1* OPINION Page 4 Saturday, January 30, 1982 'New Federalism' and. By David Spak Irony of ironies: We would have come full circle from the ideas of the New Deal and its hero who would have celebrated his 100th bir- thday this week. If President Reagan's "New Federalism" is enacted by 'Congress, it will effectively end most of what is left of Franklin Delano. Roosevelt's social programs. Reagan's plan to shift at least 40 federally funded and ad- ministered programs to the states flies in the face of whatever progress this country has nade towards eliminating the need for such programs in the first place. SURE, THESE programs do have a great deal of waste in them. Many people do take ad- vantage of them. And the president should be applauded for efforts to trim the fat from the. programs. But turning that effort over to the states is not the answer. Quite simply. this "New Federalism" is discriminatory. Instead of having one national standard for 'distributing the benefits of these programs (which include most notably food stamps and Aid to Families With Dependent _Children), under Reagan's plan the individual states will decide how these programs will be administered. In return, the federal government will take over the Medicaid program currently run by r each state. IN OTHER WORDS, Reagan would like to - give the states a responsibility they have never wanted, or accepted before. House speaker Thomas (Tip) O'Neill said Wednesday that one of the major reasons the federal government had to step in and initiate these programs ini "1932 was the states refusal to act to ease the ef- sects of the Depression. What makes the president think that situation has changed? Edited and managed by stude Vol. XCII, No. 99 Editorials represent a majority b -rHE NEW FEPERr S.IM discrimi currently have a lot of money invested in Medicaid stand to benefit from the plan. New York, for example, currently has a $2.68 billion Medicaid budget, and receives $2 billion from the federal government for food stamps and AFDC. So it would come out $680 million ahead. Other states with less invested ink Medicaid or with economies in particularly bad shape (like Michigan) would probably come out losers in the trade. Such a swap, the president says, is supposed to have no winners. and no losers. And who will suffer the most? As usual, the poor, the unemployed, the elderly, and the downtrodden, whom the president, in his inaugural address, claimed were the ones who were supposed to benefit the most from this "New Federalism." SO HOW WILL this swap result in inequalities?" Right now, with these programs being ad- ministered by the federal government, people receiving aid in one state can be assured that their benefits are equivalent to the benefits given to people in other states. But all that would change under Reagan's plan. Georgia legislators could decide to cut aid benefits to avoid a tax increase, threatening the poor who already face tough going with even tougher times ahead. And Michgan's legislators could find such a cut politically im- possible and face a very unpopular alter- native-a tax increase. SUCH A TAX increase would politically crucify state legislators rather than the president, who will have simply passed the buck. But there is another possible course of action particular states can take. By 1988, states will have complete control over the 40 federal grant programs. This means if states don't want to fund them, they can eliminate them altogether. What makes the. president think the states and their governors will accept the respon- sibility of running these programs which will lead inevitably to tax increases? Maybe'those tax increases won't come in a year or two, or even three. But as the states begin to lose the federal revenues to run these programs, taxes will increase. THIS LATEST installment of Reagan's "New Federalism" has been met with less than rousing cheers from the states. California Gov. Edmund Brown called the proposal "a diversionary tactic, diversionary from the central issue of our time, which is a sick economy and the 9.5 million people who are out of work." Hugh Carey, governor of New York said "New. Federalism" was really "new feudalism." EVEN, SOME governors who described the program as "rather bold" said they were going to have to wait and see how the proposal would directly affect their states. That is another one of the proposal's major problems. Some states will come out winners and some will come out losers. The states that nts at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Is another