4A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 25, 1995 JAMES R. CHO SIGN ON THE DOTTED LINE U' research does more t/han 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by studentsiat the University of Michigan MICHAEL ROSENBERG Editor in Chief JULIE BECKER JAMES M. NASH Editorial Page Editors Unless otherwise noted, unsigned editorials reflect the opinion of a majority of'the .Daily's editorial board. All other articles, letters, and cartoons do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Michigan Daily. SS for SW Legal service funding must be maintained he termination earlier this month of Larry Fox, a project coordinator on the Stu- dent Legal Services, is yet another symptom of the organization's financial woes. This vitally important student resource for legal representation and advice is fighting to stay afloat in the face of inadequate funding and rising costs. University students must recog- nize that SLS is funded by and exists for them, and therefore must ensure its survival by any means necessary. SLS is a law office for currently enrolled University students. It advises students in landlord-tenant disputes, family and divorce law, criminal defense and any other case that does not involve the University as one of the parties. In addition, it attempts to reform current law in students' favor-the recently fired Fox was the only remaining staff mem- ber working to improve housing law. SLS is funded only by the annual student fee of $4.16 and charges nothing at time of service. SLSis a highly-regarded organization whose lawyers work hard to meet students' needs. Unfortunately, SLS is in financial peril., For this, students largely have themselves to blame. Requests for fee increases have shown up on student ballots repeatedly, but the service has not been voted a funding increase since 1991. With the rising cost of living, SLS simply cannot operate a law office with such a piddling sum. Lately it has not only been forced to fire personnel, but has lost lawyers to better-paying jobs. The issue is plain: If SLS is to hire and retain competent attorneys and continue to serve students, it must be voted a raise. In response to this problem, the Michigan Student Assembly has included as part of its proposed budget a one-time $2,000 expendi- ture for employee bonuses. MSA is also considering three referendums on the No- vember ballot that ask students to approve a donation of the $18,000 that the University Board of Regents put in escrow in June, a $1.84 per-student fee increase, and the re- moval of a cap on the amount of money SLS may receive from student fees. These mea- sures should help to boost employee morale and make the organization financially sol- vent for the time being. MSA is to be applauded for its decisive move to keep SLS afloat. However, these measures -with the exception of the $2,000 budget item - cannot go through without student approval. Students of the University owe themselves affordable, competent legal representation. It may not be something most students depend on every day, but when a crisis arises, there are few who would not appreciate the significant savings over pri- vate legal counsel. Students have historically voted against SLS funding increases because they consider the increases another attempt by the University to pick their pockets. An investment in SLS' future requires a bit of a sacrifice, but it is a sacrifice students cannot afford not to make. Higher education does not need to be a money-losing enterprise. It shouldn't be. As another source of revenue, University President and C EO James J. Duderstadt wants to capitalize on the University's $400-plus million annual research budget in the form of royalties reaped from patents, licenses and inventions. Among higher education elites, the mighty research universities are driven by what pundits call "productive scholarship." In other words, university deans and espe- cially the provost look favorably on faculty members who bring in outside money in terms of research grants or collaboration with private enterprise. The University wants faculty members who conduct research that produces tangible - and hopefully profit- able - results. That's the definition of a research university and the University fits that description perfectly. The latest buzzwords now floating in the halls of the Fleming Administration Build- ing are "spin offs" and "technology trans- fer," not "undergraduate education" or "the first-year experience." Nevertheless, the University's commitment to aggressive re- search pursuits and profit-seeking ideals benefit students-and it's not through some complicated trickle-down effect. It's not a zero-sum game. Technology transfer may not make much sense to the history student cooped up in her 5th floor West Quad dorm room, but univer- sities have placed this issue on their top priority list. Universities today see it as a way to create jobs while feathering dimin- ishing research budgets. Certainly this pro- cess hinges on a number of key factors: First, it means pinpointing and encouraging prom- ising discoveries; second, carrying the dis- covery through the labyrinthine patent and licensing process; third, keeping it hidden from the claws of competitors; finally, guid- ing the process into the formidable world of mass production. Ofcoursethere's no guar- professors p..ocketbooks antee that anyone will make money along in biotechnology and medicin the way. But today researchers are beckoned Duderstadt formed a preside to scientific pursuits that bear the dollarnsign committee to assist in finding - that's "productive scholarship." . tal for University