Page 4 --The Michigan Daily- Monday, March 18, 1991 he Mthian ailij 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. {:tir{ 'r n rh~r {v'rd:{r.WA f' {" :.y r".:r. "44"' v 'r,{y ..".r. , PV.? nr," 'rrr ;rr'R :kir::'v :r: ":. fa"r}v:::%} :.%:7?i. . { rr~. :?: vx: __~r:".;:""{r.i"...;..""":v"v:" :": r.. ... ' v v v :¢ " d ' v ",: 'i r',r %{ "::: r : ":: :i .! 'v:5 r :% " Y { Y, Y v { "; " : S :r MSA? :4.Y5r e fo, pr m~:s. , .7.{r {' .";Y s :;;"!: :v:.;: .; {. SAS. ...S.. .Vfib V.SSSSS.VASSSSV.SV ;fr ^ i: .b "iSVr.:':".,,}rr:r.:.. :v'"ti;:;"Xi;;{ i}S>iSV. i:ti::}}.: ": r." :.Ywr' " 'rn}".1''1 ..Y " "5 W Y 55 '.Y . r 11'.' . rE~ : :,'+.,Yi .;7}~;k ,,: ::v""Y: y '':{i':"::;.? ." . V S . V V S . S S . . S S n S S S S .S.. .{ { '. . S " 1 . " . V A " 4 V1r 1 f h v s% V < 4S{. v. Y y } . s y 1 . } . Y .Y : Y Y Y r : : 1 . : : : . " : }:,. : : . . . . Y. ": 'h'Y. I :Y "" ..,,r.}},rJiY {Y". '.':;";",.1S V.V : ;.V!.:".i{ ' ' :?:':"::* V:VV . :; f:YY;, ., . SS",}": SS 1v .1. x1 ; ,§:{?t:j.y , ," }. . .Y}.i }iYor"r:Yv".iv.:v:"{::":::.;:::.v:{.:.",; .. .iYc -.. . r{ -+i* 1.i:}-h,.~r. . }. 5*!: . }:T .1"} 4 . . ..:';nnY;},: ":1 .'r.':}rr.{ i: ;}':..{.h:;i^; :"¢v :-: ::. Who to believe... To the Daily: I am writing this letter in response to the recent contro- versy surrounding the Drake's five incident. The group originally claimed that two of their members were asked to leave Drake's because they looked like lesbians. The owner claimed that the two had ordered nothing and that he thought the two were men. I have never heard a man call another man a lesbian. Therefore, that cannot be the reason why they were asked to leave. People like Pattrice Maurer want people to believe her story and only her story. After all, she claims, we were not ever their. Well, the owner was. Why are they not giving the same credibility to the owner? I have a hard time accepting Maurer's story as the solid truth seeing that she is so apt to jump to conclusions and so quick to stereotype people. Mark Perin Engineering first-year student Evidence doesn't prove homophobia To the Daily: The Drakes boycott is based on perceptions of style, on the belief that Mr. Tibbals told five women to leave because they "looked like lesbians." What does a lesbian "look like?" A lesbian is a woman who loves other women sexually. The short hair/leather jacket style is a fashion among some lesbians who - for various reasons - want to look a lot like each other. It does not define sexuality. Anyone could adopt the style and call themselves a lesbian. I suspect this sometimes occurs. Mr. Tibbals may or may not President To the Daily: I am responding to the article about Honor's Convoca- tion ("Swain denies MSA President's address request," 3/ 7/91) which I will be attending. The last thing I want to have to hear is Jennifer Van Valey's vacuous rambling. It's bad enough we have to hear her "words of wisdom" in the Daily nearly every day. When she says "Students should care about the adminis- tration trying to silence their student government," I can only reflect on the fact that no one has been able to silence Van Valey and her band of professional protesters. The administration has certainly attempted in the past to squelch the student voice, and I don't condone that. But no one else is going to speak. Why should Van Valey? Next, she claims that "the administration is really trying to de-legitimitize MSA." It seems apparent to me that MSA is most de-legitimitized by its own president. If Van Valey spent half as much time working to solve problems as she does complaining, her 0 Van Valey complaints would have some basis. Finally, the Daily reported that her request to speak was also denied because her good behavior could not be depended on. This is certainly true in my mind. We, the students, want an effective, representative student government. Unfortunately, the one we have is an embarrass- ment. Van Valey should do us all a favor and either think before she talks. Or - better yet - resign. Brian Kalt LSA first-year student Just say nol 'Drug-free zones' will not win the drug war Students and faculty in the Brighton school system kicked-off Substance Abuse Preven- tion Week last Monday by demonstrating their support for a 1988 Michigan statute that created drug-free school zones. The drug-free zone statute, patterned after a similar 1986 New Jersey law, creates a 500-foot zone around any school property. Any person caught selling, using, or possessing illegal drugs within this zone will be subject to doubled jail terms and tripled fines. For example, an adult caught distrib- uting drugs in a drug-free zone may serve up to 60 years in prison and pay $75,000 in fines. While drug dealers indeed deserve such penalties - and much more-there are questions over whether the law can help eliminate Michigan's growing drug problem. A closer inspection of the plan shows that the 1988 state law may prove to be more of a burden .than an effective tool for fighting the war against drugs. The state and federal judicial systems are al- ready overburdened with the overwhelming num- ber of drug-related cases filing through our courts. The number of drug offenders nation-wide has reached such proportions that paroles and furloughs have increased in an attempt to keep prison con- ditions relatively humane. Creating this "drug-free zone" will only in- crease the number of small-fry offenders brought to the courts, further clogging Michigan's judicial systems - a consequence New Jersey's courts are now facing. In turn, major dealers will be over- looked, while more drug offenders are released from prison to make room for their successors. Such laws demonstrate this nation's misguided drug policies. Clearly, throwing more and more offenders in prison will not winthe "waron drugs." The human resources and funds Gov. Englerintends to use enforcing the drug-free zones in Brighton should instead be ear-marked for