Page 4-Wednesday, January 18, 1978-The Michigan Daily tic ittiht6,an m3atij Eighty-Eight Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 89 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The elusive ten per cent AS EGYPTIANS RETURN TO MIDEAST Euphoria fizzles in Mideast A NOTHER JANUARY, and another report from the Office of Academic Affairs that black enrollment has failed to come close to the ten per cent goal set eight years ago. In fact, this year's an- nual gloom includes the news that the percentage has plunged to 6.6 per cent, the 1972 level, from 7.2 per cent in the fall of 1976. In between the stuffy, bureaucratic lines of the Office's report there ap- pears a despairing shrug of the should- ers. "What else can we do?" the report seems to ask, and the frustration of it all is that for once, we can't come up with easy answers to that question. Bound up in all of this is a residue of anger left over from the 1970 Black Ac- tion Movement (BAM) strike here which came close to shutting down the campus for eight days. BAM, a group of Smilitant black students, sat down for a set of negotiations with Robben Fleming and other administrators and emerged with a promise: the Univer- sity would provide, by 1973-74 enough financial aid money to ensure a black enrollment level of ten per cent. That promise was kept. Blacks cur- rently receive a very substantial pro- portion of the University's total finan- -cial aid. Although it would be conveni- ent to blame the University alone for the drop in black enrollment, it can not be done in good conscience. Officials must be commended as far as their ef- forts to enroll black students here over ..the past few years. Despite these effor- ts, ten per cent enrollment is a long way off and growing further out of reach. A surplus fo HE UNIVERSITY cornmunity will have to suffer through a new series of cutbacks this year, it was announced Monday, because of a projected budget deficit of almost $3 million. Officials attribute the deficit to their overestimating tuition income this year and warned that departments of student services, financial aid, academic affairs and research are to be - hit hardest by retrenchments. At an institution of this size, such 'budget miscalculations are certainly not unusual. Still, one vice president registered surprise at the magnitude of the drop in tuition revenues. The Uni- versity has traced the falloff to a slight drop in enrollment, but more specifi- cally, to the discovery that the average student is taking fewer credit hours and thus is not paying as much in tuition. When a University must depend on the number of courses elected by each student in order to balance its budget, it . is a sad and perplexing situation in- deed. The pitiful state of the University is not simply due to a miscalculation or two; it is the end result of a decade of drastic reductions in state funding to r education, and a growing dependence by the University upon revenues col- lected from students. As it now stands, if existing tuition and board rates do not The University has not been success- ful in its 1970 commitment to provide the sorts of services that would keep blacks here on campus once they had enrolled. The new figures show there was actually a slight increase in the number of freshpersons who enrolled last fall, but it was accompanied by an increase in the number of students who drop out or transfer elsewhere. It is the attrition rate, then, which has sent the total percentage of enrolled blacks into a tailspin. A variety of programs keep Univer- sity personnel busy working to help minority students: the Opportunity Program, the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills (CULS), and others. From the data collected it would ap- pear that these programs are not working as well as they should in re- taining students. The University needs to find out why black students are leaving, and that means talking to the ones who leave. A joint study is planned with the Univer- sities of Illinois and Wisconsin to find some answers. Locally, officials will be conducting more informal surveys, like telephone interviews, with former students. These activities are steps in the right direction,' and we' hope the University will find some constructive results to apply toward next year's figures. The black student enrollment goal of at least ten per cent should still stand. Perhaps it is time to go back to the drawing board to figure out how to achieve it. By MARCUS ELIASON The Associated Press JERUSALEM-When Anwar Sadat came here two months ago, Israelis greeted him with a euphoric burst of emotion.iNow with thecharshdrealities of the three decade dispute filtering back to the surface, a mood of disappointment, and even cynicism, is setting in. As Israeli and Egyptian foreign ministers opened what promises to be tough negotiations in Jerusalem yesterday, divisions between the old antagonists dulled the glow of Egyptian president's history-making ven- ture. "WHEN SADAT was here it was a whole new feeling," said a middle-aged saleswoman. "Now we know that making peace won't be so easy. There are big problems. It's not all white or black." One fruit of Sadat's visit remains unspoiled: The degree of human contact that has grown between Egyptians and Israelis. From Israelis who went to Egypt during preliminary peace talks, and from television reports, Israelis are learning that Egyp- tians are ordinary human beings lwho want-as they do-peace and prosperity. STILL, one hears much cynicism in places where people gather. "It was all a trick," claims