Page 4-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 5, 1991 5be Swb4Juu 1aitl 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Edited and Managed by Students at the University of Michigan ANDREW GOTTESMAN 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. ATEX I1MEN5F H EPPS'Q_70J -Ei.oA$A A-l4qPE( ON (~V~ oT R A> /,a T 1 I .~.. . . . . .W.S V.Q W.V.~fl.%St.tf r Y.Y1,"~::AYY1"1"YV WA1 A" "::A~rt"AYL t xY " ' h r }}t}';'i:'::!':T"T:}}:":T":i:{::. ::::T"}1 Hold the parade Bush must face aftermath of an George Bush's successful prosecution of the Gulf War has made him the most popular president in American history. Post-war euphoria - replete with ticker-tape parades, miles of yel- low ribbon, and thousands of flag-waving patriots - is now percolating throughout the country, leaving little time for hard questions about the Bush administration's decision to go to war, its subsequent prosecution of the war, and the war's potential aftermath.' Such questions - however unpopular - need to be asked. However astute our generals or mighty our Patriot missiles, we cannot forget that the Allied Coalition was fighting a country the size of Kentucky, with a popula- tion comparable to the Netherlands and a Gross Domestic Product equal to Portugal's. Though few Americans died, prelimi- nary estimates suggest that as many as 100,000 Iraqi soldiers - and per- haps twice as many civil- ians - may have been killed. And though Uncle Sam now stands tall in the Middle East, his pres- ence there has potentiallya destabilized the region for decades. Iraq's puny size and limited resources made any comparisons to Hitler and the mighty German war machine ridiculous; the mere 100hours it took the U.N. forces to win the Bsh ground war conclusively Bush demonstrated as much. Though Iraq had one of the largest armies in the world before the war began, it was poorly equipped and undernourished. Rather than gloating over the success of the forces he commands, Commander- in-Chief Bush should be justifying their use. As the Daily has maintained since August, sanctions against Iraq offered a safer and more cost-effective means of forcing Hussein to leave Kuwait peacefully. All of the available evidence suggests that the relatively backward Iraqi economy was reeling beneath the weight of sanctons. At the very least, Bush should have been forced to pro- vide concrete evidence that sanctions were failing. He never did so. Instead, the president rushed into war and re- expensive and avoidable war fused a cease-fire - even when it became pain- fully clear that Hussein was willing to accept any available face-saving gesture. During the six weeks of the war, U.N. forces contributed to the deaths of hundreds of thousands and the devastation of two countries' infrastructures. Finally, there is the post-war hangover to con- sider. In the Middle East itself, the ongoing U.S. presence has strengthened right-wing fundamen- talistmovementsinMorocco,Algeria,Tunis, Egypt, Syria, and Saudi Arabia. Washington has once again proven true to the role it has played in the region since the early 1940s - supporting auto- cratic rulers such as Egypt's Hosni Mubarak and the Saudi royal family rather than true democ- racy while placing its own economic interests in the region ahead of those of the Arab peoples. At home, the war and its aftermath have caused incalculable economic damage. Al- ready, allies whom Bush is counting on to pay for the war are balking. Re- building the damage caused by U.N. bombs in Kuwait - while it will benefit numerous U.S.-based multination- al corportations - will also raise domestic in- terest rates and prolong the U.S. recession. And COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE domestic social spend- ing may be cut further as Bush takes advantage of post-war euphoria to bolster the Pentagon's al- ready obscene military budget. In this context, Bush may soon find that he - like the famous British Prime Minister Winston Churchill before him - has won the war and lost the peace in the process. Churchill's heroics against Hitler did not translate into prosperity at home; three months after Germany surrendered, Churchill lost his bid for reelection. Bush has now won a much more shameful war against a caricature of Hitler. As the "Butcher of Baghdad" rides into the sunset, will ourleader lick the real-world problems he has created as easily as he triumphed in the made-for-TV war he waged? SAPAC must do more to stop rape To the Daily: The Feb. 19 article title, "SAPAC continues efforts to educate and help prevent rape," left me wondering if the organization's efforts to stop sexual assault on campus are being channeled in the right direction. Although awareness is a fundamental part of prevention, it alone is not enough to stop this crime. This University needs unsafe area on campus. Several bus stops are not lit at all, although they provide nighttime service. The Diag, also, has suffered several such power failures. What is SAPAC doing about that? Awareness is certainly the first step toward prevention. But University students will continue to be the victims of sexual assault until we are provided with better security and better protection from possible assailants. SAPAC should be com- mended for their efforts thus far. Kaufman argues that "the University of Michigan is an academic institution, and its classrooms are no place for a guerilla theater." Guerilla Theater exists on this campus to provide a medium for expression on the Gulf War. The reaction to our efforts has been mixed, not decidedly negative, as Kaufman implies. We have performed a number of skits, ranging from die- ins and songs to those which offered a more analytical com- mentary on the way the U.S. government has manipulated the media coverage of the War. In my opinion, the Gulf War disrupted the peace more than a group of students ever could. A guerilla theater is a more con- structive and academic medium of performance than a war theater. Pam Jordan Rackham graduate student OF. C PS more than a crisis hotline and some Acquaintance Rape Preven- tion Workshops. What we need is better protection: better lighting, improved night-time transporta- tion, and increased security personnel. The article stated that SAPAC's funding was recently increased to $130,000. Couldn't some of these funds be invested in improving campus security? Safewalk, Night Owl bus service, and the emergency phones scattered across campus are certainly helpful in preventing sexual assault. But these measures are not enough as they do not cover a large part of campus. North Campus has insufficient lighting, limited Safewalk service and a grossly understaffed security team. This, of course, is not the only Unfortunately, they still have a long way to go. Marta Zelitsky LSA first-year student Guerilla theater efforts important To the Daily: As a member of Guerilla Theater, I wold like to reply to Jeffrey Kaufman's letter in the Feb. 22 Daily. As a point of clarification, Guerilla Theater does not represent the Nonviolent Action Clearing House (NACH); it represents Students Against U.S. Intervention in the Middle East (SAUSI). 