41 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, October 17, 1982 The Michiqan Daily The Michicon Da.....Tl. Beicher, HE SWEET aroma of marijuana once swept over Ann Arbor. Those who inhaled the "evil weed" did so with near impunity. The $t fine seemed a small price for a "big grin." But those days may soon be gone. Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher says he wants the $5 pot law-one of the most progressive in the coun- try-repealed. First Belcher will introduce the law to the City Council, which must vote to put tle proposal on the April ballot. ' research, going 0 to pot Councifmember Lowell Peterson, for one, has promised to fight Belcher to the ,last, desperate puff. But in the past, when students actually went to the polls, their vote put the $5 law into existence. Now, with apathy running as rampant as Derby Days and Greek Weeks, the repeal stands a chance of succeeding. - Belcher said he wants the repeal because of increased drug abuse in city high schools. All those River Rats and Pioneers were just too stoned to study. A few prominent local parent organizations-Tough Love being the oddest- have put their full political clout behind the repeal drive, which by all signs has just begun. But Peterson called Belcher's anti-drug drive "grandstanding." Belcher is up for re- election in April, and his fate may hang with that of the repeal. Until April, all those who like the smile of seedless, the cool of Colombian, and the high of Hawaiian better smoke up before it's too late. If repealed, those caught puffing will be fined $1,000, put in jail for a year, or both. Winter of discontent PROTEST ON the-outside and protest on the inside set the mood for Thursday's Regen- .t t tDaily Photo by JON SNOW The $5 pot law: A thing of the past? ts meeting. In between the fussing and fighting-from students protesting in Regent's Plaza to ad- ministrators squabbling in the Regents' room-the Regents managed to pass a record- breaking $285 millionbudget. The University will get to be a big spender even in hard times with a little help from this year's 15-percent tuition hike and a less than anticipated enrollment decline. Much of the conflict at the meeting, however, concerned the salary increases for non-faculty staff. The increase itself was born of con- flict-it was largely the results of months of griping by discontented clericals and technicians left out in the cold when the University granted professors a $5 million pay hike inSeptember. Regent Gerald Dunn, who cast the only 'no' vote on the budget, wanted an across-the-board raise for the staff, not the increases based on performance that the administrators proposed. Regent Nellie Varner seemed; to dislike the plan too, even though she voted for it, when she complained, "That will mean some (non- As the president cuts away at the budgets of government bodies that traditionally support scholastic research, University faculty mem- bers have found it increasingly difficult to finance their projects. Only one sacred institution-the military- has escaped the Reagan ax unscathed, and the Pentagon continues to fuel an increasing proportion of the country's, and the Univer- sity's, research projects. Defense research on campus shot up 14 per- cent in the 1981-82 academic year. Although Pentagon work still represents only a small portion of total research at the University, last year showed the first substantial jump in defense spending on campus since 1972, when the University decided to drop most of its military work on ethical grounds. One other source of research money that showed a dramatic increase this year was the private sector. Like many other universities across the country, the University of Michigan is relying more and more on corporations: to pay for campus research, often granting the corporations exclusive rights to research -results in return for cash. University administrators insist that the faculty must look to places such as the private sector and the defense department for support if the institution is to maintain its quality. That may be true, but many academics ob- serve that shift with a degree of sadness. They fear an increasing amount of research will be done not merely for the advancement of knowledge and the improvement of the human. condition, but for the financial interests of the elite and the destruction of human lives. Coming apart HAROLD SHAPIRO must have gazed out his office window, surveyed his campus, and realized that something wasn't clicking. Students, staff workers, and professors all seemed to have something to-complain about. If it wasn't tuition hikes, it was budget cuts. If it wasn't program reviews, it was salaries. So, in his annual State of the University ad- dress last Monday, Shapiro pleaded with the f faculty staff) will not get any increase at all." Regents got other gripes off their chests at the meeting. Regent Sarah Power lashed out at declining state support to the University. What with the current rash of aid cuts and deferrals, Power said, state aid amounts to little more than "a house of cards-monopoly money." Varner complained that raising tuition may be cutting out poor'er students. She also expressed concern that defense spending on campus was increasing. The angry, disgruntled mood of the meeting spread to the public comments section. One student bleakly summed up the University's winter of discontent with, "Tuition is going up, financial aid is going down, and the Pentagon is taking over." Research ups and downs. EAGAN administration priorities hit home once again this week as Univer- sity statistics showed a drop in research last year-the first in nearly a decade. 