r OPINION Page 4 Friday, February 5, 1982 The Michigan Daily x Friday, February 5, 1982 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Of students and Vol. XClI, No. 104 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Superfluous fee T HE UNIVERSITY'S new policy charging a $10 fee to all students who drop/add after deadline is a com- pletely unnecessary financial burden and should be eliminated immediately. The University's newly announced poliay, which will take effect in Sep- temler, calls for a $10 assessment on any Student who drops or adds a class at CRISP after the normal three week deadline. Administrators - such as Helen Crafton, LSA academic actions direc- tor -- claim the new policy will reduce post-deadline CRISP traffic. This notion is a complete fallacy., Students who drop/add after the deadline currently receive a W (a' withdrawal notice) on their permanent records, a deterrent that keeps most serious students from withdrawing. late. Permanent records are reviewed by all graduate schools and, on oc- casion, prospective employers. Having a W stamped on one's tran- script, therefore, is not taken lightly. In addition to receiving a transcript W, students with late drops must pay partial tuition for the classes they leave if their total credit load falls below the 12 credit hour limit. The knowledge that one must pay this fee is in itself a strong enough monetary deterrent. The next logical question is why do students drop/add late? The answer is obviously because they have a serious reason for doing so. Students who take on outside jobs or face pressing com- mitments at home are often forced to drop classes past the deadline. A $10 late fee will not stop students from dropping a class late, it will only harass them. The University's drop/add policy is ill-considered and useless. The $10 fee will only feed the resentment many students hold toward people they con- sider to be heartless bureaucrats. By Mark Gindin The character, goals, and subsequent ac-V tions of that body of humanity refered to as college students is consistently fascinating. Students sincerely appear to care for the world they are about to enter. Unfortunately, for quite some time now, they have been calling for more harmful action than prac- tical solutions. Contrary to what they believe, centralized government is not the answer. Students and radicals use youthful vigor to pursue their goal, that of mankind in har- mony, caring for its neighbors, whether those neighbors want it or not. FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT had this same" vigor and brought to light many of the gover- nmental solutions to social and economic problems. Focused by John Kennedy and amplified by Lyndon Johnson, these social programs spread like wildfire. The basic flaw in these most noble notions is that these reformers did not and do not under- stand what makes people most happy. People are the happiest when they are allowed to do as they wish. Freedom was the magnet that attracted people to this country. A higher standard of living was merely an added bonus. In America, pioneers found unlimited op-- portunity and freedom. The only limit on freedom was not allowing people to limit the freedoms of others. That concept, unlimited freedom, has been lost over time. Even the notion of basic rights has been altered. NATURALLY, freedom in the New World did not come cheap. Everybody in the society had to guard against those who would take it away. For about two centuries, until the 1900's, everybody kept their guard up. The liberties defined by the founding fathers allowed the country to collectively advance the standard of living-for everybody-to previously unheard of levels. The people of the land, the Americans, guar- ded their freedom jealously. The states were set up by those who loved their land and desired to influence directly the people who governed it. These people were the grassroots of America. The grassroots are still there. The story would have ended there, but for. the intellectuals-those who are convinced they know how to run a person's life better than the person himself. When the professional politicians took over, intellec- tual theories provided an excuse for the en- suing reduction of liberties. CENTRALIZED POWER became the ap- parent savior, not the scourge, of the people. - The principles of individual freedom began to disappear as the New Deal and its children multiplied. In the name of equality, freedom has disappeared. The very principle the colonies fought for has disappeared. Equality, in the guise of the minimum .wage, has forced willing teenage workers from the labor force. Price supports make the consumer pay for cheese that only piles up in warehouses. We now pay people not to work. Rent control causes housing shortages. And the list continues. Regulations and taxes have grown astronomically. Washington has become the focus of power, the keeper of the people, the all-knowing Big Brother. WASHINGTON'S tax revenue, for example, has doubled since 1976, while the budget has more than doubled. If this trend continues, everybody agrees, the economy will collapse. But when change is so much as mentioned, cries of anguish are heard across the country, mostly in the name of equality. History has numerous examples of cen- tralized governments that tried to expand the country out of danger. All of them ended either in dictatorship or in failure. Russia and Britain are current examples of both. Even the misdirected French are still following their doomed footsteps. Will they never learn? Once upon a time, people welcomed a challenge, a chance to make something work that hadn't before. They crossed deserts in covered. wagons, built miles of railroad tracks, and gave up king'and country for a dream. NOW, THE college student expresses the desire to be looked after, cared for, and regulated by the "good boys" in the Washington bureaucracy. Not only is such an attitude pathetic, it is suicidal. It is hardly the attitude inherited from our forefathers. In fact, George Washington would likely with- draw him name from the city that adopted it. Being American is not a flag-waving "we are better than you" attitude of belligerance. An American is simply proud of his country. He is someone who enjoys living in a place beralism where the son of an Italian immigrant can. become the owner of his own corporation, or a Michigan ghetto dweller can become a multi-millionaire basketball player. Of course, there'is a price. Freedom is not free. There is no free lunch. The road is rocky, and so on. But the college students who are speaking and writing today do not want to pay any price. They want to kill Reagan's New: Federalism because they are not really sure of the result. THEY WANT to continue to allow Washington D.C. to run their lives and live in their own self-righteous world. And