Page 4--The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 19, 1991 JWbe 1Mid14iguu BUIQ fV - - b o-¢ ¢ ..Y. ,... ,,e 5 ,jp ., Y 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan ANDREW GOTT'ESMAN Editor in Chief STEPHEN HENDERSON DANIEL POUX Opinion Editors Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Ar f I', a , I/ 71414 VhY":..M " :YYY . A- 1'}/ " "NY": A"N " Y .,A '..:YhY ::"..1..... ._ }:._. .."..1..1.Yf:!"A:t h.........? }..i... \h"}Y"."1' .AY1"t!? ..K Y ?R+{{.'}b:Ly\k..n"h!Y1LE. M xY..AxYA~ w."YYhY1:..:.h:::...../.....:..::........ ...' ""V .**>*. .~ ''"'': . ."}:X4:}"} .{ it:: :¢}."r"::.:" " ...". c..,. .. ..::"SV 1 ,1 .........":{. f1 . .J ... 1Y :' . vr:f 1: ^"' VS .:v ":r " . .".YYr':Jh .". h."J:Vh : . h...". * ..1. W.... A... :":Y}:":.'"?'}: '''": ~v.Y., .h"J:'.".".. :JN:""""" ".,? {:f:Nr~:X"" :"1 . ::1:" SS F ighting w ords?.L"'" 4:4 "."t:":.{Y:1.:;::.}. ?.' J Brown case should be decided L ast week, in an unprecedented decision, Brown University expelled student Douglas Hann for violating Brown's student code of non-academic conduct. The code - instituted during the fall of 1989 - prohibits the subjection of a person or group of people to inappropriate, abusive, threat- ening or demeaning action based on race, religion, gender, handicap, ethnicity, national origin or sexual orientation. Hann is charged with shouting several offensive statements in a dormitory courtyard last October. After a student told him to be quiet, Hann responded with several more offensive statements directed at the individual. Hann's actions should be condemned and he should be censured, but Brown University should not be his judge, jury and executioner. His case should be heard in a federal courtroom, not in the office of the University president. Supreme Court decisions have drawn a fine line concerning the difference between free speech and "fighting words." Fighting words are defined as comments that-by their very utterance- are the verbal equivalent of a punch in the nose. According to the Supreme Court, "fighting words" are not constitutionally protected under the in court, not on campus First Amendment, and it is not the punishability of Hann's actions that deserves criticism. But, if Hann is indeed guilty of harassment, the federal government-not Brown University -should be the punisher in this case. Brown University has no jurisdiction or author- ity to prosecute transgressions of the law. Brown's potential responsibilities end in reporting an al- leged criminal activity to the proper authorities. In making decisions involving "fighting words," the Supreme Court never authorized such judicial privileges to Brown or any other university. Brown has decided to act as the judge and jury, and is committing a crime as repugnant as Hann's. Hann's Constitutional right to a fair and speedy trial has been replaced by a conviction and pun- ishment handed down by a body with no judicial authority. Brown's decision - however correct it may be in principle - is invalid. If the university administration truly respects the laws they are trying to enforce, they would reinstate Hann and hand the case over to the proper judicial authori- ties. Such a decision will justly determine Hann's fate and will prevent a second crime: the subver- sion of federal jurisdiction and Hann's right to due process. Unwanted actilvists RWL's disregard for democracy, /'"n Feb. 11, a majority of the Students Against U.S. Intervention in the Middle East (SAUSI) anti-war group voted to ban the Revolutionary Workers' League (RWL) from future meetings, pointing to the RWL's disregard for group process. SAUSI - composed of factions covering the entire anti-war political spectrum - did not expel the RWL because of its extremist doctrine. Indeed, many SAUSI members support some of the RWL's arguments and ideologies. Instead, the RWL was banned because of its constant subversion of and antagonism toward the democratic process. During the past decade, the RWL - a self- styled radical communist organization - has dis- rupted and dismembered many campus activist groups. The RWL's verbal abuse and disruptive behavior has derailed many campus activists groups, including the Latin American Solidarity Committee (LASC), the United Coalition Against :Racism (UCAR), the Coalition to Defend Abor- tion Rights (CDAR) and the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT-UP). It has been difficult enough for these different progressive groups to consolidate their efforts on campus. The disruptive antics of the RWL do 'nothing to strengthen the disjointed anti-war movement. The RWL's attempt to hijack campus justifies expulsion from SAUSI groups like SAUSI in order to promote its own agenda is unacceptable, and campus groups should be careful in the future to prevent the RWL from splintering their movements. By-constantly speaking out of turn and harass- ing other SAUSI