OPINION Page 4 Sunday, April 21, 1985 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Bikes exorcised on Diag Vol. XCV, No. 161 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Pyrrhic victory After collecting abandoned bikes and parts of bikes from around campus, they turned a backyard into a factory and assembled the campus' newest form of transportation: The Green Bike. Monday they wheeled 16 of them into the Diag and completed the most bizarre and interesting part of the project: the exor- cism. Once the material value had been "exorcised" out of the two dozen two wheelers- the project was complete. Sixteen bicycles painted in a dull green, were distrib- uted around campus for public use. The rules are simple. In addition to following all of the applicable traffic laws, the riders must use the bikes only in the central campus area and should never lock the bikes. It's a quick, gas-saving way to get to class, ride across campus, or get home safety when stranded alone at night. One Daily photographers also found the bikes to be a convenient way of getting to assignments. You do have to be sort of careful, and it's THE REAGAN Administration won another key victory Tuesday when the Senate Appropriations committee approved a bill that would send funds to guerrillas fighting the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. That vic- tory may have cost the Administration more than it planned, however. The proposal, which still must be voted on by both houses of Congress, calls for $14 billion in total aid to five separate groups of rebels known collectively as the Contras. Under the current proposal none of the aid could be used for military operations for two months to pressure the Sandinistas into meeting represen- tatives of the Contras. The Sandinistas have steadfastly refused any such talks. The proposal was, approved by a margin of only 15-13 however and some senators who voted to approve it claim they will oppose it in the full Senate. Realizing the slim chance that the bill has of passing, the Reagan Ad- ministration has announced support for an amendment proposed by Rep. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) which would prevent the U.S. funds from every being used for military supplies. Such an administration proposal is pointless however, because of the very structure of the Contra army. The Contras work from positions from neighboring countries and have thus far been unsuccessful in capturing any territory in Nicaragua. They have no use for agricultural, educational, or long term medical aid. Any resources they have will be used for military operations or indirectly for food and immediate medical treatment. Furthermore, the fact that the Con- tras have been unable to capture any Nicaraguan territory suggests that they do not have the popular support necessary to win the war. In supporting them, the United States is prolonging a war that brings little hope of altering the situation in any positive way. Fortunately, the Lott proposal faces a stiff battle for passage. Congress seems aware of the insubstantial nature of the amendment. The goal of peace in the area would thus be served by denying aid to the Contras and by putting economic pressure on the San- dinistas to insure that they work to best represent the needs and concerns of all the Nicaraguan people. The Week in R evieLaw .*! -i } k *s Student aid F PRESIDENT Reagan's 1986 fiscal budget proposal meets with Congressional approval, federal student aid will be reduced by $1.48 billion-a substantial chunk of the 1985 appropriations which totalled $7.92 billion. While Education Secretary William Bennett contends the cuts are aimed at cleaning up a system corrupted by well-heeled students vacationing in Florida courtesy of federal funding, the fact is that thousands of deserving and truly needy individuals will be hardest hit. The University's Office of Financial Aid figures that the proposal will out Pell Grants, College Work Study, Guaranteed Student Loans and ap- proximately $26.9 million of the current $36.4 million in (direct and guaranteed) federal funds now being allocated to Michigan students. The cuts would affect three-fourths of those 12,000 students receiving aid. It is anticipated that the Ad- ministration's plan will face strong, bi- partisan opposition in Washington. Rep. James Jeffords (R-Vt.) has said he is confident Congress will "reject the shortsighted, destructive proposals."'Congress is most likely to respond to the administrative proposals through either a "recoin- ciliation" attempt, or by extending the Higher Education Act. Either of these tactics would enable the lawmakers to alter the policies or "reauthorize'' threatened programs. Reprive may also be realized if Governor Blanchard's proposed 33 percent increase in state spending for education comes through. Bennett and his colleagues' callous attitudes and public comments have made lawmakers wary and attracted an unusual amount of negative atten- tion to the aid slashing proposal. Last week two members of Bennett's staff managed to alienate Sen. Lowell Weicker (R-Conn) by announcing to a Senate subcommittee that education programs for the handicapped were "selfish" and "misguided.'' The father of a handicapped child, Sen. Weicker pressed for an explaination of the statement and learned that the two Department of Education employees believe all major federal education programs should be abolished. Certainly, some folk will always abuse the system. But the reality is that those relatively few devious aid seekers won't be weeded out by the cuts; some clever CPA can always be hired to find another loophole in the law to allow for a little education allocation. As 1985 marks the 20-year anniver- sary of President Johnson's Great Society ideals and policy toward academic advancements, it is an ap- propriate time to augment, not attack the nation's most precious investment: education. advisable to test the brakes before you go riding down Hill Street. The bikes were visible all week, and if enough people care enough about the new transportation system the bikes will be available for many years to come. Monday's demonstration combined with the overdue but welcome summer weather drew a tremendous crowd, although some were a bit confused about the meaning of the bizarre ceremony. Organizers said the ritual and their "Ar- tificial Dissemination" newsletter were designed to both launch the bike project and draw attention to a "Bikes, Not Bombs" campaign for the people in Nicaragua. Remember - the Green Bike is not locked. Protests continue In a nationwide flash of student activism, that has drawn repeated comparisons to student uprisings in the 1960s, demonstrations I continued last week