6 OPINION ^F Poge 4 Thursday, September 23, 1982. The Michigan Daily S aedfRt bdts gatn v aty Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair .7 Vol. XCIII, No. 13 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Ignore the issue: It's only your school TWENTY-ONE people gathered in Regents room yesterday for their one big chance to defend the program at which they work and study, a program which is up for possible elimination. But instead of using the precious little time they were allowed to fight for the program, many of the students and faculty members from the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities used the time to attack the review process. It is true that there are many problems with the way that ad- ministrators go about reviewing a program for cutbacks. The process, as ISMRRD's director correctly pointed out yesterday, is too secretive and does not allow sufficient opportunities for public debate. But when ad- ministrators finally do open up the process and hold a public hearing, as they did yesterday, it should not be wasted. Like similar hearings before it-for the geography department and the physical therapy program-not many people cared enough to show up for the chance to speak directly to the men who will decide the program's future. And of those who did come yester- day, many of them spent more time complaining of how few chances they had been given to speak, than actually exploiting the one finally given. The result was that few, if any, new arguments were raised for saving the program. Many of the criticisms offered about the review process are legitimate. But the argument for opening up the process is weakened when the few op- portunities offered to participate are missed or wasted. Students and faculty members deserve a greater voice in the decisions shaping the future of this university. But they deserve those chances only if they are willing to sieze them. Public hearings on the futures of two other threatened programs are scheduled for the next two weeks. Defenders of those programs-the School of Natural Resources and the Institute for Labor and Industrial Relations-should show up in force and use the hearings to let administrators know that they expect a full role in deciding what happens to their educations. V E s }-'p b r . WELL, MlNuO . KLA 100r, YOUR. YNML(S Da AffFAR To DEL 1N ~r I gZ c < " r-:z ADE TAK 4, Y .4*4-~7-~ wbr- ,-, 7 Passenger rail picks itself up, dusts itself off, starts all o vei x f 4 t } s d { { h., k P Generation gap remains, but 'old' still isn't bad AMERICANS HAVE A distorted view of the elderly, the director of a New York center on aging reports. Today's youth, especially, associate growing old with loneliness, poor health, and dependency. The director's bleak conclusions are, sadly enough, hardly controversial. And nowhere are they better illustrated than right here at the University. This artificially-created haven for youth sometimes makes Ann Arbor seem like one giant ad for the Pepsi generation. A stroll through the Diag is enough to fool anyone into thinking that the best of all worlds - young, healthy, attractive, energetic --is right here on campus. How many senior citizens interrupt this illusion of eternal youth? Relatives, perhaps, although the nuclear family has effectively shuffled grandparents and great-aunts and - uncles aside. Or maybe a bag lady on the street? The most frequent contact any student is likely to have with the elderly is in a clessroom - where professors over 60 are often written off as stuffy and doddering. What does such isolation between the young and old - on campus and throughout the nation - accomplish? It merely serves to waste the vast potential of the elderly and to reinforce fears the young have of growing old. How can it be corrected? The Un- versity suffers more acutely than the outside world from the Madison Avenue-inspired glorificaion of youth, it's true, but it also has the best solution for such distortion right at hand - a good, long look at an elderly person. To clear up any fears that being old means being feeble, one need only take a look at a veteran professor. Professors, like fine wines, age very well. The wealth of knowledge they've had time to accumulate, the sense of history they are able to impart, can add up to one of the most rewarding experiences of undergraduate life. Their talent and superiority help stop any worship of youth dead in its tracks. Any undergraduate who - after measuring himself up against the talents of a professor emeritus - can call himself the better man is either an extraordinarily gifted person or an ex- traordinarily pompous fool. Aging is a process of growing old, but it also can be so much more. It's a process of learning, expanding, and reflecting. It's the getting of wisdom, too. By Phil Primack Passenger trains, presumed just a year ago to be headed for the final roundhouse under proposed cuts by the Reagan ad- ministration, now are running solidly back on the mainline. Despite bad publicity from two rail disasters in which three passengers were killed, ridership this summer reached record levels in both Canada and the United States. At the same time congressional