members, a small number of RWL members created an unpleasant and intimi- dating atmosphere for the rest of the student ac- tivists. The constant disruption discouraged many potential anti-war activists, who were irritated with the way that the RWL's disregard for majority opinion thwarted SAUSI's progress. This is not an issue of political agendas; it is an issue of respect for others' opinions. SAUSI tol- erated the RWL's outbursts for several weeks, in the interest of group democracy and respect. But the RWL members' disrespect for the opinions of the SAUSI majority left the anti-war leaders no other choice than to expel the entire RWL. Re- gardlessof a group's political ideals, no organization has the right to disrupt the focus and direction of the anti-war movement. The SAUSI membership was justified in its expulsion of the RWL, and this should serve as a warning to RWL members to respect the opinions of others in the pursuit of its revolutionary agenda. Brown's policy is unconstitutional To the Daily: I am writing to address the incident last week in which Brown University expelled one of its students for making racist remarks. I do not condone the ignorance and hate that generated these statements, but this nation- wide "politically correct" move- ment to curb insensitive com- ments by subordinating the First Amendment to the equal protec- tion clause is a travesty of freedom. Thus, the fact that the student was yelling his beliefs in the courtyard changes his statements from opinion, which is protected, to a one-man racist riot against the listeners. Do not be fooled into thinking that these restricting tendencies will be so easily noticeable. The refusal of the various anti- war campus groups to allow the RWL and the Support Our Soldiers (SOS) movement to speak at meetings is symptomatic of the urge among PC leaders to ignore opinions that contradict their own, and this destroys the basis of "liberal education." The main fallacy of these attempts to set codes of "non- academic" behavior and manda- tory racism classes is that they will not create a better world; instead, they will create a world of liberal automatons. The human urge to question, to contradict the world and its traditions, and to reject simple answers in favor of more complicated and unsolvable paradoxes will be gone. This army of "liberal" soldiers truly loves Big Brother. James Mulvenon LSA junior Conduct policies will go all the way To the Daily: It is interesting that the members of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT-UP) are upset because their meetings were infiltrated and disrupted by a group trying to impose its own agenda. And the Lesbian and Gay Rights Organizing Committee (LaGROC) is upset because its members were called racist or sexist merely because they TAs respond to Regent Nielsen's threats To the Daily: GEO, the Graduate Employees Organization, is the labor union that represents teaching and staff assistants at the University of Michigan. We in GEO were disturbed by a suggestion made by University Regent Neal Nielsen sity President Duderstadt did not support Nielsen's motion. But it is very unfortunate that someone like Nielsen, who apparently does not understand or agree with the fundamental ideals of the Univer- sity, is on the Board of Regents in the first place. GEO respects free speech, openness of information, and tolerance. We do not respect autocrats who do not support the essential mission of this Univer- sity. Christopher Roberson GEO President To the Daily: So Regent Nielsen wants to be treated with the respect due his station as a regent of the Univer- sity, and I, as a TA next term, should grant him that respect as I would to an employer in the private sector. I was always taught, however, that respect was something that had to be earned, not merely accorded because of position. Given the regents' own recent behavior of late, I doubt many of them should have earned my respect. The recent student "disrup- tions" of the regents' meetings reflect the growing dissatisfaction of some students. What is sad is that the regents apparently don't want to take the time to under- stand what is causing this dissatisfaction, to help find solutions or to hear the genuine pain some students are express- ing. Were they to do this, they might gain some of my respect back. The only reason many workers in the private sector "respect" bosses who do a bad job is to keep from getting fired. I have a Union, and I can't be fired arbitrarily. As long as my "bosses" -- the regents and President Duderstadt - continue to do the miserable job they have done thus far, I will withhold, vocally and demonstrably, my respect for them. Charles Sullivan Rackham graduate student 01 Nielsen at the last meeting of the Board of Regents. A number of students, some of whom were teaching assistants, disrupted the public comments section of that meeting. Regent Nielsen was quoted as saying after the meeting that teaching assistants who participate in such protests are showing "disrespect" for the Regents and that they should be fired. GEO objects very strongly to Regent Nielsen's remarks. It is obvious that the threat of being fired will have a chilling effect on the rights of teaching assistants to moral and political expression. Although GEO has no position on the tactics used at the regents' meeting, we do not believe that employers may legitimately fire their employees for expressing themselves on important political matters. It is mildly heartening to see that the other regents and Univer- 01 ~ ROUJIP Racists have rights too It's ironic that the two most recent demonstrations of hatred on campus weren't even addressed at last month's convocation on racism. Last month, the University Gay/ Lesbian/Bisexual Community received a telephone threat. And last weekend, students objected to a Nazi flag hung in adormresident's window. TheUniversity's Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Officer, Pat Mullen, wants the flag taken down permanently. While it is understandable that officials like Mullen would prefer people not be subjected to symbols of hatred and racism, insisting that the flag be removed is brushing deeper issues under the rug; in some ways this is worse than the act itself. Nobody but the most seething of racists could morally defend hanging a symbol of Nazism - with all that implies - anywhere, much less in a window for all to see. And this is especially true now, at a time when hate- motivated attacks against Jews, lesbians, bisexuals, gays and people of color are all on the rise. As disgusting as symbols like the Nazi flag are, there are compelling First Amendment reasons for allowing them to be displayed. Only by defending the most offensive forms of speech can all forms of speech - however unpopular - truly be preserved. But there are also other reasons to allow the flag to be displayed. Students at the "liberal" University should no longer be allowed to pretend that such hatred doesn't exist here. Removing the symbols of hatred does not remove the hatred that inspires people to embrace them, then or now. Feb. 7, 1991, Minnesota Daily University of Minnesota disagreed with members of a different organization. Last year, many students were demanding the University install a code restricting racist and sexist speech. This year, the same students are protesting against a code of non-academic behavior. Am I the only student on this campus who sees the irony in these things? Doug Shaw Rackham graduate student RWL, AAC respond to expulsion from SAUSI The Daily encourages responses from its readers. Letters should be 150 words or less and include the author's name, year in school, and phone number. They can be mailed to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, 48109, or they can be sent via MTS to "The Michigan Daily." The Daily reserves the right to edit letters for style and space. by Paul Carmouche While U.S. imperialism is murdering tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians and soldiers, the leadership of Students Against U.S. Intervention (SAUSI) is failing to act. SAUSI's leadership is ambivalent about the war's outcome and is tactically timid. The leadership covers its coward- ice by lies, red-baiting, and now the political expulsion of the Revolutionary Workers' League (RWL) and the Anti-Imperialist Action Caucus (AIAC) at the SAUSI general meeting Feb. 4. In contrast, the AIAC is not ambivalent about the war's outcome. We openly call for a victory for Iraq and a defeat of U.S. imperialism around the world. Our political objectives are to shut down the U.S. war machine, including the Univer- sity, with mass militant action. promote Democratic Party politics and favor a military draft and economic warfare against Iraq in the form of sanctions and naval blockades designed to starve the Iraqi people. Much of the leader- ship of SAUSI, along with the two major national coalitions, differ with the government only on when or how the war should be conducted. They try to hide their contra- dictions by calling for "peace," supporters of the AIAC and the RWL have had to loudly protest and cry "foul" when this kind of bureaucratic dictatorship has operated. If the meetings were run democratically this would not have had to happen. However, some activists do not have the right to speak, make proposals, and have these proposals dis- cussed and voted on. The SAUSI bureaucrats' dishonest "expulsion" of the 0 The SAUSI pro-imperialist leadership refuses to build a broad-based movement on campus with actions like real mass building occupa- tions and a student strike. Nuts and Bolts J c4GHAOIN&? By Judd Winick - - = CANT BELIEVE N'oU,' v2RK A%4Y~tpy Fo )-tHAr T I I but the AIAC knows that there can never be "peace" under AIAC and the RWL stems from