4A - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 6, 1999 Ile £idlijiautt atig 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan LAURIE MAYK Editor in Chief JACK SCHILLACI Editorial Page Editor 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 Let's make a deal Senate should not follow House's example 'I don't think there has ever been a trial in the history of Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence which is as important as this one.' - US. Sen. Aren Specter (R-Penn) on the Senate trial of President Clinton, as quoted in The New York Times yesterday MATT WIMSATT A Loo B ACK I _- 0 rT E i t+ J LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A fler months of partisan politicking and revelations about the spicier portions of elected officials' lives, the U.S. House passed two of the four articles of impeachment pre- sented by the House Judiciary Committee on Dec. 19, 1998. The voting was almost entire- ly along party lines, with a mere five Democrats voting in favor of impeachment and a similarly small handful of Republicans opposed. The hours of debate on the House floor led many Americans to a feeling of anger toward their elected representa- tives, as evidenced by the sharp results of a public opinion poll taken immedi- ately after President Clinton's impeachment.± Incensed by the rallying call that was House Speaker-designate Bob Livingston's (R-La.) resignation, conservative and moderate Republicans alike rallied around the party line. Tomorrow the Senate will begin the sec- ond presidential impeachment trial in U.S. History. The Senate should not follow the lower house's example of inflexibility and partisanship; instead it should consider cen- sure as an alternative means of punishment. With world economic crises and the ongoing dispute with Iraq among the many prominent issues with which Congress must deal, the Senate will conduct a trial that could easily stall legislators for months and leave key government officials unsure of their future and unable to act effectively. The 100 senators, who will act as the jury in Clinton's trial, must find him not guilty of the charges in the weak articles passed by the House, which were sparked by a witch hunt led by Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr. The 435-page Starr Report is full of dirty little secrets about the private relationship between Lewinsky and Clinton, but little more. Starr was hired in 1994 to investigate potential wrongdoing by the Clintons in the Whitewater real estate scandal. Five years and $40 million later, all Starr has dug up is a story about the presidential sex life. While Republicans on the Judiciary Committee were quick to compliment "Judge" Starr, his biases and tendency to act outside the ethical boundaries required of prosecutors call his motives into question. The neo-Puritanism that looms over the Capitol has been detrimental to both parties. Livingston, a veteran legislator who chaired the House Appropriations Committee, was pressured to step down after he admitted to marital infidelity. This new form of McCarthyism is doling out power to the nation's leaders based on their sexual history and not their capability to serve the nation. The public scandal began in January of 1998 when Clinton acted disingenuously at his deposition in a civil lawsuit filed by Paula Jones. After months of finagling over immu- nity deals, Starr managed to get the testimo- ny of former White House intern Monica Lewinsky that contradicted Clinton's deposi- tion about the substance of their relationship. But determining whether or not Clinton's testimony amounted to legal perjury requires more than a finding of untruth. Even if his testimony were to reach the threshold of perjury, it does not constitute an impeachable offense under the "high crimes and misdemeanors" clause of the Constitution. The clause was put in to protect the American people from a president who abuses his power to the detriment of the nation, not as a way for a lame duck Congress to reverse a popular election for lying about sex. But despite the testimony of numerous constitutional scholars before the House Judiciary Committee, Rep. Henry Hyde (R- Ill.) and other Committee Republicans showed their zeal at perpetuating a grave mis- The impeachment debate has turned into little more than a partisan quabble. Time and again, Republicans have used their power as the majority party to serve their political ends rather than fostering a fair debate. For instance, the House leadership denied Democrats the opportunity to bring a cen- sure resolution to the floor for a vote. While a simple majority is all that was necessary to move the issue to the other side of the