UNIVERSITY Forest service employee seeks free speech protection WASHINGTON |AP) - A former For est Service employee is railing on Con gress to provide more freedom of speech protection to service workers critical of their administrators' efforts to excessive ly log national forests. In testimony prepared for a House sub committee hearing Thursday. Jeff DeBonis of Fugene. Ore said the Forest Service is "often less than honest in its public disclosure of the environmental impacts" of logging "The agency is purposefully and knowingly overcutting our national for ests to meet the demands of the timber industry and short-sighted politicians." he said. DeBonis is the director of the Associa tion of Forest Service Employees For En vironmental Ethics. He worked more than 12 years for the Forest Service be fore resigning in February. "The Forest Service is not protecting your resources. It is not meeting its obli gation to the American people and their public trust." he said during a news con ference Wednesday. “We are finding that the past practices of turning old-growth forest ecosystems into tree plantations is not working." he said. DeBonis said 5 percent of all Forest Service workers now belong to his or ganization. He was scheduled to testify Thursday before the House Post Office and Civil Service Committee's subcom mittee on Civil .Service. "More employees are speaking out in support of a more environmentally ethi cal agency and being subject to varying amounts of reprisal," he said in his pre pared testimony. "Congress needs to review and stan dardize the myriad conduct and ethics policies of government agencies to strengthen free speech rights of govern ment employees." he said. Subcommittee chairman Rep. Gerry Sikorski. D-Minn.. confirmed that the panel is receiving complaints "in esca lating numbers, collectively and individ ually, privately and in public fashion" from the 40,000 civil servants employed by the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. DeBonis said Forest Service biologists and other resource specialists are “iso lated and pressured to conform — be 'team players' so as not to interfere with getting the cut out. I'd never have believed that one little computer could make such an incredible difference in me academic and working life. Miriam Stoll BA Hittory, Dartmouth Collogo MBA Stanford Groduato School of Butmott rl became a Miami >sh am\ eri in business schixil. At i )ur computer lab I d alw ays find lines of people waiting ti > use the Mtcinti>sh o imputers. w hileixher a>m puiers just sat there s > I had a chi >ice w.ut fi >r a Macinti >sh. or a >me buck at 6 \ m to grab i me Ixlt ire they d .til lx* taken. Alter business sehi x>1,1 took a |i >b at a large bank and used im Miami »sh It >r pri xJuang e\ entiling In im spreadsheets to a companenewsletter w li xla\ I use Macintt >sh ti»help me run m\ i >\vn marntgemeniamsuiiingmm wnonigi\e.1 pre* dilation. I uin see in |v< >ples faces that they're re.tllv impressed Ami that makes me feel ga-at "Sometime* I lake tnua\ oil. pm m\ Macinu ish and skis in the car. and head fori he mountains I ski days anil work nights It's |x*rteci "Y>u know I cant sa\ where I'll lx- in five, ten. i >r fifteen years, hut 1 can sa\ that m\ Macintosh will lx* there with me « Win d< > |vople li >ve Macintosh? ,\sk them Tuesday, October 9 llam-4pm EMU Fir Room Pick up a free stadium cup and register to win an Apple Scanner! C ai tW Mkrorampvtrf Support la* « -44*2 for (kimth c <990 Wm Compuiw me ***** ini ***** logo «nd Mfc-.nfc.v* vt r«gt****«o *mcw**i*»• o* ***** Co***** me Inventor debates suicide machine DETROIT (AH) - Suicide machine inventor Dr. Jack Kevorkian said "I am not a martyr” as he defended his use of the controversial device Wednesday, contending that officials are persecuting him. "The courts would love to burn me at the stake. The pros ecution is. figuratively speak ing,” he said during a lecture with former Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson, now in private practice. “But a patient comes to me dying of disease, needing help," Kevorkian said. "As a doctor, what am I supposed to do? I am not a martyr." Patterson said it's not courts that oppose the retired Royal Oak pathologist, but the public. "I think he’s shooting the messenger. By today's law in the United States — that's in the 50 states and United States territories — no one defines su icide as a crime. That brings us to assisted suicide," he told his audience at the Detroit-area chapter of the Society of Profes sional journalists. "In 22 states and in three U S. territories, assisting sui cide is a crime, it’s a stated public policy.” Patterson On June 4. Kevorkian hooked his machine to janet Adkins, 54. of Portland. Ore Adkins, who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease, pressed a button on the machine to make lethal drugs flow into her veins, and died in the back of his van in a subur ban Detmit park. Prosecutors obtained a tem porary injunction against Kevorkian to keep him from us ing the machine, which they seized, or from aiding any oth er suicides. Criminal charges haven't berm pressed.