1 Come to vigil to mourn war dead To the Daily: A coalition of campus groups has organized a candlelight vigil to be held on the Diag tonight at 10 p.m. to mourn for the people who have died and continue to suffer as a result of the Persian Gulf War. Although offensive military operations are said to have ceased, there is nothing to celebrate in this victory for the United States. As the news media focuses on the "brilliance" of the U.S. command and on the celebrations of victory, they are ignoring the devastation that has racked its toll in human lives. This vigil will allow people to express the pain and the sorrow that is being eclipsed by the patriotic cheers of victory in our midst. Let us mourn for all the war dead and their families. 0 Louder than words To a lot of people, making public places accessible to everyone means things like building ramps, widening bathroom stalls and adding elevators. What is often overlooked is that some obstacles faced by disabled people are not necessarily physical. For many members of the deaf community, English is a second language. Mostdeaf Americans use American Sign Language, and the hearing society's lack of knowledge about ASL can be the deaf community's biggest barrier to access. When communication breaks down, the net result is often frustration, isolation or something worse. In the case of Carl DuPree, a student at Gallaudet University, the nation's only university for the deaf, the result meant death. Last fall DuPree got into a dispute with an instructor about English 50, a remedial language course in which he was enrolled. Whether the argument was about a grade or the university policy that forced DuPree to be in the class in the first place is not known. But we do know DuPree had been involved in a student movement protesting the policy. According to a Washington Post article, tempers between DuPree and his instructor flared and campus security was summoned. A struggle ensued, and DuPree's hands were cuffed, preventing him from sign- ing. In an apparent attempt to subdue him, officers placed DuPree in a choke hold and he died of asphyxi- ation. Next month will mark the third anniversary of the student-led fight to get a deaf president appointed at Gallaudet. For 124 years, Gallaudet had been headed by hearing presidents and a mostly hearing board of trustees. Carl DuPree was one of the hundreds of students, faculty and alumni whose efforts led to the appointment of I. King Jordan - a victory one student described as the "Selma of the deaf." But even after this success, the tacitly understood rules of order among the hearing community persist. The responsibility for communication - or its failure - falls on the deaf alone. Many unanswered questions persist: Why did the fight begin? Why was DuPree handcuffed, and therefore left unable to sign? Why was a choke hold - illegal in the District of Colombia - used? And how is it that many of the 25 to 30 campus security officers employed by Gallaudet are not fluent in American Sign Language? DuPree's death has correctly been attributed to a "communication breakdown" - not only between the officers, but between the hearing and the hearing- impaired. Feb. 19, 1991 The Minnesota Daily University of Minnesota Benjamin Sandler LSA sophomore PC pressure on campuses mirrors Red Scare hysteria* by Jonathan Uy The return of Chandler Davis, Clement Markert, and Mark Nickerson - three University professors purged during the Red Scare in the 1950s - to the University several weeks ago focuses our attention on some- thing that is often taken for granted: academic freedom. The University has traditionally been a symbol of academic freedom in the face of political and economic pressures, but in the unfortunate cases of Davis, Markert, and Nickerson, that freedom was denied. It is easy to look back at the days of McCarthyism and smugly believe that such incidents are behind us and could no longer happen. This is not so. Today, our nation is heading down a danger- ous path of ideological confor- mity; this time, the universities are not fighting this trend but leading it. The current trend is often referred to as "politically-correct" or "PC." Historically, PC can be traced back to the 1960s when the civil rights, women's rights, and other movements took the national spotlight. The protestors of the 60s sought to educate a universities, in control of the institutions of higher learning. The power to institutionalize their ideals by force has proven too tempting. In implementing speech and conduct policies, instituting a political education curriculum that begins at orientation and contin- ues in the residence halls, and formulating a simple litmus test for what is acceptable and unacceptable, these academicians have sacrificed their intellectual integrity. that need answers but are not often asked. The liberal ethic - with all the positive things it has brought to our society - is not perfect and needs to be more carefully examined. There are contradictions within the PC dogma. Should the government allow an unrestricted pornography industry or should they mandate censorship to reduce the exploitation of women? Should we strive for completely free speech or create Public figures, from athletes to politicians, have to watch what they say and even parrot the right lines in order to gain the approval of today's thought police. The Daily encourages responses from or less and include the author's name, can be mailed to The Michigan Daily, its readers. Letters should be 150 words year in school, and phone number. They 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor 48109, or they 0 can be sent via M TS to "The Michigan Daily." The Daily reserves the right to edit letters for style and space. Much of the academic basis for this movement comes from the social sciences, its basic presup- positions and methodologies not subject to hard scrutiny or critique. Indeed, voicing any criticism is bad for one's health as one might be immediately labeled racist or sexist and denied any future university-affiliated restrictions to guarantee "free speech" for all? These and other contradictions are not intentional but indicative of the world we live in. Even if it were possible to eradicate our nation of the triumvirate of evil -racism, sexism, and homophobia - America would still be far from utopia. In this Nuts and Bolts SPRING , 1 r ti E AC MATS M ,~.RED CI HEY 2 WHICH ONE-? tI61'#JIN& NEXT by Judd Winick MOTHER!. 0I