Capitol, two-thirds of the Senate will have to consent to remove Clinton. With partisanship plaguing the issue as it has, it is unlikely that Republicans, who hold only 55 seats in the Senate, will be able to Hyde muster enough votes to remove him from office. Nonetheless, some Republicans interviewed shortly after the passage of the articles of impeachment stat- ed their belief that partisanship would end at the doors of the House. Many cited the oath of impartiality that senators will take prior to the trial as sufficient to prevent pol- itics from guiding the Senate's decision. While it is important for the senators to give a fair reading of the facts in this matter and acquit the president, it is unlikely that parti- sanship will be dissipated by an oath. Further, many senators have thrown any possibility of impartiality to the wind by espousing their beliefs in the media about the gravity or inconsequence of the issues to come before them. Unlike jurors, many sen- ators have had no problem indicating their preference before the trial. There are alternatives to a drawn-out trial that could stall legislation and disrupt the activities of all three branches of government. A proposal by Sens. Slade Gorton (R-Wash.) and Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) would con- dense the trial to four days. The proposal also calls for a vote at the beginning of the trial to determine if the requisite two-thirds of sena- tors even believe that the allegations in the two articles of impeachment would warrant Clinton's removal from office. If not, it is like- ly that the the Senate trial would adjourn immediately. Despite the objection of many conservative senators, this proposal should be adopted to speed the process along. Besides political problems presented by the articles of impeachment to be brought before the Senate tomorrow, a significant procedural and constitutional problem exists. As pointed out by Yale constitutional law Prof. Bruce Ackerman in his testimony before the Judiciary Committee and in a paper recently published, allowing the Senate to proceed on articles passed by a lame-duck House sets a frightening precedent. Normally, legislation passed by only one house at the end of a session of Congress dies and must be repassed by both houses in the new term. Despite their invocation of vaunted constitutional principles,. Republicans are ignoring the pathos of the 20th Amendment and the deference that should be paid to the newly elected Congress. The House should at least resub- mit the appointment of impeachment man- agers to allow the new representatives a chance to confirm or annul the passage of the articles of impeachment. The scandal and impeachment debacle has held the public spotlight for almost a year, but there are still no grounds to remove Bill Clinton from office. The presi- dent's lawyers and the Senate should work together to reach a censure deal. Ending the impeachment debate quickly would be the best way to begin to restore public confi- dence in governmental affairs and allow legislators to address the many pressing public issues facing the nation and the AAPD abridged civil liberties To THE DAILY: I can't believe it, but I'm writing a letter in defense of the Greek system. Yes, the old boys-and-girls club, whose implicit purpose is the furtherance of social strati- fication and elitism in society, have come to a point where I feel obligated to speak up for it. Why? Well, we all know alcohol is a problem on cam- pus. Of course the rites of passage, used by the Greek system to homogenize the thinking and behavior of its pledge classes, make plenti- ful use of alcohol. In any case, this time, the Greek system is being preyed upon by the immense power of the Ann Arbor Police Department. I must object. Of course, alcohol abuse is rampant in the system. Just look at the multitudinous flyers and party announcements slipped under the doors of first- year students during their first weeks in school. You don't have to be a genius to pick up the implication of alcohol on them, but in case you're not, there are often pictures. In any case, this abuse does happen in private residences where real people live. The police have neither the right nor the authority to go to such extreme violations of civil liberties to curtail drinking on campus or in town. Individual students' lives are affected, and for what? Holding a plastic cup they waited in a two-hour line to get. Rather than bringing the all-out power of the police to bear on the heads of these "poor oppressed peoples," if Ann Arbor and the University want to do something to com- bat the rampant spread of alco- hol, work to provide proper social environments where alcohol is not an