things rehabilita- tion and educational programs. Only this type of action will truly cure Michigan - and this nation - of its drug illnesses. If citizens outside Brighton find these drug-free zones appealing, communities all over Michigan may soon create similar areas. Ideally, all school zones should be drug-free, but Brighton's misguided plan of action skirts over the real issues at stake - this nation's drug problems. be homophobic, but the incident has drawn some truly abusive homophobics out of the wood- work, who who would rather harass these women than deal with their own issues. Mr. Tibbals seems hardly to live in the late 20th century. He doesn't see or hear well, and may have little idea of what style corresponds to which sub-culture. He has, over the years, employed women who "looked like lesbians" according to the definition given. And I know a very clean-cut, mild-looking man who was once thrown out of Drake's for studying in a booth without ordering. It seems to be something Mr. Tibbals does with impartial irascibleness. Maybe he was rude, and owes an apology for discour- tesy to five human beings, two of whom had indeed ordered. But there are not enough grounds for the assumption that his action was based on homophobia. Irena Nag er University Staff ! Courthouse follies in Ann Arbor ;Education crunch Administrators and legislators should listen to student input As tuition costs rise and financial aid awards continue to diminish each term, it becomes clear that without serious reform, an education at this University will soon become the privilege of a ;small elite. In these times of educational crisis, policy mak- ers should be looking - to a great extent - to students for solutions to their situation. To this end, last Wednesday's student forum on tuition costs and financial aid sponsored by the Michigan Student Educational Fund (MSEF) should be commended, and more dialogue be- tween students, administrators and Lansing repre- sentatives should be encouraged. Students at the forum spoke out to the as- sembled administrators and representatives about the difficulties ofjuggling full academic schedules with part-time jobs, and the continuing need for increased financial aid. University administrators and state legislators listened to student complaints, and gasve sugges- tions to help alleviate their financial problems. MSEF representatives recorded many of the stu- dents' anecdotes, and will compile these with the results of five other similar forums being held around the state. Their comprehensive report will be presented to the legislators in Lansing, in the hopes that these personal accounts will inspire lawmakers to con- sider all the ramifications of their budgetary belt- tightening. That higher education financing systems need to be revamped is a given; however, college ad- ministrators and lawmakers have very different ideas about how the system should be reformed. To find the best solutions, they need to ask those who know the problems best: the students. Hope- fully, this MSEF forum will be only the first step in a new attitude emphasizing student input in the fight to keep a college education affordable. The next time you and your friends are sitting around trying to come up with a better way to spend a weekday afternoon than watching Oprah, try going to the trial of a University protester. Unfortu- David nately,such occasionsSc come along i nf re - quently,but when they do, they make for an excellen t time. Just two weeks ago, for example, former University stu- dent Harold Marcuse was in Washtenaw County Circuit Court seeking justice for injuries he sus- tained while trying to break up a CIA recruiting session in 1987. Marcuse has asserted for the last three-and-a-half years that he was kicked in the "groin" by Assistant Public Safety, Director Leo Heatley and Assistant Director Robert Pifer, conspired to coerce him into drop- ping his allegations against Patrick. Each of these University officials filed a countersuit, as did Ann Ar- bor Police Detective Douglas Barbour. What more does anyone need for a great melodrama than four police and Public Safety officials sitting in a courtroom looking like common criminals? Still not enough, you say? Well, enter Jonathan Rose, Ann Arbor attorney and consistent advocate of student radicals and their causes. After collecting fees from Student Legal Services for more than three years, and as the trial was just beginning to get really interesting, Rose did a remarkable thing. He advised his client to drop the lawsuit. Oh, but it was better than L.A. Law while it lasted. Judge Patrick Conlin, not even attempting to hide his obvious loyalties to the Uni- versity and the Ann Arbor police, overruled every one of Rose's ob- own opening statement?) According to Austin's account of his participation in the 1987 demonstration, he broke into what he thought was an interview room at Career Planning & Placement and had the following exchange with a women whom he thought was recruiting for the CIA: Austin: I want to interview for the position of assassin. The woman, who it turns out worked for CP&P and not the CIA: Oh. Do you have an appointment? The trial was funny, and I en- courage all of you to go to the next pubic bickering session between a student protester and University officials. But theabruptfinish leaves a great many serious questions still unanswered, and most of them have to do with the role of campus police in interfering with student demon- strations. Leo Heatley, at the protest all those years ago, positioned himself in such a way that he said the pro- testers "would have to assault me to get by." As a result, there were Nuts and Bolts FMCLOWN- (FRUMY...I nomg~R Vwa (Ybu 1RALY NAVE A UN~I QUE W ~.AY OF I)EAUN& j#WJTH IMATUE CONCEP~sTH il4 S UCHN YOU)NG C4IL.LREN. WHAT ARC rf4F-Y "R A1'lNCa NOW? -a® . ? r tal peAt i by Judd Winick rW TwS Nom.)ALL EIxTIENTJAL wl