Avishai Klein, 23, a student. "Sadat made the world hail him as a hero and now he's talking tough again." While we Egyptians say Israeli 'The peace Sadat wants isn't the same as the peace we want. It isn't easy to end problems that have built up for so many years all at once. ' said in en editorial: "We don't like the way Egypt has begun talking to us .. put the gun aside. It won't help either of us." YEDIOT focused on Sadat's recent interviews in which he sounded deeply disheartened by Israel's response to his peace initiative. Not everyone is bitter. Benny Paz, 35, says he's not worried. "Of course we'll have peace. The peace is coming." Avram Brill, a treacher, said, "the peace Sadat wants isn't the same as the peace we want. It isn't easy to end problems that have built up for so many years all at once." AS EGYPTIAN journalists here for the foreign ministers' talks toured holy sites in Jerusalem, an old woman hob- bled up, shaking her fist and yelling: "You don't want peace. We gave you the Sinai twice because you promised peace, and now you want it back again? So that our boys can get killed again?" An Israeli kindergarten teacher who heard the shouting hurried over and shushed the woman and apologized to the Egyptians. Later, another elderly woman approached an Egyptian editor near the Wailing Wall, Judaism's holiest shrine: Obviously thrilled to meet a real live Egyptian, she asked anxiously: "Do you really think there'll be peace?" "We are praying," replied the Egyptian, "and so must you. "o s Prime Minister Menahem Begin was too unyielding toward Sadat,. Israelis complain he was too generous. ONLY A tiny minority of lef- tists and mavericks believes Begin should yield to Sadat's call for Palestinian self- determination and disband Jewish settlements in occupied Arab land. "Sadat keeps saying he gave us everything we wanted by coming here," says a doctor who asked not to be named. "I say: thank you very much Mr. Sadat, but we didn't need your approval for our existence." Putting words to the new mood, the newspaper Yediot Aharonot Letters to The Daily our deficit? cover the University's financial needs, officials have no choice but to cut programs and services and raise rates. "So what else is new?" we usually say. We put up with higher bills and lower quality, because we are told there: is no alternative. - The irony is that this year, when students have to pay higher tuition and dorm rates, there may very well be an alternative which is being conveniently overlooked. Gov. Milliken reported last week that the state was, at last, in good financial condition. Milliken announced a healthy election-year budget surplus, and proposed a massive election-year tax cut.{ But while the particulars won't be known for a few weeks yet, University officials have been told to expect only a modest increase in the campus' ap- propriation from the state. This is wrong. The University has suffered long enough and should not have to start counting the number of credit hours students are electing just to see if it will be able to make its mon- thly payroll. A substantial contribution from the state this year could prevent tuition increases and program cut- backs. Hey Lansing! Let us in on your budget surplus celebration - we get to vote in elections too! women athletes To The Daily: I was very disappointed in your editorial ("A Win for Women Athletes") supporting a U.S. District Court decision which, when one considers all of its possible ramifications, has a much greater potential to harm than to help women's athletics. Since the enactment of Title IX, women have finally begun to realize the long-denied oppor- tunity to compete in inter- scholastic athletics at the high- school level. Given that many, if not most, high schools, operate under tight athletic budgets, the effect of a ruling that women may compete with men, even in con- tact sports, could well be to deny them that opportunity. Under the logic of this ruling, a high school might well argue that it is fulfilling its Title IX obligations by providing one team in a sport, with member- ship being open to all students. And even if there are separate men's and women's teams, if women are eligible to compete on the men's, team, then it must follow that men are eligible to compete on the women's teams. The very likely result of this would be to deny all but the "superstar" women athlete the right to compete. For every ''woman Rick Leach'' who is able to make men's team, there will be many striving women athletes who will be denied the oppor- tunity to sharpen their skills through participation in inter- scholastic competition. At this moment in history men are, in general, athletically superior'to women. To the extent that this results from any natural physical advantages held by men in a given sport, we can do little but recognize these differences in deciding whether women and men can compete together in that sport. (Which is not to imply that men hold physical advantages which would compel separate competition in all sports.) But to the extent that it results from women having been denied the opportunity to develop the necessary competitive skills, we must seek out and support solutions which will provide them with that opportunity. At least for the present, a program of separate but equal opportunities to participate in interscholastic athletics is better equipped to achieve that goal. Finally, I must note that the ing the denial of tenure for white male Prof. Joel Samoff, "the only authority on South Africa at the U." "Authority" is just the word to describe