0 OPINION Poge4 Saturday, October 3, 1981 The Michigan Daily 0 die md ngatn t Miia Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan A letter from Arthur Miller Vol. XCII, No. 21 420 Moynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Treading the thin ice of tenured faculty layoffs BOTH PRIVATELY and publicly, University administrators have suggested that firing faculty members who have tenure - that supposedly sacred promise of lifetime job security -may be a necessary part of the University's grand "smaller but bet- b ter"plan. A top assistant to University Vice President Billy Frye said the dismissal of tenured professors is now being con- sidered by administrators as a possible step in downsizing and improving the University. And Wednesday, LSA Dean Peter Steiner, at a gathering of faculty members, reminded them that tenure was no magical guarantee of a job at the University. If the University runs short on money or if it discon- tinues a particularrdepartment, faculty members - tenured or not - can be fired, henoted. From the hints in the wind, it would appear that administrators are trying to brace faculty members for the possibility of layoffs. University administrators are fully aware of the serious implications of firing tenured professors. As soon as word spreads through the academic community - as it always does - that a pv'ticuar university iismissing teo ed professors, that university fi s itself with a whole new set of dif- ficulties in trying to recruit talented new faculty members. It is very hard to convince a bright young scholar that he or she should came to a university where tenure is an empty promise, when there are plenty op other institutions that make good on titeir promises of job security. trhe dismissal of tenured faculty niembers is a crime not soon forgotten inkthe academic community. It would take a great deal of time for the Ukiversity's reputation to heal if it were to decide to make the ranks of tejured professors "smaller but bet- ter." The University would also condemn its less "central" 'departments and programs to certain deterioration if it stprted firing tenured faculty mem- bers. Clearly, the University would not eliminate a popular, profitable, and "entral" department such as political sdience or computer engineering. More likely, the programs axed would be the smaller, more obscure units - such as geography and physical therapy. Thus, for young talented scholars in less popular' fields, the University of Michigan would not be a logical choice for starting a career because the University has already earned a national reputation for its "smaller but better" approach to cutting out-of-the- way departments. So, those peripheral departments would be unable to compete with other quality universities for the top-flight scholars. Unable to bring new talented faculty members into their ranks, the quality of those departments would slowly slide until Billy Frye, or some other "smaller but better" minded administrator,' targets them for elimination because of their deterioration. In a sense, if the University begins to discontinue more peripheral depar- What is worrisome is that ad- ministrators have suggested that tenured faculty members might be fired, not for lack of money to pay them, but because of a conscious decision on the part of the ad- ministration to make the University smaller. Vice. President Frye's 'chief adviser on the budget, Robert Sauve, has ex- plained that the University's "smaller but better" plan, and its consideration of tenured faculty layoffs, has little to do with short-term financial shortfalls. Regardless of how much money the University gets from the state and other sources, it intends to cut programs in order to use the money to strengthen other programs that the University values most. The geography department, for example, might be eliminated so that the University could improve its engineering programs, which are- in greater demand. The fact that money, or the lack thereof, is not really at issue will make the University's job all the more dif- ficult in firing tenured professors from non-favored departments. It will be considerably tougher explaining to a tenured professor that he or she is being dismissed, not because of money, problems, but because his or her program and work is not of great value to the University. That would probably make the jobless professor all the more bitter - and make the Univer- sity's problem in recruiting new professors all the more acute. If the University considers firing tenured faculty members, it had better be for a very good, unavoidable reason. There are conceivable situations in which the University would have no other choice but to lay off tenured faculty members. If state appropriations to the Univer- sity were to.drop off dramatically for several consecutive years so that the University were in desperate financial straits, the dismissal of tenured faculty, as a last resort, might be justified as an alternative to skyrocketing tuition or drastic cut- backs in programs. But the University is not in that situation. State funds to the University have been declining recently, but they have not forced the University into a corner. In