MR Page Six { THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 26, 1975 University Values Year presents DR. ELIZABETH KUBLER ROSS The cash crunch Psychiatrist, author of Death and Dying EACH YEAR at about this time, University administra- tors raise a litany of gloom and DEA TH AND DYING: doom after they hear the de- tails of the governor's proposed state budget for the coming E THICA L IMPLICATIONSfiscal year. Sometimes their protest is FOP T E UN VERSTY jwell founded, sometimes not. F R THE U VERSTY But in this year of stagflation, recession and just plain ter- rible times, the fears of of- ' Au itorum J:1 0ficials over the University's fi- nancial foundering are real. HilAuditorium 3:10 P.. ia. 29 wa learned thswewl Governor William Milliken, it was learned this week, will probably recommend a state appropriation of just over $100 million for the University-a tidy sum, but far below the campus' anticipated b u d g e t ... . _A A ..... needs. LOOKING IN REVIEW accepts that there has to be a military, I'd be distressed if there weren't reserve officer,. They should be trained at the best and most liberal institu- tions, of which the University of Michigan is one." The LSA faculty is expected to tangle with those same kinds of questions at next Monday's meeting. Carduner also predicted that the faculty would call for more explicit guidelines than outlined ini the report advocating credit for ROTC courses. The plan recommends credit be given ROTC courses stressinghistory, management - leadership, a n d technical non-military skills. The report specifically does not suggest that credit be given to programs which hinge on mili- tary training. One Curriculum Committee member emphasized, "We did not recommend credit for courses on how to kill people." The number of courses which any student may take for LSA credit would be limited and sub- ject to periodic review by the Curriculum Committee. -SARA RIMER Announcing H AYPPY HOUR O a " yr 3 , : e Q f.., i y": ' fY .fix ^z:X: x Y .ter}a:iki. \ 4 4:,30=6 Monday thru Wednesday o n all M IX E D D rin ks 310 MAYNAR ,.:y:T f'i: i:;;<. ' 41 0 CUrS THEAMOUNT reflects a four per cent cut first asked by Milliken in the fall. Milliken, faced with the recession and the loss of state sales tax dol- lars on January 1, decided to ask for the cuts in order to balance the state's beleaguered budget. In real terms, the four per cent cut means a good deal to the 575 students enrolled in the Pilot Program. Administrators have said that the innovative program would be on the lis of possible expendables if ap- propriations are shaved four per cent. But Pilot won't be the only victim: high level University sources said last week that Rackham may have to absorb up to an eight per cent br Ige- cut, with other University de- partments forced to make more conservative cutbacks. Faculty hiring, meanwhile, has been curtailed. PUT THE most distinct dan- ger to the level of education- al quality at the University is the possibility that there will be faculty and staff layoffs. So far, officials have been mum or non-committal on the necessity for layoffs-but the threat remains. Ironically, the very groups now involved in their first contract negotiations with the University, clerical employes and graduate teach- ing assistants, probably face the greatest menace from per- sonnel cutbacks. Milliken will make public hs budget message on Thur lay. The state legislature then begins the long process of hearings, debate, and compromise before a final Dudget is hammered into law. But those in the Unive s tv who might expect help from the legislature should not hold their collective breaths. With state welfare rolls ballooning, and revenue an L-1certainty, legisla - There IS a . difference"' PREPARE FOR: S MC~AT Over 35 years " " of experience ° ®DAT and success , Small classes LSAT Voluminous home " " GRE study materials " Courses that are 0 * lconstantlyupdated * Tape facilities for " reviews of class " " CPAT lessons and for use * of supplementary " " FLEX materals f " Makeupsfor " : ECFMG missed lessons NAT'LMED BDS : THOUSANDS HAVE " * RAISED THEIR SCORES * . write or cal: * (313) 354-0085 " 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd." s Southfield, Mi. 48015 0 0 EDUCATIONAL CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECALISTSSINCE193 * ranches n Major U SiC es ROTC credit THE RESERVE Officer Train- ing Corp (ROTC) is back on the literary college (LSA) fac- ulty floor for debate next Mon- day with the Executive Com- mittee's approval last week of a proposal recommending that academic credit be reinstated for some ROTC courses. While both the LSA Curricu- lum Committee and the Execu- tive Committee focused solely on the academic merit of ROTC courses in their examinati n, most obswrverspredict that the LSA faculty will tackle the broader political and moral is sues that sparked hot degate back in 1970 when the facuLy voted to eliminate credit. The Executive Committee pro- ceedings are usually tightly guarded, but the ROTC de is.on was announced because of its "interest" to the student body, Academic Affairs Coordinator John Meeker said last week. Apparently the proposal swept through the Executive Commit- tee because "the plan appeared1 to be so workable," according to Associate Dean of Curriculum Jean Carduner. HlOWEVER, faculty and stu- dents earlier thrashed out the broader implications of support- ing the military on campus at a long Curriculum Committee. Responding to Carduner's re- minder that the committee was charged only with examining courses on their academic mer- it, director for Academic