ice age c The Michigan Daily nation Many of these programs went a long way towards educating minorities and the poor, who, without these programs, would have even less of a chance of digging'themselves out of poverty. REAGAN CLAIMS his "New Federalism" will make welfare less costly. Welfare cer- tainly will become less costly when it doesn't exist. But then who will benefit? Is it no wonder that in a recent CBS News poll none of the blacks questioned said they believed Ronald Reagan cared about the poor? The Reagan administration answers these charges by isaying they will include in this legislation some sort of minimal guidelines the states must follow in handing out benefits. But if the states gain control of these programs, the federal government will have no constitutional basis to impose such restrictive legislation. It would be an infringement upon the rights of the states. And the Reagan team also says that Moves to curtail such programs will be politically unlikely because of the increased power of minorities. But if minorities had this so-called increased power we would not need to extend such anti-discriminatory measures as the Voting Rights Act. And if these minorities are so politically potent, Reagan never would have made this current attempt to cut back social welfare. For that matter he would never have cut back so sharply on the programs he has already reduced or eliminated. Mr. President, you can add my name to the list of people who believe you don't give a damn about this nation's poor. Spak is a Daily staff writer. coming?. 7 ~ ~ and California during severe heat waves in 1977. IN THIS SAME 40year-period, earth phenomena not usually classed with weather also reached new extremes. The U.S. earthquake count rose rapidly, ,with 1 times more "significant quakes in 1976 than were recor- ded in 1940. Mt. St. Helens provided only the most dramatic indication of an upsurge in volcanic activity. Data- gathered by numerous scientists suggest that all these phenomea could be linked to the earth's cooling trend. In 1977 an international team of leading climatologists published a paper in the prestigious British Journal of Nature, stating: "Our data does not show a reversal in the cooling of the Northern Hemisphere." Nevertheless, much recent scientific speculation has focused on a theory that predicts a war- ming of the planet, bringing significant glacial melting- and coastal flooding. The warming theory is built on thefact that 0,000 years human activity, particularly the burning of fossil. fuels, has in- O V I T C H creased C02 concentration in the ed three atmosphere, effectively creating ,000 years, a "greenhouse" which traps heat d 20,000 from escaping into outer space. hape of the- But, a least so far, no actual wobble and measurements show such a rotation. warming in the Northern s comprise Hemisphere. redictable IN'OTHER words, there still ibution of beCs ma etoo little C02 in the at- the earth. mosphere to counteract the ear- ned before th's cooling and stave off Tree cycles glaciation. the earth's Remedies proposed so far range from speeding~ up Third the worst World industrialization tohor- s hit of biting large plastic film reflec- parts of tors to enhance absorption of 979, for the solar energy. riory, snow he Sahara mena also Gardner, a mathematician since 1940. who does private geological ado count consulting, wrote this article inexpected for Pacific News Service. red forest recedented gh Alaska By Robert Lence 0, Boss! NA& L-T 7W SMITES ,HE STN4E o (r - SK T1 F A 11 A[ LL ~ Ck'H Ic~I ( EA WELL JONE a' ededde ense -DMIRAL HYMAN Rickover, the heart of .-father of our nuclear navy, gave Nuclear ,bur national defense system some tive am needed criticism Thursday. has incr The 82-year-old Rickover, who Reducin recently was forced to resign from his or elim rpst'as chairman of the Naval Nuclear move R ropulsion Program, gave his is the on criticism as part of a final appearance increasi on Capitol Hill. His comments, coming stockpil from an insider to the nation's complex Rickoi .defense industry, should serve as per- current ceptive insight to the political leaders claimed currently involved in structuring our too mu nuclear armament system. claimed, The more destructive weapons for the become, the more weapons the super- match, o powers want to build, Rickover pointed tion. Am out. "I think there's something \has rea illogical about that," he said. parison, "It (the arms race) gets to the point admirall where it becomes meaningless, but our Rickov leaders keep using scare