fact, both the University's and the state's most respected economists have predicted a tur- naround in the state economy that in future years will likely mean a restoration of adequate funds to higher education. It seems clear that if the University begins firing tenured faculty in the next few years it will not be necessitated by financial losses and therefore will not be a "last resort" at all. There are certainly some faculty members at the University who do not deserve their tenure; their dismissals would not be a great loss to students or fellow scholars. But the long-term con- sequences of firing them would be too harmful. Any benefit gained from their dismissal, however, cannot outweigh The competing ideologies of Com- munism and Fascism were at a high point of conflict in 1936. Hitler's rise to power, the Spanish Civil War, and other ideological and political struggles in Europe and elsewhere sent shockwaves throughout the world. At the University of Michigan In- dustrial Conference on Education and Research in 1936, leaders from business and industry met to discuss the role of ,Replay*.., By Will McLean Greeley education in the affairs of government and national policy. In an opening day speech Fred Zeder, Vice Chairman of the Chrysler Corportaion, stated that he had come to "admire" Adolph Hitler greatly, who he felt was "doing a great job ... carrying on.. . putting his house in order." Zeder then blasted the New Deal and politicians in general. In response to Zeder's speech, then student, later playright, Arthur Miller wrote the following satiric tober 11, 1936. MR. ZEDIER'S TALK "Hitler is doing a great job, he's carrying on, he's putting his house in order.. ." What we need is a re-dedication to the basic values of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," Mr. Zeder also stated. Fine! Mr. Zeder, vice chairman of the Board, Chrysler Corporation. We all thank you, our fathers thank you. Saluta! Mr. Zeder for saving the liberals of this locality the trouble of convincing the people that American Big Business is Fascist and more treasonable to the American form of gover- nment than threc times the number of Com- 'munists in America today. Congratulations! Mr. Zeder and the Chrysler Corporation for explaining so con- cisely that is it Big Business which is behind the "people's" demand for a bigger navy which General Smedley Butler told me had not ONE SINGLE PLAN FOR DEFENSIVE WARFARE BUT ONLY FOR OFFENSE IN FOREIGN WATERS.' Some of us had thought that when you and the Republicans you are backing said you were for a "different way" of handling relief-for "progress of industry founded on sound principles," well we thought that perhaps you meant what the words mean in English. We see now-I say we understand, Mr. Zeder, that what you really mean are the same words translated into Italian and Ger- man. In other words you mean labor in con- centration camps working for whatever you choose to pay them. You mean that labor letter to Daily on Oc- strikes and efforts to make a living wade un- der decent conditions are "crimes against the state." But most of all, Gentlemen Manufacturers, thank you for telling us in one breath your aim to Fascitize American industry and in the next that you would enjoy having we college men help you to do it!. We don't know how we can repay this debt to you-this debt we owe you for telling the Great American College Man YOURSELVES that he is preferred because it is more probable that with his training in "cultural subjects" he will help his bosser trim his uneducated fellow workers out of their just desserts . For not only is Mr. Zeder a Fascist but he is also like Hitler against Communism. Not only does Mr. Zeder find that the choice IS, Fascism or Communism, but he must ther- fore completely disagree with our President (Ruthven) who says that "We are not con- fronted with a choice between fascism and communism, but we cannot survive, we can- not achieve peace, without the recognition of our responsibility for the welfare of others." Fascism has not one iota of "responsibility for the welfare of others. So thanks again Herr Zeder. But we advise if we may, that you change your opinion of the college man. He is not a sap! -Arthur A. Miller S * * * * NEXT WEEK: The "victors." Greele v's column appears everv Saturdav. 0 6 0 0 Weasel 0 By Robert Lence Youve .BAN PROC-4T~, Pt~HL- t S GBr-J At.M l~ A BFA-E.S SC*-' GoK oij %C)(-*A 15 1~ wock4 i t yr vote PLAY PIN At-Boml of YOW WIIAP " Q RI4lVt. k\ s CWt S-rANT> (T, ANY LotiS&F-R! titE 6 Ab R R BeATl.r--$ 1 -V Go IWPN6? l . iI. ! What riches holds Australa? SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA-Amid growing political instability in the Middle East and Africa, leading to talk of a "resource war," the West is beginning to take a serious look at Australia as an alternative supply depot for fuels and strategic materials of all sorts. Australia could turn out to be the answer to Washington's prayers. The liberal gover- nment of Malcolm Fraser is friendly to the United States and the booming economy is largely owned and guided by American, Japanese and British corporations. Butamost important, this huge but sparsely populated (14 million) nation has an