OPINION Page 4 Sunday, March 31, 1985 'U Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCV, No. 143 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 GEO get tentative agreement If a show of hands is any indication, theGmgw Graduate Employees Organization will have little trouble wipning enough support to ratify its new contract with the University. On ; March 15 GEO agreed tentatively to a one- year contract with University officials, and on Thursday night member teaching assistants met in a closed session to discuss the measure. All but one-tenth of the mem- bers at that meeting endorsed the contract, which includes a five percent salary hike, a larger tuition waiver, continued discussions with department chairs on working con- ditions, and English language training for foreign TAs. Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A bold step The College of Engineering has taken a bold step towards a broader curriculum in light of mounting eviden- ce that engineers today need far more than just technical training to survive in a competetive marketplace. According to engineering Dean James Duderstadt, the college will be bringing in a panel next fall to review its undergraduate curriculum. He said he hopes the panel-whose com- position is presently undeter- mined-will recommend that the college increase its humanities and social sciences requirements. Duderstadt envisions an engineering curriculum that provides students with more of a liberal arts education-"education in a classical sense," as he calls it. His ambition-which is extremely broad-minded in a field which has traditionally emphasized a math and science education-is based on his ac- curate perception that engineers now need communication skills in their daily work more than ever before. Industry representatives say that they are looking for engineers with a wide variety of non-technical skills, ranging from creative writing, to working with groups and management practice. Duderstadt and, the college are wise to try and fulfill this need, but they must also remain aware of the poten- tial problems of a philosophical shift in. the engineering curriculum. As industry representatives are quick to point out, technical proficien- cy is still the basis for much of engineering work, particularly as engineers incorporate advanced new computer technology into the work- place. Increasing engineers' humanities and social sciences requirements would, by definition, mean cutting back on the technical courses that make up much of the engineering students' 128 required credit hours. Although increased liberal arts is an obvious necessity, insufficient technical preparation could con- ceivably hamper University engineering graduates as they com- pete against their peers from other top - ranked institutions.' Given that engineers are professionals as opposed to technicians, Duderstadt's long-range goal of pushing technical courses to the graduate level seems appropriate. Engineers, then, would be receiving analogous education to other professionals such as lawyers and doc- tors. Nevertheless, additional years of education entail additional expenses which many students cannot afford. Still, the idea of increased humanities for engineers sounds plausible and even necessary in theory. Dean Duderstadt and his sup- porters should, however, take all fac- tors into account when they make decisions that could directly affect the future of every engineering student who graduates from the University. The Week in Review But all of the union's 1,200 members will vote my mail-in ballots. If the contract fails, said union bargainer Stephen Grossbart, it will probably be because members want a shorter contract. TAs will be covered by the proposed contract three months beyond the expiration date of a federal law exempting TAs from taxation on their tuition waivers. Some TAs at Thursday night's meeting preferred that their contract's expiration date coincide with that of the law. Their con- cern is that Congress will fail to renew the legislation when it expires December 31-repeating lawmakers in 1983-leaving TAs to start paying taxes in the middle of the year, with no guarantee the University will compensate them. But GEO officers are trying to convince the members the new contract, which expires March 15, 1986, is better because the later date will allow the union to bargain next year's contract after Congress votes on tuition waiver tax liability. The officers ex- pect a final outcome of the vote on the con- tract on April 22. Greek Week ends All week longastrange things have been happening on campus. Large groups of Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writer Amy Mindell and Daily editors Laurie Delater, Joseph Kraus, Tom Miller, and Andrew Porter. Greek Week festivities featured bed races among other events Salvadoran elections Letters Death unsuitable solution to hunger TODAY begins the latest set of elec- tions in El Salvador. For the four- th time in three years the people will go to the polls in order to elect Legislative Assembly and Municipal Council members via party voting and to in- directly elect a president from the par- ties participating. The U.S. Department of State claims that in recent years the elections have been run fairly. Voters vote in the municipality in which they registered and their hands are marked with in- delible ink in order to prevent multiple voting. Today's elections are expected to run just as smoothly, although the lef- tist guerrillas who have been operating from the countryside and recently from the cities as well have been travelling around the country bombing post offices and city halls in order to erase registration records and other sources of information vital to the elec- tion process. Whether or not the elections run smoothly may no longer be the impor- tant issue, despite the fact that they would still be some indication of Duar- te's strength. Rather, it is a question of how to deal with the rebels. Villages currently exist all over the countryside in which civilian peasants operate un- der communist ideologies on self- sufficient farms. These hamlets usually contain approximately- 150 inhabitants who tend the fields in the mornings and return for schooling in the night. Unfortunately, the potential of the villages to serve as havens for guerrillas causes them to be shelled as often as four or five times a week by government helicopters and planes, peace initiative in which he invited the guerrillas to meet him for a summit to discuss many of the country's' problems. He offered amnesty for the rebels and guaranteed them the security to organize politically. In November, the rebels (FMLN) offered Duarte a plan which called for an end to military aid from foreign nations, territorial demarcation, for- mion of a new government, and a merging of rebel forces with the army. They also justified their use of economic sabotage as a means of fighting war, however, and Duarte, citing this, rejected the entire set of proposals and claimed that the guerrillas were only seeking power through violence. The rebels have amassed an army of between 10,000 and 15,000 men and are too strong a force to be reckoned with in any way other than a summit. While acts of terrorism have declined greatly during the last four years, there have been small increases in recent months, including the tennis court murder of Lieut. Col. Ricardo Cienfuegos. On the one hand, terrorism has been greatly decreasing in proportion to what it has been in recent years, yet, on the other hand, the rebels are in- creasing their footholds in the cities and are strengthening themselves in this regard. Thus, the success of the elections is no longer the issue. The issue has become how to deal with the rebels given a stronger central government. Both sides are guilty of ruthless at- tacks and shameless aggression and successful resolution seems just as far away as it has for several years, despite the fact that the government To the Daily: In a letter to the Daily (March 18th), Tom Leete lets loose a number of misconceptions about world hunger. "Famine is nature's way of limiting a population-of any species-that is too large," Lette, pronounces. With due respect, Lette seems to have failed to put to use that which distinguishes human beings from all other species. Are we to sit idle and allow all "natural" life-limiting phenomena to control our num- ~bers: illness, disease, and natural disasters? "If man could produce enough food, there would not be a large starving population in any region,"gsays he. "If man could provide food for everybody, then there would be no such thing as 'world hunger' " (emphasis mine). These two apparently similar claims illustrate Lette's unfortunate confusion. There is enough food produced in this world to feed today's population. People starve because the food is not where they are. Short-term famine relief efforts are (sometimes feeble) attempts to provide food to starving human beings. Lette confuses produc- tion and distribution. Thinking of the whole world for a moment, doesn't it seem true that simply eating enough food to stay alive may be the biggest single problem facing human beings upon awakening each morning? The causes of famine are com- plex. Leete is not wrong to speak of population growth as a problem related to famine. But aren't there more humane ways to affect population growth than to allow people to wither away till death from lack of food? I should thi nk thamt fuinding non-coercive means to relieve the pain of star- vation I find Leete's "total solution" morally repugnant and appalling. And yet I find hope in Leete's closing paragraphs. He states that if we could be doing a better job feeding people, then "we I