indicator of one's social status. Environments like this are scarce at many parties, both Greek and non-Greek. Of course, we needn't for- get - the Greek system makes good people do bad things. Nationwide, it is an institu- tion geared toward the continu- ation of social stratification under the rubric of "tradition." Funny, that was the same term which the houses used to exclude people of color from their ranks for years. Further, we should note the slantedness of the hiring sys- tem on account of Greek per- petuation. It's funny that if your resume says your an Alpha Beta Whatever, you are guaran- teed a job if somewhere out there, there's a recruitment offi- cer who is a "brother" or "sis- ter." It seems a little unfair when we see that programs like affir- for their attempt to empower the "traditionally" disenfran- chised. Anyway, I'm getting off point. My purpose here is not to bash the Greek system. Well, okay, it is. But I should point out that everyone, no matter who they are, has basic civil liberties that must not be abridged. The actions of the AAPD have done just that. CHAD BAILEY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Abu-Jamal'S supporters spread propaganda To ThE DAILY: Joseph Goebbels, minister of propaganda for the Nazi party, once said "Nothing is easier than leading the people on a leash. I just hold up a dazzling campaign poster and they jump right through it." This is exactly what Mumia Abu-Jamal has done to thou- sands of people internationally. The evidence against Abu- Jamal during his trial made his conviction a no-brainer. Abu- Jamal was seen by three sepa- rate witnesses, all of whom were within 50 feet of the inci- dent and all gave similar testi- mony within 20 minutes of the crime. Abu-Jamal's gun was found at the scene and the bul- lets in the back and in the face of the slain officer came from that gun. Abu-Jamal's own brother, who was at the scene, refused to exonerate Abu-Jamal of the crime. What is Abu-Jamal's defense? He saw a police offi- cer who was shot between the eyes? When he walked up to see if the officer needed any help, the officer's gun mysteri- ously went off and hit Abu- Jamal in the chest. Abu- Jamal's witnesses include a prostitute who was "high on a half-nickel bag" and two city blocks from the crime, a woman at the top of an apart- ment building and another wit- ness who was not even near the crime. None of their stories coincide. Furthermore, Abu- Jamal's defense contends that the bullet used to kill the offi- cer was a .44 caliber slug, whereas the gun found at the scene was a .38 caliber. Several ballistics experts, including Abu-Jamal's original defense ballistic expert, howev- er, confirmed that the bullet was .38 caliber and came from the gun at the crime scene. Abu-Jamal's proponents would like everybody to believe that his death sen- tence is the silencing of an activist voice. Abu-Jamal has been quoted as saying, "Revolution is my religion" That would seem to go hand in hand with Abu-Jamal's affiliation with the Black ous for violence. As for "international support" for Abu-Jamal, it doesn't matter what celebrities support him, or which cities applaud him. These people have all been fooled by a concerted effort by Abu-Jamal and his revolu- tionary supporters to subvert justice and use popular senti- ment as a tool to freedom. If the Daily wants to take a stand, it should take one on the side of the evidence, and thus on the side of justice.To all of the people supporting Abu-Jamal, sit down for a bit and think about who you're supporting and why. And remember - you can fool some of the people all of the time. You can fool all of the people some of the time. But you can't fool all of the peo- ple all of the time. CHRIS GEORGANDEWS LSA SENIOR Notification of Code violations is necessary To THE DAILY: In the Daily's editorial "You've got mail" (12/10/98), the editorial staff missed the point again. Its condemnation of University notification of Code of Student Conduct violations to students receiving minor-in-pos- session citations is based on bla- tant self-interest and advocates avoiding personal responsibility. The idea that it is unfair for the University to send a letter to a student cited for violating the law is ridiculous. Students are here because the University is here. It is the responsibility of the University to respond when its students violate the law. The Daily says, "The University does not ally itself with any particular school of thought and likewise, it should not take or enforce any moral stance." This argument fails by going far beyond the facts of the case. The University is not "try- ing to create a morally homo- geneous student body," but rather, as stated in