around the country. At the University of California at Berkeley, over 100 students were arrested for staging a sleep-in at Sproul Hall. They are calling for the University of California system to divest its estimated $1.7 billion from South Africa. In spite of the arrests, the sleep-incontinues and has inspired sympathy rallies across campus. Meanwhile, a similar sleep-in at Columbia University in New York entered its third week. On Monday, the Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke before the demonstrators, prompting President MichaelSovern to issue a promise not to have the protestors arrested. Last week, a judge had issued a temporary restraining order which expired on Monday that banned the University from any such ac- tion. At Harvard University, a rally in support of the Berkeley and Columbia protests drew a estimated crowd of 5,000 people. Cornell, Rutgers, and Yale Universities held sym- pathy rallies as well. In Ann Arbor, the newly elected MSA voted to send a letter of support to both Berkeley and Columbia. This week's Week in Review was com- piled by Daily staffer Jody Becker and Daily editors Neil Chase and Andrew Eriksen. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB A green-clad 'exorcist' drives the evil out of a bicycle on the Diag Monday. Several hundred spectators cheered the members of the group as the ceremony continued. 0j Star Wars University researchers and professors who have submitted proposals to the Department of Defense to conduct "Star Wars" research and development came under fire this week as student protesters converged on the University's Office of Research, Develop- ment, and Administration. About 80 students protested the Univer- sity's decision to pursue the funding without student input. The University has submitted four proposals for $4,366,000 in Star Wars research funds to the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, a special government office created last year. Reagan originally announced his Strategic Defense Initiative in a nationally-televised speech last year. The Progressive Student Network plans to initiate a University-wide forum in the fall. this week to cut the medical technology program at the end of the 1986-87 academic year. Thirty juniors and seniorstcurrently in the program will he allowed to receive their degrees under the plan. But the handful of freshmen who came to the University hoping to get into the program are going to be left out in the cold. Sandra Gluck, director of the program, said that the best way to handle the freshman situation would be to continue the program another year. The one-year extension would cost the University $186,000. The program has no tenured faculty, so the instructors will either be relocated within the Universtiy or helped to find other positions outside the University. There is little doubt, however, about the quality of the program. "We consider our- selves the best in the state," said Gluck, 'It's been said we have the reputation as one of the top programs in the country." Med Tech cut The University's Board of Regents decided Stand- on abortion opens rift By Kathy Burke To some, they're modern versions of Galileo and Joan of Arc. To others, they're the devil incarnate. "They" are 24 nuns who signed an ad published in the New York Times last fall stating that "a diversity of opinions regarding abortion exists among committed Catholics," and that the church's official condemnation of abortion is not the only "legitimate" Catholic position. It is unlikely the nuns anticipated the consequences- they have been told to recant or face expulsion from their religious communities. And it is unlikely the Vatican officials who made that demand anticipated the uproar it would provoke. The church hierarchy "are unrealistic and out of touch with the people," said Sister Margaret Ellen Traxler, who now faces expulsion after 44 years in the Notre Dame order. All this has become even more a matter of particular concern to religious women since three of the four priests and brothers who signed the ad have recanted. In its new Code of Canon Law which took effect over a year ago, the Vatican ruled that all female clerics-nearly 120,000 in over 30 U.S. or- ders-will have to alter their lifestyles. Many nuns who moved into apartments to form the smaller communities urged by Vatican II must now return to "their own religious house." The Sacred Congregation For Religious and Secular Institutes (SCRIS), the Vatican agency which oversees religious communities, is a largely male body, whose officials "see themselves as possessing the truth, as guardians of women, as protectors of the past," in the words of one nun, former head of an order. Writing anonymously in the National Catholic Reporter, she compared these officials to wife guilty of such conduct." So far none of the women who signed has repudiated the ad, nor have the superiors demanded retractions. The matter cannot be settled quietly. The alleged offense was too public. More important, the nuns signed the document for "pastoral and political reasons," according to Sr. Donna Quinn, a Dominican who is president of Chicago Catholic Women and works as a counselor in an inner city women's shelter. "The ad was never intended to be in defiance of the Vatican, or to be pro-abortion," she said. "Women signed it out of sensitivity to other women's problems with the Reagan Administration." "Having borne two children, I think abortion is a very sad thing," she continued. "But my feeling is that as long as the church is as misogynistic as it is, abortion may be some women's only way out. I look forward to the time when there is no need for it, but meanwhile, women face such problems as the irresponsibility of men, date rape, spouse rape, ansi the church's unwillingness o discuss birth control issues." Unwillingness to discuss seems to be key in this matter. Male . theologians whose teachings deviate from official doctrine are called in to discuss their views, but not the nuns. "To SCRIS officials, the issue is abortion," noted the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, LCWR, but "to many signers the issue is dialogue." Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, who chairs the Pro-Life Activities Commitee of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, has written that the ad "directly challenged the church's constant teaching about the immorality of abortion," and that expulsion "may have o be in- voked." But he, too, joined in the call for a "sincere attempt to resolve, through dialogue, the serious problem which has arisen." For now, the "dialogue" has spread for beyond the church and onto TV ta lk t wq-nv~roP whic ha anr nuv nwrn.4- ennnr fn !C= a-~wl.\21 & ~Z