OPINION Page 4 Tuesday, April 22, 1986 The Michigan Daily 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman Vol. XCVI, No. 138 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. T~ip ale a WW~ I hontest withy Ge okeioric tv-- Unenforced values 10 v r'1 .. ...._. __ o ;. - i HE COLLEGIATE Institute , for Values and Science is a giant missed opportunity. The group was created ten years ago to bring together members of the University community for substan- tive discussion on issues of ethics and appropriate technology. What has evolved is an elitist rap { session, involving select faculty members whose activity has little impact on University policy or the community at large. The existence of CIVS would seem to imply that there are some values worth articulating and ad- vancing. But according to Univer- sity Vice President Billy Frye, CIVS' founder, there's no way to distinguish what's right and wrong in many cases, and therefroe the University must refrain from making moral pronouncements. In the context of scientific research funding, such a stance conveniently protects the Univer- sity's pocket book and unchecked academic freedom, while denying the sanctity of human life. Unfortunately, the Institute has apparently become another victim of an intellectual hostage crisis - tip-toeing around the issue that scientists must increasingly seek support from the military- industrial complex. To antagonize private business and government agencies by denouncing or boycot- ting certain kinds of research could cost the University millions in precious research dollars. So CIVS keeps a very low profile. The group made no attem- pt to centralize campus wide debate on the advent of Strategic Defense Initiative research on campus. And as long as the Pen- tagon remains the fastest growing source of scientific research fun- ding, the group isn't likely to be issuing moral edicts. The University's status as a "crucible in which scholars seek truth and fact to find new knowledge" as stated in a Sept. 1985 Board of Regents resolution "encouraging" Star Wars research does not excuse the institution from moral obligation. To the con- trary, such an impressive assem- bly of great thinkers ought to act as a beacon of enlightenment, projec- ting ideals which reflect and rein- force human genius and potential. *CIVS should be reminding the community that with such freedom comes responsibility. Certainly, it is less taxing to in- tellectualize, and consider issues of value and science in the abstract. So at CIVS' monthly dinner meetings nobody wants to discuss maiming and killing, according to David Singer, a professor of political science and member of the group. It could ruin your ap- petite. But it could also happen, and it seems inappropriate for CIVS to avoid such issues. Two voices echo across this campus from Harvard Yard. One belongs to Harvard University President Derek Bok, who has authored a book entitled Beyond the Ivory Tower: Social Respon- sibilities of the Modern University. Bok, like Frye, maintains that the university isvnot a moral guardian. The other voice belongs to Dr. Helen Caldicott, pediatrician and President of Physicians for Social Responsibility. Caldicott would surely diagnose CIVS as suffering fromwhat she calls a fatal case of "psychic numbing." It's what animals do in life threatening situations, says Caldicott. "They run away and do something totally irrelevant." The time has come to CIVS to stop running and do something relevant. After ten- years of delightful dinners and relaxed discussions it is time to confront reality. Reality is that the University is increasingly finacnially tied to in- stitutions that have created the means to kill every person on this planet sixteen times. Many mem- bers of the University community, including 50 physicists who signed a petition to boycott Star Wars research, are concerned about those realities. And still no Univer- sity body is examining the im- plications of those ties or ad- dressing those concerns. Last week the University's Of- fice for Research issued a mandate calling for 90 million dollars in new Department of Defense funding on campus. The announcement presents CIVS with another opportunity to live up to its potential and address the fundamental issues of values and science. It is ten years later, but it's not too late. . - 1 __ -- In. the encT., did any com' of It? TAP - - I Yluy. I - , W l I Vo eI( oil To yi, J P A "' . J LETTERS: Old Main perfect for day-care center To the Daily: I agree with your article about using parts of Old Main Hospital for the elderly, mentally ill and handicapped that appeared in the February 20, 1986 issue of the Daily. Having worked for the Hospital from 1977-1985, I've seen how much money has been spent on remodeling, upgrading, bringing areas up to code, and it would truly be a shame for that money to be literally thrown away.: As a part of the working mother force here at the University, why not use part of Old Main as a day care center for the children of the University's employees, Hospital and Campus wide. The word "children" would mean a child as young as 6 weeks old to as old as 5 or 6 years of age. St. Joseph's Hospital has a beautiful facility for their employee's children providing care starting at 6 weeks of age. U of M Dearborn has a Child Development Center (day care) which offers facilities first to students, then to faculty and staff, and then to the com- munity. U of M Dearborn does not take children until they are 1 year old and able to walk. If something similar was offered here, I believe that mothers here at the University would return to work earlier from having a child without using their vacation time, taking a leave of absence, or even resorting to leaving the University. Children closer to their mother's/father's work area would also mean less time lost if a child got sick or had a doctor's appointment. University of Michigan Hospital, St. Joe's and the McCauley Health Plan is close at hand. Being a member of M-Care, a child care facility at Old Main would not only save me time and money but also my department. A good example is the other day my six-month-old daughter had to go for her six month check up. I had to leave work 11J, hours before her appoin- tment so I could drive to the babysitters on the east side of Ypsilanti, pick her up, and then return tothe Taubman Center for her appointment. If there had been a day care center at Old Main, I could have left my office 30-45 minutes before her appoin- tment to ensure proper parking, retrieve her from the center, and get to the Taubman Center in time for her appointment. I can not stress enough that a day care center located in Old Main would not only save me and other mother's/father's time away from our jobs, but also saves on the use of vacation time, probably would have been gone a total of 1%i< hours instead of 33 hours. That is certainly a big dif- ference in time. I attended one of the open forums that John