the mission statement of the University, to develop "leaders and citizens who will challenge the present and enrich the future." The law is not just a moral stance. It is the consensus of society on our minimum standards of behav- ior. This typically means restraints, and the bohemia the Daily advocates is not going to happen here. So, again I say, change your behavior or change the rules. Stop whining about penalties for getting caught. Finally, accept that the educa- tion you are getting at the University may sometimes extend beyond the classroom. CURT WEST Me and the rest of the micks are ] not cool in Hollywood There are few things more irritating than an ethnic group that isn't oppressed complaining about their oppression. This being said, I'm going to do it anyway. Nyah nyah nyah. It seems that the A m e r i c a n Entertainment" w Machine has its crosshairs set on a new ethnic darling. Last year it was the Scottish. We saw a resurgence of Sean Connery movies and millions of Marlboro smoking, J AMESO "Star Wars" wor- MILLER shipping, dorm rat MiEtt retards fell in love T3p with dirty heroin - chic and "Trainspotting." Suddenly, being Scottish was cool. Fine. Stupid things happen. Now it's the Irish. This is my neigh- borhood. I'm not sure where or when it hap- pened. First there was "The Matchmaker" with Janeane Garafolo, when she went to Ireland for some rea- son andhad big fun with cute accents and dark beer. Then 'Angela's Ashes" gave women everywhere a non- Hallmark commercial reason to cry. Everyone was so moved by the plight of the Irish that no one pointed out that Frank McCourt had ripped off "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man." The Irish tale of maturation in a cruel and drunk- en world has already been done by James Joyce and in Brenden Behan's "Borstel Boy" after that; and Frank McCourt, despite his newfound Oprah- like sainthood, could not hold either of their jockstraps. This month we have "Waking Ned Devine," a movie starring Irish actors so obviously and quaintly Irish that they looked pilfered from a Lucky Charms advertisement. "Would you happen to know a Ned Devine?" "Yes! I do! Would ye like a nice jig, mate?" Worse yet is the American Express commercial where the well-heeled red- head flies her and her mother to Ireland so they can see where she met her father. It's an adorable story, minus the come-ons with Guinness-scented breath and the "Nah, no rubber, love. It's a sin, don't you know?" Let me begin by saying that I myself am not very Irish. If they gave a schol- arship for it, " would just barely qualify. There are no accents or traditional dances or family crests on the walls in my family. Nor is there any tweed, homemade whiskey or genial, white- haired, pipe-smokinguncles. I'm not objecting to the Irish obses- sion because of a foolish loyalty to "my people" I object because this is some- thing that Americans, especially the trouser snakes than run the entertain- ment world, love to do more than bomb countries with dark people in them. It's a sick little reflex we have. We reduce anything foreign or ethnic into one or two adorable little traits or characteris- tics, primed for placement on the front of a lunchbox. The Irish are not "a proud, resilient3 people full of vitality and wit" any mre. than the Nigerians or the Ukraines or the Cambodians. Any group larger than a rugby team can't be that homogenous and easily pigeon-holed. The Irish are a bunch of people who are all differenta and just as dull and ordinary as the rest of the world. We have latched onto this image of the Irish as a pavilion at Disney World{ because we love to latch on and simpli- fy ethnic groups to make ourselves look cool. We can look at the quaint, hard-drink- ing Irishman in a movie and think about our idiot grandfather who was a drunk, without the brogue, driving cap and charming stories. "Well, I'm Irish too, um, laddie, and this place can't make a good Black and Tan. My Irish grandfather makes the best Black and Tan in the world. In fact, there's still a little Gaelic spoken in my house. Rah rah, IRA! Oh, Danny* Boooooooy." We like to identify with these tradi- tions because our own country is so cheap and traditionless sometimes. Pretend to be a member of one of the "cool ethnic groups" and you can be cool, not like one of the bland, lawn- mowing, church-going types that people mean when they talk about "The Man." It's rather like when wimpy, bawling, little monkey boys latch onto conser -. vatism and libertarian journalism to an alarming lack of secondary sex charac- teristics and the inability to get two dates in a row or get anyone to read their snot-covered little tabloid. What's the upshot of all this? I don't