OPINION Page 4. Sunday, September 26, 1982- The Michigan Daily Bo's boys, profs don't get the goods HOW DO YOU graduate from the Uni- versity and not earn a degree? It's sim- ple-just join the football team. It seems that Coach Bo Schembechler's record of graduating his players is not quite as good as he claimed. After Sports Illustrated said in August that more than 40 percent of Bo's former Wolverines who made it to the pros never earned a degree, the coach called time- out. This week, the Daily discovered that the sports magazine was a little careless in its research, but it had the right idea. University records show that 31 percent of the former Wolverines in the National Football League never graduated.. Both Bo and his recruiting assistant, who was preparing a resporse to Sports Illustrated, were certain that the figure should have been around 15 percent. When the coach found that a few of the players whom he counted as official graduates actually are still a few credits short of degrees, Bo wasn't bummed. Bo says that if a guy only needs to make up an incomplete or take another class to earn a diploma, it's as good as graduating. When that ex-Wolverine really needs that sheepskin, he'll have the drive, the determination, the guts to come back and get it. And if Bo's team comes marching down the field 80 yards for the game-winning score, but is stopped on fourth and goal, it just wouldn't be fair for those referees to say the boys didn't score. Better punt, Bo. Shouting match W HAT WAS billed as a "silent march" Friday to mourn the slaughter two weeks Doiiv Photo by JEFF SCHRIER A very noisy silent march. Laboratories, W.E. Lay Automotive Laboratory, and the North Campus Library Stacks. Engineering a move TENURE IS often considered the "golden key" to University job security, but four professors recently learned that-at least tem- porarily-they're going to be locked out. The professors-all from schools under budgetary review-were promoted without tenure, a move that angered much of the faculty. On Monday, the faculty Senate Assem- bly unanimously endorsed a letter opposing the promotions. Tenure review usually comes after seven years of teaching at the University, although it can come before. None of the four professors has taught for more than five years; the promotions are controversial, however, because the administration ignored advice from departments recommending that tenure be granted. Some faculty members fear that this method of promotion will weaken the University tenure policy. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, however, defended the ad- ministration's decision to withhold tenure. "It's not in any way against University policy," he said. "We're simply trying to keep these (positions) open until the reviews, are finished." In other words, they're being kept under lock and key. Guess who's coming ? P OLITICS MAKES strange bedfellows. Political conferences at the University make them even stranger. An odd couple-former Presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter - will team up on campus in February for a special forum. The old rivals will bury the political hatchet to co- chair a domestic policy conference at the North Campus Gerald Ford Presidential Library. If that sounds impressive, just look at this fall's warm-up act. In November, such State Department luminaries as Dean Rusk, William Rogers, Edmund Muskie, and Alexander Haig & PF7 i ago of Palestinian refugees deteriorated into a shouting match between Arab'and pro-Israeli students. Leaders of several Arab student groups who organized the demonstration said the silent march was a memorial to those civilians mur- dered by Christian militiamen in Beirut. But shortly into the march, some of the 200 protestors began to yell slogans blasting Israel's invasion of Lebanon. Students supporting Israel's moves coun- tered with their own shouts when the march en- tered the Diag. The yelling culminated in near violence when one undergraduate mounted a bench to address the crowd. "Fuck you all," he urged the demonstrators. Friday's march finished a full week of organized anti-Israel demonstrations and programs, including several .speeches con- demning alleged Israeli involvement in the Beirut massacre. One speaker, Joe Stork, the editor of a small magazine on Middle Eastern affairs, charged that the United States had conspired with Israel in coming up with its in- vasion plans. Lock and key REMEMBER ALL the skinny guys walking around campus with calculators hanging off their belts and slide rules in their pockets? You bumped into them because their glasses had fallen off the bridge of their noses. Good old engineering students. Well, those days are gone. The engineering department is on its way to North Campus, and with it goes quite a bit of big bucks. The state legislature passed a bill this week clearing the way for construction of a new $29 million classroom and office complex on North Campus. The bill provided a mere $100,000 to finish plans on the complex, which will be com- pleted in six months. Construction will begin by next summer, and last two and a half years, according to top calculator punchers. In addition, all those chemical scholars will be able to bump into the walls of their newly refurnished North Campusfacilities. Improved places will include the G.G. Brown Haig: To visit here in November also will gather at the Ford library for a con- ference on foreign policy. Although