actor John Travolta, who plays a drug-addict hood- lum as a hip anti-hero. In the end, though, Travolta's character is shot to death. President Clinton, Vice President Al Gore and Norma Mattheson, deliver a speech at The Grand Canyon National Park In Arizona yesterday. Cli*nton pro wenounces canyons national-monumnts GRAND CANYON NATIONAL PARK, Ariz. (AP) - Siding with envi- ronmentalists in one of the nation's biggest wilderness battles, President Clinton declared 1.7 million acres of southern Utah's red-rock cliffs and canyons as a national monument yester- day. The election-year move effectively blocks development of one of America's largest known coal reserves, to the dismay of political leaders in Utah, the nation's most Republican state. "We can't have mines everywhere and we shouldn't have mines that threaten our national treasures," the president said. Standing at the south rim of the rust- colored Grand Canyon, Clinton invoked a 90-year-old law to create the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument without congressional approval. He announced his decision near the same spot where Theodore Roosevelt used the same law, the Antiquities Act, to protect the Grand Canyon from development in 1908. "We are saying very simply, our par- ents and grandparents saved the Grand Canyon for us,' the president said, bathed in sunlight breaking through the clouds. "Today we will save the Grand Escalante Canyons and the Kaiparowits Plateaus of Utah for our children." The area, 70 miles north of here, is marked with natural arches and bridges, high cliffs of red, white and yellow sandstone and deep canyons. Seven weeks before the election, Clinton's action delighted environmen- talists but brought threats of political retaliation from Utah. Mike Matz, executive director of the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, called it "one of the most significant land actions that any president has done." Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said Clinton was declaring "war on the West." Utah's Republican governor Michael Leavitt said Clinton "completely chose to ignore the process ... (and) ignore the public trust" of people in the region. Yet, with just five electoral votes in Utah, there was not much political risk for Clinton in offending the state's political establishment. Arizona was the third state on Clinton's six-state campaign tour, and it was the second time he visited the state in a week. No Democrat has carried Arizona since Harry Truman in 1948 but Clinton campaign officials say the presi- dent holds a narrow lead over Bob Dole. From here, Clinton headed to Seattle for a speech at the Pike Place Market. Today he will take a bus trip through Washington to Oregon for a rally in Portland tomorrow. The presi- dent will stop in South Dakota, anoth- er traditional Republican stronghold, on his way back to Washington later in the day. Clinton holds a double-digit lead- in Washington and Oregon and a narrow- er edge in South Dakota, according to his campaign. Clinton's designation of a national monument in southern Utah covers fed- eral land to the west of the Colorado River and to the east of Bryce Canyon National Park. It includes the coal-rich Kaiparowits Plateau, the Escalante River Canyons and the Grand Staircase. A Dutch mining company, Andalex Resources, holds coal leases on the 600,000-acre plateau and already has begun -some mining operations. The federal government will seek negotia- tions with the company to trade leases in the area for federal assets elsewhere, the White House said. WORK-STUDY STUDENT: various duties n the medical center. Must have UM work- ;tudy status. Call Liz at 936-5504. WORK-STUDY (2) wanted for Medical School offices. 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' Reform Party to sue U.S. District Court for inclusion in events The Washington Post SAN FRANCISCO - An angry Ross Perot yesterday called his exclu- sion from the upcoming presidential debates "a major setback ... for democ- racy and the rights of voters," and sar- castically suggested that America ask "Bosnia and Haiti to send poll-watchers to help us clean up the election process." Reacting to Tuesday's decision by the Commission on Presidential Debates to bar him from debating President Clinton and Republican nominee Bob Dole because it believed he does not have a chance of being elected, Perot said: "The American voters don't have a voice. Their views are ignored by the debate commission." "The overriding factor" on whether a candidate should be included in the debates, Perot said, is whether "the owners of this country" want him. Perot cited a recent Harris poll that found 76 percent of the electorate thinks he should be allowed to debate the major party candidates, as he was four years ago when he garnered 19 percent of the vote running as an independent. The decision to "freeze me out" of the debates, Perot told 600 members of the Commonwealth Club of California, was made by a commission composed of Democrats and Republicans and Perot protests exclusion from upcoming presidential debates "funded by corporations and founda- tions who have a lot at stake here, and (whose) chairman, believe it or not, is a registered lobbyist for the gambling industry." Perot was referring to commission co-chairman Frank Fahrenkopf Jr., for- mer chair of the Republican National Committee, who is president and chief operating officer of the American Gaming Association. Perot is running as the nominee of the Reform Party, which he founded and funded. Perot won the party's nom- ination over former Colorado Gov. Dick Lamm, whom Perot refused to debate. Perot said the Reform Party will sue the commission in U.S. District Court in Washington "to d e t e r m i n e whether 76 per- cent of the vot- ers should decide who This is a blatant display of power by the Republicans and the large donors" . - RsPeo somely, and every penny of those handsome rewards comes from hard-work- ing taxpayers, and we're going to stop that;' Perot said. Perot said Clinton, the Democratic Party and "40 Republican con- gressmen, who wanted me in, but "Now do you understand why they don't want this cur dog included -just two registered puppies," Perot said to laughter. Perot placed most of the blame on Dole, whose advisers believe Perot will cut into the anti-Clinton vote, thus help- ing the president. "The primary reason for keeping us out of the debates and not selling us television time is to protect and to pre- serve Washington's corrupt political practices," Perot said. "This is a blatant display of power by the Republicans and the large donors who fund their campaigns and then get rewarded hand- TIOS DELIVERS Ann Arbor's best Mexican style food. Call 761-6650. Tios Mexican Restaurant 333 E. Huron. gets to debate, or should it beR left up to the Reform two political parties and political writers that they call on the phone to get their opinion" Before the 1992 debates, Perot's standing in the polls was lower then that it is now - between 6 and 8 percent - but afterward he "roared up" in the polls. - Ross Perot Party nominee bolted from Doe, What you wants.. Baby we got it Atb Iid~iguu IDaU FREE "I SAFE SEX YOU, because l love you" cassette tape with your order of the weight-loss patch or the 60 minute phonecard $3.9 &shppnga& andlig pinal Free THE FISH DOCTORS back to school a- quarium sale! 10 gallon tank $7.99 29 gallon tank $25.99 they were ignored." Inclusion in the debate is "so criti- cal;' Perot said, because it is the only way a candidate can get his views pre- sented to the expected 80 million view- ers. . I I