The Michiaan Daily-Thursday, May 14, 1981-Page 3 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE RECOMMENDS DISCONTINUANCE Geographyre By SUE INGLIS the department has a "good record" of Given the severe budgetary con- placing its graduate students, the straints the LSA College had to face in document also notes the two most the past year, and will likely wrestle eminent faculty members of the depar- wtinthe as utyar, thd wLSA Exkecte tment will retire within eight years and with in the future, the LSA Executive the number of applicants to the Comnmitee has recommended the graduate program "continues to discontinuance of the University's dinish." geography department, according to a diminish. letter sent to all LSA faculty members Geography Department Chair- yesterday. man John Nystuen said yesterday that The elimination of the department the Executive Committee's decision is was seen "as the best of a series of a "mistake," and the department will unattractive options available at this appeal to the Regents for a recommen- point," said the letter of formal dation. "They're taking out clearly recommendation sent from the good scholars for the purpose of Executive Committee to Vice- creating a 'smaller, but better Univer- President for Academic Affairs Bill sity,' " he said. Frye. THE DECISION HAS damaged both "WE BELIEVE THAT the quality of the individuals in the department and the department as a whole has declined the University as a whole, Nystuen significantly in the last decade, and we said,' adding, "Who's going to want to see little liklihood, given the economic hire a professor from a department that situation of the College, that a is not considered worth being in the desirable level of quality can. be University?" restored and sustained in the forseeable He said the University has set a future," the Committee said in its let- damaging precedent for reducing its ter. size by "secretly targeting a depar- Frye and University President tment ... and then villifying it for four Harold Shapiro are expected to support months." the Committee's recommendation to According to the Executive Commit- discontinue the geography department, tee's recommendation, comparable said Richard Kennedy, University Vice peer reviews of other possible can- President for State Relations and didates for discontinuance were not University secretary. initiated at the same time the Kennedy said Frye and Shapiro will geography review began because the forward their recommendations to the Committee believed that to do so would Regents later this month but will "not be "needlessly damaging." Before ask for any actions until they (the targeting geography for peer review, Regents) have looked it over." The the Committee "attempted to view .. . Regents will make the final decision as (it) in relation to other departments to whether the department should be and programs in the college." eliminated. NYSTUEN ADDED HE felt it would WHILE THE EXECUTIVE Commit- be "very difficult to keep an assistant tee's recommendation recognizes that professor committed" to teaching the department includes "some highly geography within another department respected members of the faculty" and if the University decides to maintain port released GEOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT CHAIRMAN John Nystuen said yesterday he will appeal the LSA Executive Committee's recommendation to discon- tinue his department before the Regents. Behind Nystuen are the pages from the Executive Committee's formal recommendation. the discipline in a form other than as a department of the college. The Executive Committee's recom- mendation suggests that the University administration establish a committee which would include representation from other schools and colleges as well as from the present department - to determine how the discipline of geography should be restructured within the college. "WE ARE COMMITTED to makinga serious, good faith effort to relocate tenured faculty of the department, either in the college or in other schools and colleges of the University." The Executive Committee is also committed to making "every reasonable effort to enable students currently in the department to finish their academic programs," accordingto the document. "I think there is such animosity bet- ween the (geography) faculty and the administration, that if professors had a choice they would leave (were the department discontinued)," said John Oppenheim, a pre-doctoral geography student. "But the market is so tight it would be tough for a tenured faculty member to find a job somewhere else at a comparable level of pay." 'U' profs discuss legal insanity Kelly's attorney may have tough verdict to prove By NANCY BILYEAU Yesterday morning 'another small step was taken toward the verdict Leo Kelly's attorney hopes to obtain for his client-not guilty by reason of insanity. That verdict, however, could be dif- ficult to secure in light of the complex state statutes, public conceptions of legal insanity, and confusing trial procedures which often come into play in cases like this one, according to University professors from the Law School and sociology department. ALTHOUGH murder cases involving insanity seem to get a great deal of public attention-primarily due to ex- tensive media coverage-the number of insanity defenses recorded in Michigan is actually quite small, said sociology Prof. Lee Hamilton. Furthermore, the percentage of defendants who are successful in ob- taining "not guilty" verdicts is even smaller, Dr. Andrew Watson, who is both a Law School professor and psychiatry professor at the Medical School. A great deal hinges on how frightened the jury is of insanity, Watson said. "They think of this fantasy person tur- ned loose on society," he explained. "IF THEY'RE frightened enough, the safest thing seems to be a guilty verdict," Watson said. Hamilton agreed that society often has problems with the idea that an in- sane person may not be legally respon- sible for his actions. "There's a sense of unfairness, of inequity," she said. Jurors may act on the feeling that someone has to be punished for a crime that had horrible consequences, such as multiple murders. Many people are unsympathetic to the plight of the insane, Hamilton said. "It's easier to understand an epileptic or a retarded person than a paranoid." The first impulse of a juror is often to deliver retribution, Watson said-a reaction that defense lawyers must try to counter throughout the trial. ON A MORE concrete level, the defense attorney must prove not just mental illness, but a state of insanity at See'U', Page 7 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTR LEO KELLY'S defense attorney, William Waterman, discusses the case with reporters yesterday in City Hall's sixth floor lobby. Waterman asked a city judge for extensive psychiatric tests to determine his client's competen- cy to stand trial.