OPINION Page 4 E d Adm dbtde an U f Ig Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Saturday, October 9, 1982 Sinclair The Michigan Daily aind 4o Q7lM/LeIn .guf. ** Vol. XCll, No. 27 420 Maynorci St. Ann Arbor. 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Out of THLIE UNEMPLOYMENT rate stands today at its highest level since the Great Depression, and all the president can do is blame the Democrats. On Thursday evening, the day before the newest unemployment figures came out, President Reagan blamed the Democrats in advance for the bad news. The Democrats, he said, had turned Washington into "fat city," had put the nation's economy "on a toboggan slide," and are responsible for the 10.1 percent unemployment. He said the recent jumps in the stock market were evidence of an "onrushing surge of confidence" in the economy.. The president's analysis couldin't be further from reality, and his response to the latest economy news could har- dly be more shameful. No, there can be little question that, even if the downturn started late during the Carter administration, the president's policies are directly responsible for the recession's severity and length., The claim that the president's economic policies have suddenly in- control spired confidence on Wall Street is ab- surd. Nearly all stock market analysts agree that the current rally is being driven by the decline in interest rates-in other words, by the hope that the administration's previous monetary policies are being reversed. Interest rates are falling because the president's recession has so battered business that the demand for loans has decreased dramatically. And what's the administration's response to the news that the nation now has depression-level unem- ployment? A reexamination of economic policy, or even just a public works program? Nope-it's all the fault of the opposition party; nothing new shall be done. How high will the unemployment rate go? When might the nation get out of this mess? "No one knows," was Treasury Secretary Donald Regan's answer yesterday. . All the administration seems to haver are these strange, troubling, and in- credibly self-righteous answers. They seem to be the hallmarks of an economy-and an economic policy- that are out of control. Nothing's simple anymore THINGS USED TO be simple. Life was, as they say, uncomplicated. For sweetness without sugar, there was saccharin, for nervousness there were cigarettes, and for headaches there was aspirin. When you were hungry and in a hurry, there was Mc- Donald's. Just a quick jaunt down William Street, take a right on Maynard, and there were the golden arches. Stand in line for a minute, mumble the magic words (BigMac-smallfries-chocolate shale), and then it was fast food heaven. That's how it used to be, but no more. A creeping paranoia has made its way into America's favorite cardboard food factory. A disease caused by eating hamburger meat (specifically Mc- Donald's hamburger meat) has been discovered at Kroc's place. The disease-called hemorrhagic colitis (yuck)-causes severe stomach pain. It has appeared in the intestines of Mac fans in a small town in Oregon, and now in Traverse City, Mich. There were 21 cases in our fair home state, 58 nationwide, but none of them were, or ever could have been fatal, experts say. Nonetheless, severe stomach pain at the golden arches? If students want to get sick to their §tomachs, they can or- der Chicken Mc . . they can go someplace else. There once was a sense of security about McDonald's. Tastelessness bred assurances of non-nutritious hygiene. One never worried about a bum milkshake, or.a burnt fry. Things like that just didn't happen. A buzzer saved the cheeseburgers from a charcoaled fate, and master mixers made the cokes just right-never too syrupy. And then there was that wonderful styrofoam that kept the edibles away from nasty germs that float in the air. Never again. Now it will always be "Should I order a double cheeseburger without the pickle, or should I go down the block?" Another decision in an already con- fusing life. A perfect order has been tainted by the stains of the imperfect world. God preserve Burger King. It's time for the true foot soldier of professional football- the fan-to stand up and force the National Football League to pay its debt to society. After all, the sport we love is not delivered to us on a silver platter. We pay the freight when we buy tickets and television sponsors' products, when we cough up millions to build and maintain NFL stadiums, when we put in countless of unpaid hours to help train tomorrow's gridiron heroes. IF THE fans remain in their seats, football as we know it is in danger of extinction because of growing cracks in football's very foundation. Professional football exists only by resting atop the vast pyramid of amateur foot- ball. But NFL owners do not con- tribute one cent to the peewee leagues, high schools, and colleges which combine to form a huge and highly effective farm system for the pros. The in- dispensible service these feeder systems perform is clearly illustrated by the incompetence of the occasional speed merchant who tries to sneak into the NFL without previous football ex- perience. Yet in this age of cutbacks, where the warm sun of education is increasingly eclipsed by the rising moon of military spending, schools are often unable to make ends meet unless they reduce the size of their athletic programs. CLEVELAND has eliminated all junior high sports. Some high schools in