Pubdate: Wed, 04 Aug 2010 Source: Wednesday Journal (IL) Website: http://wednesdayjournalonline.com/ Contact: http://wednesdayjournalonline.com/Formlayout.asp?formcall=userform&form=10 Address: 141 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, IL 60302 Fax: 708/524-0447 Copyright: 2010, Wednesday Journal Inc. Author: Paul Deziel OPRF HIGH SCHOOL IS RIGHT - STUDENTS ARE NOT PEOPLE I'm so relieved to find out that searches can now be conducted on students attending Oak Park and River Forest High School [OPRF clarifies procedures for searching students, News, July 28]. As shown by the most unreliable study ever written, the Illinois State Youth Survey, the high school has a raging drug problem, especially one concerning marijuana use. If you have not taken health class at the high school, let me inform you on marijuana: Marijuana is a drug that is equally as destructive and addicting as heroin, and if smoked, will give you cancer and cause death, unless it is smoked for medicinal purposes or in Amsterdam, for then it will only be as inhibitive as alcohol and isn't a serious threat. Searches are OK, because students have no privacy. Due to the survey's results, we have reason to believe that everyone is carrying drugs or other illicit items. We should also frisk them for weapons, just in case. And don't worry; it's OK, because according to Terry v. Ohio (1968), frisking is a search, but it does not invade privacy enough to count as a search. And since students don't have any privacy to begin with, we don't have to worry about reasonable suspicion! I'm so glad that the high school can do so much to solve the problems that could not - in any way, shape or form - come from our middle schools, for they are too perfect. High schoolers are inherently evil, and putting more restrictions on them will not result in more protests against the institution, only immediate, inexpensive solutions. As for the breathalyzers, we need them. In fact, we should force students to take a drug test during each passing period, to make sure that they aren't injecting marijuana into their veins. It's completely legal, because students don't have any moral right to their bodily fluids. Why would they? Their bodily fluids don't belong to them, they belong to the school! If any student refuses to take the test because it is "immoral" and "may or may not be a violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Articles 3, 5 and 12," we should expel him or her from the school, for he or she is probably under the influence of marijuana. And as we know, nothing good can come to those who even try marijuana once, for from the moment they agree to try it, they will fail at everything else in life and will definitely not become the 43rd or 44th president of the United States. Paul Deziel Paul Deziel is a 2010 OPRF grad and River Forest resident. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart