OPINION Page 4 Sunday, September 25, 1983 The Michigan Daily The flour of Billy Frye's thought VICE PRESIDENT for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye's speeches are like sif- ted flour. They have to be examined very carefully to differentiate between the "flour" and the hot air. Frye's report to the faculty Senate Assembly last Mondy on the progress of the University's "five-year plan" is a perfect example. According to Frye, the worst phase of the budget cutting is over. "The period of uncer- tainty is past," he said. All right, if the worst is over, then there won't The Week n Review be any more major budget reviews, right? Well not exactly. What Frye said is that there will be no more reviews like those that the schools of natural resources, art, ane education had undergone. According to Frye, there are no major budget reviews planned for the immediate future, althczgh "that does not rule out the possibility." Time to begin sifting. Frye did not promise to end the budget reviews. He merely said that the structure of the reviews would change. He cited the length of the reviews as the cause for 90 percent of the problems enco.un- tered. "There is a great deal of room for im- provement in the review process," Frye said. ~ 7 K Sifting through this Frye-wpeak, one begins to wonder if the worst is really past or is the Un- versity taking a breather before it begins the next round of budget cuts? In any event, has the outlook really changed? Billy Frye may feel a bit more optimistic, but the deans of the various schools and colleges at the University are probably taking Frye's speech with a grain of salt or flour, if you like. Vice-President Hart? Once again it's time to strike up the band, hop on the bandwagon, toss your hat into the ring, and do all the other fun things associated with a presidential campaign. When Democratic presidential candidate Gary Hart rolled into town last Sunday, Ann Arbor got its first dose of the three p's of a political campaign: pledges, promises, and programs. Hart, a senator from Colorado promised the more than 400 people in the Union that he would establish a "Peace Corps II" to fight poverty in Central America. "The principle enemy is not communism," he said.,"IT IS POVERTY." The senator had just returned from a tour of Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador. He ac- cused the Reagan administration of having "the wrong policy for Central America, because it had focused on the wrong enemy." In addition to announcing his updated Peace Corpa program, Hart also pledged to push for a revival of the Central American common market and a new international bank for the region. Hart admittedly faces an uphill fight for his party's nomination. That was evident even at the $50-per-person fundraiser at Dominick's that followed the senator's speech. In atten- dance was State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), who is supporting former vice president Walter Mondale. Bullard, being the diplomatic type, said Hart might become the Democratic vice- presidential nominee. Striking out After 15 days of acting like children instead of teaching them, Ann Arbor school board' members and teachers agreed upon a new con- tract, allowing classes to begin. Sen. Gary Hart (D-Colo.) took a tour of South about it in a campaign stop this week. The school board played bully in this dispute, filing a complaint in U.S. District Court Tuesday, asking for an injunction' to force teachers back to work. But Judge Ross Cam- pbell apparently had had enough of the schoolyard brawling. He threatened to lock both sides in a room until they played nice. To avoid being grounded, teachers and the board agreed to a settlement giving teachers a 2.5 percent salary increase, considerably less than the 4 percent they were requesting. In ad- dition, teachers will be gradually giving up their current insurance coverage through the Michigan Educational Special Services Ad- ministration (MESSA) for a comparable, but cheaper plan. The two sides had disagreed vehemently on the insurance issue. Teachers gave in, though, agreeing to cut the MESSA coverage on the Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS America recently and told Ann Arbor residents condition that the terms for the third year of the phase out be negotiated by a third party. Teachers were miffed because they lost this year's shoving match. "Most teachers feel (the 2.5 percent raise) is grossly inadequate," said1 Dean Bodley, the vice president of the teachers' union. "It's almost embarrassing." More embarrassing was the whole strike, which almost lasted long enough to force the board to schedule classes on weekends to make up for the lost days. As it is, Ann Arbor students will have shorter vacations during this school year - unless board members and teachers have another spat. The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writer