4 OPINION Page 4 Sunday, October 23, 1983 The Michigan Daily Gen. Haig didn't need the Marines 4 T HE MILITARY machine was a bit creaky when former Secretary of State Al Haig rolled into town Thursday. First, due to a * lgistical error he was bivouaced at East Quad, that hotbed of radicalism and insurgency. As iaig tried to settle down into his quarters, studients serenaded him with chants of "Money fgr jobs, not for war, U.S. out of El Salvador." The planning broke down again Thursday night, when hundreds who had come to see the man with the steely blue eyes, were locked out of a packed Rackham Auditorium. Outside about politesse when the end is near. Haig's siege of the 'U' ended yesterday, with a bird's eye view of the football game. Earlier Haig said the Wolverines should be victorious, but we have to shore up that secondary. It makes sense - after all, they are on the side of the defense. Computer dating It sounds like a marriage made in heaven. Or, at least, not made in the bowels of the ad- ministration building. Faculty from the colleges of LSA and engineering are working out the details of a merger between the two schools' computer departments. The idea has been around for a few years, but it took a faculty review of the graduate computer program and comments from folks like the National Science Foun- dation to push it along. Under the plan, LSA's computer department would be abolished, and engineering's will be rebuilt into a department of electrical engineering and computer science with a curriculum that will allow LSA students to major in computers without leaving the literary college. Faculty members say the con- solidated department will be stronger than the present ones and will be big enough to under- take major projects. Before the marriage license is approved, however, the faculty will undergo some strenuous testing. LSA professors will probably be receiving partial or complete appointments to engineering, and it remains to be seen how they will be paid and who will control their ap- pointment, assignments, and tenure. Somebody will have to have control of the department, and even though it will be within engineering the folks in the LSA building don't want to lose their say. ministration has faced with students - students can continue to blame the ministration" as well as the new ministrator." fails, "ad- "ad- students staged a "die-in" on the Rackham steps to protest Europe's peace movement as a ease of "nuclear schizophrenia." Haig's was not the only voice heard in the auditorium, though, as hecklers jumped the gun on the question-and-answer session with repeated interruptions, prompting Haig to say the University is unique: at Princeton, Yale, and Columbia he "didn't have to face this non- sense." But the free speech question didn't die away after laig made his strategic exit from the building Thursday night, and moved his camp to Campus Inn. In the Diag, Friday, things got hot and heavy. with Stoney Burke telling Haig supporters to take the barricades out of their minds, and Haig supporter telling Burke he was full of that smelly stuff. All we are saying, is give Haig a chance, the supporters said. Stoney responded that this is a revolution and you don't mince These students were intent on taking former Secretary of State Alexander Haig's visit lying down. While others pounded on the doors of Rackham Auditorium, these students chose to hold a "die- in" outside. They missed quite a show inside as Haig traded barbs with several active hecklers. Hefner's sad case Last Thursday marked the end of the Univer- sity's first formal investigation into a sexual harassment charge against a professor. University President Harold Shapiro announ- ced the resignation of the accused professor, Robert Hefner, formerly of the psychology department, before Shapiro could make a final decision. Hefner, who was accused of seven separate charges of sexually harassing female students and staff members, has worked at the Univer- sity since 1954 specializing in mathematical social psychology. The case began with complaints filed to the LSA grievance committee. When LSA Dean Peter Steiner became aware of the complaints he sought the advice of Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye, and they both agreed that the case should be brought to Shapiro's attention. Shapiro then asked the top faculty committee, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA), to investigate the matter. After hearing testimony from witnesses representing both sides of the case, SACUA's subcommittee on tenure ruled that Hefner should be dismissed for misconduct. The case was sub- sequently appealed to the full SACUA which upheld the subcommittee's judgment. Shapiro accepted Hefner's resignation aftertentatively deciding to dismiss him. The week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers Neil Chase, Jim Sparks, and Jonathan Stewart and Daily editor David Spak. Symbols and action Blacks and other minorities on campus got not one, but two big pieces of news this week. The first came on the national level when the U.S. Senate finally approved a bill making the third Monday in January Martin Luther King, Jr. Day after the slain civil rights leader. The House of Representatives had already passed the measure which President Ronald Reagan said he will sign. Closer to home, the University regents took a more concrete move toward bolstering minority concerns. They voted to create a new post - an associate vice president for academic affairs that will be responsible for coordinating efforts to increase minority enrollment. Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye, who will be the new associate vice president's boss, said that in or- der to lessen the burden on the new ad- ministrator he or she will have other respon- sibilities. Frye didn't want the whole burden of the minority enrollment heaped on one un- suspecting soul. He also didn't want other University officials shirking their respon- sibilities toward minorities. One would guess that this means if the new effort to boost minority enrollment - long one of the stickiest problems the University ad- _ _ _ i Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Stewart mmwa- --o. Vol. XCIV-No. 41 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 ALTHOUGH I HEARD THAT YOU MAY HAVE HAD COM- MUNIST INFLUENCES, CONGRATULATIONS, f ALTHOUGH I MEARD THAT YOU fr1ER5 A oo ) 4 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board I Programming error PROMINENT SLAVE- 1OLDER, THANK YOU. 4 W ILL THE LSA computer depart- ment's transfer to the engineer- ing college further exacerbate the problems non-computer majors face when trying to get a basic computer education? It is too early to tell for sure, but some early signs do not look good. Administrators of both colleges were given permission by the University's executive officersthis week to plan the merger into the engineering college of the two departments. Although both schools say non- computer majors will have access to the courses, there seems to be cause for worrying about how effectively this will be carried out. Currently, LSA's computer depar- tment is not a hospitable place for non- majors. Even the most fundamental courses are often filled with students majoring in computer science. In- troductory courses teach program- ming which is far more in-depth than non-majors want or need. The result is that most non-majors forego any com- puter education because the necessary commitment exceeds the benefits they receive. Under the merger plan problems may get worse. The new department will be located in the engineering college. This will even further isolate LSA non-computer students from the department. It may mean more paperwork to take computer courses from LSA. It may mean the courses will be listed in different time schedules and class description books. Professors' and administrative offices may be in out-of-the-way places for most LSA students - possibly as far as North Campus when the engineering college completes its move there. Some. of these problems can be worked out. But with this merger it is difficult to see how a basic computer education will be any easier for non- computer majors. 3.> A '= + . . .,,.. -'' ;' - + ., ,.. . . 4 law F, A LETTERS TO THE DAILY: Of Purple hearts and Haig's visit.. 0 h I 0Utopia II WE '#IA '/PP TWE A/CH/&A,4- IOWAA ALP77i'-1 FS L1'77ES o A 5P1./A-L ANNa UNCeFMEA1,r UN/7' 7W'E5. ... 600'D A F7E--A/62/y1 AMEP2'C4A/5, WE AS.E 7NA 10-A MO7 P/7/6 51/WA77eAJ... 7E 5 6Vi~1AI1,V/AI /4,qTU5n-' R/l5Er4 c# O i/c1Erg.e AA/t' iv f ?- To the Daily: An open letter to the man who earned two purple hearts: I don't know your name, sir, but I want to thank you. I want to thank you for your two purple hearts, presumably earned in World War II. You sacrificed your body in service of our coun- try and humanity, and I honor your sacrifice. I'm sorry if my fellow demon- strators and I enraged you as we chanted "peace now" while you filed out of Rackham Auditorium Thursday night after listening to General Haig speak, but we had to keep chanting. It's our way of fighting against inhumane, undemocratic dic- tatorships like the one fought against in Germany. Our stand is not as heroic as the acts of bravery that earned you two pur- ple hearts, but it is still a stand. Our pledge of allegiance ends during World War II, our gover- nment is working against us. However, I do share your anger at the heckling that went on during Gen. Haig's speech. There is no excuse for such rude attempts to curtail his freedom of speech. We who oppose the militaristic policies Haig espouses were allowed the freedom to express our opinion as people entered and left the auditorium, and Haig should have been allowed the freedom to speak to those who chose to go hear him. The hecklers did a great disservice to the growing peace movement of concerned, respon- sible Americans. After hearing Haig speak, many people would have understood why we were demonstrating against his policies. Instead, they came away thinking of the peace movement as a bunch of radicals who respect neither common courtesy nor this nation's con- stitution. No thanks, hecklers, you're not the leaders of my peace movement. - Paul Resnick October 21 ...And a botched security mission To the Daily: After the way that the Univer- sity and the University com- munity handled the visit of for- mer Secretary of State Alexander Haig, it would not surprise me one bit if prominent personalities pass up the opportunity to speak here. To put it bluntly, it was a zoo and a disgrace to the intellec- tual freedom which the Once the doors opened, there was not way to control the amount of people entering the auditorium. This chaos was only a hint of what was to come. Certain in- dividuals took it upon themselves to mercilessly heckle the former secretary of state in the name of causes ranging from El Salvador to Euromissiles to Vietnam. The usual cries of "fascist. im- learn from Mr. Haig. What is ap- palling to me is that the Univer- sity security guards took no ac- tion to remove these troublemakers. The University, committed to pluralism of thought, had a duty to uphold its principles and failed miserably. Students disagreeing with the views of Mr. Haig should have, nut nf amnur tn ;th,. e air ' , I 70 Rt/ A IA4 774WI/De AWAII f AA //7 O l3EMnn/ri M . f- rrr csrs NF_ t/ L l o-Li I I