Idaho, Illinois, In- diana, andMichigan have scrap- ped football. Even mighty Massillon (Ohio), the cradle of bigtime high school football, had to pass an emergency school levy to insure the completion of the Taxing the NFL to support the amateurs By Lee Ballinger 1981 season. Villanova was forced to end an 87-year tradition of college football when its program sank in a sea of red ink last year. The NFL makes a net profit of $13 million each year just from licensing its trademarks, while high school football players in California, Connecticut, Michigan, Ohio and Pen- nsylvania have to pay as much as $50 apiece just to be allowed to go out for the team. There are high schools in Washington, D.C., which do not charge admission to their football games because they cannot afford to erect fences' around their fields. The school system of Warren, Ohio, which has produced five current NFL players, has been forced to lay off several high school coaches on the eve of the 1982 season. THE TAXPAYING fan not only funds the educational system whose athletic assembly line em- pties directly onto the NFL loading dock, he also directly subsidizes Pete Rozelle and Co. Since 1953 the public has paid hundreds of millions to build and maintain professional sports facilities and that was only the down payment. The fans must still come up with almost $7 billion before the mortgages can be burned. The local citizens of Pontiac, Mich., already devastated by the collapse of the auto industry, pay $1.2 million a year in property taxes to help keep the Lions and the Silverdome in the black. Meanwhile, their own school system has been forced to lay off coaches because of a decrease in tax revenue. THE ANAHEIM Stadium Authority used public funds to build 108 luxury boxes yet donates 80 percent of the revenue they produce to the Rams. But while the public tries in vain to call a play that will blunt the rush of the economic down- turn, the NFL continues to prosper. Major league baseball underwrites an entire farm system, and the NBA helps to support the minor league Con- tinental Basketball Association. The NFL does nothing. I propose that 5 percent of the league's gross revenues be set aside for the support of amateur football programs across the country. At present income levels, that would amount to $31 million a year which could be placed in a fund administered by players and owners. Shoulder pads for; Pascagoula. Coaches' salaries for Cabin Creek. A new field for Fresno. A revival for Villanova. THE NFL not only has a moral obligation to help sustain the athletic infrastructure of the United States, but common sense should dictate that it preserve the athletic bedrock upon which its shining edifice rests. There is honest disagreement over the players' demand for a percentage of the owners' gross revenues, but surely it is gross that no percentage of the NFL's annual bonanza goes to those who do so much to create it. Fans, players and coaches at every level of football must come together and force the NFL to do its duty before it's too late. Ballinger is the author of "In Your Face! Sports for Love and Money. " He wrote this article for the Pacific. News Service. "ONE OF YOUR GREATEST ACTING JOBS CHIEF' f f - 1 cr LETTERS TO THE DAILY: LSA students are the exploited To the Daily: Kevin O'Connor's letter to the Daily (Oct. 1, 1982) expressed the "fact" that engineering students "receive less money per student than any other college at the University". The State of Michigan regularly monitors the amount of money spent per student class hour as part of its funding model for university support. I checked on some figures for 1976- 78 to verify Mr. O'Connor's asser- tion and discovered that Univer- sity expenditures per student class hour for freshmen and sophomore engineering students for this period was $50.69, com- pared to $39.75 for students in bio-sci.., $29.75 for students in let- ters, $17.00 for students in psychology, and $19.05 for students in social sciences. Junior and senior engineering students also received com- parably more than their counter- parts in these subjects. In fact, in a study of University expen- ditures done by a reidential college team under the super- vision of Prof. Tom Weisskopf (Econ.), it was revealed that the average LSA graduate received less in instructional expenditure - per student than the average non- LSA undergraduate. My own calculations are that LSA freshmen and sophomores receive little more than their tuition back in direct classroom instructional expenditures from the University. They are the most: heavily exploited class in the University. One wonders where Mr. O'Con-' nor got his "facts." If he got them from the University, no matter: how much they spend on him per classroom hour, he's probably right in perceiving that e ngineerirg students are not get- ting a good education at the: University. Do they believe everything they are told by Headline shows racist intent To the Daily: I think you could have been more upfront with your headline, "Blacks Show Low SAT Scores," (Tues., Oct. 5) and added a subheading, "Are Blacks Really Less Intelligent Than Whites?" displaced (as I did), I would see this article as yet another nail in the academic coffin that the University of Michigan has been working on since the day I set foot on campus. the caption ". . . and hopes for a bigger fish to take home for din- ner." For that alone you should be stripped of any journalistic license you have. What is the point of the kind of