~0 OPINION Page 4 Friday. September 25, 1981 The Michigan Daily 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Baseball 1992: It's a blast! By Steve Hook Vol. XCII, No. 14 420 Moynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board * 1 Redecorati~n NANCY SAYS she's all done now. The first Lady is finished redoing the White House; what's more, she's done it on a budget. And what a budget: $822,641. The White House Press Office has assiduously refused-probably with good reason-to break down exactly how all that money was spent. All that's known is that $209,000 went into a new set of dishes, and that other major costs were for plumbing, refinishing floors, and rewiring. No one is suggesting that the First Family should have to live in abject poverty, but the sort of regal splendor for which the Reagans seem to be aiming is, in this day, unconscionable. The White House is very careful to point out that every penny of the money for redecoration came from private donations. The fact remains, however, that even though the money for redecorating was from private sources, the donations were tax deduc- table. Part of the bill for the Women mi Lg oan a budget' redecorating is going to be picked up by the taxpayer in the form of reduced federal income tax revenue collec- tions. Instead of lavishing hundreds of thousands of dollars on a set of dishes, Nancy Reagan might pay some atten- tion to the suffering right in the District of Columbia itself. The slums of Washington are among the worst in the nation-and $800,000 could help a lot of slum dwellers. Within blocks of the White House, in fact, there are dozens of "bag ladies"-women without homes and without jobs who wander around Washington carrying all their worldly belongings in shopping bags. The 'huge expenditures '.on redecoration bespeak a haughty and almost cruel indifference toward the plight of the needy by the Reagans. In view of President Reagan's calls for further cuts in federal spending last night, the expenditures on the White House appear ridiculous, disgraceful, and not slightly hypocritical. norities hurt Anything is possible, sports fans, as the 1992 Major League Baseball season comes to a fran- tic conclusion. Just ten days remain in the stretch drive, and there are no clear winners in any division. As usual, the areas of pitching, hitting, and base running have played important rolesin the most recent clashes, and good old team spirit has surely propelled many teams. But there is little doubt about the key factor in this race: last ~week's nuclear attack on several American citiesby the Soviet Union. THE UNEXPECTED bom- bing, which involved one megaton strikes on eight metropolitan areas, has resulted in a drastic realignment for the remaining cities. Three of the decimated teams were leading their divisions, creating new op- portunities for their foes. "I'm just delighted," chirped Minnesoat Twins' manager John Butterfield, whose Tribe has replaced the Chicago White Sox atop the American League West. "I thought I was dreaming when I heard about the ICBM's over ,Comiskey Park," he added,"It was just what the doctor or- dered." George Brett, the skipper of the Kansas City Royals, was less exhuberant about the surprise Russian bombing. "We had a weekend series coming up with the (California) Angels," he groaned, "and we were really psyched for a sweep." MAJOR LEAGUE President Fred Thompson condemned the Soviet Union for "messing up the playoff picture." He told a mob of reporters in Washington that "a nuclear attack in the hometown of a contender is the most vicious gesture I can imagine. They could have waited until next month." According to Thompson, the season will "simply carry on as if nothing happened," with the up- coming "holes in the schedule" being dismissed as "the equivalent of rainouts. The best percentages win and go to the playoffs." Hitting should become the dominant factor in the final days, with several league leading pit- chers reportedly succumbing to fallout-induced radiation sickness. "You can only pour so much Maalox down their throats," said Cleveland Indian trainer George Hicks. In St. Louis, the entire bullpen has been stricken with severe nausea and hair loss. DESPITE their difficulties, surviving stadiums around the league have been bustling with eager fans, especially the domed parks which can withstand the unpredictable fallout showers. "They've been coming out in droves," said Texas manager "Wild" Bill Patterson, "and we really appreciate their support. For those who were caught in that freak radioactive cloudburst last Sunday, though, our club is sincerely regretful." The New York Mets were on the road when two Soviet missiles plummeted onto the Big Apple, but Met manager Joe Stevens feels much more than just relief. "There goes the subway series," he grumbled, in a reference to the Mets' arch-rival New York Yankees. The division-leading Yanks were leading the- Boston Red Sox 5-2 when the bombs descended on the city and vaporized both teams. "It's not over until it's over," the great Yogi Berra used to say in the Golden Days of baseball, 6 6 9 by administration stance and his words have never been more appropriate. The Soviet strike has inspired a passionate pennant race, and even the most arrogant baseball experts cannot choose any clear winners. Will it be the Toronto Blue Jays and their feared power hitting, or the well-coached Baltimore Orioles? Will the Minnesota Twins live up to Butterfield's ex- pectations, and prevail in the tough A.L. West? Will the Mets remain in first place, the bulk of their competition no longer taking the field? And will those feisty Atlanta Braves replace the Dodgers as. the pride of the National League? There is simply no way to tell, but as baseball feverblows away those last wisps of radioactivity, one thing is for sure: It's not over until it's over. Hook was Opinion Pag4 Editor for the Summer Daily. T HE REAGAN administration struck a severe blow to women and minorities yesterday. Administration officials announced they will no longer go to court to force employers found guilty of sex or racial discrimination to stick to quotas in their hiring. The decision seems to typify the ad- ministration's callous attitude toward job-seeking women and minorities across the country. It says, in effect, that employers may feel free to con- tinue discriminatory practices of hiring and firing with little fear of being forced, by law, to establish quotas. This move sets affirmative action back 15 years. Even the Nixon ad- ministration, not known for a strong commitment to/ civil rights, had a policy , of insisting that employers follow quotas in their hiring practices. Unfortunately, the Reagan ad- ministration has chosen to ignore the needs of women and minorities in the job market. Many are still faced with both blatant ard subtle discrimination. The change in policy by the ad- ministration will only encourage those employers