"I r :Page 4 S - OPINION Wednesday, April 14, 1982- The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students a.t The University of Michigan Cutting the University budget: /ol. XCII, No. 154 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Who will win, who will lose Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board , environmentIn M ANY OF THE classic legislative battles won during the 1970s in the name of .the environment are now being challenged by a hasty Reagan ..administration. The administration currently is seeking to weaken two of the most im- portant environmental laws on the books, and it is using an ailing economy as its ally. Regulations cost industry money. It is much cheaper for companies to spew dangerous acids and chemicals into the air and water than it is for them to help keep the environment clean. The administration has been quick to heed complaints from its friends in industry concerning. inconvenient regulations. The Environmental Protection Agency now wants to give industries more time to install the "best available technology" to halt the dumping of pollutants into the nation's watet supplies. In addition, the EPA has drafted legislation that would ease rules for the cleanup of contaminated water and ex- tend industrial permits for discharging waste into rivers from five years to ten years. Well, at least we still have clean air, ,-ou say. Perhaps not if the EPA and General Motors have their way. GM ,nsists that changes in the Federal Clean Air Act could lower costs on autos with minimal effects on air quality, and the EPA agrees. En- vironmentalists have disputed these claims, however, saying relaxed stan- dards will greatly increase the nation's air pollution and acid rain levels. Clean air and water do cost money and in these hard economic times they often become the first victims of "cost saving measures." Just as there are costs inherent in environmental regulations, however, there are costs in scrapping standards to save money. Polluted air and water destroy the en- vironment and plague humans with disease. These are the hidden costs of unchecked pollution. - Industrial progress and a clean en- vironment can coexist in this country. Regulation that hampers industry with. little positive results for the environ- ment deserves to be scrapped. But weakening regulations merely to im- prove economic quantity would needlessly sacrifice environmental quality. Losing our clean air and water con- trols after waging such a long fight to have them would be a step backward. The administration should halt its drive to relax valuable environmental regulations before too much ground is, lost. By Bret Eynon The geography department is gone. The schools of art, natural resources, education and other University programs currently are on the chopping block. Rumors fly that the School of? Social Work and the Residential College may be the next targets for the cutting process known as "selective discontinuance." If you're like many students, you probably believe that these programs are being whittled away because of declining state:appropriations to higher education. ' You may think these cuts are an unfortunate, but necessary, move to save the University. DECLINING STATE appropriations, however, are merely a short-term problem. They are not the immediate impetus for the program-cutting strategy. Why are programs being reduced and discontinued? It actually is part of an administrative effort to drastically reshape the University. The current process of reduction and discon- tinuance is a process of budget shifting, not budget cutting. Cuts in schools such as natural resources will not reduce the University's overall budget. The dollars taken from natural resources will be reallocated to another "high priority" campus unit. With Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye's five-year plan, some $20 million will be shifted in this manner over the next five years. So far, most of the argument over the five- year plan has centered on which programs will be cut. But an equally important question exists: Where will the funds taken from art, education, and other programs be put? And what will this reallocation mean for the future of the University? ONE POSSIBLE beneficiary of the coming cuts is the proposed Michigan Research Cor- poration, a University-owned subsidiary which will serve as a bridge, between the University and private industry. MRC will subsidize faculty entrepreneurs whose research has high commercial potential, providing them with laboratory space, legal and business services, and high salaries. In the long-run, products developed by MRC may benefit the entire University through licensing agreements and patent royalties. In the short-run, however, the University must invest $4 million to $6 million to get MRC off the ground. Other units will likely benefit from the Un- versity's restructuring program. The engineering college, which has great potential for attracting grants from private industry and the military, wants to move to North Campus. Such a move will require large sums of money-large sums that the five-year plan un- doubtedly will