4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, March 21, 1982. The Michigan Daily Reviewing for dollars: 3 schools hit THE WORD HAS come down from on high: The University has spread itself! too thin. And, in announcing late last week that three schools-Natural Resources, Education, and Art-were to be scrutinized for major cut- backs or possible elimination, administrators said "no more.", The move to review the schools and colleges is part of the, University ad- ministration's five-year plan to make the University smaller but better. Stage One of the plan involves $20 million in general fund cuts over the next five years. Stage Two of the plan will funnel those dollars back into University programs deemed most worthy. Charges to the committees that will review the schools and colleges, and the methods for review, are still in draft stages. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye admitted, however, that the preliminary questions directing the changes may need major revisions. Several vice presidential aides ex- pressed concern that the questions suggested bias against parts of the various schools.. "At this point, the initiation of a review means only that enough questions have been raised to warrant examinations of the possibility of significant program changes and. budgetary savings," Frye said. The school and college reviews are expected to begin in the next two weeks and will join smaller-scale reviews of three other University programs-the Institute for Labor and In- dustrial Relations, the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities, and the Center for the Continuing Education of Women. No more thinning; many more cuts. And professors collectively agreed in their CESF responses that they were unhappy over last year's salary distribution. Professors labored over the fact that they want more voice -in determining who gets what salary increase. This financial discontent may leave the door open for future faculty efforts to gain clout over salary decisions-perhaps through a little in- formal bargaining. 'U' Hospital in trouble L ATELY IT SEEMS that nothing planted on Michigan soil can grow, no matter how well-nourished. The University's heralded Replacement Hospital Project, with its estimated fer- tilization budget of $285 million, is suddenly in danger of being perilously underfed. $140 million worth of state-issued bonds needed for payment on the hospital's construc- tion have not yet been sold. These bonds must be sold by the beginning of the 1983 calendar year, or the budding growth of the project will come to a screeching halt, according to University officials. High national interest rates and a sluggish Michigan economy are the prime factors keeping the bonds unsold and the project's future in jeopardy. In addition, there are $100 million worth of previously issued state bonds sitting in Lansing that must be sold to the in- vestment community before the University's bonds can go on the market. The project's gardeners were ambigious on the implications of this latest harvest of bad news. Most said the hospital was important enough to state legislators to eventually receive alternate sources of money if the bond scheme failed. Other financial green thumbs would not give odds on the future of the project, however, and saw little way the state would find alternate funds. Report to the Regents EPORTS AND EXPLANATIONS of reports. University Regents come to town two days each month to get a hefty dose of them. They certainly had their fill this week. Among now-familiar discussions of budget crises were two reports presented annually to the Regents-one on campus minority enrollment and the second an update of the University's investments in firms with South African subsidiaries. Included in the minority report was the following: The percentage ofjlack students on campus has declined from 92 percent in Fall 1980 to 4.9 percent in Fall 1981. Overall minority student enrollment went up from 9.1 percent to 9.2 percent in the same time period-primarily because of an increase in the number of Asian students. During presentation of a second report, two Regents complained that the University has been too lax in enforcing its 1978 anti-apartheid guidelines governing investment in companies that do business in South Africa. The guidelines require that the University sell its stock in companies that don't move toward desegregating work facilities, equalizing pay, and developing training programs for blacks in their South African subsidiaries. Regents Nellie Varner and James Waters said- investigations of the actions of 42 com- panies that fell under the guidelines show disappointing efforts on the part of a number of those firms. They suggested that the Univer- sity divest from problem companies. "We're falling down on our objectives," Var- ner said. It's hard to get anything done with so many reports. Labor at home, abroad U NITED AUTO WORKERS President Douglas Fraser came to campus Tuesday and said that his union is on a collision-course abroad and at home-with Japan and with the Reagan administration. Fraser came to Ann Arbor to participate in' this week's U.S.