who practice discrimination in .hiring to continue doing so. There is a need to give all people equal opportunity to procure em- ployment. The Reagan administration should not destroy this opportunity-or even weaken it-by refusing to insist that sex discriminators abide by quotas in future job hiring practices._ The problems with giving economic aid to El Salvador "DAMNEP INVESTORS AND 3USINESSMEN - PROBALY ALL A BUNCH OF PEMOCRAT LIBERALS" C f Gj t , /" 'I \1I As Congress this month begins a detailed examination of the Reagan administration's foreign aid requests, one item is apt to stand out as a notable exception to the otherwise sharp reductions from past years. El Salvador, that tiny Central American nation of 4 million people, is slated to receive a whopping $126 million, $100 million of which is for economic, not military aid. To put that figure into perspective, obser- vers note that the same per capita aid level to a nation like India would amount to $15 billion.. If the experience of the past two years is any guide, El Salvador's aid will be increased even further during the fiscal year as funds originally designated for other areas are reprogrammed. By'the end of the next fiscal year, total U.S. assistance since the October' 1979 coup could approach the half-billion- dollar mark. Yet despite the magnitude of this commit- ment, the debate over U.S. policy in El Salvador continues to be dominated by political, rather than economic, con- siderations. The administration continues to stress the theme of outside Communist inter- vention in El Salvador and to warn of the regional dangers inherent in any Marxist takeover. Critics emphasize the human rights violations by the junta's security forces, and the moral aspects of the struggle between the ruling elite and the mass of the Salvadoran population. As a result of the political reality in El Salvador, U.S. options are limited to policies which are uncertain or potentially disastrous. The United States could totally withdraw from the conflict and leave the internal forces to fight it out. This almost certainly would lead to a victory for the left, with political consequences which the Reagan ad- ministration finds unacceptable. The United States could increase military aid to the government and push for a total military victory. This option, which was initially favored, has lost ground in view of the Salvadoran army's clear inability to oust rebel forces from their rural strongholds, or to maintain and utilize modern military equipment, such as the U.S.-supplied helicop- ters. To lm n -T-- --. _ nlr.:rr- ..rn,- By Richard Millett the current level of conflict, pumping in suf- ficient aid to keep the government afloat and hoping that eventually its opponents will divide or abandon the struggle out of sheer exhaustion. While paying lip service to the possibility of a negotiated settlement, the Reagan ad- ministrationdappears to have chosen the last of these options. In a speech last July 16, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter- American Affairs Thomas. Enders talked about the need for "a political solution" to the conflict, emphasizing that "only Salvadorans" could resolve the problems facing their nation. But in the same speech he declared that the Duarte regime "should not grant the in- surgents, through negotiations, the share of power the rebels have not been able to win on the battlefield." The political supporters of the guerrillas were promised that if they renounced violen- ce, broke their support for the insurgents and entrusted their security to the ruling junta, they would be given the opportunity to partici- pate in government-run elections. Such con- ditions virtually ruled out meaningful com- promise and committed the United States to an indefinite support of the current gover- nment's fight for survival. If the United States is adopting such a policy, its enormous economic costs and potential results should be in the forefront of the debate. El Salvador today is virtually bankrupt. The gross national product has declined steadily over the past two years, new capital investment is non-existant, debts are moun- ting and even the economic minister admitted that unemployment was at least 50 percent. More than 10 percent of the population are refugees, forced to flee from their homes due to the continuing political violence. Simply keeping the government from collapse requires continual and probably con- stantly increasing infusions of U.S. aid. It is quite possible that the United States may ultimately find itself in a situation similar to that produced in Viewnam, with a large per- are high and threaten *to become a major problem, they are even greater for the people of El Salvador. There are regional costs as well. Continued fighting reans continued flows of refugees in- to the rest of Central America, Mexico and, in a surprising number of cases, ultimately to the United States. Tens of thousands already have made their way here, adding their* weight to the problems caused by the growing flow of undocumented aliens across U.S. bor- ders. But the results in Central America are much more serious. The worst case is that of Honduras where massive economic problems already are theatening efforts to return to civilian rule. The continued fighting in El Salvador poses a constantly growing refugee burden on this traditionally poorest Central American nation and, at the same time, in- creases military pressures for a larger budget and greater political influence. It also disrupts regional trade, scares off foreign investment and encourages domestic capital flight. Finally, the demands for constantly in- creased U.S. assistance to El Salvador, in an era when overall foreign assistance ap- propriations are declining, reduces still fur- ther the amounts potentially available' to nations such as Honduras and Costa Rica, where peaceful reforms yet may be possible. There are, of course, political as well as economic costs for U.S. strategy of protracted conflict in Central America. Domestically, El Salvador has the potential for becoming an increasingly divisive political issue. In Central America the failure to find a solution to the conflict adds to the regional pressures producing ,political polarization. And in Mexico, Venezuela, and Western Europe, popular opposition to administration policy in El Salvador threatens to obstruct relations with the United States in other more vital areas. In the long range, then, it seems doubtful that current U.S. policy can be maintained, By next year at this time, the administration may have to choose between accepting the necessity of a negotiated settlement, or, as we ultimately did in Vietnam, making one last ef- fort at military victory, this time with more direct participation. Prospects for a successful outcome in either case will be even less than they are now. Time is not the administration's ally in t tuy}i : _ , pr ) w ; j I --T~~