OPINION 1, Page 4 Wednesday, February 11, 1981 The MichiganDaily Edited g stichigan t Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Rescue EEO from 'U' cuts Vol. XCI, No. 113 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Demonstrators don't look at total budget, picture HE DEMONSTRATORS in Monday's rally against budget euts, tuition hikes, and layoffs not only exhibited a shortsighted and super- :"ficial approach to a complex problem, but came off as being just plain silly. Instead of supporting logical or well- thought alternatives to the Univer- sity's present budget-cutting plans, the protesters advocated, very sim- plistically, no budget cuts at all. They seem to have completely forgotten about the state's current financial crisis axing more than $12 million from the University's budget. The protesters insisted that students should not be subjected to tuition hikes,; no programs should be cut, and no members of the staff should be laid off. Their solution to waylay the budget problems? Make cuts in the ad- rhinistration. ' It is true that before cuts are made from any academic programs, all waste must be trimmed from the ad- ministration. There is no reason for the administration to thrive if academic portions of the University are going to suffer. But to greatly cut ad- ministrators' salaries, as was suggested, would undercut the quality of the University. Administrative positions, like any others, are com- pNtitive. And in order to maintain qtUlty members of the Univer- sity--staff, faculty, or ad- ministrators-the University must be able to compete for their services. Another objection raised was the $50,000 used for President Harold shapiro's inauguration. What the demonstrators neglected to realize, hiowever, is the importance of the event for alumni and other individuals who, after attending the ceremony, have donated money to the University. I If members of the group wished to liave a realistic impact on future changes of the University, they picked the wrong way to do it. If they had a logical and rational reason behind their protests, more people would listen to them. As their protest stands now-tauting opposition to budget cuts, tuition hikes, and layoffs in a time of budget crisis-it is very ineffective. An example of this simple-minded approach was evidenced by rally speaker Donna Stern. "The University will not give us anything out of the goodness of its heart-it will only cough up the money if it is backed up against the wall," she said. Perhaps Stern could enlighten the University community on these vast resources that the institution is hoarding. Given the state's bleak financial situation, like the proverbial turnip, no blood can be squeezed out of the University. One of the biggest disappointments of the rally, was its endorsement by the Michigan Student Assembly. With MSA President Marc Breakstone leading the pack, the assembly has also taken a simple, incomplete look at a complex issue. The importance of student input in budget-making decisions cannot be stressed enough. It is unfortunate that MSA has chosen to endorse such an illogical fight. After being part of such irrational rhetoric, how does Breakstone expect to sit down with the University's budget priorities commit- tee and be taken seriously? The students need a legitimate voice pulling for them as cutbacks are plan- ned. By endorsing Monday's fiasco,' MSA has taken a toll on its credibility.r Whether the protesters are willing to accept it or not, cutbacks are going to have to be made. As state ap- propriations shrink, the University will have to adapt. It is better to plan for them now-through a smaller and bet- ter University-than to have to declare an emergency situation as Cecil Mackey did at Michigan State. The answers to the University's financial problems are not simple. Ignoring this fiscal crisis will not make it go away. The best way to live with these cutbacks, however, is for studen- ts to take a responsible part in the decision making process-for everyone to look at the total picture. As Director of the Evaluation & Examinations Office for the past seventeen years I found the February 6 Michigan Daily article on proposed Center for Research on Learning and Teaching cutbacks, including the elimination of my own position, of more than ordinary interest. Though no fault of the reporter, Sue Inglis, the article contains several errors that should be corrected. Before mentioning some of them it is worth noting that EEO's affiliation with CRLT has been short (since 1976) and slight. For exam- ple, Bill McKeachie, Director of CRLT (109 E. Madison Street) has visited EEO's main of- fice (3014 Rackham Building) only once, and, as the material below will suggest, his under- standing and appreciation of EEO functions is limited. Because of this, termination of the EEO- CRLT connection has been under con- sideration for over two years. Until the last year or so, very few at the University even suspected there was any relationship between EEO and CRLT. BECAUSE EEO and CRLT activities are quite separate, faculty members who favor a sharply reduced CRLT budget would nor- mally not expect EEO services to