Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom E AirW 43Iati1 FLURRY Occasional flurries today, with a high in the low 30s. S Vol. XCI, No. 100 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan, Tuesday, January 27, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages lw Geography department slated for eiimination pending specia review LSA Dean Knott cites 'budgetary constraints' GEORGE KISH began teaching geography at the University when Franklin Roosevelt was president. Yesterday, he learned that the geography department may be eliminated in a cost-cutting move. After 41 years of teaching prof astonished' by geography review By LORENZO BENET The geography department will be eliminated after the 1981-82 academic year unless a review process convinces University officials that the program should be continued, LSA Dean John Knott announced yesterday. It is the first department that has been threatened with elimination by the current budgetary crisis. The review proceedings will be the first under the guidelines for academic program discontinuance that the Regents adop- ted in 1979. KNOTT INFORMED Geography Chairman JohnFNystuen yesterday that he and the LSA Executive Committee set the discontinuance proceedings into motion "after careful deliberation, in the context of the severe budgetary cuts facing the college. "The executive committee and I believe that the best way to protect the overall strength of the college in a period of retrenchment is to make hard decisions about what activities we should attempt to sustain," Knott said. Knott said the cost-cutting measure could save LSA-which must reduce its budget by $2 million-$150,000 to $200,000 over the next several years. If the department is eliminated, the college will "try vigorously" to relocate the eight tenured geography faculty, Knott said. HOWEVER, HE said, the University may not be able to accommodate all geography concentrators. "For those tundergraduate) students at the begin- ning and the middle of the program, we are concerned with enabling them to complete their degrees (in geography)," he said. Undergraduates near the end of the program would be able to finish, and graduate students would continue to work with faculty on their dissertations, he added. This is only the second program in the recent history of the University that has been marked for elimination. In 1977, the University discontinued the School of Public Health's population planning department. The geography department is the only LSA department now under con- sideration for elimination. Knott said geography was chosen as a "result pf a combination of factors. "OUR ASSESSMENT of our ability to relocate the tenured faculty entered in- to the decision," he said. "The chances for relocation look good." Geography test ease for discontinuance Vice-President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye said that geography's ability to be incorporated into other disciplines could have affected LSA's decision. If the department is discontinued, the following positions ,would be eliminated: five non-tenured faculty, one administrative assistant, two secretaries, eight teaching assistants, and one part-time cartographic assistant, Knott said. Tenured faculty See GEOGRAPHY, Page 7 Geography Prof. George Kish has been teaching at the University since 1940. Yesterday, he learned that his department has been targeted for a review that could result in its. elimination. Daily Editor-in-Chief Mark Parrent questioned Prof. Kish about the pending review:. When did you find out that your department was being con- sidered for elimination? Sometime between 10 and 11 (Monday) morning. Did Dean Knott's decision surprise you? It astonished me. Why did it astonish you? Because we are a department that has had an existence since 1915 in connection with geology and since 1923 as an in- dependent department. That's a very long time. That's first. Second, because in the 41 years I've been a member of the faculty, I know of only one instance when a department was discontinued-that was in the public health school. Why do you think the geography department was singled out for review? The college was not satisfied with the department's per- formance since its last overall review three years ago. Is there any chance that your department will survive the review? I should hope so. On what do you base your optimism? These things. One: the department's standing nationally. It is one of the 10 or so senior graduate departments in the United States. It's been ranked among those 10 on more than one occasion in the last 20 years. That means that it's one of the top 10 among over 150-or close to 200-departments in the United States and Canada. In other words, what I'm driving at here is that geography as an independent depar- tment is an established fact of university life all over the world and in North America. See PROF, Page 2 For months, the University has publically discussed the need for selec- tive program cuts because of the University's bleak financial situation. Now it looks as though the geography department is likely to be the first of a number of academic programs eliminated from the University's curriculum. Acting LSA Dean John Knott said the college decided to start making reduc- tions now "in the context of the severe budgetary constraints facing the College." Several years ago, in anticipation of the need to make planned program cuts, faculty, administrators, and Regents designed and adopted guidelines to follow when academic programs are considered for elimination. Adopted in October, 1979, the set of procedures was developed in part to avoid a controversy such as the one that developed in 1977 when the School of Public Health's Department of Population Planning was slated, for elimination. The geography department's review, under the new guidelines, is expected to be completed in two months. The procedures require the case to be reviewed by a special committee. The