f J , / 0 OPINION Page 4 i Thursday, March 31, 1983 Wasserman The Michigan Daily I Eie a M e bte ntahe U iichig an Edited and managed by students at- The University of Michigan Vol. XCIII, No. 142 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Superfund safety HREE YEARS AGO Congress set 3 up a multi-billion "Superfund" to help pay the cleanup costs of thousands of toxic waste dumps which dot the nation's landscape. But under current procedure, state and federal regulations and inspectors are not only unable to keep the wastes from being dumped in the first place, but many states don't have the money and the EPA has been too slow in stopping the danger from spreading. Two sites in Michigan and California are cases in point. Not being ones to bicker too much with America's all- important industry interests, the Justice Department tried to work out an "amicable" settlement for cleanup costs with more than 200 companies who illegally dumped wastes near Riverside, Calif. Not surprisingly, the secret negotiations broke down, and the department is going to sue. But during those six months of talks, the EPA did nothing to clean up the waste. Riverside was lucky. The state of California had the funds to contain the wastes from spreading during the recent heavy rains there. Other com- munities were spared from the health risks posed by contaminated drinking water supplies. Midland, Mich. has not been so lucky. The state Department of Natural Resources knew about possible dioxin contamination by Dow Chemical Co. near the town and in the Tittabawassee and Saginaw Rivers as early as 1978, but cuts in the state budget eliminated funding for study of the area. It wasn't until after fish caught in the river were found to- be contaminated with dioxin, which has been linked to cancer, that the site drew any attention. With such sites threatening millions of Americans, it is ridiculous for the Superfund to sit idle while lawyers argue over who should pay and states ignore dumps because they don't have the money to investigate them. As sites are identified, money should be allot- ted and contracts for investigation and cleanup signed. Legal battles can be fought later, but struggles for the nation's health and safety cannot. o ixiToiAZIrgts1t ° QOjE. &TiMAVIAT1oN - U LCS'I O1961A4N~b6IA'S SVDICE I( 79 C. 4 LETTERS TO THE DAILY: a6 Daily ili from o bjective-jo urn alitis... Heckling free speech T IBERALS ARE FOND of fighting for their First Amendment right to a protected free speech when that right is attacked. They rightly fear the intrusion upon free speech would threaten their input into the political system. But when liberals are doing the restricting, those principles go flying out the window. That has been the case in many in- cidents involving U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick and others. The ambassador has been heckled so persistently while attem- pting to give speeches on various college -campuses that she has had to leave the podium on several occasions. She has had to cancel at least two addresses, one after Smith College officials told her they could not guarantee her safety. The intensity of the heckling has prompted a host of college academic organizations to endorse a statement condemning these intrusions on Kirk- patrick's, and others, First Amen- dment rights. The statement correctly points out that the hissing and booing is not only being used to disapprove of particular viewpoints, but to "silence those with whom one disagrees." These hecklers don't have to agree! with one word Kirkpatrick says, but they have no right to prevent her from speaking those words, or the audience from hearing them. Protesters need not cease protesting if they disagree, but their opposition prevents her from speaking, the protesters must be removed from the scene. These type of restrictions on free speech whether they come from the right or the left, have no place under the Constitution. Kirkpatrick's words may not be palatable to some, but they have a place in this nation's political dialogue. To the Daily: The MSA endorsement of a petition calling for the Daily to acknowledge acts of irrespon- sible journalism is laudable. The petition may not, however, get to the root of the problem. Sen- sationalism and racism are only current symptoms of the disease that has infected the Daily for the last few years. The disease if ob- jective-journalitis. This illnesspervertsthe minds of the Daily staff from the editors to headline writers. The vision of the "balanced story" deludes these students. Reporters, they believe, must be disinterested observers. Articles must not "lean." Responsible journalists only follow the "middle road." Objective-journalitis blinds its victims to its own internal con- tradictions. There is no such thing as un- biased journalism. There are not just two sides to every story. Disinterested reporters are either asleep - exemplified by the Daily's misquotations and typos -pawns of the powers that be - exemplified by the Daily's parodying of the national media - or both. Responsible jour- nalism is not synonymous with objective journalism. Instead, responsible journalism is first and foremost a critical under- taking. Responsible journalism is not sniping from concealment, but rather an excercise in which even the decision that a story is news is openly admitted to stem from one's (hopefully coherent) systematic point of view. Your status as a newspaper does not prtect you from the necessity of formulating an understanding of the news you report. It is no use to pretend that an eight page newspaper has no criteria for the selection of its stories. Fortunately, objective-jour- nalitis need not be terminal. The Daily must begin to critically examine, not just report, student issues. A student newspaper is not just staffed by students but also run for students. Although the Ann Arbor News and the MSA News presently keep students in- formed, the Daily could restore