be af- fected. The year before EEO and I became associated with CRLT and Bill McKeachie, 1975-76, EEO's entire salary budget was $51,569, this year it is only $47,598. The budget for the corresponding testing unit at Michigan State University is about six times larger. From discussions with testing officers at other major universities, it seems safe to say that all offices have essentially the same ac- tivities we have at the University. The average staff size in Big Ten testing offices is about 13 full-time employees; over the past seven years at the University we have had an average of about 2.7 full-time employees. In short, we are smaller and better. WE BELIEVE EEO has given the Univer- sity excellent service over the years. Disper- sal of our closely interrelated regular ac- tivities would almost certainly cost the University much more, not less, even if a few activities were eliminated or reduced. Although I am providingedetailed infor- mation to the CRLT Review Committee, several points published in the Daily article merit explication. Daily reporter Sue Inglis mentions four current EEO activities. Ac- tually, only two of them are among the fif- teen EEO activities outlined in my Jan. 23 memo to the CRLT Review Committee. For tight budget,, small staff, and related reasons we no longer attempt to "provide in- formation to the faculty about students' characteristics and achievements," nor do we "administer national tests such as the SAT, MCAT, and GRE" as reported in the Daily. Inglis obtained her information on EEO ac- tivities "from McKeachie's written proposal" on possible CRLT budget cuts. My copy of the By Benno Fricke McKeachie proposal indicates, as she says, that "admissions and placement testing'' could not be turned over to the Orientation Of- fice. But the staff of that office is not qualified to do this work. WITH PROPER supervision orientation personnel could administer the tests to- students, yet that is only the first and least complicated step in the proper handling of counseling and placement tests and test scores. Some of the others are: " placing students on the basis of test scores and other data into appropriate introductory courses and sections; * providing academic counseling offices with test score reports; " conducting the necessary research to determine suitable standards for placing students. EEO employs graduate and undergraduate students on an hourly basis to administer these tests (from detailed directions we provide); there is no special problem with the' test-giving aspect. Perhaps even more indicative of McKeachie's lack of interest in and'concern over EEO activities is his notion that we ad- minister "the SAT, MCAT, and GRE." It is certainly surprising to see the SAT mentioned because EEO has not administered a single SA T to anyone for over twenty-five years. In 1955, the year I joined EEO, we gave the SAT to all entering freshmen during the Sep-. tember Orientation Program for new studen- ts.) On several occasions since 1976 I reviewed the tests EEO handles with McKeachie. He did not get the incorrect SAT idea from me. Also, almost two years ago I discontinued my role as the Ann Arbor area supervisor for administration of graduate-professional national selection tests (GRE, LSAT, and MCAT). In the early Spring of 1979 I arranged to have responsibility for this testing activity taken over by Cal Dyer of the University School of Education. He has handled these tests since April 1979. McKeachie was fully in- formed of the transferal of this activity. In- deed, he even mentioned it in a letter to me dated March 23, 1979. Here is the pertinent part: "I do appreciate your getting Cal Dyer to handle the test administration for the future." Accordingly, it is puzzling, if not distur- bing, to read in McKeachie's January 1981 proposal about one of the ways he thinks EEO-CRLT dollars can be saved. As Inglis notes, McKeachie says he will "try to per- suade Prof. Cal Dyer of the School of Education to assume responsibility for. national tests." As indicated above, Dyer was approached and persuaded almost two years ago! No new saving here. It is often -not clear what some ad- ministrators are thinliing about when they make important decisions affecting quality and cost factors. In this general connection readers of the Daily may be interested in knowing that McKeachie's proposals are very similar to those made about ten years ago by Stephen Spurr, former Dean of the Graduate School and Vice president for academic ser- vices at the' University during another tough time financially. After I questioned - Spurr's ill-considered and arbitrary decision, President Robben Fleming appointed a five-member faculty committee to make a thorough study of the matter. This they did over a four-month period during which they held weekly meetings. Their first recommendation to the ad- ministration, a unanimous one they said, was "that all of the present functions of the Office of Evaluation and Examinations be continued and be administered as a single ad- ministrative unit." Factors they took into ac- count were summarized by the Committee as follows: This first recommendation is based primarily on the fact that the severalfunctions of E and E are so interdependent as ,to make it both unwise and uneconomical to disperse them. Equally important, the supposition that the multiple activities of E and E could be dispersed among several units (or could be transferred intact to a single unit) ignores the fact that several of its fun- ctions require considerable specialized, professional com- petence not to be found at present in any other existing unit. Apparently, previous decisions in relation to E and E have been made without any clear perception of the scope of its functions. 