start-up bu "In the old days, the way technology was Technological advances de transferred from academia to the real world University should not be left t was through educating students and letting bowels of Randall Laborator them take their knowledge into the private ment laboratories of Med Sci1 sector," Duderstadt said. "Today, that's not agrees that there need to be i good enough. We need to do more, faster. searchers often collaborate w Now we are forming our own companies, who pay to use their intellec joining partnerships with private industry to Technological development transfer new technologies faster." quickly when financial ince The old-fashioned ideals of university tached. researchers looking down on entrepreneur- Students may complain th ial collaborations with scorn are long gone. sponsibilities divert faculty r When talking about technology transfer, re- their teaching priorities. In re searchers and administrators, in particular, have taken advantage of the d think about the development many, years tation of the University's res ago of the commercial production of Vita- The number of applicants wh min D; it began simply as a theory, in a ticipate in the Undergraduate1 professor's laboratory at the University of portunities Program or the me Wisconsin - the school has since yarned Biomedical Research Program millions in royalties. eted. Not only has the Univer The hands-down winner in technology and succeeded in bridging the transfer has to be the Massachusetts Institute faculty members and student of Technology, headed by former Michigan allowed students to work sid Provost Charles Vest. Since the mid-1980s, those same professors engag the school has spun off 80 small businesses edge research as well. that have created thousands of jobs. Fifteen Some would even go so fa of these new companies are now publicly new technology developed atr traded with an estimated value in excess of tutions should be open for alla $2.5 billion. the highest bidder. (Nike dealt Frustrated with the University's appar- ing, of course.) Certainly t ent lack of success in technology transfer, favors collaboration betweenr and eyeing his former colleague at MIT with private industries because oft envy, Duderstadt fired several patent law- generates -maybe we are in t yers in the University's technology transfer selling our services to the hi division in massive 1993 shakeup of the But we shouldn't delude ourse division and brought in Robert Robb from ing that what's good for the U Texas, a tried and proven expert in spinning have a detrimental effect on u off commercial enterprises from on-campus emphasis on research and "pro discoveries. Robb came to the city of trees arship" only makes faculty n from BCM Technologies, a part of Baylor knowledgeable teachers. College of Medicine in Houston. In six years, - -J ames R. Cho can be Robb helpedspin off 12 companies-'mostly e-mail atjcho e. In addition, ntial advisory venture capi- sinesses. eveloped at the o fallow in the y or the base- I. Duderstadt ncentives; re- ,ith industries tual property. moves more ntives are at- at research re- members from eality students epth and repu- earch activity. o want to par- Research Op- dical school's m has skyrock- sity attempted e gap between ts, it has even e by side with ed in cutting- r as to say that research insti- and not sold to notwithstand- he University esearchers and the revenue it the business of ighest bidder. Ives into think- University will s students. The oductive schol- members more reached over o)(umnich.edit. JIM LASSER ' ~ SHARP AS TOAST in prison, with religion YEAH... H.EALrTH SERVICE S fOLD ME TH^AT '- ?ULLED A MUSCLE !!V MY 9ACK...... Sprng Arbor shouldn't I ast week, Howard Simon, executive di- rector of the Michigan chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, asked state Attorney General Frank Kelley to declarei that Spring Arbor College is unqualified toj teach classes to the state's correctional facil- ity inmates. Simon is correct in his assess-1 ment that signing a contract with the reli-l giously exclusive Spring Arbor College vio-J lates the state's civil rights laws. Spring Arbor, according to Dean Natalie Gianetti, requires its faculty "to be active+ Christians who embrace Jesus Christ in their+ everyday living." The school received+ $560,000 from the Michigan Department of Education and the Michigan Department of1 Corrections last year for administering classes to inmates in four prisons. Michigan law requires that every state contract contain a clause stating that the contractor does not discriminate on the basis of religion or other factors. While it is entirely legal for the+ Jackson County school to be religiously ex-; clusive as a private institution, it is not legal1 for the college to accept public funds for1 performing public services. It contradicts the American principle of a separation of church and state. Spring Arbor Provost Mark Sargent con- tends that state payments to the college should be considered similar to the process by which the federal government administers Pell Grants to individual students. Pell Grant re- cipients are free to spend public money at; receive state contracts any school they choose, even a religious one. Sargent's assertion is preposterous. Prison inmates are a captive audience whose state- regulated rehabilitations should not include programs with any religious overtones. Furthermore, the state of Michigan should be enforcing its own laws. Sargent also ex- plained, "We've not made any attempt to hide the fact that we are a Christian institu- tion and would be interested in employing people who are Christian." This