OPINION Page 4 Saturday, October 15, 1983 The Michigan Daily e t a ntichigan Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Sinclair Vol. XCIV-No. 34 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Draft law smokescreen NO ONE really knows if the Solomon amendment has caused more students to register for the draft. But the amendment has done one thing perfectly for its supporters. It has made everyone forget the central issue of whether draft registration itself is right. The amendment, which denies federal financial aid to students who do not register for selective service, is a dangerous precedent. But everyone has been so busy criticizing and defen- ding the technicalities of this new twist to registration, they have forgotten about the larger and more dangerous law which it is-intended to enforce. Just take a look at what people are saying at the University. President Harold Shapiro has criticized the law - not because it supports draft registration, and not because it is an im- proper link between education and registration. He didn't like the amen- dment because it made the University do all the enforcement work. University financial aid officials fell right in line. They didn't like the extra work either. Beyond that, they haven't had much to say. A few people, primarily faculty leaders, have gone one step further and attacked the law for unfairly linking educational aid with registration. Yet very few people talk about draft registration itself anymore. The silen- ce had added a sense of correctness to selective service. Almost no one questions it anymore. But with the United States in- creasing its involvement in the Middle East and Central America, nothing could be more relevant. Registration is the first step to in- stituting a draft, and a draft is a key step to heavy military involvement. Registration makes the first domino in the ominous chain teeter ever more precariously. The Solomon amendment is cer- tainly worth fighting. But at its core, the debate surrounding the law is basically an idealist one because it af- fects so few students. If there is a real threat to society, it comes from selec- tive service. And people should not let the Soloman amendment obscure that. Reagan running? You bet HERE'S A PEAK at Joe Piscopo's next Saturday Night Live Weekend Update broadcast: "Politics. Presidential. More? You bet. Announcement. Running? Reagan. Finally. Sort of." There's more, but we'll save the rest for later. Yes, Ronald Reagan, the president, made it official Thursday -- almost. He's about to become Ronald Reagan, the candidate. What's the difference? Nevada Senator Paul Laxalt, the chairman of the Republican National Committee, announced that Reagan had given the go-ahead for the for- mation of aereelection committee. Reagan will make the necessary statement to the Federal Election Commission Monday. But there's a catch (isn't there always?). Reagan plans to add a disclaimer that he might back out. Laxalt said that the disclaimer was necessary because if Reagan formally declares his candidacy he would "im- pair his credibility" as president. As Piscopo would say, "Joke. Right? Ha, ha." Reagan has been running for reelec- tion for as long as he's been president. That isn't necessarily a problem, but why deny it? Because it makes him look like he is above party politics. Jimmy Carter tried that move four years ago during the hostage crisis in Iran, but allthe while his underlings were raising money and getting the reelection machine in place. Reagan's people have been doing the same since his inauguration. So don't be fooled for a minute that Reagan, Carter, or any other president hasn't been running for reelection all along. So it's time for Ronald Reagan to come out of his imaginary ivory tower and get back into the gutter of presidential election politics with the rest of the candidates. It's time to get down to some serious mudslinging. If you think about human organizations, you might notice thattsome are more com- plex than others. They do not run efficiently, but their inefficiency is built in by design. Such organizations resemble delicate electronic circuits and processes fashioned skillfully and with in- telligence to accomplish their programs with the least damage to their human parts. Compared to such highly com- plex organizations, the Univer- sity is a simple institution. It is hierarchical in structure with each echelon controlling the ones below it. The checks and feed- backs of a complex organization, the substantive voting powers, and' veto powers normally con- ferred on those whom decisions effect in our civil communities are all absent from the Univer- sity. This absence is puzzling because the University is sup- posedly operated for the benefit of its students. The in loco parentis doctrine is dead, and students are presumably adults capable of charting their own educational destinies. Yet they can join the University or leave it, but not change it. THE PROBLEM is not com- munication. There is nothing a student could tell an ad- ministrator that an ad- ministrator probably hasn't heard before. It is a different kind of problem. Many years ago when I wrote a term paper on student housing, I submitted the paper to senior housing officials at the Univer- sity, and I noticed that while they agreed with my conclusions and recommendations, they did not seem highly motivated to carry out any of the proposals for im- proving housing that I recom- mended. They were not bad people, but their indifference puzzled me until I came upon a metaphor that seemed to explain their lack of concern. It seemed to me that the University was like a giant that suffered from a strange ailment. It possessed all of the normal human senses but one-it had no system of pain. The students could feel pain, living in cramped and overpriced housing. But the head itself, the University ad- ministration, was not in pain. Quite the contrary, the head was as comfortable and happy as it could make itself. Thus, for example, if the giant's shoes were too tight and pinched-like student housing-the giant could per- ceive that it's feet were swollen and blistered. But say the giant had no idea how serious the problem was. If it could conceal the blisters with fine Italian boots-the equivalent of the Feel no pain. A nesthetizing Un iversity By Robert D. Hon igman cupied with their research, but the silk suit was too stylish and handsome to abandon, why let the body shiver for the sake of the suit? Thus, under the "smaller but better" program class sizes will grow larger, tuitions will in- bodies as to be unable to know how seriously hurt they may be, to be unable to fully and deeply care for our bodies and sustain them, would be a fatal condition for most of us. We would live for awhile in a fool's paradise with our new clothes and prestige, So in the larger community, if the body hurts ft votes its leaders out of office. They share the pain of the body. If they arrogantly say to the body, "We know more than you," they would get booted out of office all the faster. This is the sharing of pain. And if a single person in our larger society has problems, a court can halt the operation of'government and set aside a law to prevent someone from being a victim of organizational efficiency. That is a pain system too. The secret of a pain system is that it does not substitute its judgment for that of the head, it simply forces the head to pay at- tention and change its priorities. Healing the body becomes a number one priority; the prestige: and the glamor become less im- portanta Thus, in the University, for example, it is not necessary to students to sit on committees or participate in the governance of the University. It is only necessary to have the right to' vote the president out of office and veto tenure appointments. With autonomous feedbacks in place it would be amazing how concerned a president and faculty would be with keeping class sizes low, reducing tuition, and improving the quality of student life-keeping the student body healthy. In our larger society we have built finely tuned mechanisms to keep our heads and bodies at- tuned to each other. We know from bitter historical experience that this is the only way to keep our larger society healthy. But we haven't learned this lesson on a smaller scale, and we've allowed our universities to become as sick and unfeeling as giants without pain. Honigman is a graduate of the University and an attorney in Sterling Heights. 'The students could feel pain, living in cramped and overpriced housing. But the head itself, the University ad- ministration,...was as comfortable and happy as it could make itself.' S crease-the body will suffer-but the head can scarcely conceal its pleasure at the new resources directed towards its goals. If the University were only a head with no body, this policy would of course be right. But in the real world, no one would every really wish to be a human being who feels no pain, however terrible pain is, unless life itself were too terrible to live. To live so alienated from our able to do things and endure bur- dens that other people who feel pain could not do. But one day we would suddenly sicken and die, without really knowing until the very end how gravely ill we were. IN OUR larger society, bf cour- se, we take autonomous feed- backs'and checks and balances for granted. We don't willingly discard thousands of years of ex- perience which tells us that power corrupts. kF Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. '4 BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed 6XCU56 MC ...I'M £XCU~M~...TM WEU.L I JV5T WANTP 65 YES.- _ -___. I - .1