both forums have impressive casts and are bound to attract national media atten- tion, they are unrelated. The presidential pairing is the culmination of a nationwide series of town meetings, while the foreign policy conference is being sponsored by the Gerald Ford Foundation. i*Y The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers Andrew Chapman, Julie Hinds, David Meyer, Fannie Weinstein, and Barry Witt. i Ube im itdentsan iatiga Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Screams of delight-or of terror Vol. XCIII, No. 16 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board MS dilscrimination: degrees in hypocrisy To the Daily: A few days ago I was working in my office, when I heard screams coming from the hallway. It was 1:30 p.m., a safe time, and the woman was goofing around with some friends-a sort of primeval mating game. These thoughts ran through my mind, until I decided that the screams were lasting too long. I was met by two other people as I ran out of my office to find out what the problem was. The woman, we discovered, was grabbed by a man who tried to kiss her. Fortunately, she was carrying a metal object, with which she hit the man. He pushed her down and ran away. We arrived too late to hear anything but the story. When I returned to my office, I felt pretty bad that I had not responded to her call more quickly. She could have been trapped in that East Engineering stairwell with a man with a knife, gun, stick, etc. Or she could have been dragged away. But I also associated the in- cident with the "boy who cried wolf" fable. No one hears screams anymore because they are far too common and un- warranted. There were people sitting in the office next to mine who laughed when they first heard her-another girl acting silly. Under usual circumstances, their assessment would have been correct. At the University, the response to this incident would be to form a task force to "look, into" in- creased security on campus. On a more personal level, women might elect to carry weapons-mace, tear gas, a knife-to ensure their safety. Before this happens, though, it would behoove every female screamer to analyze why she per- forms her strange vocal act. And if the screams are caused by flir- tation, exuberance, or anything along those lines, perhaps these women could learn to shut their mouths or, better yet, to laugh. If screams came only from people who needed help. the response time would be much faster, injuries reduced, and more criminals caught. -Maureen Fleming Sept. 23' 0I M ICHIGAN STATE University student John Nowack learned quite a lesson from his college. He learned not to count on open- mindedness, consistency, or fair play. How could one school teach one student so much? It's easy when you play by MSU's underhanded rules. When Nowack was kicked out of his fraternity for being a homosexual, he turned for help to the first source that came to mindi-the supposedly lear- ned, equitable MSU administration. He thought, naturally, that his university would eliminate such a narrow-minded discriminatory practice from its cam- pus. Nowack received a rude shock. MSU president Cecil Mackey upheld the fraternity's decision to throw Nowack out, claiming that fraternities and sororities were not under university jurisdiction. Mackey's position could have been chalked up to callous indifference if he had stuck to his policy of non- intervention in the affairs of Greek- letter societies. In fact, he has shown himself only too willing to intercede- when the pressure comes from a dif- ferent minority. MSU recently rushed to place another fraternity on probation for putting an advertisement in a student newspaper that included what might be called a "Little Black Sambo" doll. That move to stamp out racism was honor on the university; it merely ser- ved to illustrate MSU's hypocrisy. In condemning the racist slur, MSU announced that fraternity behavior must remain "consistent with the ex- pectations of the university in race relations and human relations." But MSU's expectations have nothing in common with consistency- they're high when it comes to race, but they're nonexistent where sexual preference is concerned. MSU taught Nowack that a college can write its own rules. MSU's rules happen to include that some minorities are more important than others; that discrimination must be stopped, but only when doing so isn't awkward or embarrassing; that whatever's fair in MSU boils down to what Cecil Mackey and his gang are in the mood for. Nowack got the message. He's decided to drop his efforts to be rein- stated in his fraternity, saying he wan- ts to spare his family any further suf- fering. Nowack learned his lesson. Now he won't expect people to accept him without prejudice. He won't expect in- stitutions of enlightment and advan- cement to protect him from bigotry and ignorance. For anyone else wanting a quick course in discrimination, why start with MSU's inane, immature frater- nities? Go right to the source, where hypocrisy is fostered-take a lesson Letters and columns represent the opinions of the individual author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the altitudes or beliefs of the Daily. _.i Wasserman *I A TfEHCF1',o&ICAL 'ThRE-AT To HUMN~A L IV IIIZ.ATiWtN 0 -air PoW OF V ATH / ST PIN THE M.ARCH OF SCIETII IT '5 M TR AI4INe CONQUERI NG 4 IT'S MAN TAM~ING NATURE /1 0 146 1zORCeS OF LIFEif - - IELF/ t(AN STANPD oAtNA"C G 0 o 0o 0 O0 O w .G 3 I