Samoff. His arro- gance, dogmatism and authori- tarian methods and manner dis- qualify him for defense by any- one seriously interested in "liber- ation." In 1972, I filed a grading appeal against Samoff after he failed me for not attending more frequently a class he'd rendered intolerable with his domineering. Samoff ac- tively connived with his Political Science Department colleagues to bias the proceedings and make sure he was whitewashed. For instance, at Samoff's urg- ing the review committee heard Samoff's defense even before it heard my complaint - and after my absence was arranged by promising that only "procedure" would be dealt with. He pulled a similar stunt before the LS&A Administrative Board. Nonetheless, a majority of the Ad Board (but not the two-thirds needed to take action) held that I had not received a fair and lawful hearing. The LS&A Student Gov- ernment unanimously con- demned both the Poli Sci Depart- , . ment and Samoff personally for countless violations of due process and common courtesy. The department was embar- rassed enough to pack Samoff off to Africa until I graduated and things simmered down. Does this sound like a man who cares about liberation? Samoff's falling out with his co-conspira- tors need not concern -the rest of us. Students have nothing to gain or lose by family quarrels among faculty oligarchs. Neither Samoff nor anybody else should be ten- ured. Tenure only institutional- izes incompetence. Before learn- ing, becomes possile here, the entire mandarinate will have to be overthrown. The Southern Afric'i'"Libera- tion" Committee has forgotten that liberation begins at home - and that the enemy of your ene- my is not necessarily your friend. - Bob Black '73 Submissions to the Daily's Editorial page should be typed and triple spaced. They will be returned to the author only if a request is made to do so. Publication is based on con- ciseness, clarity of thought and writing and overall appeal. I-----Health Service Handbook OA f I r1 g By SYLVIA HACKER and NANCY PALCUiK QUESTION: Is there any way to remove un- wanted pubic hair? I've tried shaving but it grows back thicker (and itches). When I wear a bathing suit, it is quite embarrassing. (Please answer soon as I am going to Florida for Christmas). ANSWER: Really sorry we couldn't get this answer in before your vacation but you got it to us too late to prepare before the last issue of the Daily. Too bad you didn't include your name and address! We hope you had a good vacation anyway and recommend another one very soon so you can use the information. We pooled resources with our Dr. Barbara "Adams and surfaced with the following: To begin, we're not going to mention that it is only our societal hangup that makes normal amounts of body hair seem excessive or embar- rassing. Nor will we mention that the extension of pubic hair onto the inner aspects of the upper thighs signals complete development of secondary sex characteristics. But we will say that many consider hair from private sources to be embar- rassing when it shows itself in public places. The only way to rid oneself permanently of un- wanted hair is by electrolsysis, but we wouldn't recommend it in this case because of the expense and the likelihood of infection in the area. Shaving is simplest and quickest but it is true that it can end up being awfully prickly when growing back. However, keeping up with the shaving daily by a quick once-over with a lady's electric shaver, will tend to minimize the stubble. (By the way, shav- ing doesn't really cause hair to grow back more thickly - it's just that the blunt ends of stubble are more obvious than the tapered ends of unshaved hair). to use plenty of sun screen on vacation - a bad sunburn also looks terrible in a bathing suit! QUESTION: Why does it take an hour to get a lost prescription replaced? ANSWER: According to Ms. Shelia Farmer, our ombudsperson, all prescriptions for medica- tion must be written by a physician, and so if you have lost a prescription before it is filled you will, have to see a physician to have another one issued. While it may seem that having a prescription re- issued is a minor request" for such a real incon- venience to you, we feel that we must be conserva- tive when replacing lost prescriptions. We know how easy it is to lose a prescription. Unfortunate- ly, for some people, a "lost" prescription may be a coAvenient means of obtaining more sedatives or tranquilizers than the physician feels should be dispensed at one particular time. As any medica- tion has the potential to be hazardous if, for ex- ample, it is taken in greater dosages than may be warranted by a particular illness, or at times other than those specifically indicated, we hope you will understand if we feel it is best to err on the side of cautiousness when replacing lost prescrip- tions. We are genuinely sorry that you had to wait an entire hour for your second prescription since we really try to do everything that we possibly can to minimize the waiting time of all students using the Health Service. Generally, if you have specified that you have come in for a refill or a lost prescrip- tion, you will be directed to our Express Clinic with a short waiting time. However, if you happerr to come in on a busy day or at a busy time (e.g., 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. are always bad), you will, unfor- tunately, have to wait to be seen as will any of our other patients. In addition, if you wish to see,' without an appointment, the specific physician who issued your original prescription, your c rir ' i