|  The Cavalier daily Wednesday, December 6, 1972  | ||
refute his claim that "no 
student should have to support 
organizations opposed to his 
political or moral beliefs." Just 
who is properly libertarian?
Under the fees system, 
students are required to 
contribute a certain amount of 
money to the Student 
Council's Activities Fund, which 
the Council later parcels out to 
student organizations. But 
what assurance is there that the 
end result is fair to everybody?
How can the Council judge 
objectively which group is 
more needy or worthy of 
funds? Isn't it clear that, 
indirectly, some students will 
be subsidizing other students' 
organizations?
Why, why does the money 
have to go to the Council in 
the first place? Is it because 
some groups can't raise enough 
funds on their own? And, if so, 
is it right to force others most 
of whom have their own 
special groups (also, I'm sure, 
in need of further funds) to 
chip in?
It is unfortunate that the 
dream of utopia must 
sometimes be broken by the 
bitter realization that 
occasionally everything just 
doesn't work out. But we must 
finally face the fact that the 
present system is nothing more 
than planned inequity, forced 
subsiding!!
Every student group must 
vie more and more for a share 
in the kitty, for the money 
that may well make it or break 
it. But, as the pressure on the 
Council members themselves 
grows, so, too, the risk becomes 
greater that, increasingly, 
self-interest and personal 
preference will determine the 
final gifts of that all-sustaining 
money.
The solution can only be to 
begin cutting back on the fees 
from the very start! The recent 
allocation to the Gay Student 
Union of a paltry $45 is but 
the focal point of a much more 
significant issue. Mandatory 
Student Fees must be 
reformed.
Chairman
Young Americans
for Freedom
|  The Cavalier daily Wednesday, December 6, 1972  | ||