Te Michigan Daily Vol. XCI, No. 4-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, May 9, 1981 Sixteen Pages Executive committee: Eliminate Geography By SUE INGLIS The LSA Executive Committee has decided to recommend that the geography department be eliminated, a member of the geography faculty said yesterday. The faculty member said that Geography Department Chairman John Nystuen had been informed of the committee's decision on Thursday in a meeting with Acting LSA Dean John Knott. THE COMMITTEE recommendation will now be forwarded to President Shapiro and Vice-President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye. If Frye and Shapiro endorse the proposal, it will be sent to the Regents for final approval when they convene May 20. Both Knott and Vice-President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye could not be reached for comment. yesterday. Nystuen said yesterday he had been informed by a reliable source close to both Knott and the executive commit- tee that the decision to discontinue the department had been made. Knott said earlier in the week that the official an- nouncement would most likely be delivered next week, but did not say what the decision would be. NYSTUEN SAID he did not think the committee deliberately waited to an- nounce the recommendation during a time when many students and geography faculty were out of town. He said the executive committee was sim- ply behind schedule. "What are they (the executive committee) going to do? Wait around until September (when a greater number of students and faculty are on campus)?" he said. Nystuen did express displeasure, however, with the timing of the decision. "It's not good," he said. "Has anything been good anywhere in this case? No." Nystuen declined further comment until he sees the final recommendation in writing. EARLIER IN the week he said despite evidence presented that geography is not the weakest depar- tment in the college, the executive committee was compelled by a "necessity to chop something" in order to avoid making deeper overall cuts. He said he felt the initial decision to target geography was a "capricious act" given the data they used in making an initial decision. "They have prejudged the whole affair on the basis of this kind of work," he said, referring to what he said was "sloppy" research work done by the dean's staff. The executive committee announced in January it would bring proceedings against the geography department which could possibly lead to its discon- tinuance. After two and a half months of investigation, a four-member faculty committee, set up to review the depar- tment, recommended that the depar- tment be either entirely abolished or that at least the cultural area of the program by discontinued. IN APRIL, the LSA faculty voted to reject the review committee's recom- mendation. Although not bound to the faculty vote-effectively an advisory vote-the executive committee said it would "seriously consider" it when making their final recommendation. "If it is true that the executive com- mittee has recommended that geography be discontinued then I would say it is most unfortunate," said Mathematics Prof. Wilfred Kaplan. "It will cause a lot of dissension in the faculty." Kaplan introduced a motion which was defeated at a February faculty meeting to suspend the discon- tinuance proceedings. "It certainly isn't totally unexpec- ted," said Joel Isaacson, professor of art history. "It never seemed as though a vote of the faculty would be sufficient enough to bring about a different decision." Isaacson added that he had thoughtthe committee might decide to recommend an alternative to the discontinuance of the entire depar- tment. Exclusive "I think they (the executive commit- tee) stalled the whole thing for the op- portune moment," said Geography Prof. John Kolars. "Who's to reverse it? I see no reason why the Regents won't rubber stamp what the Vice-President (Frye) has decided. The process has been cut and dried." Kolars said he felt Knott and the executive committee were "just ex- pressing the feelings of Frye and (President) Shapiro." "I don't think that it's Knott," he said, adding that he felt Knott was sim- ply acting in accord with what Frye and Shapiro wanted. "John Knott has been bloodied pretty badly with the whole thing," he said. "I consider the executive committee sim- ply a tool of the administration. The administration chooses the people they want on the committee." Daily staff writer Lorenzo Benet filed a report for this story. V'ictory beans AP Photo PRESIDENT REAGAN CELEBRATES the House passage of his budget plan yesterday in one of his favorite ways. A grinning Reagan presents House minority leader Bob Michel with a jar of his now-famous presidential jelly beans. Financia1 aid cuts loom By MARK GINDIN House approval of President Reagan's budget plan has targeted the widely used Guaranteed Student Loan and Pell Grant programs for revisions that would make federal financial aid unavailable to most of the University students who now use it. If the Republican-dominated Senate approves the Reagan budget, as it is almost sure to do, the guidelines that determine eligibility for the federally- subsidized grants and loans will be tightened, making students from most middle- and higher-income families ineligible. TlE NEW ELIGIBILITY guidelines would include family financial resources and individual need as criteria for the aid. Currently, the GSLs are available to students from any financial background. A change to the new guidelines would "eliminate 80 percent of the 15,000 loan applications approved this year," according to University Financial Aid director Harvey Grotrian. The Reagan proposals would not alter the interest rate or payback period of the GSLs, only the eligibility requirements, thus keeping in line with his stance of not pulling the rug out from the "truly needy," Grotrian said. THE TARGET DATE FOR implementation of the new federal guidelines was initially July 1, 1981, but because of the inevitable debate in Congress, Grotrian said he expects the date to be delayed to Oc- tober 1, and possibly as late as January 1, 1982. He added that all financial aid applications received un- til that time will be processed under the old guidelines. See FEDERAL, Page9