-Japan Automotive Industry Conference. Speaking at Hill Auditorium, Fraser blamed Japan for much of the auto in- dustry's current troubles. Fraser called 0 4 Union poll: A measure of faculty discontent? Unrest, but no union THERE'S NO need to look for the union label on University professors yet. A sur- vey released Monday by the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty showed that 67 percent of faculty members don't want a union. The CESF's results also revealed that a sur- rising number of professors don't even care about a union-only 33 percent of the faculty bothered to lift pen to paper to answer the sur- vey. The poll was sparked by last term's petitions from art history and physics professors asking faculty governance groups to look into union possibilities. The professors who initiated the petitions, however, hinted they were more concerned with airing salary grievances than in starting up collective bargaining. Fraser;:Blasts away - current Japanese competition "lopsided and discriminatory." Congressional trade restric- tions should be passed to halt the Japanese threat, Fraser said, adding, "I don't believe we should sacrifice our auto workers for the pri i- ciples of free trade." Fraser, in an exclusive interview with the, Daily, hinted that the Reagan administration was also on the road to destroying the labor: movement in America. Fraser described'' Reagan's handling of the air traffic controllers' strike as "one of the most brutal strike-., breaking activities in, the history of the labor. movement." The -president won't destroy the-,: UAW, Fraser added, because "we are just too., strong." Following his University appearance, Fraser hurried back to negotiations with - General Motors, where he will presumably drive home a few more points. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily editors Afidrew Chapman and Julie Hinds -. and former Daily editor Julie Engebrecht' Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan SSinclair , I 'I . _ "- Vol. XCI1, No. 134 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Detestable violence As SPECIAL LA TO iTBE QfIhCE OF TH AssISTANT PUTY D OF vU BLC INFORMAThN T+ARTMENoTHE AS THEY SUCCEEDED. They drove the neo-Nazis out of Ann Arbor. Our beautiful, peaceful, lovefilled hideaway was preserved from the violent, repulsive, racist hatred of the neo-Nazis. The peace-seeking inhabitants of Ann Arbor, who came out in full force today to keep the community free of hate, created a spectacle as disgusting as any neo-Nazi could have presented. They drove the Nazi hatred from our Ann Arbor streets-with clubs, rocks, and abuse-all in the best fascist tradition. The whole episode was revolting. From the very beginning of the City Hall rally, violence was in the air. Marchers- arrived carrying baseball bats and nightsticks. Speakers gave brief explanations on first aid treat- ment for beating victims. There was never a doubt as to what those counter- demonstration groups wanted-and they got it. They got action. They got violence. They got bloodshed. The crowd outside the Federal Building prepared itself; for a violent confrontation, and then put that training to the test. The result was as ugly a scene as anyone could wish for the Ann Arbor community. Almost certainly the various op- position groups are claiming victory over the neo-Nazis. These groups called upon the local community to help them fight the bigotry and hatred of the Nazis, and then used the min- dless fury of the crowd to fulfill their predictions of confrontation. That was their victory. The scene at the Federal Building was violence for violence's sake. The Nazis have no copyright on hatred. The methods of the crowd were as base and as low as the ideology of the Nazis. As a minority, the neo-Nazis were an easy target for people swayed by violent ac- tions. So now the neo-Nazis will never again march in Ann Arbor. Meanwhile, we all have been saved from the violence, bigotry, and hatred that could have overtaken our community. The irony in this is all too apparent. When the militant groups proclaim victory over the neo-Nazis in Ann Ar- bor, they are, in essence, proclaiming a victory for the violent ideology of those very same neo-Nazis, and that is no victory at all. UNDERsECRTA I FR F C~ E~ OFKCE O F %AGEMENTJ ANP G I !\ AYTNOR1ZETo ATR\\EAGo AINST 9OJF f\55 E~- O& Thc1E\S FUs -MOCEEI'I& SuCCES5 FULL I J SON A DVISOR tE ACT IN& OF THE OEATIONS ET I i SICLAa K I A'/ LETTERS TO THE DAILY Invading the oilfields is ridiculous To the Daily: I understand that courses at the University are being reduced, but I didn't realize that all study of morality had ceased. Dan Aronoff's article "Is it time to move in on Mideast Oil?" (Daily, March 13) is the most immoral (and impractical) idea I have come across in ten years of sub- scribing to the Daily. By what right would we "oc- cupy the Persian Gulf oil fields"? Just because we need the oil? Whose oil is it? By the same reasoning, Russia should occupy Kansas and Nebraska. They need wheat just as badly as we need oil. If we descend to the moral level of our so-called enemies, we then become no better than those enemies.. *Even if you can swallow the immense immorality of such a move, it is completely imprac- tical. If we couldn't even pull off the rescue. of a few hostages in that region, how could we occupy the oil fields? What do you think the Russians would be doing during this occupation? A quick glance at the globe will indicate that the Russians are a few thousand miles closer than we are to the Persian Gulf. It is of in- terest that the Soviets have the largest standing army to walk to'- the Gulf if necessary. The article just below Aronoff'sI call to the Gulf was revealing. Its last sentence was, "A super- power, in fact, can back up what it wants with enough space age influence and metallic manhood to char our entire world into a desert." Then nobody would need oil. -Ruth Parks March 16 a Pot shots at leftists To the Daily: On Sturdav March 13 T at- 'Delano Roosevelt, Tip O'Neill, -,-'9 g -z-