Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 27, 1968 Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY .u.sd. Aua ...J.,.. ...7 I9 vUv J Annual budget squabble puts pinch on 'U finance MAYTAG MAKES THE CAMPUS SCENE TO BRING YOU ALL THE FEATURES OF A FULL SIZE DRYERS IN HALF By MARK LEVIN Editor and MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Last year the state provided over $59 million in operating funds and is currently helping to pay for a new Dental School and the Medical Science II Building, as well as improvements and ren- ovations in University Hospital and the heating plant. The $59 million figure may seem very high, but the appropriation was far short of the University's re- quest of $74.6 million. The result: substantial increases in both in- state and out-of-state tuition. With the ever-changing and petty nature of Michigan politics, presenting the University's case for a larger budget and needed construction , money becomes a dangerous political game. Until last year the Governor and both houses of the state legislature were elected every two years. Un- der the new constitution, the Governor and State Senate are elected every, four years, but the House is still up for grabs every two years. So, if the University should be too polite to one Repub- lican politico, retaliations may occur two years later when the Democrats regain control of the state house. If the University should be a bit over cooperative with one enterprising Democratic legislator, it may offend his Re- publican counterpart. The Uni- versity is caught in the squeeze, trying to placate both sides at the same time. The University with its ,tough admissions policies, high academic standards and large out-of-state enrollment is particularly vulner- able to criticism. For years Uni- versity administrators have had to field protests from dissident s t a t e- legislators complaining about the rejection of one of their consituents. One apocryphal story tells of a , state senator whose daughter was rejected, and who wasn't too pleased about it. "I couldn't give a --------- -----University," explained the senator. "Yo.'ll not get a red cent." Fortunately the senator didn't get his way. Frequent attempts are made to put a ceiling on out-of-stateen- rollment, but University adminis- trators persist in their belief that such a decision is not in the con- stitutional province of the Legis- laturp. low 20 per cent, a level which the legislature considers acceptable. The actual needs of the Univer- sity usually are sceondary in de- termining budget appropriations. The state has just so much money and it must be divided among the eleven state-supported universities and numerous junior colleges. The University is in competition with such . schools - as Michigan State University and Wayne State University, since all are in need of funds and all are continually expanding. Personal factors enter into the determination. How effective the University lobby is in presenting his case and making information available is vital..However, many times, the numer of tickets to Wolverine football games that have been distributed seems to be even more important. The Uni- versity enters the political log- Irolling and wheeling and dealing game with much at stake in its success. To increase the efficiency of the University's lobby in Lansing, one of the first moves University President Robben Fleming made was to bring labor expert Arthur Ross to Ann Arbor as Vice Presi- dent for State Relations and Plan- ning. Legislators often have an urge to investigate. In the past three years legislative committees have come down from Lansing to look into University housing policies, tuition-and dormitory fee hikes, Regental conflict-of-interests and even to conduct a general Univer- sity audit. A recent report written by state Auditor General Albert Lee, re- portedly charges that the Univer- sity has shiftedx its funds in such a way as to distort the true nature of its finances. The report has not yet been officially released, but its effect on the University's appropriation has already been de trimental. This year's budget will be the second fiscal disaster in a row. At this writings the University is expected to receive a general funds appropriation within $100,000 of $63.3 million after requesting $75.8. As a result, further sub- stantial increases in tuition will be made, and the University will undergo another year in which faculty salaries fall behind the rest of the nation and programs go underfunded. The University will just have to wait until th6 state decides to in- crease taxes or institute new ones before it can expect to have its financial requests met by a gen- erous state government. THE FLOOR SPACE for people. who th they didn't have fora Dryer . . 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I 1 i Perhaps the most permanent Legacy of the abortive Student Power Movement of 1966 was the solidification of a student image of the administrators of this once great University as devious and conspiratorial beings totally dis- dainful of student opinion, rights or desires. This year's transition from the Eisenhoweresque leadership of Harlan Hatcher to the mediation- oriented regime of Robben W. Fleming has done little to destroy this widespread student view- point. While avoiding some of the worse blunders of the Hatcher years, the Fleming ascendency has done .relatively little to con- vince the skeptical of its sym- pathy toward student aspirations. Like all, stereotypes, the stu- dent image of the administration contains a solid kernal of truth embellished with a series of ro- mantic misconceptions. The underlying misconceptiion probably stems from the fact that if asked the function of the ad- ministration, the average student is likely to respond glibly, "run- ning the University." The phrase "running the University"s is high- ly misleading, because the power of the president and his vice presidents is in many ways more apparent than real. For example, below the budget- ary level, almost all academic matters fall under the domain of the various schools and colleges who carefully nurture, their inde- pendence and perrogatives. As for non-academic matters here once the administration was supreme. But with in loco parentis barely lingering on-despite the annoy- ing length of its death throes-- these matters are now in the hands of the students or their representatives. Furthermore despite the om- nipotence we seem to automati- cally associate these days with the office, President Fleming's of former President Hatcher. Since a change in the presidency of a university is not the signal for a wholesale purge, Fleming is to some extent the captive of his predecessor's advisors. It seems that Fleming will lafgely bypass this problem by altering Hatcher's decision-mak- ing process. Where Hatcher placed great reliance on his vice presi- dents-in fact for a while many claimed that Vice President for Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont was actually "running" the University - Fleming seems likely to place more of the re- sponsibility on unofficial advisors in whom he has deep confidence. Reflecting his own background as a labor mediator, all of Flem- ing's close advisors are econo- mists. They ,include Barbara Newell, his assistant from his' Wisconsin days, Arthur Ross, the new Vice-President for State Re- lations and Planning, and Wil- liamr Haber, the retiring dean of the literary college. 1 But a more important limita- tion of Fleming and his fellow ad- ministrators is that their power is theoretically subordinate to that of the Regents. While Fleming handles or dele- gates most day-to-day decisions and as a result of his expertise and the aura of his office often dominates in long range matters as well, the power and the pres- ence of the Regents place very definite parameters on what Fle- ming can and cannot do with impunity. Whatever their power relation- ship, both Fleming and the Re- gents are effectively hand-cuffed by the seemingly endless financial problems of the University. While the appointment of Arthur Ross may end the Univer- sity's relatively incompetent per- formance as a lobbyist, it is still clear that the state legislature has abandoned forever a commitment to quality education here at the blame for the level of education and the size of classes here in Ann Arbor must rest far more in Lansing than it does in the new Administration Building. But this new Administration Building is highly symbolic of the area in which University administrators, have been most neglibent. The major areas of responsi-- bility of the administration lies in the allocation of the Univer- sity's scarce resources. Up to now the priorities governing this dis- tribution of dwindling money have' been skewed to say the least. It seems likely that one of Fleming's major innovatidns will be a master-plan, for it was this lack which was one of the major things which disturbed him on taking over. Again it is the ap- pointment of Arthur Ross as Vice-president which indicates Fleming's major committment in this direction. And it is on this record of allo- cating resources that the adminis- tration's record is the most dis- mal. For example, while the new Administration Building was paid for by bonds, the money under- writing those bonds could have been put to far more useful pur- poses. The once planned Residential College complex has been con- signed permanently to East Quad, becaue' the University was not willing to borrow money to bring that program to fruition. More importantly underwriting the Ad Building bonds could have been used to offset the University's steady and highly dangerous downturn in the AAUP ratings of faculty salaries. But to a large extent these are sins of the Hatcher Administra- tion. It seems evident that under Fleming there will be an improve- ment in terms of master plan- ning and lobbying in Lansing. 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