The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 4, 1980-Pag.5-A By MITCH STUART PBilly Frye became the University's vibe -president for academic affairs jh'July 1. His appointment comes at a time of extreme economic har- ~ipfor the University and the en- tru country. In an interview with Lq~ily staff writer Mitch Stuart, Frye dispussed his views on the problems cpofronting the University, and his w.responsibuities as vice-presi- DAILY: Whit is the major problem the University will face in the next few y' RYE: The major problem will be a cdnmlex set of things which you can d setibe in this way: Managing a no- 10owth or possibly shrinking budget in a'why that will maintain and hopefully even 4build quality programs within the Uiversity. YDAILY: How will you deal with this . tuation in your new capacity? tFRYE: It gets down to a question of pi egram management on all levels. Ad"for me it's going to mean very largely a matter of building an infor- mtion base and procedures that will A1lbw the University administration ahtd'the faculty to make the best jWdgments about where to put our rtibureds-and by implication, where tm 'thke them away-where to shrink Oidwhere to develop. .1YAILY: It was mentioned at the (June) Regents meeting that it will be veny" important to look at faculty piVtotions and tenure decisions to make sure the University doesn't make ep Frye discusses the 'U, 0 long-term commitments it can't keep. How important will fiscal restraint be in making those decisions? FRYE: Promotion decisions will be tougher-they have gotten tougher. How much tougher they will get I don't, know. My opinion is, in the parts of the University I know, that they've toughened up very substantially already, and it may well be that there is room for more tightening up of stan- dards. To this date, to my knowledge, we have not denied a promotion for budgetary reasons. It may well be that at some point we'll find ourselves facing that question of the University's financial need independently of faculty merit. I hope we will not reach the point where we review a young assistant professor's record and say, "This is a superb individual, but financial cir- cumstances prevent us from promoting this individual." If we do come to a point where there-has to be program reduction-if we were to discontinue an entire unit-then clearly, at least the non-tenured faculty in that unit would be discharged. And that clearly wouldn't be a question of merit, but a question of a decision largely motivated-but not entirely-by finan- cial reasons. I say "not entirely" because hopefully we would find a coin- cidence between the individual need of the institution and units that are less central and perhaps of weaker quality overall than others. DAILY: All the University ad- ministrators are very concerned about maintaining the University's drawing power for top-notch faculty. Billy Frye, vice-president for academic affairs program of high quality will remain the same size or grow. Quality is not com- mensurate with size or vice versa. Quality is a crfterion, but it is not an ultimate protector against budget reductions. " Demand. It is clearly a criterion to which we should respond. Some programs, such as computer science and business administration, will con- tinue to have the student enrollment and demand, unlike certain other areas. * Intellectual centrality. I can't imagine, for example, irrespective of whether students think there are jobs in the field or not, an English department below a certain size because of its cen- tral importance. Music, similarly. In- tellectual centrality is really two dif- ferent things: Centrality could mean that a field is central to the curriculum, say mathematics, and consequently it simple has a certain instructional load to bear, that's not likely to be modified. That's somewhat different than the role math as a subject plays in the scholarly life of an institution. Now they may coincide-math may be central in both senses, and I think it is-but they are somewhat different. " New areas. Nobody has a crystal ball, but we ought to be doing the best we can to judge what the potential in- tellectual development of a field is. If we see important new ideas surfacing, which should be given the opportunity to flourish and grow on this campus, then we've got a strong responsibility to encourage that possibility. You can't just use the kind of retrospective criterion of where a field is at. You have to also look and see where it is going. There has to be some creative ad- ministration. DAILY: A computer engineering graduate has a starting salary of more than $20,000 per year, but a humanities graduate has a hard time finding a job. How is that going to affect the ad- ministration's priorities? FRYE: I believe we have to be responsive to the student demand, and when enrollments go up as they presen- tly are in engineering and business, that has to be one of the considerations for the allocation of instructional resources. On the other hand, we must not pull back from the lower-enrolled areas unduly. You've also got to make sure that you dampen out the "short- run oscillation"-you don't want to make foolish decisions to grow here and shrink there only to have to turn around tomorrow and do it all over again. DAILY: What do you think of the phrase "education for education's sake?" FRYE: If it means what I think it means, I think everything of it. I think to look at education, particularly on the undergradaute level, simple in terms of employability is to take a very, very, narrow view of its potential. Daily staff Mitch Stuart covers Re- gents and University A dministration " for the Daily. ___ What will happen to that drawing power if promotions decrease? FRYE: Of course if the number of appointments we can make are reduced, then our opportunities to bring in outstanding new junior faculty will be decreased. What you have to do is balance these forces out as best you can. Some of the steps that will have to be taken are bound to work somewhat to our detriment. We will play the game in a manner that maintains or in- creases our position relative to our peer institutions-to manage this problem no worse than, and if possible, better than anybody else. DAILY: How is the uncertainty in the state's (fiscal 1980-81) higher education budget affecting your budget planning? FRYE: We are coming up against a decision very soon of whether to proceed with an extension of last year's budget or to go ahead and enact the budget for next year based upon our best prediction of what the state allocation might be. We're ready to have to decide by the July Regents meeting (July 17 and 18) because they will have to enact the budget-if we delay any longer than that we've effectively chosen to wait until the state acts. DAILY: Since program decisions are so vital, what kinds of criteria will you use to decide which programs to cut? FRYE: The notion of program reduction is in the air. What we haven't done is deal with the procedures and the strategic questions of how to go about it. We haven't really specifically set up criteria. But it's not as if I don't have some notion of those criteria; it's not as if we haven't thought about this often and long over the past several years. What kinds of criteria ought to affect whether a unit grows or is reduced? " Quality. You can't simply say that a MSA president urges ,students to activate other voices q'The University of Michigan is' frequently depicted as a large totporation. The University's Board of Regents is identical in design to Chrysler's Board of Directors. The ad- aninsstration performs like, and is as bureaucratic as GM's management. By extending the analogy we may liken the culty to workers in a factory. Even 'th all of these similarities there is a defective component in the analogy. While shareholders in a corporation bxert significant influence on the direc- tioneof their company, students at the Uhiversity of Michigan, one of the kawgest single bodies of investors in that ftvorporation," have very little impact on the governance of the institution. I have been told by administrators ji faculty members that the the University of Michigan would not exist f it were a democratic institution. How can the University teach its students democracy when it refutes the principle in its undemocratic attitudes and prac- tices? Today's students have lost the power to affect the direction of their Univer- sity. Unlike their predecessors of the 1960's, University of Michigan students 1Na'e not demanded their rights to par- ticipate in the governance of this in- Vtltution. The general complacency of y~. ' minority students can only be achieved by overhauling and re-humanizing the University's supportive services. We also believe that the elimination of racism in the institution can be facilitated by open forums that would uncover problems wherever they exist and discuss ways of solving them. The concern of students and MSA with course evaluations has been in- creasing in the last several years. As students have had virtually no influen- ce on the decisions of faculty hiring and promotion, and since we feel that these decisions are among the most impor- tant to students, MSA decided last year to initiate a program to allow students to evaluate their courses and professors. We felt that the former evaluation procedures were incon- sistent and inadequate. The initial ap- plication of the MSA course evaluation program proved a success with more than 85% of LSA students completing the questionaire. We intend to publish the results of the evaluation in Novem- ber for student use in selecting courses for the 1981 Winter Term. We also hope that the results of this survey will be acknowledged as the student viewpoint and eventually included in the faculty hiring and promotion decision-making process. A welcome from the mayor WELCOME TO ANN ARBOR FROM ALL 110,000 OF US "ANN ARBORITES!" We hope that you will find your new exciting and intellectually stimulating. city Ann Arbor and the -University of Michigan have literally grown up together and the "town and growth" relationship is one that has flour- ished over the past 150 years. Many great people call or have called "Ann Arbor" home at one time or another. The University has the distinc- tion of having the largest body of living alumni of any university in the United States, so Ann Arbor is a well-known city for its size. High technology research and manufactur- ing firms along with tourism, retail stores and the University form the backbone of our com- merce. Our citizens come from every State in the Union, and our many international cit'zens give the city a cosr opolitan flavor encompass- ing many lifestyles. Whether it is a crisp autumn afternoon in Michigan Stadium, a beer with friends at one of the many "watering holes;" Eugene Ormandy filling Hill Auditorium with wonderful sounds; a moring browsing in one of the many book stores; or just lazying in the sun on the "Diag"--all of these and many more delicious experiences will be yours. Enjoy! Louis Belcher, mayor, City of Ann Arbor Sincerely, Louis D. Belcher Mayor SUSSMANRE VIEWS THE GRAD SCHOOL Ag newcomer's guide to Rackham Marc Breakstone,, Michigan Student Assembly President e U of M student body has resulted in a recession of many of the innovative pcademic changes that were evolved 4pr~ing previous years. Students can ,nake a creative contribution to the gpyernance of the University, yet we mt keep in mind that an effective student role in University decision- making is not a privilege that is gran- -0d, but rather a task that must con- stantly be pursued. The focal point for the organization of student interests on campus is the ,Michigan Student Assembly. As the all- caipus student government at the Vniversity of Michigan, MSA has 'become the most effective advocate of student needs in the University com- jinity. Our basic responsibility is to you, the student. Within this framework for action, we can foresee no limits to a-ur efforts to satisfy the needs of ,students. In order for us to be effective, 4hmwever, we rely on your participation Sand support. 