committee will be comprised of LSA faculty members, excluding members of the geography department and the college's Executive Committee. Knott and the LSA Executive Committee have decided no students will sit on the committee. Knott said students "can voice their views directly to me." Following the review, the committee will consult the LSA governing faculty before the dean and the Executive Committee decide whether to recom- mend discontinuation to Vice-President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye. If after' consultation with President Harold Shapiro, the recommendation is accepted by the executive officers, and subsequently approved by the Regents, the program will be eliminated. -Lorenzo Benet I Body found in parking garage INCREASES IN WELFARE AND EDUCATION 'MODEST': Milliken asks 8.3% budget hike T " -rTLT! /TT7 T1 m1__, tL f _'tISL._ _ - - - - - ._ By DAVID SPAK A suspect is in State Police custody in the apparent murder of a 39-year-old Saline man, whose body was found yesterday stuffed in the trunk of his car in the Fourth and William Streets parking structure. The victim, Ford Motor Co. executive Richard Mosher, was last seen on the night of Jan. 20 in his 1981 Mustang at an intersection near Arborland, State Police Sgt. Kenneth Krause said. A cousin, with whom Mosher lived in Saline, reported him missing Jan. 21. A STATE POLICE spokesperson said the death is being labeled an "apparent homicide." Results of an autopsy, con- ducted yesterday at University Hospital, were not released. Ann Arbor police had been working with the State Police in the search for Mosher, the manufacturing manager at the Ford plastics plant in Milan. John Roberts, the Milan plant in- dustrial relations manager, said Mosher had been employed at Ford sin- ce 1967 in various management positions, and was appointed plant manager last May. "He was a very respected individual at Ford," Roberts said. "He always conducted himself in a fair and equitable manner." Management at the plant circulated a memo yesterday in- forming employees of Mosher's death. LANSING (UPI) - The MilliKen administration proposed yesterday , an 8.3 percent spending increase for the next fiscal year, including ; modest increases in such hard-hit areas as welfare, education, and mental health. Michigan State University may receive a larger percen- tage of state appropriations than the University of Michigan. See story, page 3. However, Gov. William Milliken's $4.85 billion general revenue budget for the fiscal year beginning in Oc- tober, retains many of the cuts im- plemented in the current austere spending plan. MEANWHILE, STATE depar- tment heads have been asked to shave $80 million from the current hard-times budget or risk further cuts in the spring. Budget Director Gerald Miller said the budget offers "key- new programs despite a year in which we expect only modest economic growth." The cautious document, which in- cludes the $125 million cost of the governor's property tax reform plan, is "in close harmony.. . with the views of . . . Michigan tax- payers," Miller said. BASED ON AN expected economic upswing later this year, the administration predicts general revenues for fiscal year 1981-82 of $4.97 billion - up from the current recession-depressed level of $4.5 billion. Total budget expenditures in- cluding federal moxpey are $10.5 billion.{ Despite this, the total general fund budget would be less than this year's when adjusted for inflation, Miller said. THE BUDGET retains $196.9 million of the reductions in state agencies adopted in this year's spending plan and anticipates a reduction of 500 in the state workfor- ce from current levels. Nearly $78 million in reductions are restored, however. Many of the proposals will un- dergo significant revision in the Democrat-dominated legislature, however, before they are enacted in- to law. Due to the deepening recession, Michigan's current budget - adop- ted only last month - was slashed by $1 billion from Milliken's original projection and fell below the previous year's spending level for the first time since the Great Depression. ..... Milliken .. plans 8.3 percent increase TODAY- Join the Daily S O YOU WANT to be a reporter? Come to one of the Daily's mass meetings tomorrow or Thursday. Daily editors will be at the East Lounge in Bursley Hall at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, waiting to meet prospective Daily staffers and explain what the Daily has to offer. There will be another mass meeting at 7:30 Nixon hall-of-fame The city of San Clemente, Calif., is paying tribute to for- mer President Richard Nixon with a brand new $800,000 museum. Inside there is a bronze bust of Nixon and two floors jam-packed with pictures and artifacts to remind San Clemente of the 11 years Nixon lived there. "We saw his value in being here because he did put us on the map and we had the reflected glory," said Charlie Ashbaugh, president of the San Clemente Historical Society. However, there is !nothingi in the newsui m w1m~hiph inrliej',tpa th~t Nin some advice on his retirement. He suggested that Carter keep busy, and engage in activities "that'll give him a chance to make observations, maybe some criticisms." Q Bugs Bunny tan Spring break is only a month away, but for those who can't wait to get that Florida tan, Oui magazine may be able to help. Last year, a Canadian firm developed Oro- Bronze tanning pills, capsules which' supposedly tan the the world belongs to a Los Angeles resident named "ZZ- ZZZ". The man apparently convinced the phone company that he was known to his friends as "ZZZZZ" because he fell asleep in class all the time. Thus, he became the last entry in the phone book, which was ZZZZZ's intention all the time. Now, he has an automatic answering machine with a humorous message to callers who dial his number (213) 836- 5566. Keep trying if you get a busy signal; after all, it may be one of the most frequently called numbers in the world.od I i I I