0 The proposals of Spurr were not implemen- ted by the University administration. The situation today is not unlike what it was in 1971. In a nutshell, what counts most at the University, quality work or being a subser- vient-organization man (or woman?) Benno Fricke is the director of the University 's Evaluation and Examinations Office. Both his office and job have been targeted by the University for elimination. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Crowds at SPH library S V V .5 .5 / '4. A Unsigned editorials appearing on the left side of this page represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board. Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the attitudes or beliefs of the Daily.- AE bAY, NO HE ' NAN'T PUT MR. CARTER IN PRIb0M % -TREIR POLITICAL bYbTEM I& & GIT DIFERENT FROM OURS d o To the Daily: In light of the recent controver- sy over the use of the Law School Library, I find it necessary to respond from a slightly different point of view. We, as graduate students in the School of Public Health, have a small, but quite different library system for our everyday use. However, with increasing enrollment within our depart- ments in the last two years, our library is no longer able to ac- commodate our own students plus the "wave" of non-Public Health students who make their presence known. Realizing that the Public Health Library is administered through the University Library system, we have restricted our feelings about this issue up to now. However, with the use of the Law Library by non-law students now in question, we feel the time is appropriate to voice our coin- ciding problem. On behalf of the Public Health Student Association, we support the concerns of the Law School studentscand their SenateSub- committee, and propose that the University of Michigan take a good look at the overall use and available space of the professional libraries on cam- pus. Within our own library, over- crowding is much more evident during certain exam periods, and this problem will now be dealt with accordingly. However, we do not intend to restrict the use of our library for those needing the necessary resources. The time to act is now, before the problem becomes an even bigger headache. We are open for suggestions and comments. -Paul Moss President, School of Public Health Student Association February 8 i j 4 l c now 4 f - o' i Stop Nazi terrorism Housing and Peterson To the Daily: Every year at this time, students in Ann Arbor find them- selves pounding the streets, speaking to building managers, surveying various holes-in-the- wall, camping out for days in front of the rental agencies, bewildered at the, phenomenal and exhorbitant rent increases and worrying about whether they can get Mom and Dad to pay the little bit more or whether they will have to get a third job. It is a rare person indeed that hasn't now, the majority of City Council members have been impervious to the needs of a very important part of this community. Lowell Peterson, City Council candidate in the First Ward, is someone who believes in the im- portance of decent, reasonable housing. Peterson feels that enormous housing costs threaten the character of our community. It is important to get a person on City Council who cares about this issue. We would like to add our support to this campaign and To the Daily: The neo-Nazis of West Ger- many have declared open season on Jews. They have threatened to murder two innocent Jewish citizens this Valentine's Day if a ransom of $6.9 million is not paid toward the legal defense of Adolph Hitler's right-hand man, Rudolf Hess. Such a gesture must not go unchallenged if the world is to be rid of Nazi terror. It is not only up to the West German government to keep the Nazis in check. It is the respon- sibility of ourselves, the mem- bers of the human race, inhabitants of a planet which cannot survive with prejudice and terrorism. We all must act NOW, before nessed less than forty years ago. Praise is due tokThe Michigan Daily for its quick, decisive ac- tion culminating in the editorial on Thursday, February 5. Th2 Daily 'has shown leadership in speaking out when the mass media in general has kept silent. To believe that the consequen- ces of Nazi activity is restricted to only Germans and Jews is@ naive and dangerous. At present, the Ku Klux Klan and the American Nazi Party boast a none-too negligible mem- bership and.-sponsor camps to teach their children of the dangers of "kikes" and "niggers." Followers of such hatreds must not be encouraged toward their goals for "White