they call anyone who disagrees with them heartless, uncaring, and naive, among other things. The truth is, nobody can predict the future, The New Federalism policy is not a guaran- teed success, and will meet with certaiy failure if the principle of centralized gover- nment is endorsed. It must be observed, however, that Keynesian economics - the excuse politicians use to expand central control-is a failure, because, in the long run, it is dead. To sit back and accept the present state of af- fairs, or especially to .ask for more of the same, is suicide. A large and bloated federal government can only increase the pain of a recession, not cure it. THE DARING, the adventurous, and the patriots will try and better the world for themselves and their children. Those are the people who deserve to be in charge of their own lives, not the intellectuals who believe they can think for everybody. John Kenneth Galbraith, Edward Kennedy, Ralph Nader, and others do not know how to run other people's lives, and anyone who thinks they can is an insidious danger to society. The college student who presumes to know that social programs are good for people is also dangerous. They want no budget cuts in social programs and no responsibility for their lives and the lives of their families. I have faith that the power will return to the states, and ultimately to the people from whence it came. That is what will make people happiest. Those who oppose it are either misguided or irresponsible. Pity them in their quest for utopia, for they will never find it. Gindin is the Daily's University editor. 4 Muddled solution WITH ITS new plan for testing the English proficiency of teaching assistants, the University has indulged in reasoning as hard to fathom as the lectures of many of its foreign TAsr. After several years of student protest, the University has finally ad- dressed the problem posed by foreign TAs who lack adequate English skills. LSA Dean for Curriculum Affairs Jens Zorn announced last week that, starting in September, all foreign TAs will be required to pass an oral examination that tests their English language proficiency. The test will be mandatory for all TAs currently at the University, as well as those entering in the fall. This worthy idea, however, contains some ludicrous provisions. Under the plan, TAs who fail the oral examination will be required to un- dergo special English tutoring-but they will be allowed to continue teaching for a whole semester. The University carried its illogical reasoning even further with its plans for removing TAs from classy If a TA failst asecond exam, he or she will be barred fromteaching, but will be able to do alternative work, such as grading papers. The University seemingly con- cludes that a graduate student unable to instruct students in spoken English will be ready to grade coursework written in English. The University's oral examination plan will do little to alleviate the problems faced by students who must cope with incomprehensible instruc- tors. These half-hearted measures ob- viously fail to ensure that TAs unable to communicate in English will be prevented from teaching in the University's classrooms. Weasel By Robert Lence HEY, WHAT'S ON& ON? A PILLOW FIGHT? WITH So MANY P"LEMS M SOLVE IN THE WOIZ-D, Youlte wAsr Nb Yoga TIME HAUIN6 A PIU4W FI69T 91 'MINK OF f}LL THE PLIC" NAT HAD TD 'DIE IN MER FOR 1W, PILLOWS p bit l i m aji 1 OKAYI KNOCK< THE. RIGHTS FAWN, F EARE SELF- ENTITLED OU.SNESS. TO RAVE. A LITTLE FUN. I! I- .s LOOKERE cNOT BLIN TOTE I66.ISU- THEN YOU DO REALIZE OF COURSE WE Po! iliAT THE.RE. FOR 6OPIS .SAKES, ARE 65M.OUS OUR PLE66F ISSUES AT I4ANP FORML IS WWCN T VEIANp LZES THAN TWO OUR ATTENTION. WEEKS AWAY!. - r 0 I "RIXM POThOLES IS NOT A FEPERAL RESPONSIILuf' LETTERS TO THE DAILY: F ii 'tI a j!4e Staff does its best on suicide problem To the Daily: It is generally contrary to our practice and principles to respond to editorial or jour- nalistic remarks expressed in support or critical of our operations. We feel, however, that the editorial statement published Jan. 16 cannot pass without commentary and, in fact, correction from the Housing Division staff. While we applaud your efforts at raising campus awareness of the drastic nature of the suicide attempt problem here at Michigan, we are just as vehemently disturbed by your allegations of poor training and inconsistent standards with regard to the paraprofessional preparation of our residence hall staff. As the professional staff mem- bers responsible and accountable for the preparation of Resident Advisors, Directors and so forth, we spend a significant portion of our time reviewing training prin- ciples and programs. The Building Directors and Residen- ce Life Directors meet frequently and regularly in conjunction with our minority support staff and library director to invest major ef- forts at developing clear stan- dards for hiring as well as training our live-in staff. The criteria by which staff are hired and trained may differ somewhat from building to building but, nonetheless, they are all rooted in consistent standards involved fundamental requirements of sensitivity, maturity, empathy, and the like. Similarly, orientation and in- service training programs are developed with concern for commonly established prin- ciples. Contrary to your statement of resident staff's needing to ask for specific training, our staff are required to participate in an array of training sessions covering many areas of problem solving, crisis intervention, and personal growth. At the various professional meetings which oc- cur in the Housing Division, we have identified several aspects of staff development which have come. to be expected as basic elements of all training programs. Among those are racial awareness, academic and personal counseling, program- ming and, indeed, crisis interven- tion. If your editorial authors had consulted even with your own reporters who diligently in- vestigated our training programs you would have discovered that nearly every R.A., R.D., A.R.D., M.P.A., and Head Librarian in the Housing Division spent the equivalent 'of a full day in crisis skills development training during our summer orientation. In addition, virtually every hall: has had follow-up, in-service training in suicide prevention and general crisis intervention. We are as distressed as your editors with the magnitude of the- suicide problem and we spend considerable amounts of time and energy training staff in prevention and intervention techniques. As the saying goes, we do our best, and we certainly do better than is implied by your editorial. -Kathie Beauvais * Larry Moneta Max Smith Residence.Life Directors February 3 ,a I I Wasserman $AL.VADORAu1 T~LROOF5AVE MA5ACREp ~ SEVERAL RNDR~ED GIV(L1At1S NO, -T14E REFO~RT5Y IT fff METOP1 CAL PA;sURE co*6?ES;-1 cJUMT&A i AU IVIN& i r i