support for Amtrak has remained solid as company executives have lobbied for continued budgetary support. PROPOSED cuts in Canadian train service also havemet fierce political opposition. "We proposed to eliminate one train which carried only 5,000 people a year," said Emery LeBlanc, a spokesman for VIA Rail Canada, "and we got a petition supporting it signed by over 20,000." Revivial of passenger train service has occurred more in spite of, than because of, official policy. Amtrak, which inherited both outdated equipment and hostility from 22 private railroads in 1971, still is recovering from its early operations when trains ran late or not at all. Perennially starved of capital under each of the last four administrations-President Carter tried to cut more than 40 percent of Amtrak's routes in 1979-Amtrak has been sustained largely through its friends in Congress. VIA, created in 1977 and also the inheritor of old equipment and bad tracks, has similarly suf- fered from official neglect or worse. Canadian rail supporters note that the senior official in charge of passenger rail service today is a former lobbyist for the bus industry, a longtime foe of passenger trains. "WE HANDLED our cutbacks very poorly," concedes LeBlanc, a strong rail supporter himself. VIA ridership had increased 41 percent in five years, with no new equipment and not much aggressive marketing. "People wanted trains, and it seemed we didn't. We have a lot of negative image to correct." Even in the United States, Reagan officials may have lear- ned not to tamper too much with passenger rail service. For the Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL' Ann Arbor passengers board the Twilight Limited bound for Chicago. Sometimes old professor a youngster's it just takes a doddering to knock some sense into head. thur Lloyd, a railroad veteran who heads Amtrak's west coast communications office, Lewis had a speaking engagement set in Albuquerque. Sen. Pete Dominici (R-N.M.), who had been receiving heavy constituent mail opposing Amtrak cuts, persuaded Lewis to stop at the local train station to inspect some of Am- trak's much ballyhooed new Superliner equipment. BY COINCIDENCE, Lloyd said, the Southwest Limited pulled into the station right on time. And filled. "Lewis asked me if we'd set that up," Lloyd recalled, "but he picked the time. Like a lot of other officials overkthe years, Lewis had been hearing from the highway lobby that Amtrak was running a bunch of rattling old trains for a few foaming rail buf- fs." Dominici, Lewis, and other formerly hostile officials may not love Amtrak now, but they no longer are anti-train. In a day when hard sales num- bers are everything, Amtrak's statistics do seem impressive. Nearly 21 million people rode with the system in 1981, making it the nation's sixth busiest inter- city transportation company. That is a 60 percent increase in riders since 1971, and Amtrak projects 48 million riders by 1990. Amtrak already has made major layoffs in its own non- operating personnel; cooked-to- order dining car meals have disappeared along with them. To many of the company's friends and critics alike, Am- trak's success is mystifying. The simplest explanation is that there are vast numbers of Americans who just love trains. They like walking around and chatting, and feeling unhurried, when riding them. They like the views which a train window offers without the interference of concrete and exhaust and gas pumps and check-in metal detectors. MORE SPECIFIC reasons also are apparent, however. Amtrak's biggest ridership jumps came during the fuel embargos of the 1970s. Significantly, even as gas prices went down this spring, Amtrak ridership held. When the next wave of fuel cost hikes arrives, possibly as early as next year, some analysts predict both Amtrak and VIA will likely face even more demand. Capital costs for maintaining passenger trains also pale com- pared to current projected repair bills for the aging interstate highway system. In 1982, more than $8 billion was authorized for federal road and bridge work. In comparison, Amtrak's budget request for 1983 was $788 million. The federal government spends $1.5 billion just to operate the air control system, which is only part of the massive federal subsidy to, the airline industry. Yet many train riders are refugees from the airlines-those who live in non- competitive route cities where air fares have skyrocketed undei deregulation. Some isolated areas have lost air servie altogether, making buses and trains their only public transpor- tation link. "Everyonecomplains about spending public money opi trains;" LeBlanc said in his Moe treal office. "But no one thinks of the airlines or highway subsidies. You've never seen a bus com- pany build a highway." To be on par with what has been publicly spent for buses and planes, a government should build a whole new roadbed just for passenger trains-something the Canadians in fact are con- sidering. Primack, who recently completed a coast-to-coast trip by rail, wrote this article for Pacific News Service. ALMI N ISTRATI EcC wOasI N EXPERTS IN,. MIACL CRE EDUCATON SOC IA~LSERVICES EERGY( coNSERVATION SOCIA~L SECURTY' P:AAPLOV MENT a t.1 'A