a OPINION Page 6 be ficigan EhiI Vol. XCIV, No. 32-S 94 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board The Constitution applies in schools, too T HE JUSTICE Department recently carried out part of President Reagan's plan to eliminate an "epidemic" of crime in the nation's schools by urging the Supreme Court to grant school administrators sweeping powers to search for drugs and weapons. In a friend-of-the-court brief filed this week, the Justice Department sided with a New Jer- sey school official who pawed through a 14- year-old girl's purse after she had been ac- cused of smoking cigarettes. The official found the cigarettes, but kept digging and also discovered marijuana. The principal then called police. The New Jersey Supreme Court correctly ruled that the evidence the principal found could not be used to bring drug charges again- st the girl. Granting school administrators such leeway to violate a student's civil rights would be tantamount to declaring martial law in the schools. In fact, if such tactics were used against adults instead of minors, the evidence would be immediately thrown out of court. While there may be a great discipline problem in many schools, stripping students of any vestige of civil rights is not the way to approach the problem. The girl in the New Jersey case was not even suspected of carrying marijuana, but the principal con- tinued searching anyway. Granting school officials such sweeping powers is a clear violation of the constitutional ban on illegal searches and seizures. Simply because the action takes place in a school does not create an exemption to the constitutional prohibition on searches without probable cause. There is certainly nothing wrong with in- creasing security in a public school if con- ditions warrant it, but it must be done in a sane and rational manner. A student who is disruptive-such as one who comes to school drunk-should be immediately disciplined or ordered to a drug rehabilitation center, but searching students and their personal proper- ty without probable cause is a clear violation of students rights. It does violence to the prin- ciples of law and justice which our schools exist to promote. Friday, August 3, 1984 The Michigan Daily The case for Indianapolis' pornography law a By Beulah Coughenour INDIANAPOLIS- There has been a great deal of national in- terest in an Indianapolis ordinan- ce which establishes por- nography as a form of discrimination on the basis of sex. Because pornography is a systematic practice of ex- ploitation that sexually subor- dinates women, it violates all laws which guarantee civil equality to all citizens. The ordinance is based on the idea-like the principle un- derlying the Fourteenth Amen- dment-that women have rights which are abrogated by systematic sexual subordination. Pornography is systematic sexual subordination. Under the ordinance, por- nography is defined as the graphic sexually explicit subor- dination of women, whether in pictures or in words. The material, in order to be por- nography, must also include one WASHINGTON, D.C.-For most students, summer means a time to relax, to make extra money for the fall, to travel, and to tan. A few Michigan students remain in Ann Arbor to take classes or just not to go home. Fewer people yet leave the streets of Ann Arbor, Southfield, West Bloomfield, Long Island, and Highland Park to seek their fortunes as interns in the tumult of Washington, D.C. Why do we do it? Why do we spend 40 hours a week working for no pay? With no beach, not many people we know, and a very high cost of living. What is worse than working for no pay is the op- portunity cost of volunteer working. It is as though we are losing out twice: not earning money and missing the oppor- tunity to earn money. For most interns, the shortage of money means searching for happy hours that serve food, for receptions, and free lunches. Often times the work is demanding and most of the time interns do the same work as salaried employees. BUT WHY DO we do it? Everyone talks about theex- perience, making connections, and rubbing elbows with the right people. The truth is that ex- perience means working hard. Connections do not just magically appear, and in all likelihood you can get rubbed the wrong way. With all these risks, Washington is still teeming with interns. There must be something that keeps people here and keeps them coming back. An internship in Washington, or anywhere for that matter, has to be looked at as an investment. It is a plan for the future. As an in- tern, one has the golden oppor- tunity to experience jobs and of the following: sexual objects who enjoy rape, pain, or humiliation; sexual objects being tied up, cut up, mutilated, bruised, or physically hurt or penetrated by objects or animals; or sexual objects in scenarios of degradation, injury, abasement, torture, or shown as filthy, inferior, bleeding, bruised, or hurt in a context which makes these conditions sexual. The or- dinance clearly states that the separating out of isolated passages may not be used as a charge against the sellers. This definition describes the actual abuses of women in pornography, a $7-billion-a-year industry in the United States, larger than the conventional record and film in- dustries combined. It is supported by women from differing philosophical backgrounds who see one of the most practical harms as the silencing of women about attack because of the difficulty of receiving a fair trial. Studies show pornography callouses Fro-m Wa shin goil: Anode to internships By Andrew Hartman possible careers that would otherwise not be considered. It's better for the future MBA student to find out he hates business in the summer of his junior year than after he graduates and is working for a Big Eight firm. It is a boon to the future lawyer who finds she is frustrated and disillusioned with the criminal justice system. The consumer activist finds that he hates cut- juries, preventing them from perceiving the harm and somehow tending to blame the victim. The ordinance is part of the civil code, not the criminal code. There is no state ban or police en- forcement. It follows the procedure for any civil rights violation and requires judicial review. A suit has been filed against the city by a coalition of publishers, booksellers, and film distributors claiming the city does not have the right to regulate sexually ex- plicit materials unless legally ob- scene. It is of interest that the Supreme Court recently ruled that child pornography, along with libel and other harmful acts, is not protected by the First Amendment. . Coughenour, a Republican member of the Indianapolis City Council, is a strong sup- porter of the new Indianapolis ordinance. ting through all the red tape to do the simplest things; the future politician realizes that not everyone is as committed as she is. An internship is a cheap in- vestment to find out what the future holds. That is why so many Wolverines choose to in- tern. Washington is teeming with in- terns, it seems that most of them are from the University of Michigan. Their jobe range from the private sector to consumer advocacy groups; from Congress to the White House to the Department of Justice; from the Democratic National Com- mittee to the National Conser- vative Political Action Commit- tee. It amazes me that there are so many people from the Univer- sity here. On second thought, if any university should be over- represented, it makes sense that it is the University of Michigan. Hartman is a University sophomore. I I I 0 6 Unsigned editorials ap- pearing on the left side on this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily 's Editorial Board. 0