seriously calls into question the state's conduct. Either officials in the departments of Education and Corrections are unaware ofthe anti-discrimi- nation requirement for federal contracts, or they chose to ignore it. Both scenarios sug- gest an imperfect and irresponsible adminis- tration of state government and they deserve a closer look. The fact that an attorney general's office spokesperson downplayed the situation because Spring Arbor has no contract with the state for the coming year is also unsettling. The state government would better serve its citizens by minding its obliga- tion to uphold civil rights rather than accept the lowest bid on government contracts. The ACLU's position is not an argument against the existence of religiously exclusive institutions. These institutions provide alter- native educations and experiences to their students that a publicly funded college or university cannot supply. It is simply not their duty to involve themselves in the public affairs of the state. NOTABLE QUOTABLE if the administration paid him and he got out of working at Pizza Bob's, then Idthink he pulled a good scam.' - Michigan Student Assembly Rep. Matt Curin, on MSA President Flint Wainess'participa- tion in Leadership 2017 ; b VtI d/ lyi (/t 1 T VIEWPOINT With Trammell goes a piece of childhood By Julie Becker I'm not a big sports fan. To put it mildly. In factI continually exasperate this paper's editor in chief-a former sports editor- by replying, when he refers to some sporting great, "Who?" But there is one name in sports I do recognize, one player of whom I'd describe myself as a "fan." Alan Trammell has been my favorite baseball player since I was old enough to understand what the game was. For me, his departure from Tiger Stadium last week meant more than the end of a baseball era. It meant that I, at two months short of 21, am get- ting old. I can recall precisely when I decided Trammell was my favor- ite, although not precisely wh' In second grade, a fifth-grader's survey named several Detroit Ti- gers and asked us to raise our hand forour favorite.At 7,I knew nothing about the Tigers, but for Becker is an LSA senior and a Daily editorial page editor. some reason, I raised my hand for Tram. Perhaps it was because I'd seen him on television; perhaps because my father's name is Allan. I'll probably never know. Whatever the reason, from that day forwardI was a declared Alan Trammell fanatic. I looked for him in the games on- TV; I fol- lowed his statistics in the news- paper; I even wrote him a fan letter once, although I can't recall if I actually mailed it. Some girls had crushes on movie stars; I dreamed about a baseball player. My affection for Trammell soon grew into an affinity for baseball itself. My father spent hours teaching me about the game, describing players and strategies, teams and rules. My parents and I followed the 1984 season with unbroken excitement, culminat- ing after the final game of the World Series with me dancing around the house waving my "American League Champions" pennant. (So I was a geek. It was fifth grade. We all have our little embarrassing moments.) As I got older, however, my interest in baseball waned. Partly it was due to the fact that-aside from the brief glory of 1987 - the Tigers never again approached the magic of 1984. Partly it was that I simply became interested in other things. Partly it was that the players I had come to identify with the game - Lance Parrish, Larry Herndon, Tom Brookens - left the Tigers one by one, replaced by men I had little desire to follow. Except for Tram (and his equally famous partner Lou Whitaker). Even as they, too, were getting older, even as Trammell was plagued by one injury after another, I knew that to turn on a Tigers game was to tune in to my favorite player. Even as I began to read newspapers for the news section rather than the sports, I still often turned to the baseball page to take note of Trammell's batting average. A habit begun in early childhood, whose remnants remained. Until now. Alan Trammell and Lou Whitaker's predicted retirement brings home to me the realization that nothing lasts forever. I haven't been to a Tigers game in years, and nowadays my father and I are more likely tc discuss block grants than baseball. But Trammell was always there, a part of my childhood that was still current. His departure makes me feel much the way I did when I packed away most of my children's books, when "The Cosby Show" went off the air, when I realized that Nerds candy was a truly disgusting thing. It is just one more small reminderthat my little-girl world is slowly but surely disappearing. In one sense, Alan Trammell's retirement really won't make much difference. To baseball, maybe, but not in my practical life. In another sense, however, it makes all the difference in the world. 20 years from now, I prob- ably won't remember the classes I went to last week. But I will remember the day Alan Trammell walked out of Tiger Stadium, tak- ing a piece ofmy childhood along with him. OW TO CONTACT THEM State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D-Washtenaw County) 410 Farnum Building Lansing, MI 48909 (517) 373-2406 LETTERS 'U' should improve accessibility of computers for students State Rep. Mary Schroer (D-52nd district, North Campus) 99 Olds Plaza Building 1 ninr NAI AOC200a State Rep. Liz Brater (D-53rd district, Central Campus) 412 Roosevelt Building 1 an~cincfdMI ARQOCI To the Daily: What's up with computing on months of September and Octo- ber. So, what's the story here? The past few years have seen a shift the University needs to respond to the increased demand for com-