PIRGIM friends and The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, March 1, 1983-Page 5 foes battle over By BILL SPINDLE The University Regents had a stack of 12,000 petition signatures dumped in their laps Thursday by friends and foes of the Public Interest Research Group iii Michigan. "From the petitions presented, there appears to be more interest among the campus public in seeing PIRGIM boun- ced off student verification forms as a means of fund-raising than in giving the organization a stronger donation system. TWO MEMBERS of the Student Committee for Reform and Progress (SCRAP) - the organization that says PIRGIM has an unfair advantage in its use of University forms to collect donations - said their group gathered more than 7,000 signatures in their recent drive. PIRGIM is "a special-interest group and they are using our registration Wystem to raise money," said Raymond Despres, a SCRAP Organizer. "Studen- ts are tired of being hassled in registration lines." ' Forrest Fernandez, another SCRAP leader, also urged the Regents not to renew PIRGIM's contract when it, comes up for consideration this spring. "WE ARE not out to get PIRGIM - we want it to be fair," Fernandez said. "We are running into the problem of PIRGIM overpowering other (student) organizations because of the Univer- sity's cooperation." PIRGIM members outnumbered SCRAP supporters at the Regents meeting, but the consumer organization could claim only 5,200 signatures in support of their proposal to strengthen their funding structure. PIRGIM is asking the Regents to ap- prove a system in which students would automatically be assessed the $2 fee on their tuition, but they could ask that the money be refunded if they desire. "PIRGIM has been severely ham- pered by the present system. The 'positive donation' simply doesn't work," said PIRGIM member Amy Gibons. "All other &(University) fees funding are mandatory, placing the PIRGIM fee at a distinct disadvantage." A SECOND emotional campus issue, divestment, also surfaced during the public comments portion of the regents meeting. Dennis Brutus, an English professor at Northwestern University and political exile from South Africa, urged the Regents to divest from companies operating in his native country. "I expect to return to my country when it is free. I ask you not to prolong the length of exile," lie said. "THE CORPORATIONS in which the University has invested are actively in- volved in the apartheid system," he said. "They supply the funds that make oppression possible." Brutus argued that if the real issue to the Regents is a matter of profit, then they should address the issue as such, rather than claiming their investments are aiding black South Africans. University President Harold Shapiro said the Regents will discuss the issue at its April meeting. ^3.a...- ""----e Iwl Uao CLEARANCE w 3 Dean tells Regents one-third cut too high (Continued from Page 1) most the school can handle. A 33 percent , cut would force the layoff of three to five tenured faculty members, Crowfoot said, even if the school cut its teaching assistants and administrative and clerical staffs by one third; did not replace professors approaching retirement; and left vacant the four positions now open in the school. BOTH FRYE and Crowfoot told the Regents that they hoped to finish the review as soon as possible. "The prolonging of this is the most destruc- tive part of the process," Frye said.' Also at their monthly meeting last week, the Regents created a new ad- Ministrative post to coordinate the ac- tivities of the medical school and the rapidly-changing University hospitals. The new vice provost for medical af- fairs will report to the vice president for academic affairs and provost. I Three of the Regents opposed the new position, on the grounds that the new administrator likely will not be worth the high salary he or she will command. President Harold Shapiro had said that the appropriate person for the post could make in excess of $100,000 per year. "YOU'RE TALKING about a very high-priced person and a high-priced staff," said Regent Gerald Dunn (D- Garden City). "I can't justify that in these times." Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey) said the position would be redundant, with existing administrative positions. "We have a dean of the medical school and a director of the hospital. I don't see why they can't do the work of the vice provost," Brown said. But five other members of the board agreed with Frye and Shapiro's conten- tion that the vice provost would be able to find enough savings within the $300 pillion medical school and hospitals budget to make his or her high salary worthwhile. IN OTHER action concerning the medical school, the Regents approved a cut in first-year student enrollment by 30 people next year. The reduction is part of a larger plan to cut enrollment by 60 students and raise tuition as much as $1,000 within five y.ears. Medical school officials said the reduction is needed to counter a lack of state funds and to make room for more students participating in clinical programs at state hospitals. The Regents refused to adopt the second phase of the plan, saying that a large enrollment decline might cause the state to cut some of the University's appropriation. They also complained that the report they received was am- biguous in points and did not fully ex- plain the ramifications of an enrollment cut. By a 6-2 vote, the Regents decided to adopt only the first year of the plan, dropping enrollment from 237 to 207 students next fall. The remainder of the proposal will come up for consideration again later this year, after the Univer- sity knows how the state reacts to the enrollment cut.6 THE REGENTS also made official last week what most administration ob- servers have known for a long time: Billy Frye is one step above the other vice presidents. To his title of vice president for academic affairs, the Regents dubbed Frye "provost," making him second only to the president in the University's ad- ministrative hierarchy: In one other action, the Regents ap- proved the investment of up to five per- cent of the University's endowment in high risk/high return, venture capital firms. The University will join with several other investors in the Michigan Investment Fund Limited Partnership to make the investments. NeW Hairstyles for '83 DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State ........668-9529 East U, at So. U.......... 662-0354 Arborland..............971-9975 Maple Village............761-2733 15-50% OFF LIST PRICES ON HUNDREDS OF SELECTED ITEMS, THROUGH MARCH 31. FEATURING.... 1 FLOOR----. CLOCK RADIOS DANSKINS JEWELRY LUXO LS-1A DESK LAMPS MICHIGAN INSIGNIA CLOTHING & SOUVENIRS SCHOOL SUPPLIES STUFFED ANIMALS SWISS ARMY KNIVES VIDEO GAME CASSETTES VITAMINS & HEALTH CARE PRODUCTS ri I, Fre ... powers expanded The University of North Carolina is the only other public university that currently invests in venture capital firms, according to an administration report. 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