6 I Shapiro: Pulling together rest of the University to cooperate. "It's a time of sacrifice and commitment," Shapiro im- plored, and everyone must pull together as a community in these hard times. Apparently, however, a lot of people didn't buy that argument. The very day after Shapiro spoke, student government leaders were plot- ting how best to cause more trouble for ad- ministrators. Michigan Student Assembly members vowed to put up a tough fight over coming budget reviews and cutbacks and swore that Shapiro and his budget cronies would face stiff student resistance in the future. But the students lost their first battle. Their rally on Regents' Plaza Thursday, which the'; leaders promised would be formidable, fizzled. Fewer than 100 students showed up to chant budget slogans as the Regents went about their business of making the University "smaller but better" inside the administration building. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers A ndrew Chapman, Julie Hinds, David Meyer, and Barry WMitt. Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair Vol. XCIII, No. 34 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor. MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board \ Of OUR COURSE) WAE'LL isE CQNIS(oER BL Sweets for the sweetest SWEETEST DAY came and went transactions to the size of PIRGIM yesterday and the appropriate donations. For a $5 donation, you can gifts-a bag of chocolates from drop a 100-level class, for $15 a senior Drake's, a card with cupids on the seminar, and so on ... front from Hallmark's-were + To Don Canham: we thought of the distributed around campus. But in the all-pro turf, we thought of a mega- fever of artificially-inflated affection, million dollar Athletic Department, a few University notables received but somebody beat us to it. What can nary a gift. So here's a few mushy and you get for the man who has irreverently heartfelt presents to some everything? of our favorite folks. " To protesters of defense-sponsored * To Mayor Louis Belcher: a roach research on campus: definitive proof clip. And advice to use it quickly before that research with military application his efforts to repeal Ann Arbor's $5 pot is actually going to be used on a laser- law succeed. powered can opener. * To Harold Shapiro: a big, sloppy . To the Pentagon: definitive proof hug from every undergraduate. He that that laser-powered can opener has seemed to need one at Monday's State a military application. of the University speech when he . And, last but not least, to Mom and forlornly called for unity. Dad: 15 percent higher grade point " To PIRGIM: an even better way to averages-to make the 15 percent get funds than being put on University tuition hike a little easier to swallow. tuition bills-a new plan linking CRISP II A "'1 ,#' ~. v i ' t , -. TO BR IN~i I S f AE TH~E N[oTi- TABLE. .i ^ 2 r" s8 "ad i 11 ' l ; L ''r r- ; 4'- . 4 - r - I t' _ - -- _ , ., r 1 s ~ f _ . .- S_ _ - 1 I_ 1 y t6 y if 4 _ _ > n ': " . yr- '° ; -- - . _ --- _ E LEV!ER% EL L To T(N cv t; i 0' N ANN* , T ~ ._- _- , _ . -_. - - _-, - LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Covering part of Hatfield's speech To the Daily: Your article on Sen. Mark Hat- field's speech on arms control (Daily, Oct. 12) neglected to men- tion his most provocative remarks. As the Daily correctly repor- ted, Hatfield lashed out against the billions of dollars wasted by the government on the arms race. But he did not stop there. During the question-and-answer period following the speech, the senator was asked about univer- sities that support military research. In response, he stressed his fear of the co- dividuals have found themselves prostituted, forced to refrain from that kind of inquiry." In particular, Hatfield ex- pressed concern over military research at his alma mater Stan- ford, and although he felt it "presumptuous" to speak direc- tly about the Unive:'sity of Michigan's research, the im- plications were obvious. That the Department f Defense funds professors here is no secret (ac- cording to your own newspaper, defense research stands at $5.2 million and continues to grow). If professors risk the chance of prostituting themselves by ac- says, "In a situation like this, professors are bound to go 'a- whoring," and I don't see anything wrong with that." The importance of Hatfield's comment was heightened even more by the irony of the scene in the auditorium. Hatfield was lavishly introduced by none other than President Shapiro, who stayed on the stage throughout Sounds like To the Daily: Mark Gindin's article on the Opinion Page ("Modern-day Rohin Hnnd .de or ., 1n;1- the evening. Perhaps the biggest irony. however, was that the Daily --in light of its attempts to expose military research on campus -- failed to give notice to the views of a well-respected senator on the very subje,'t. --,lonathan Weiss Oct. 14 ai libertarian didates such as Ted Kennedy. Don Riegle, Ronald Reagan (assuming he goes for a second term) .liamBlnchea r ]ic