I OPINION Page 4 Sunday, October 9, 1983 The Michigan Daily Yes, Virginia, there is a five-year plan IT MAKES YOU think that no one reads newspapers and that everyone walks around with Walkmans on 24 hours a day. Despite extensive coverage in the local media and numerous campus protests and forums, an informal Daily survey indicated that most students are utterly clueless to the University's five-year plan of budget reduc- tions and reallocations. Two students said they were partof the so- called five-year plan, explaining that they were going to be fifth-year seniors. -9 '0h} " i 1 "I'm not aware of what's going on because I'm busy studying," said LSA sophomore John Swirczek, who also didn't know about the budget cuts. "Smaller but better?" said Swirczek. "I don't understand. I don't see how you can cut and get better. It just doesn't make sense to me." Well, John, you're not alone. Most of the others questioned seemed to be affected by the same mysterious fog which had shrouded students since February 1982, when University administrators announced the five-year plan. One student suggested clearing the air via direct University communication with students through the mail - sort of a "Budget Cut Up- date." Billy Frye, vice president for academic af- fairs and provost, said, "It's absolutely incredible, not so much that students wouldn't know (about the five-year plan), but that they would imply that it is the University's respon- sibility to inform them." When the fog lifts, maybe students will realize that the University has already cut 40 percent from the School of Education, 25 per- cent from the School of Natural Resources, while the School of Art got off with a mere 18 ding? Well, put those thoughts aside, because no one will check up on you. According to Cynthia Reeves, former MSA vice president for personnel, MSA's job is to find the students for the committees, not to keep tabs on them. Besides she said, MSA hasn't got the jurisdiction to fire them. Well, then, if MSA, the self-professed voice of the students, cannot or will not keep track of student participation, who will? If you decide to attend the meetings, you will probably find that you don't understand what is going on, say some former students appointed to the committees. Besides, the faculty mem- bers seem to know so much more, so why bother showing up? But aren't these committees important? Aren't these positions the same ones that for- mer students for which fought so hard? Aren't students giving up one of our important means of communication with the faculty and the ad- ministration? Sure, but this is the stuff great resumes are made of. Still interested? Hurry, because there aren't that many spots left. Act now to start yourself on a long and fulfilling career of resume- building. Kegger gone flat What if you threw a party and no one showed up? You'd feel hurt, and, well, rejected. "Doesn't anyone want to share all this good food and beer I bought?" you'd wonder. The negotiators for the Graduate Employee Organization, the union that represents University teaching assistants and graduate student assistants, must feel the same way. The negotiators haggled with University of- ficials for a new tentative one-year contract. So when GEO's leaders scheduled a meeting they probably expected their fellow union members to show up to discuss the agreement. But alas, fewer than 30 members out of almost 700 found the time to say hello to their valiant represen- tatives. That wasn't very nice. On top of that, no one would volunteer to mail ballots to the rest of the union's members, nor I Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON A. J. Foyt beware. A couple hundred University students tried to prove they were ready for the big time at Crisler Arena this past week. No injuries were reported. 4 What's a five-year what? percent cut. But then again, they might not. Resume writing MSA is looking for a few good students. Well, not that good, but ambitious people with a strong desire to pad their resumes with important-sounding University committee ap- pointments. No experience or sincere concern necessary. Sounds- great, doesn't it? But wait, there's more! You won't even have to attend these meetings to give your resume that badly- needed shot in the arm. Sound too good to be true? Check the record. According to the minutes of these meetings, most students never bothered to attend more than a couple of meet- ings. Worried that you'll be fired for not atten- would anyone volunteer to count the ballots on- ce they come back, if anyone decides to vote. What must bother GEO leaders most is this' lack of interest threatens approval of the con- tract, which would give TAs and SAs pay raises and tuition credits. The union constitution requires contracts be approved by at least half of the membership, not just by a simple majority that choose to vote. That means that if 300 to 350 members vote, virtually all of them would have to approve the contract for it to take effect. This malaise, though, may also signal the end of the party for the GEO itself. Then who will buy the beer? Speed Racer The state's sports pages were filled all week with the hype and hoopla over a football game that turned out to be a typically dull Michigan trouncing of our neanderthal neighbors to the northwest. Meanwhile, the