words to get seriously what they want," Rickover, said, in the fi commenting on the superpowers' need should to constantly wage a war of military ministr threats. drastical His criticism strikes directly at the of how to a 4E .. fi Bc Y t a! )YP criticisi f our nuclear arms problem. overkill-the ratio of destruc- ns to the number of targets- eased to the point of absurdity. g the number of nuclear arms, inating them completely-a ickover explicitly supported- ly rational solution to the ever ng threat posed by our nuclear .e-. ver broke with the usual-and -Pentagon line when he that the nation was spending ch money on defense. He , justifiably, that it is madness United States to attempt to Dne for one, Soviet ship produc- nerican/Soviet military parity ched a level beyond com- and sadly only an outgoing has the sense to realize it. ver's criticism should be taken y. His knowledge and expertise eld of military preparedness warn the current ad- ation that something is Illy wrong with its perception win the arms race. By Bruce Gardner When artic cold swept across the eastern United States in January, 1981, many Americans thought they had seen the worst that weather could offer. Frigid new records were set in areas as widespread as Atlantic City, N.J. (4 degrees F), Baltimore, Md. (8, degrees), Richmond, Va. (6 degrees) and Maine (-24 degrees). Then 1982 arrived. eclipsing all that. On Jan. 11, lows of 2 degrees were registered in New Jersey, 4 degrees below zero in Maryland, minus 11 degrees in Virginia, and in Chicago, an all- time low of 26 degrees below zero. It was the "coldest day of the cen- tury," the National Meterological Center declared. INDEED, THE last 10 years have brought a series of record winters, not just in North America, but in Europe and other regions as well. The 1973 World Meterological Organization bulletin listed scores of record weather. extremes duringk1972. George and* Helena Kukla of. Columbia University's Lamont- Dougherty Geological Obser- vatory measured, via satellite photography, a 4-million-square- kilometer increasein 1971 mean annual snow over 1970 for the nor- thern hemisphere. They noted that only seven con- secutive .winters of similar severity could establish an ice cover matching in area, if not depth,,the glacial cover of the-last ice age. We are about 10,000 years into an "interglacial," a period between ice ages. Contrary to widespread predic- tions of a disastrous warming trend-a "greenhouse effect" caused by increased carbon. dioxide (C02) in the atmosphere, threatening to melt the polar ice caps, the next ice age in fact may be underway. ACCORDING to Kukla, recent research shows that in the last in- terglacial some 120,000 years ago, climatic changes came fast. Ann Arbor endures a recent cold spell. Wooded areas in the latitudinal range of modern France went in a few decades from tht deciduous forests associated with tem- perate zones to pine and birch forests such as are now found in Lapland. By 200 years later, treeless tundra took over. This winter's extreme cold, like recent droughts, volcanic erup- tions and other unusual earth behavior, may be part of a pat- tern that began four decades ago, when the planet started to cool. The earth continually warms and cools as its movement around the sun varies in a pattern known as the "Milankovitch mechanism." But only in the most recent geological era is the chill known to have gone so far that ice formed and endured on the planet's surface. The whole Pleistocene era, spanning the last 3 million years-from which the earliest traces of the human species originate, has been characterized by a series of lengthy glaciations, separated by much shorter, 10,000-year in- terglacials. The last major glaciation occurred 1C ago. THE MILANK mechanism involvi distinct cycles-of 100; 40,000' years an( years-linked to the sr earth's orbit and the v tilt of its axis of Together, these cycles an intricate but pr variation in the distr solar energy reaching At present-as happer the last ice age-all th are working to cool t climate. In January, 1978, snowstorms in 40 year zerland and other Europe. On Feb. 19, 19 first time in living men fell on localities in ti desert. Other weather pheno have set new re ords An accelerating torn brought twisters to u places. Drought-foster and brush fires of unpr extent stormed throu 1 Weasel Ews I TEM : VINCENT ROK US, .At; RECENT COLLEGE &i~.APUATE~ DI PNT ANYNE 'FAKE GORE OF THE I4G6(NS ACCONT?! GtXIo' HEL.P T~lSE TRAYS I / I. HLENNYSMITh? NO, N S~ TAL k' C~ENN ( WITH Mn 'S7 - t I i I I I I I I