Tom Miller and Daily editor David Spak. Eeaedtu Tichigan Edited and managed by students ot The University of Michigan vol. XCIV - No. 16 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MJ 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Forgotten symbolism a 4 W HEN THE William Monroe Trotter house was established as a black student center in 1970, those who lobbied for it saw it as a symbol of the University's commitment to educating blacks. Instead, Trotter house's 13 year history has become a symbol of the University's inconsistent, sporadic support for blacks, and ultimately its inability to meet their needs. Blacks wanted the center to serve both political and social functions ,as a place where they could artially escape the presures of a whi e, upper class university and rally to improve conditions here. As early as the mid-seventies, however, University commitment started to wane. The concept of a black student center mutated into a minority student center, tossing together blacks, Native Americans, Asians, and Hispanics under the erroneous premise that problems are all the same. The semantic exchange of 'black" for "minority" was indicative of campus-wide thinking, which tended to mask blacks' special difficulties behind the generic "minority'' UTO PIA WHADYA WANNA DO TONI6HT? V t W4Y 1)WE V -o 6EF CDg-UNK 2ALLT1-1E category. Meanwhile, the center has had seven or eight directors - University of- ficials can't remember the exact num- ber - in its 13 years. It also has been without a director since John Powell was fired this summer. This has made it almost impossible for consistent development of programs. If Trotter house is ever going to help blacks, University officials are going to have to recommit themselves to solving these problems. The University has begun to put some effort into reviving Trotter house. This summer $70,000 was spent on renovations. Physical renovations, however, can fix only a small portion of the many, more deeply rooted, problems of the center. Campus blacks have specific problems which are not shared by other minority groups. The center needs to concentrate more on these, and stop trying to be everything for everyone. Trotter house was conceived as a symbol of University commitment to improve conditions for blacks. It has been a hollow symbol for too long. WE COULt> 60 -O A SAR O 2UST 6ET SOME SEERS AkJO.D " - \Now .-".,"...---- E S'3 "Why are wein Lebanon?" As American involvement in the Lebanese tragedy deepens, President Reagan has yet to offer a clear answer to that question. And it may well be that, under the pressure of escalating violence, Washington has failed to settle on a long-term strategic plan. More likely, however, the president is silent because talking frankly to the American people would mean conceding that, willingly or unintentionally, the United States has become Israel's surrogate in Lebanon. WHEN THE Israelis invaded Lebanon in June of 1982, they first claimed the action was designed to rid their northern boundaries of terrorists. The administration had few reservations about that end, even if it was unsure about the drastic means. It was only later, when their forces were beseiging Beirut, that Israeli officials spoke openly of destroying the PLO altogether, and privately about establishing a Christian Lebanese state - much more profound changes in the strateaicniecture. Does Reagan have a plan for Lebanon? Israelis know where to go, the question that we would like to pose to the world, and to the U.S. and Israel in particular, is: 'Where should the Palestinians withdraw to?'" Indeed, today even more than before the Lebanon invasion, the Palestinian question remains the key to the problem of the Middle East. And it has never been fur- ther from resolution. Hence the significance of another Israeli aim which Washington has publicly condemned - but which it also tacitly indulges now. That aim is the formalization of Israeli settlement on the West Bank, which not only precludes any resolution in Lebanon, but almost guarantees a continuing stalemate there. For Arabs and Israelis, clearly, the two issues are inextricably connected. Ignorance of that fact is behind the deepening dilemma of American policy in the Eastern Mediterranean. For by focusing on Lebanon alone, rather than viewing it in the larger context of the Palestinian issue, ,Washington is being drawn inexorahly intoacntive- unam- By Paul Magnelia of Lebanon ended in a military and political imbroglio of such magnitude that the United States was forced to intervene. The violence that accompanied the siege of Beirut, and even more, its terrible aftermath, made intervention necesarv. it would lead to a rapid resolution of the crisis. IN FACT, mutual withdrawal was considered a real possibility only in the public utterances of the U.S. government. Not a single Arab state supported the agreement Arnh nwsnaners.