0D0 op inion PaeGTuesday, July 27, 1982 The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily Vol. XCII, No. 48-S Ninety-two Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Oil barons win IN ONE FELL swoop Interior Secretary James Watt unleashed a tidal wave of oil barons to plunder nearly all of the nation's coastlines in search of oil and gas. He has promised "stringent environmental safeguar- ds." Sadly, for the wildlife and the industries that live off the waters of the continental shelf, he cannot possibly deliver on that promise. The sheer size of the area to be open for leasing-nearly one billion acres or roughly the entire outer U.S. continental shelf-suggests that the Interior Department cannot possibly safeguard the nation's fragile coastline from calamitous oil spills. For Mr. Watt, the issue is simple: The United States needs the oil. For environmentalists and those who depend on this nation's coastal waters for their livelihood, the issue is much more complex. It involves many fisheries in delicate ecosystems over an area 20 times as large as what the department now manages. At issue is not only Watt's ridiculous asser- tion that his department could safeguard such important and delicate ecosystems, but whether he has put the nation's interest behind that of the oil industry. If his sale of coal on federal lands-of which 1.6 billion tons was sold in the midst of a coal glut for less than a fair market price-is any indication, the United States is about to be taken. And what is good for Exxon is not necessarily good for the nation. There remains hope that both he ses of Congress will enact resolutions to nullify ,att's unmanageable leasing plan. If they do not, what Americans will be left with is both an en- dangered coastline and an endangered economic principle: Goods-even those owned by the government-should be sold at fair market value. d- Sinclair -I- Reagan 's next movie 4 4 4 4 Coming! This fall! From Steven Spielberg, the man who petrified you with Poltergeist,. prepare for: POLLSTERGHOST! They were a typical American. family, living in an average Washington neighborhood, in a run-of-the-mill mansion at 1600 Pennsylvania Boulevard. Until one normal morning when: "Mommy, there's something strange going on around here." "Why, Ronnie, whatever makes you say that?" "well, pooh-bear and I came down for milk and cookies last night and I heard voices coming out of the TV set." "It was just that nasty Nightline, dear." Not Funny By D.,B. Christy But the TV wasn't turned on, Mommy." "Ted Koppel gives me night- mares, too, my dear." At first the spirits are playful: "Ronnie? Have you been in the dining room?" "No, Mommy, I've been in the Oval Office playing President." "That's nice, dear, but someone's been in here rearranging my china. But who? There's not a soul around . " But then the haunting beings in earnest as a ghostly interview snatches little Davie Stockman from the security of his daven- port. The wraithlike media impale Ray Donovan on a razor-sharp Mafia sidebar. James Watt is strangled by tendrils of protoplasmic slander. And a special Al Haig tears his own head off. Then, one horrible night: "Mommy, Mommy! Come quick, come quick!" "Mommy's here, Ronnie, what's wrong?" "It's missing! My mandate is missing-! It was sleeping right there, and allwofsa sudden it got sucked into the recession in the closet." "We'd better get the White Rouse exorcised, Ronnie." "It's always been a flabby ad- ministration, Mommy. Exorcise won't help." "Oh, grow up, will you? We've got to try parapsypolitics." So Ronnie calls in his con- sultants. They are smooth, reasssuring. "Don't worry, Ron- nie," says Meese. "we'll find your mandate for you." "Don't worry even if we can't," Deaver adds. "You didn't really need it anyway." "Sure, take it from me," Laxalt says dismissively, "man- dates are like dames-if you miss the first bus, there'll be another one along in a minute." "And you don't need to talk to Howard Baker about this, either, Ronnie," Meese cautions. "We'll handle it." "Why don't you want me to talk to Howard, Ed?" Ronnie asks suspiciouslyand suddenly strides purposefully to his limo. "If he takes it to Baker, he'll find out everything," moans Deaver. Laxalt nods grimly. "Howard, what the hell's hap- pening around here?" "Not now, Ronnie, I haven't got the time. We're shout to be buried in November." "Buried? What do you mean, buried? It's ten o'clock, Howard-do you know where our mandate is?" Baker glares at him balefully, eyes narrowed in hate. "It died, didn't it, Howard? You haven't told anybody, have you? Where did you hide the body, Howard?" He looks a Baker's muddy Dingoes, at the muddy bootprints tracked up from the Senate sub-basement stair- well. "My God, Roward, not the polls!" Ronnie screams, "What have you done with the polls?" Meese, Deaver, and Laxalt pace glumly in the Blue Room as Ronnie walks wearily. in. They pass a guilty glance amongst themselves. "How many, Ed?" Ronnie asks tiredly. "How many of my ap- proval ratings did you plant down there, Mike? Why did you build my administration over a Gallup poll cemetery, Paul, and not even move the corpses? Now they've come back from the dead to claim their mandate." "We had to do it, Ronnie," Meese explains. "The polls went right through the floor when they died and the cellar was the han- diest place to bury them." Christy's Not Funny ap- pears every Tuesday. I 4 4 I