Forsyth, Executive Director of the Hospital had, and when asked about the possibility of having a child care center, he responded that there was not enough in- terest in a program like that. I find that very hard to believe with today's economy the way it is, forcing more mothers to con- tinue working after having not just their first but their second and third child. A day care center could offer a nursery, program for the four-year- olds and a kindergarten for the 5 -year olds. This would offer much sought after experience for students in education, social work, etc. Also, what does a mother do with a child of kin- dergarten age who would only at- tend school for ' a day? I face this problem in the fall with my oldest child. What do I do then, leave early for lunch, pick up my daughter;at school, take her to the babysitters, and then return to work? Can all this be accom- plished in an hour's time frame. What if the weather is bad? What do mothers/fathers do who only have a 1- hour lunch? A child care center could in- clude experience, on-hand training for students and ad- ditional experience/research fo4 faculty from the School of Education, Social Work, Psychiatry, and many more areas, so the University would benefit from the experiences beside making child care more bearable for the parents and the departments of the University. -Mary Donahue Schock Secretary IV Plant Operations March 11 Terrorism deserves strong response To the Daily: I am writing in response to the editorial, "Vengeance and violence" (Daily, 4/16/86). The editorial as a whole was ludicrous. Not because the author(s) has different views on U.S. policy than I do, but because it was unsubstantiated at many points apd not a real editorial. The Daily criticizes President Reagan's use of military action against Libya. I would pose the question: What would you like our government to do in order to diminish the occurrence of state sponsored terrorism? If you are going to write an editorial criticizing U.S. actions, then you had better be prepared to offer a viable suggestion with regard to the problem at hand. This was not done in your editorial. The problem at hand is state sponsored terrorism. The ad- ministration says it has directly linked Libya to pass acts of terrorism. The CIA confirms this. If the information is so unfounded and the CIA so unreliable, why then is the Daily so quick to believe the "Truth" from Libyan news agencies? (Who, I might add, are controlled by the Libyan government.) How do we know that American bombs killed Khadafy's daughter? Was it really his daughter? It was in- dependently confirmed that some civilian casualties were the result of Libyan military incompetency. Firing anti-aircraft guns into the night could very well achieve this. It happened in London during the Battle of Britain in World War II. I also want to correct the Daily on another matter. You stated that the United States has met Khadafy on his own terrorist terms. Wrong. The U.S. carried out a military action aimed at military installations. This is not comparable to a bomb planted on Khadafy for years. Negotiation- s go nowhere because of his radical nature. He is so radical that the Soviets do no more for him than supply him militarily; he has no national allies. Economic sanctions were attem- pted but again no support came from our fair weather NATO "friends." In fact, the announ- cement of a military action a week before was designed to pressure our allies to participate in economic sanctions so strategic action would not be im- plemented. That is why UN am- bassador Walters was in Britain and France before the assault took place. By doing nothing, we increase the risk of appeasement. Appeasement has proven not to work. World War II is the prime example of a result of this form of policy. I believe that terrorism is a result of Western vulnerability and not just frustration on Libya's part. Of course escalation is a risk in the short run but something must be don so Americans don't have to fear for their lives every time they get on an airplane or enter a discotheque. I further believe that our credibility is en- dangered more by not dealing with the situation. If we are afraid to deal with terrorism with a strong hand, then our allies can only begin to question our ability and our enemies certainly will. -Todd Barr April16 Silence the scream A lesser evil HE GREAT newspaper war has ended. The Joint Operating Agreement (JOA) between the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News will, if approved by the Justice Department, merge the business operations of the two papers while allowing them to maintain separate editorial divisions. This is a bitter pill to swallow for those who work for and W read both papers; however, the agreement should be approved because the alternative is probably the survival of only one of the two papers. The JOA is a result of the than in comparable markets. This is a result of the competition bet- ween the newspapers which forces them to keep their rates low. The strongest argument against the merger is the resulting loss of jobs. Local 22 of the newspaper guild is working against the merger. In a city with Detroit's high unemployment more layoffs would be tragic. But the executives of both newspapers have promised to keep layoffs to a minimum and the job losses would certainly be more severe if one of the newspapers went under. Whenever a merger occurs, the , , in.mr Ifctnmp P a.pn. a To the Daily: In an exclamation point-laden letter to the Daily (4/16/86), a group calling itself S.C.R.E .A.M. declared that they're tired of hearing charges of student apathy leveled at them, and an- nounced that they've organized what is to be "the biggest event to hit this campus since the '60s," a mass "SCREAM" on the Diag. Could it be that the criticism they refer to has something to do with the current student body's lack of critical awareness of American politics and concern for social issues? The "ex- citement" on the Diag in the late 60s and 70s was created by many political movements and issues: antiwar, women's, Black, sexual liberation, environmen- talist ... The screams were screams of The S.C.R.E.A.M. letter en- courages students to appear and scream if "you hate nuclear weapons or becausethat pim pl on your face has finally disap peared, whatever!" Nuclear bombs, acne and whatever have now been given equal importance as reasons to come out and protest. And "hate nuclear weapons" has become a sufficien- tly precise term to describe the way students consider national and global nuclear weapons policy. Like, don't you think that nuclear bombs are just gross That sentence especially, as weF as their entire letter, indicates a disturbing misinterpretation of the meaning of student activism and an unawareness of the changes on campus which have occurred since the 70s. After the SCREAM is over, maybe we can all put on out Way- farers and Maui shirts, climb into our Fieros and crash en masse iN