its former credibility if it assumed the role of an advocate of student interests. If the Daily were actually an advocate of student interests, it would not contribute to the spread of institutionalized racism. The fact that the Daily continues to create racism and feckless sensation indicates the changes the Daily will have to make as it seeks to become a responsible newspaper. - Eric Schnauf4 Josh Ezekiel Ellen Trabka Larry D. Jonas Gwynne Sigel John Schloerb March 30 ...Anti-Daily petition a bunch of bunk To the Daily: MSA's endorsement of the petition asking that the Daily admit to irresponsible journalism is a bunch of bunk. The articles cited by MSA member Mark Klein clearly demonstrate this. Although I'd have to agree with him in regards to the story about the bulimiac girl who was ex- pelled from her sorority, at least the Daily made an attempt to ex- pose a real problem on this cam- pus. The girl's name and picture should not have been printed. But all media have the right to expose or not to expose their sources. The "Jap" article, in my opinion, was well done. It ap- peared in an issue of Weekend, that informative magazine published by the Daily that offers information on Ann Arbor night spots, films, and dining, among other things. It has also printed a few intelligent book reviews. These are items of interest to the University community. After reading the "Jap" article, I said to a friend, "It's about time those guys had the cojones to print something that most students really think about and discuss." Is that irresponsible jour- nalism? C'mon, guys, we all know about Japs, earthies, frat boys, sorority starlets, cynical non-greeks, punkers, and on and on and on. Why not write about those who make up visible mem- bers of the student body? If Brian Sher and Mark Klein have any opinions on these or any other subjects, they should sim- ply write an article, send it to the Daily, and, if written even in engineer prose, it would probably get printed. That's what the opinion page is there for. If these gentlemen wish to further their career ambitions, they should try any other method other than -sophomoric, attention-getting, finger pointing. Free speech and access to speak openly is offerred by our campus newspaper and thus represent the rules of the game. So if you have anything to say, write about it, don't bitch (squawk) about it. - Randy Watson March 29 'U' will suffer from cuts FATHER OF NUCLEAR FREEZE 'Yes' on MSA proposal 'A' To the Daily: I am a student at the School of Education in the undergraduate program. In regards to the recommendations to cut the School of Education budget by 40% and to phase out the un- dergraduate program, J wonder if the Budget Priorities Commit- tee has considered the effects of such action on 'the rest of the University. I am afraid that not only the schools targeted, but all University schools and depar- tments will suffer financially due to declining enrollment for several different reasons. The greatest cause of declining enrollment will be the University of Michigan's drop in national standings. Michigan's top ten standing will surely suffer in light of the university's lack of com- mitment to imporve and main- tain, by financially investing in, the quality of education at the schools of Education, Natural Resources, and Art. Already the response to the review process from prominent alumni who had been sending their children here has been to cease sending any more of their children or financial aid to this once great university. My final point involves students such as myself who would have left the University three years ago to complete my training as a physics teacher elsewhere had there been no School of Education. I know that part of the master plan is to retain the cer- tification program, but this would not have helped me. To complete my training with a Bachelor of6 Science from the Physics Depar- tment plus certification, given my academic status at the time I made the decision in 1980, would have meant four more terms, at least, than the time I have spent at the School of Education. (In- cidentally, I pay my tuition in full, as did my brothers, without loans.) My two younger brothers did@ attend here and my youngest brother plans to. If the Budget Priorities Committee and the Regents cut out the very heart of this university as they plan to, I will advise my youngest brother not to attend here. It is obvious to me what the "bottom line" will be if the University carries out the recommendations of the review committee. Please, before the damage done already becomes irreversible, show the people of Michigan and the rest of the nation, that we here at the University of Michigan, put high standards of academic excellen- ce above all else. - Elizabeth Dahlberg March 21 To the Daily: I am a student member of the Board of Directors of Student Legal Services here at the University. On April 5 and 6 the question of this services' funding and funding for the entire Michigan Student Assembly will be voted upon by the student body. I surge each and every Michigan student to vote "yes" on proposal "A" on the student ballot and renew funding for Student Legal Services for the following reasons: The ballot proposal is designed to freeze the real current level of funding with ad- justments to be made only for in- flation. This funding system is save students and other tenants up to $800 million in energy costs in the next two decades. It has drafted numerous other lan- dlord/tenant laws and court rules which help protect every student's housing rights every day. " Student Legal Services is one of less than a handful of Univer- sity student programs directly controlled by students. Five members of a board of nine direc- tors are students. These students are chosen by the Michigan Student Assembly. " The funding proposal will also fund many other important student programs - such as the MtfC A cr L.... A 1 I+U .--A 4 I( r fT" r 4 . y _. i