The michigianDaly igan-Wednesday, June 17, 1981 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Frye urges geography elknination i wan you,.. ... to support my tax plan. President Reagan fielded questions on a wide range of issues and tried to garner support for his tax cut plan yesterday in his first televised press conference in more than three months. See story, Page 10. U.S. to sell arms to China, Haigannounces 75 By ANDREW CHAPMAN Daily staff writer In a long-awaited statement made public yesterday, University Vice-president for Academic Affairs Bill Frye announced he would recommend the discontinuance of the University's Department of Geography to the University Regents. Frye's recommendation will be presented to the Regents tomorrow at their June meeting. However, a decision from the Regents on discontinuance may not be an- nounced for another month. REASONS GIVEN by Frye for the proposed elimination were the general economic climate of the University, the "slipping" scholarly quality of the geography depar- tment, the department's non-central role in the LSA College, and the large amount of resources that he said would be needed to raise the department to an acceptable stan- dard. Geography department Chairman John Nystuen said he was not surprised by Frye's recommendation "because the ad- ministration did not show a response to arguments made in the department's defen- se." LSA Acting. Dean John Knott defended Frye's decision. "This is not something we take great pleasure in," Knott said. "There was a necessity for taking this kind of ac- tion." "I BELIEVE the recommendation realizes budgetary realities and the department's failure to compete successfully,'Knott said. Students enrolled in the geography depar- tment were distressed by Frye's -announ- cement, although none said they were sur- prised by the decision. Ph.D. pre-candidate Victor Santiago said he felt the decision had been made a while ago, and that yesterday's recommendation was just "a question of rubber-stamping it." DOCTORAL candidate Margaret Wilder criticized Frye's open hearings held over the past two weeks, in which students and faculty members were encouraged to provide suggestions and criticism. Wilder said she believed Frye's hearings had "little or no im- pact on his decision." However, Frye said that the talks he held with members of the University community were "significant," and that "had the inter- views provided different input the report could have been modified, delayed, or witi- drawn." University President Harold Shapiro said the open hearings "helped articulate various options." See GEOGRAPHY, Page 9 From AP and UPI PEKING-Secretary of State Alexander Haig said last night that the Reagan administration has, decided in principle to sell arms to China, and that the United States and China agree on the need to con- front Soviet global expansion. Haig said the deputy chief of staff of China's army, Liu Huaqing, will visit the United States in August to explore specific purchases of arms that can kill, as opposed to those used for military support purposes, such as trucks. IF A DEAL is struck, it would be the first time the United States has sold arms to China since the com- munist takeover in 1949. He told a news conference at the conclusion of his three-day official' visit here that the administration will remove the so-called munitions list restrictions that now prohibit arms sales to China. Haig met yesterday with Premier Zhao Ziyang and Com- munist Party Vice Chairman Deng Xiaoping. He said afterward his visit to China was "unusually productive and successful." HE SAID he told the Chinese that Reagan intends to treat China "as a friendly nation with which the United States is not allied but with which it shares many interests." Haig dodged specific questions on the degree to which the U.S. relationship with Taiwan was discussed, but he appeared to say it was not a stumbling block. He said he explained the ad- ministration's "unofficial relation- See U.S., Page 1Q rFrye ... not just administration vs. faculty A4AUP ,profs question. geograph decision By ANDREW CHAPMAN Daily staff writer Representatives of the American Association of University Professors will go before the Regents tomorrow, claiming that the administration ignored an essential Regental bylaw in its review of the geography department. The professors will argue that if the bylaw was violated, as they believe it was, the ad- ministration's recommendation to discon- tinue the geography department is invalid. ACCORDING TO the AAUP represen- tatives, the Regents' bylaws leave such questions as program discontinuance with the faculty-not with the administration. Former president of the AAUP, and University mathematics professor, Wilfred Kaplan said "we are arguing that the ad- ministration's procedure was inconsistent See AAUP, Page 5