i LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 26, 1996 - 7 o"" DEANS Continued from Page 1. team. The nature of the relationship depends more on the personalities of the president and the provost than on any particular set of rules." Chemistry Prof. Thomas Dunn, who chairs the faculty's governing body, said Duderstadt ran the University in a top-down fashion. Dunn said it will be good for the University if Bollinger builds stronger lines of communication with the deans. But Dunn said Bollinger sent con- fusing signals about how he sees the deans' roles. Dunn cautioned Bollinger not to give more direct power to the deans, but added that more communication between differ- ent parts of the University would be a big improvement. "It wasn't clear to me what he really meant,' Dunn said. "I would have been in like Flint had I thought he just meant he was going to increase The power of the deans. ... I would be against an arbitrary assumption of more power by the deans." Dunn said faculty governance has great influence in the overall direction of the University. Deans act as man- agers, Dunn said, while faculty gover- nance sets long-term goals and agen- das. "We need a lot more communication at all levels, not more power" Dunn said. Engineering Dean Stephen Director, who came to the University last July, said Bollinger's perspective is probably affected by his seven years of service as Law dean. "It sounds to me that Bollinger's thought on changing the organization is based upon what he remembers things to have been like while he was dean here," Director said. GIVE THIS PAGE TO SOMEONE WHO KNOWS YOU WELL E------". -----"---- U -EEEE --E -U -u... --UUUU US Dear L]Mom LII Dad L] Santa LII AllI want fill in the blank i for LI Hanukkah w Christmas Q Kwa-..nzaa w Graduat..-ion w my birthday [] being special .1 JULLY PARiK/Daily Making the gradeP Keith Bartlett, a student working toward his master's in architecture, studies blueprints from the exhibition work of Prof. David Osler, an American institute of Architects gold medalist. i 1- _ .5. Continued from Page 1. "When you poll the people and ask them their priorities, they want to see deficit control and a balanced budget as Ouch as they want to see tax reform," said U.S. Sen. Larry Craig (R-Idaho). However, demanding a balanced budget requires the government to reassess the structure of government and its fiscal priorities, Craig said. Craig said that if all the members of Congress who voted for the previous proposal and all the newly elected members who promised to support the measure keep their word, legislation for balanced budget amendment should pass in the 105th Congress. Panelists at the sessions yesterday discussed an issue on which they said .--hey hope Washington won't take action EDUCATION Continued from Page 1. Lott said Republican governors have ot received due credit for the innova- tions and cre- ativity in edu- cation they What A h~ave brought to 'their states. are peopi "But a recent- y released edu- are passi cation report gave the United - Rep. States poor arks by many ucators' standards, and Finn said the study is a grim omen for unrealized edu- cation goals. U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) said schools are concentrating too much on bureaucracy. any time soon - the Welfare Reform Act. The bill, which transferred respon- sibility for much of the regulation of the welfare system to the states, should be given a chance before Democratic opponents render it ineffective or harm- ful, they said. "Let's try to make it work and then as we learn things, we're prepared to try to improve it,"Gingrich said. Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad said the bill represented a historic shift of power from the federal government to the states. The governors cited federal stipu- lations in the legislation that may be obstacles in making it work, however. Work force development strategies should be a priority for governors across the country, said Rep. Bill Goodling (R- Pa.). "Problems will only be compounded as welfare recipients are forced to seek employment or face reductions in bene- fits,' Goodling said. Gingrich warned the governors not to simply shift federal bureaucracy to the states, creating more limitations through agencies, courts and guberna- torial administrations. "Decentralization from Washington can also be matched by decentralization of state capitols,"Gingrich said. "I want to remind you that state departments of education are often more rigid and engage in more regulation than the fed- eral Department of Education." Gingrich took the governors' respon- sibility to a broader level and delegated to them some of the responsibility of maintaining a positive image as a world leader. "They look to us to prove to their doubters that there is a model to dedi- cate themselves to," he said. -i Apple PowerBook 190cs/66 & Apple StyleWriter 1200 66 MHz 68LC040/8MB/500MB/10.5" Color Display/ClarisWorks software uT L_ Apple Power Macintosh 5260/100 & Apple Color StyleWriter 1500 100 MHz 603e/16MB/800MB/4X CD/built-in 14" Color Display REBATE I I Apple Power Macintosh 5400/120 & Apple Color StyleWriter 2500 120 MHz 603e/16MB/1.6GB/built-in 15" Color Display/Ethernet AFTER t'x "What kids need are people who are passionate, not people who are orderly," Gingrich said. Gingrich proposed a program that would offer automatic scholarships to kids need e who ronate.~ Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) high school stu- dents who gradu- ate in three years. Many students are able to take on the extra work to earn the degree early, but are lacking the incentive, he said. "We're running the most expen- as chair of a national committee on edu- cation. Engler said Michigan is on its way to a solid education system, but that "we need to make a lot more progress' Michigan schools have adapted to the age of technology well, but need to take the next step, he said. "We're there," Engler said. "What does a school do once it's dialed into the Internet?" Gingrich said instability in higher education stems from a tendency of "academia" to abandon American solu- tions and values for European ones. He said political science and sociology professors are particularly guilty of choosing European models over indi- vidualism and decentralization. "(European models) are very heavily influenced by a state-centered tradition rather than a citizen-driven model,: Gingrich said. 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Promotion ends January 19, 1997. i .v 4°°t THANK YOU: CIRCLE K International to those who volunteered this weekend at the Yost clean-up and the District Service Project. Happy Thanksgiving! Next meeting Dec. 5. -Todd. Thank you ',lriI fl 'lIfI n5i iii x ea in.0 ' iv np, 1 IPJ /// // I I )t All xt