The Michigan Daily--Tuesday, July 13, 1982-Page 5 Shultz to face difficulties in new cabinet post WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State-designate George Shultz is coming across on Capitol Hill as a soft- spoken smoothie, but he faces many of the same problems his prickly predecessor did in dealing with Congress. As Shultz made the rounds of Senate offices preparing for his confirmation hearing, which begins Tuesday, both Republicans and Democrats described him as a low-key, likable man who should be easy to get along with. Many of the senators already knew Shultz from his days as treasury secretary and secretary of labor in the Nixon administration. But'even those who didn't know him seemed taken with his personality. FRESHMAN Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.), for instance,- praised the secretary-designate for conceding can- didly that he did not know very much about Latin America, compared to other regions of the world. For all his apparent charm, however, Shultz could run into trouble selling the administration's policies on Capitol Hill, as the more testy Haig did before him. He will, for instance, learn some things about Latin America. Dodd said he already had tried-he didn't know how successfully-to correct what he said was Shultz's erroneous impression that things were getting better in El Salvador. WITHIN TWO weeks of Shultz's ex- pected swearing-in, the administration is suooosed to report to Congress on Sultz ...nears confirmation whether the government in El Salvador is making progress in land reform and other areas. If the answer to that question is "yes"-as it must be if military aid to the Salvadoran gover- nment is to continue-Dodd and other critics are likely to ask how scrupulously the administration looked into the matter. Meanwhile, the administration's ef- fort to boost foreign aid spending is foundering in an election year in which Congress has been asked to cut politically popular domestic programs. . In 1981, the lawmakers authorized $5.9 billion in foreign aid for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. Both the Senate Foreign Relations and House Foreign Affairs panels have agreed to add about 17milin to thk vUn rk y rV~C-- r Shovel it ! Fred Vrdman takes his job and shovels it on E. Huron near the Power Center yesterday. The roads around the medical campus are being improved in con- junction with the Replacement Hospital Project. Congress balks at U.S. troop involvement in Beirut (Continued from Page 4) AS BEIRUT residents inspected the damage from Sunday's artillery ex- changes, former prime minister Saeb Salam said it is up to the United States to find a country willing to accept the, guerrillas now that Syria has announ- ced it will not. Meanwhile PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat said that the PLO would not leave Lebanon completely. "Don't ask me about negotiations," Arafat shouted in response to a question from an AP correspondent. BPC advises ISMRRD be eliminated from budget subcommittee with reasons for ISM- (Continuedfrom Page 1) MRD's continuation; however, at one from outside sources as a "contributing public me:eting no one showed up. factor" in the decision to eliminate "The fact that nobody showed up in a ISMRRD. sense becomes a comment in itself," "THIS WAS certainly one of the in- Frye said, commenting on the low tur- stitutes in which that was a factor," nout. "Given the problems we have had Frye explained. with the institute, I wouldn't be sur- He said that the committee's recom- prised," he said. mendation will now be sent to the FRYE SAID that closure of the in- Committee on Budget Administration, stitute will affect only the disabled who who will then report to the Board of utilize its services, and not students, Regents. because it is a "non-academic unit" "The ultimate decision on a program and, therefore, does not offer struc- closure rests with the Regents," Frye tured courses. said, "but we obviously take the report The mental retardation institute is of the committee very, very seriously." nationally respected for its pioneering During the review process, Frye said research and development of com- ample opportunity was provided for munity reintegration programs for the concerned individuals to present the mentally handicapped.