Page 6-Thursday, June 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily Fuming photographers AP^h Press photographers, their arms folded and their cameras at their feet, glare silently as French cabinet members leave the Elysee Palace yesterday. The photographers staged a no-photo session to protest incidents last week in which they were clubbed by policemen while covering demonstrations. State gives unique freedom to col in plannin curriculum (Connuedirom Page3) sity is able to claim a reduction," he their colleges in the future, Melchiori said. explained. much interest in continuing its own When a discontinuation decision is program to make an objective decision, "P.R. reductions give a college the made by a state agency the University he added. image of being budget-minded and in can "pass the buck" and tell disgrun- The study found that in the past about step with the times," Melchiori said, tied students and faculty that they were half the program discontinuations at She said that these false cutbacks have forced to cut the program, Melchiori universities were cutbacks on paper been used by departments to squeeze said. only. Miller called these reductions new programs from the colleges. Many Universities need to be prepared in "P.R. reductions." departments try to show the ad- the event that program discontinuation ministration that since they have rid becomes necessary, Melchiori noted. SOME REDUCTIONS will mean themselves of dead wood they are "Universities often begin the reduction fewer faculty involved, but in other deserving of new programs, she said. process without identifying the issues cases, the number of teachers and they need to face, such as legal hassles students participating will remain the Dim economic predictions and expec- or student/faculty opposition," same, but because they have tations of declining enrollment have Melchiori said. "They ought to define rearranged' things (department titles, prompted state agencies to expect these problems first and develop_ mech- course requirements, etc.) the univer- more "meaty" discontinuations from anisms to overcome them." Western govt's ire raised by OPEC oil price hike From AP and UPI Western governments yesterday assailed a decision by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries allowing crude oil prices to rise as much as $4 a barrel. "Any price rise at this time is com- pletely unjustified in view of market conditions," U.S. Energy Secretary Charles Duncan said in Washington af- ter OPEC oil ministers ended a three- day meeting in Algeria. NEW OIL price hikes, on top of a more than 10per cent increase since the beginning of 1979, will be "a further considerable burden for the world economy," said Guido Brunner, the European Common Market energy commissioner. Any increases will worsen "the ten- dencies toward recession and in- flation," Brunner said in Brussels, Belgium. In Tokyo, Bank of Japan Governor Haruo Mayekawa said the OPEC decision would raise Japanese prices and increase the country's oil-fueled trade deficit, which reached $1.9 billion in April. THERE WAS no immediate reaction from President Carter, but Duncan called price hikes already announced by some OPEC members "irrespon- sible." In Algiers, meanwhile, Saudi Arabia's oil minister yesterday predic- ted a growing worldwide oil glut would sendeprices tumbling this autumn from OPEC's new $32-per-barrel base price. He indicated the Saudis, OPEC's largest producer, will continue selling their oil below the cartel's minimum and maintain stepped-up production in an apparent effort to keep downward pressure on prices. "DON'T BE surprised if we don't raise our prices," Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani said after the close of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries' hectic two days of price talks. Yamani was commenting on an agreement by the cartel's oil ministers to narrow a price gap and try to stabilize the market-by establishing a $32-per-barrel floor price and a $37-per- barrel ceiling. Despite the agreement by OPEC's majority, Saudi Arabia will refuse for now to lift its own rates from $28 to $32 per barrel, Yamani said. "We will watch the market," said the Saudi minister, whose nation is the largest of the 13 OPEC producers and the main foreign supplier of oil to the United States. "If we see the oil companies are making too much profits and the con- sumers are not benefitting from the cheap Saudi price, we will raise it a lit- 4 4 4