free up. The new Center for Robotics and Integrated Manufacturing will need roughly half a million in University funds over the next two years. And the proposed Ann Arbor township research park, designed to house the Industrial Technology Institute, will depend upon University financial support to get its ball rolling. The pattern is clear. Administrators have chosen to market the University's, most attrac- tive asset - technological expertise. This strategy might bring in revenues, but not until sometime in the late 1980s. The University needs substantial amounts of "venture capital" to get things started now, so ad- ministrators are hacking up programs with lit- tle or no potential for attracting military or in- dustrial sponsors. SUPPOSEDLY, profits from programs like MRC or CRIM will be plowed back into the University - a kind of academic "trickle- down" theory. But the results of such an effort to "Reaganize" the University are not pleasant to contemplate. The University's new focus may mean a narrower range of classes will be offered. Students may find themselves in large classes with professors more interested in research than in teaching. In other words, students will receive a shabbier education. Other groups may also be hurt. Many bright junior faculty members have already gotten the message to look elsewhere for jobs. And as tenure prospects dwindle, so do the prospects of meeting affirmative action goals. In the coming years we can expect the faculty to grow smaller, older, whiter, and more predominan- tly male. Perhapsthe real losers of the University's redirection will be the people of the state. Michigan taxpayers, who have built the University, may see their public resource tur- ned over to the interests of private industry. To fully understand the impact of this loss, it is necessary to consider the history of the University and the true social purpose of any public institution of higher education. THE UNIVERSITY always has found itself caught between two contrasting definitions. On one hand, it is a public school charged with bringing its benefits to the people of Michigan. On the other hand, it has always had a strong research component, and has been considei'd an elite school-the Harvard of the Midwest, It used to seem that these two components could complement each other The benefits of both University teaching and reseach have been widely shared. In recent years, the University has opened its doors to several new groups. New programs in labor relations, en vironmental advocacy, black culture, and women's studies have flowered as these groups took their place on campus. Now, however, the fruits of this development are being tossed aside. Programs currently are being evaluated according to the con- stituency they serve. Does that constituency have money? Power? If not, tile program in- volved is expendable. Creative, innovative ex- change, which holds the best hope for finding solutions to humanity's problems, is bein eliminated systematically in favor of vocational training and military-industrial fund-shopping. The damage being done may be irrevocable. The opportunity to make the University of Michigan a rich' educational community representing the diverse interests of the state's citizens is being carelessly thrown away. Who knows when, or if; such an opportunity will come again? Eynon is a community historian and Michigan Stulent Assembly investigator. Loan cuts on vacation, RESIDENT Reagan interrupted his' Caribbean vacation this weekend to deliver a radio address on his proposed student loan cuts. The heat finally got to the president-not the warm temperatures of the tropics, but the criticism from Congress and the nation on his rash policies toward students. Reagan lashed back at his critics, saying they had deliberately misled students into believing the government was unjustly snatching away loans. Unfair, the president charged. As un- fair, as the horror stories unleashed that his cuts will force millions of students to drop out of college. His proposals will cut back some on student loans, the. president admitted, but their impact will be limited, since private lenders are now offering a record volume of loans. The president seems to be protesting too much. No amount of explanation can deny the facts; students will be severely affected if the president's ef- forts to cut loans succeed. What Reagan neglects to stress are the unpleasant facts. Under his. proposals, graduate students would be eliminated from the guaranteed student loan program altogether. Eligibility for all grants would be tightened. Direct loans for lower in- come students, such as Pell grants, would no longer be given solely on demonstrated need. Work-study funds would be slashed by a third. If these proposals pass through Congress, thousands of students un- deniably may be hurt. Legislators estimate that at least 800,000 students would lose their Pell grants. Although not all of those affected would have to leave school, as the president correctly stated, a substantial portion would be forced out or would find .it impossible to obtain desired educational oppor- tunities. The opposition to student