real sports event of the week was taking place right on campus in the Crisler Arena parking lot. It was "Indy comes to Ann Arbor" as 259 students took advantage of the opportunity to be Mario Andretti, if only for a few seconds. The speeds never quite reached 200 miles per hour;in fact, they didn't break 40. But Greg Ippolito, a. graduate student in mechanical engineering, maneuvered through the winding course in the shortest time with the fewest errors to earn a free trip to Daytona in May and a chance to win free use of a Dodge sports car for a year. The event attracted about half as many drivers as anticipated, according to race of- ficals, but the competition is certain to see thousands of college students by the time it'' finishes its 70-school tour next spring. Sports enthusiasts will be happy to know that next year's events include a mini-America s Cup (one-meter class) run on the Huron and a junior-level Masters golf championship (The Servants) played on the Michigan golf course. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers Thomas Miller and: Sharon Silbar and Daily editors David Spak and Barry Witt. . . .... ..... Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIV - No. 29 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Utopia A5UC s u 60" SL5 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board GREEN P-t) Mt~ SUCKS ! YLW HT a Ll\i' I1 STA7KES FEcNIT L(NVM= ?.tA- STA TE PA(I SUCKS!A CATS{ t7 /L3 , -Ft ItA=SU CAPS 7 f I 4,K ( 9 y P ' GO 8L Volunteer for hire BY HIRING A coordinator to-help recruit and retain its volunteers, the Michigan Student Assembly is lazily trying to solve its problems by throwing student fees at them. This year MSA members decided that their personnel problems were serious enough to spend $960 to hire someone to solve them. So for $80 a week this term Julia Gittleman, a student and former MSA member, will be recruiting potential MSA volunteers and then matching their skills with various assembly projects. MSA's goals are laudable. Active volunteers are the key to effective student government. But by hiring the coordinator to achieve those goals, the assembly is paying someone to do their job. And they are paying that person with students' money. Gittleman has been publicizing the assembly in classes and mass meetings. She has distributed surveys to prospective volunteers and fed the Information into a computer to match them with University and assembly committees. She will, also help strengthen MSA's ties with other cam- pus organizations. All these things, however, should be done by MSA members. By hiring Git- tleman, they are merely shirking their responsibility. In the past, MSA prudently has hired its small paid staff. Bret Eynon and Roger Kerson, two researchers MSA hired to examine campus defense department research had a significant impact on the debate surrounding University military research contrac- ts. Eynon and Kerson were effective because they offered MSA research experience and skills that students could not provide. They supplemented the assembly's talent rather than merely duplicating it. With the new student coordinator position, however, MSA seems to be operating under a strangely twisted form of an old adage: "If you want something done right, hire someone else to do it." The skills for the student researcher position are not out of the grasp of MSA members. There is no reason they can not do the job just as effectively and save students' money. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Students spotted at committee meeting To the Daily: The Daily's front page article, "Student truancy plagues com- mittee meetings," (October 5) appears to tar all student mem- bers of University committees with the same brush. LSA's Joint Student-Faculty Policy Committee, composed of Band out of tune To the Daily: As a graduate of the University of Michigan ( I received degrees in 1963, 1965, and 1970) and one who toils in the midst of intellec- tual, academic, and athletic (with the possible exception of the basketball team) mediocrity at the University of Kentucky, I frequently refer to many aspects of Michigan as examples of high quality. The University's mar- ching band was no exception. Af- ter all, wasn't it voted the premier college marching band in the country last year? After viewing the half-time travesty at October i's Indiana- Michigan football game, however, no longer will I be able, with good conscience, to hold it in high tesm Tn th nre ne nf six faculty members and six students, is surely a shining ex- ception. Last year, student atten- dance was regular, student par- ticipation was active, and all student members invested a great deal of time and effort in committee projects. This highly-ranked committee, whose reports may take precedence in LSA faculty meetings over those of all other .committees save the executive committee, is proud if its highly active student participation. The committee meets almost every week during the year, and this year's group is beginning its work with enthusiasm. -Roy Jay Nelson October 5 Nelson is chairman pro tem of the LSA Joint Student- Faculty Policy Committee. Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of the Daily. Wasserman IT COMBV Wl~TS A YCONTRWOL WMYAZ BIPATISANW DRESSIN1& AD A THOS~ AND '&vtwtms dom. W6 t L .. r . NZ _ I I