Ac- tions Eugene Nissen and Zool- ogy Prof. David Shappirio de- manded that "the whole issue be looked at in the college." While some Curriculum Com- mittee members blasted pro- grams that would increase mili- tary effectiveness, Physics Prof. Jens Zorn countered, "If one JEWELL COBB felt the glare of publicity from events 800 miles away but remained si- lent as the University moved to "finalize" its choice. tors will probalvgive higher education a shiorter-than-usual financial shrift. -DAVID BURHENN * * * ROBBEN FLEMING refused to acknowledge the Regents' unanimous vote and insisted that the University's final de- cision is yet to come. * * * Deanship uproar A STATE of major crisis now exists at the highest levels of the University's power struc- ture. All week long, officials tried to keep calm exteriors and limit the alarming realities to private conversations, but por- tions of the story leaked. The Regents, as The Daily learned eight days ago, had voted to offer the literary college (LSA) deanship to Jewel Cobb, but the administration has backed away from officially announcing that decision. The Regental vote was a cinch for controversy: the tra- ditionally conservative board- now dominated by Democrats- chose a respected black woman educator. Cobb's color and sex were probably enough to draw silent accusations of "tokenism" and racist, sexisttslurs. Coupled with that, the Re- gents also had to contend with the popularity of the man they did not choose - personable, popular Billy Frye, LSA'3 high- ly competent acting dean. On Tuesday night, President Robben Fleming said the dean- ship decision was "yet to come ' and simply would not comment on the decision that had al- ready taken place. He predicted a decision would be announced in "a couple of weeks." He spoke quietly, but the words landed on Ann Arbor like a bomb: the University's presi- dent, it appeared, was taking a position that flew in the face of his acknowledged superiors, the Regents. COBB, who is presently dean of Connecticut College, re- fused to comment on the Uni- versity's apparent indecision as the glare of publicity touched her in New London. Frye's supporters came on like gangbusters, cursing the board for reaching outside the University community for lead- ership in times of financial trouble, and praising Frye's un- deniably cool-headed approach to LSA's tangled business. It was rumored that some high- level officials in the college would resign if the Cobb choice was, finalized, although some- one pointed out that any resig- nations would likely be accepted with a smile in this time of tight budgets. One pro-Frye official warned snidely that Cobb "had better be damned good." 1 "It was strictly a Regental appointment," said another of- ficial. "They bypassed the ad- ministration's choice." Other sources agreed that Fleming and Rhodes had strongly urged, the board to approve Frye. j Another official contended, "Because the University was having trouble with affirmative action, they picked +he ideal person-a woman who is black. It's perfect." FROM educators in Ann Arbor and elsewhere came equal- ly resounding support for Cobb, whose reputation as an admin- istrator and researcher is im- peccable. Acquaintances of Cobb at Connecticut praised her interest in spending time with ,cudents and her work in cancer re- search. One source said: "She operates quietly, and is not BA CK in normal times, that silence becomes deafening in times of near-disaster. From the number of official statements about the deanship before Friday-zero, that is-one could be led to believe that business is proceed- ing as usual. While that was probably the intended effect, Vice President for Academic Affairs Fran Rhodes' statement Friday was full of subtle crisis- indicators. The Regents, he said, ha made only a "ranking" decisio on the three final deanshit, can- didates- but The Daily's source reaffirmed that the board chos Cobb and Cebb alone. RHODES gave no details of the "routine negotiations" h said were taking place - no even so much as an admission that Cobb is the party on the other side of the negotiating table. He indirectly blamed other for creating an atmo- sphere of "various conflicting statements and rumors"-with- out providing enough official news to fill the information void now surrounding the deanship appointment. He dismissed the lack of offi- cial statements by describing negotiating delays as "a normal part of the appointment pro- cess." Thus, at the week's end, the question remained: Why has the University failed to properly acknowledge the vote of its own Regents? The vice president said a full announcement would certainly follow the completion of negotia- tions. But no one knew when that would be. -DAN BIDDLE Have a flair for artistic writinq? If you are interest- ed in reviewing poetry, and music or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor. do The MichiganDiy Violence divides. God unites. The community of God. Make it your way. OEUGION IN AMERICAN iL E l A~tcirO iS. tTh tA N, Ep rfl FRANK RHODES tried to por- tray the Regents' vote as no more than a "ranking" of the three final candidates - sug- gesting the administration may yet try to keep Billy Frye in the deanship. dramatic, way-out-type admin- istrator." The only objection seemed to be that Jewel Cobb is not Billy Frye. If this University grows silent FINANCIAL AID SPRING-SUMMER TERM, 1975 Application materials for the Spring-Summer Term (including Full-Time Work-Study Employment) are now available in the Office of Financial Aid, 2011 S.A.B. 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