immense wealth of coal, natural gas, bauxite and other metals, including some of the crucial defense- related "strategic" materials the United States now imports from southern Africa. AS A RESULT, Australia has become the Yukon of the '80s. The directors and chief executives of Exxon Corp. recently visited here for a series of private meetings and briefings, and they will be followed by the In- ternational Board of Advice of the Chase Manhattan Bank, led by David Rockefeller and Henry Kissinger.,Along the northeast coast of Queensland on the Pacific Ocean, port towns are clogged with workers building railroads, deepening ports, laying the groun- dwork for an export boom in coal. "It's all set to go, no doubt about it," said G. Paul Phillips, director of the Australian Mining Industry Council. "We haven't really touched the surface yet." Because of problems and costs associated with nuclear power and the continuing high cost and supply interruptions that come with oil, energy planners around the world are turning back tocoal as the fuel for electricity. AS A RESULT, the International Eergy Agency predicts that by the 1990s Australia will be the world's largest coal-exporting nation, surpassing the United States, and shipping out a staggering 120 million tons a year. . "The major markets will be in Southeast Asia, but there will be growing markets in Europe and the United States," predicted Phillips. Australian coal, he said, could be "borderline competitive" at U.S. gulf ports. In Europe, Australia is stealing business By James Ridgeway As the Australians race to set up the in- frastructure for coal exports on the East Coast, plans are being implemented in the west to begin to tap the enormous natural gas finds of the Rankin field along the north- western shelf. Gas is to be brought onshore, liquified, and shipped to Japan. Though Australia itself has no nuclear plan- ts, the Fraser government is determined to make the country into a major supplier of uranium. Doug Anthony, deputy prime minister, recently announced that Australia has contracts for $4 billion in uranium and has launched a -feasibility study as the first step toward building a uranium enrichment facility. THE BUREAU of Mineral Resources projects Australia will rank as No. 3 in uranium production by 1985, increasing production from the current 1,500 tons a year to 11,000 tons. The energy boom is having a profound ef- fect within Australia itself. Because of the cheap power provided by coal and natural gas, the big transnational companies that dominate the aluminum industry are racing pell mell to build smelters for Australian bauxite, most of which now is exported for smelting elsewhere. Smelting capacity may more than quadruple in this decade, providing enough aluminum to supply world growth for several years. This amounts to the biggest invest- ment in a single industry the world has ever seen. As the aluminum processing begins in earnest, Australia will be in a position to make a number of consumer goods, notably parts for the world car. ALL BUT OVERLOOKED in the ex- citement of the resource boom is the nation's potential as a supplier of strategic metals. For such critical materials as vanadium, tungsten and manganese Australia could become an alternative source to such un- stable regions as southern Africa, which the Reagan administration has labeled the "Per- sian Gulf of Metals.'' Australia produces 90 percent of the world's rvtile, which is employed in the manufacture of titanium. It is the world's fifth-ranking producer of manganese, and exports are growing. Tin and tungsten are produced in substantial quantities. Tantalite, an elec- tronics metal, it is in abundant supply due to a huge find in western Australia. Cobalt and vanadium also are produced. The importance of such strategic metals to the U.S. military goes beyond a stable source of supply. The Pentagon is equally interested in Australia as an increasingly important cog in U.S. defense planning. AN EXAMPLE suggests the trend: The rutile, used in manufacture of titanium, a crucial metal for defense, has been exported in raw form for processing in Japan, the United States and Europe. Under a proposed deal, however, General Dynamics and United Technologies have agreed in principle to build a $100 million 5,000-ton-a-year titanium sponge plant in Australia if the government agrees to purchase their F-16 jets for the Australian air force. McDonnell Douglas is believed to be con- sidering a similar offer in return for purchase of its F-18 aircraft. Thus, Australia's internal economic development hinges, in this exam- ple, on a growing armaments policy which is closely tied to American defense spending. Australia began in the 18th century as a penal colony of Britain. Some observers fear the current era of resource exploitation may result in a new form of colonization, by the United States or Japan. But for the time being, the government of Malcolm Fraser seems delighted to fulfill Australia's usual role in world commerce, a faithful and cooperative supplier of raw materials to the industrialized West. Ridgeway is a columnist for the Village Voice. He wrote this article for Pacific News Service. 0 0 IPttem and columns represent