6 At present several issues on campus '1iave captured the attention of student concern. MSA has historically been one of the most active advocates of the rAinpds of minority students in the The Michigan Student Assembly is equally concerned with issues regar- ding the quality of student life at the University. The Ann Arbor housing crisis and its effects on students is one of them. Rents in Ann Arbor are exhor- bitant and housing facilities are generally inferior. In response to this dilemma, MSA, along with PIRGIM and the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union, is organizing a tenants' rights conference for October. We hope that this con- ference will serve as a springboard to initiate more efforts to solve the housing problem. Other important issues that MSA will be addressing this year are strengthening campus security, chan- neling student input into the Michigan Union renovation, improving health services, and increasing student study space on campus. The Michigan Student Assembly's ef- forts will be futile without the active support and participation of all studen- ts on campus. In addition to your fun- damental obligation as a student to get involved in these activities, you have an even greater obligation to yourself to enhance vour educational exnAriene The University of Michigan's reputation as a premiere institution of higher learning is based on a unique admixture of excellent undergraduate and graduate programs. All graduate programs leading to the Ph.D. and M.A. degrees, and some other professional doctoral and master's programs, are supervised by the, Graduate School. The Graduate School confers about 600 doctoral degrees and 2,100 master's degrees annually, representing over 120 separate graduate programs, which include departmental offerings as well as ap- proximately 30 interdisciplinary programs. While the work of students toward their degrees is taken in depar- tments and interdisciplinary programs, certain policies and procedures are set by the Graduate School. What are these special functions? The major role of the Graduate School, performed in conjunction with the other schools and colleges and the departments and programs, is to en- sure the high quality of Michigan graduate degrees. This is accomplished by the efforts of its Executive Board, which consists of faculty members, students, and administrators who deliberate weekly through the school year. Policies which are set by the Graduate School include those that relate to admissions decisions, fellowship and dissertation support, the establishment and evaluation of new Alfred Sussman, Rackham Graduate School Dean ensure better communication. Graduate students seeking information regarding supplemental financial assistance with budgeting, or help in locating other resources available to graduate students, are encouraged to use this counseling service whether- or not they are receiving direct financial assistance from the Office of Financial Aid. While graduate students may still make appointments at the Office of Financial Aid (2100 SAB), they may also take advantage of the counseling services at Rackham. Minority Affairs. This office places special emphasis on minority recruit- ment and retention. It works to ensure that in addition to their academic programs, graduate minority students have access to "personal and academic counseling, to opportunities for fellowship awards and teaching or research assistantships, and to cultural and social events within the com- munity. Also, under the auspices of Dean Deskins, is the Minority Advisory Committeescharged with advising the Dean and Executive Board on all academic and administrative issues pertaining to graduate minority affairs. Women's Affairs. The Women's Af- fairs component of the Office of Student Affairs is charged with adising the Dean and Executive Board of all aspec- ts of the graduate experience of women; particularly, admissions and 1980 issue of Rackham Reports, a jour- nal produced by the Graduate School to this subject. As a way of introducing the functions of the Graduate School to students in more detail, the separate offices con- cerned with these functions will be described below. The Graduate Admissions Office. The Graduate Admissions Office (110 Rackham, 764-8129) is responsible for coordinating graduate admissions fun- ctions, recording the reporting ad- mission date, providing foreign ad- mission services, and conducting studies which contribute to admission Office of Student Affairs. The Office .of Student Affairs assists students and departments by administering the sup- port services component of the Graduate School. Included within this component are Fellowships, Minority Affairs, Women's Affairs and Academic Appeals. Fellowships. The Fellowship Office is responsible for the administration, ac- counting and processing of a variety of fellowships which include the following: University Fellowships, University Fellowships for Minority Students, First Year/Michigan College Fellowships, Barbour Fellowships for