loan cuts, however, obviously has built a strong enough base to reach the president's ear. And, fortunately, Congress is not likely to pass any of the proposed cuts for the next fiscal year. Perhaps this concerted pressure will be enough to convince Reagan to put his student loan proposals on a permanent vacation-by giving them up for good. Weasel, By R obert Lence NEY, W +tF IOU IA MY O eNTATION (2 YEAR. L THU-44T- YW L40KCP FAWWAR. i tT NAR 'tn SEWEVe 7W WAS FUR YEARS Ago! YfAg( irSURF- WErtr FAST, Tt*t IT. SqFwA" 'yowu'( N K. OF CO"C(,E6.? soRfA W"T T te1)a.6 4 t Mm5ft ANA TRICP NOT ToFMAK~E WAVES. WHEN VERONE WENT 1 CLASS, X. WENT lb .As5! WHNJ EVERYONE WEN(T To THE BAR, L WENT1Tme vimJRE "T1INKLM6THAN IZtHolz). I° -t iaW, HorU r ANLAD CD 20 CETA RUSEIN MF ALL SETFOR WHAT? "Ic WHO KNOWS? TRYINb Nor WAVES/ 0, LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Capitalist press unfairly slams rally .4 * -.4 .4 TA the Daily: March 20 marks an important victory: the day the Nazis were run out of Ann Arbor. Some 2,000 workers, students, minorities, heavily supported by area labor unions responded to the call for action of the Spartacist League- initiated Committee to Stop the Nazis on March 20. But for those who did not want to see the Nazis stopped, March 20 was a shameful defeat. So The Michigan Daily is howling about "violence." In the editorial titled, "Placing the Blame", (Daily, March 23) you blame not the Nazi stormtroopers who came with their brownshirts and swastikas to terrorize decent citizens, but the militant anti-Nazi demon- §trators who organized to stop them. "On Saturday they caused trouble," editorializes the Michigan Daily, siding with the Nazis against their enemies. The 1ubiquitous "they" refers here to "revolutionary groups." For the Daily "nothing could be more reproachable-than the methods of these groups." Stopping the Nazis seems to be just about the worst thing the Daily editors can imagine, calling "the whole scene (on March 20) a tremen- dous spectacle unmatched in action of the crowd which needed no 'manipulation' to stop the hated Nazis. Unlike the Daily, which weeps over the "constitutional rights". of the "innocent" Nazis, the 2,000 Ann Arbor residents who stopped them know what they are. The survivors of Hitler's death camps know that "free speech" is not the issue with these terrorists who are looking for an "American Hitler to gas the Niggers and Kikes." And Cynthia Steele, the black Michigan woman who had her hand blown off by the Klan knows that the genocidal terrorists are not just a/ threat in the future and the dim past. A Nazi lynch mob is not a debating society. Why has The Michigan Daily so obviously lined up with the Nazis against those who fight them? Because they are smarting from the political defeat they suffered along with the Nazis on March 20, when the Mayor's diversionary "Let's ignore the Nazis" rally flopped. Despite the Daily's in- cessant campaign of violence- baiting the Committee rally in an effort to keep away demon- strators, hundreds of University of Michigan students made the clear decision to stop the Nazis, not ignore them. leaflets!' But more than mere hypocrisy is involved in blaming the left for the violence of the fascists lalthough there's plenty of hypocrisy). The Michigan Daily is a crude collegiate reflection of the big-time capitalist press. After the Greensboro massacre in which the Ku Klux Klan/Nazis gunned down anti-fascist demon- strators in, broad daylight The New York Times called it a ,'shootout" between two equally violent groups. The Daily wants to go the Times one better por- traying the communists as more violent than the Nazis. Behind this journalistic campaign of witchhunting the left and covering up for the Nazis is the ominous fact that the fascists in all of their forms are becoming more acceptable to an in- creasingly desperate capitalistic class. The racist union-busting scum are seen as the future-shock troops needed to save decaying capitalism in crisis.ay The Daily was particularlm irritated by the SYL's "banne (which) flew at the City Hall rally proclaiming an end to the Reagan war drive." For the Daily such a program. is "completely out of place in protesting a Nazi threat." But in fact the alarming and increasing growth of, the fascist groups is taking place in the fringes of the anti-Soviet war drive. It is the Cold War an racist policies of both capital parties that have given the green light to the KKK/Nazis and they are, helped out considerably by the capitalist press. It will take the SYL program of mass labor/black mobilization to stop them. That's what stopped the fascists here-not the courts, police or the bleating of liberal. sheep.--Michelle Lubke Spartacus Youth Leag April 12 I '., /i it'K 1 Pales tin ian struggle I To the Daily: In a story (Daily, March 28) you quoted some of my statemen- ts out of context. What I actually said was that the Palestinians hope to establish a secular Victims of Zionism in refugee camps or lender a most brutal Israeli military occupation, they are struggling for the right to return to their homeland, Palestine, and live there with Jes in ei nria .ht