Pubdate: Sat, 16 Mar 2002 Source: Oregonian, The (OR) Copyright: 2002 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Peter Zuckerman VOICING AN OPINION If you speak out against drug use at Reed College, some students will promise to murder you. They'll threaten to drag you into court, stop you from writing for the campus newspaper, make you feel forced to move out of your dorm room, for your own safety. They'll harass you with phone calls, max out your e-mail account with hate mail and threaten you with rape. Speak out against drug use at Reed, and some students will do everything they can to make sure your stay in college is as miserable as possible. And one other thing: Speak out against drug use at Reed College, and 163 students will thank you for addressing a widespread problem that we need to stop ignoring -- not just at Reed, but on all college campuses nationwide. I thought my commentary ("The drug Olympics," March 1) would prompt angry letters and a spirited debate; that's the sort of thing you expect in an academic environment. What I didn't expect was to encounter viciousness and ugliness. Bodyguards began escorting me around campus. The Community Safety Office told me to carry a whistle and a cell phone with me at all times. I didn't go to the library or the cafeteria anymore, at least not alone. And this is not the first time an expression of opinion met hostility at Reed. About a month ago, a reporter at the campus newspaper dared to critique the student government's funding process. As a result, a prominent student body officer screamed at the writer, threatening her to point where she was afraid to leave her room. She will no longer write about anything controversial. Excuse me? What happened to freedom of the press? According to some of my angry e-mails, the First Amendment doesn't apply to Reed. All problems here need to be dealt with internally and secretly. Nobody outside should be allowed to glimpse what really goes on. "I don't think an accurate picture of Reed is what we necessarily want," someone wrote me. Please. Everyone should have the right to report the truth and express an opinion. Free speech is fundamental to democracy and the foundation of academia. It's something any decent school ought to protect. If students want to get angry about something, let them get angry about any infringements on the right of free speech. To the college's credit, the administration and, after some prodding, the student government, have now attempted to make it clear that a gag rule here will not be tolerated. Both the college president and the student body president have sent out letters saying they won't put up with the threats I've received. I've been told that the angry students have calmed down. I can only applaud these civilized steps. And I want to make it clear that I still believe in the ideals that have always made Reed a place of open-mindedness and tolerance. Some students have acted thoughtlessly, but I believe that, when they take stock of what they have done and what it means, they, too, will begin to grasp the importance of free and open debate on a college campus, without threats, without fear. Outsiders sometimes call this school Weed College, but to insiders it's The Bubble. A bubble is something that floats above the rest of the world. When you look closely at its surface you see a rainbow of colors all swirling around, in elegant flux; intricate, beautiful. But any bubble is fragile, and a bubble can barely exist in an atmosphere of thoughtless anger. I've been away from Reed for spring break. When I return to campus Monday, I hope that all Reedies will stand together to make sure that our beautiful bubble doesn't explode. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh