Page 2-Wednesday, October 18, 1978-The Michigan Daily PROMISES TO REMAIN 'U' ENGINEERING DEAN: Dean aecepts NSB policy post By JOHN SINKEVICS Though David Ragone, dean of the University's College of Engineering, has served on several government committees, he said his nomination by President Carter last week to the National Science Board (NSB) is his most prestigious assignment. "Without a doubt, I'm going to accept the position," said Ragone. "It's a great honor and I'll be joining a lot of bright guys." RAGONE, ALONG with six other NSB nominees, is awaiting Senate con- firmation before he can officially sit on the policy-making board of the National Science Foundation. The 24-member board - which includes two former University faculty members - deals with budget allocations and research policies. Although Ragone is pleased with the nomination, he said he realizes it will burden his workload. "The last thing I need is another job," the 48-year-old dean joked. "This position could be. very time-consuming and will require an enormous amount of reading." Even if confirmed, Ragone will retain his deanship at the Engineering College, a position he has held since 1972. Ragone holds three degre s from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and first came to the University in 1953 as an assistant professor in the department of chemical and metallurgical engineering. AN EXPERT ON the relation bet- ween automotive fuels and air pollution, Dean Ragone is not a newcomer to government. He served on the Panel on Automotive Air Pollution and the Panel on Automotive Fuels of the Department of Commerce Technical Advisory Board, the Ad- visory Committee on Advanced Automotive Power Systems of the Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ) and is currently chairman of the CEQ's Advisory Committee on Alter- native Automotive Power Systems. Ragone said his NSB responsibilities will resemble the duties he now executes as a dean. "I expect that most of the time will be spent examining the enormous budget of the foundation and' how the money is to be used," he stated. "I think it will take a while to get used to the issues involved, so I'll probably just be doing a lot of listening New pope VATICAN CITY (AP) - Pope John Paul II promised yesterday that a "ministry of love" would mark his reign as the 264th pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. The former Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Krakow, Poland, also took a trip out- side Vatican walls on his first full day as leader of the world's 700 million Catholics. IN A TELEVISED sermon delivered under Michelangelo's fresco "The Last Judgment" in the Sistine Chapel, the pope pledged to carry on the church reforms launched by the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council and to follow the guidelines laid down by Paul VI and John Paul I. Vatican officials, meanwhile, an- nounced that John Paul would preside at a Mass at his installation on Sunday. The announcement made no mention of a coronation, implying that he would continue the pattern of John Paul I, who refused to be crowned the temporal ruler of the church. From Warsaw, Polish communist leader Edward Gierek sent a message to the pope, saying his election "fills Poland with great satisfaction" and that he was "convinced that further development of relations between Poland and the Apostolic See" would come about. A POLISH government spokesman, Kazimierz Kakol, said passport restric- tions would be eased to allow a "large number" of Poles to travel to Rome for the installation. He did not say how many visas would be granted. Poles normally have to wait three to four weeks to obtain a travel visa. In his first papal sermon, the 58-year- old pontiff warned that the "general criteria of loyalty to the Vatican Coun- cil" must not affect loyalty to the basic doctrinal truths of the church. This was perhaps an indication that he would pursue a conservative stance on such matters as the church's ban on ar- tificial contraception, the ordination of, women and the marriage of priests. The pope supported the contraception ban put forth in Pope Paul VI's 1968 en- cyclical Humanae Vitae when he was archbishop of Krakow. to continue reforms CLAD IN THE traditional pai robes of brilliant white satin and a r skullcap, the pope celebrated M jointly with the cardinals who elec him Monday. He delivered a half-i sermon in Latin and then released 110 men from the secret conclave whA they had been sequestered since Sat day afternoon. Less than 24 hours after his electi John Paul left the Vatican to v Polish Bishop Andre-Marie Deskur, head of the Pontifical Commission Social Communication. Deskur taken to a hospital 'about two nrii from the Vatican Friday after suffer a heart attack. Thousands, alerted radio announcement that he wo make the trip, lined the streets to ch the pope. The election of Wojtyla as succe$ to Pope John Paul I broke the 455-y hold Italians had on the papacy. Cardinal Franz Koenig of Vienna s" the Polish prelate had been favore the voting by the Italian cardinals w. the "foreigners" leaned toward ma taming the Italian line. Ragone at first." Ragone's wife, Katherine, a lecturer in the Chemistry Department, is ex- cited about her husband's nomination, but Ragone says his teenage children are less than enthusiastic about this additional "time-consumer." "It's going to -be a challenge," said Ragone. "Taking a quote from Frank Rhodes (former University Vice- President for Academic Affairs), I'd say it's 'a case of a scholar working in the service of other scholars'." is preserved on AVAILABLE AT: The Michigan Daily Student Publications Bldq. 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library Mimcbie strike runs into 16th day. By SHELLEY WOLSON University library frequenters will have to continue surviving without a- caffeine fix between reserve readin- ings, as the ARA Food Services Com- pany strike enters its sixteenth day. Negotiations are continuing between ARA employees, who fill most of the candy and beverage machines in Ann Arbor, and the company, with no resolution in sight. ARA divisions in Wyandotte and Dearborn have also been on strike since October 2, when contract negotiations broke down bet- ween the Teamsters Union-represented ARA workers and their employer. - SO FAR, the University hasn't received complaints from students or faculty annoyed by the empty vending machines throughout campus. "I think people recognize that there is a strike and that service is discontinued until it has been settled," said Eugene Ingram, University director of pur- chasing and stores. ARA president Don West said his company has continued to offer new proposals and the workers have made some compromises on their demands. "We want to get the thing settled as soon as possible and stop all this incon- venience to our customers," West said. MEANWHILE, workers are picketing at various ARA locations in Detroit. "We're at a deadlock now so we're picketing and hoping," said one ARA employee who asked not to identified. He agreed that the worke demands have altered. "The company has come close toI money we want but they still have come up with anything on the benefit* the employee added. Unidn offidi and their state mediator v unavailable for comment. U.N. peace, plan nea~ for Southwest Afric (Continued fo ae1 (C tmniU 1. IfII gtJ) would remain in Pretoria through tomorrow. The delegation leaders of the five Western countries - Vance, British Foreign Secretary David Owen, Foreign Minister Hans Dietrich Gen- scher of West German, Canadian Ex- ternal Affairs Minister Donald Jamieson, and Deputy Foreign L. ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE MAJORS DON'T MISS TALKING TO THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON. One dolar won't even buy you a cheap bottle of wine, a single rose, or a small box of candy. But now $1 will buy a message straight from the heart *Ii4i printed in the MICHIGAN DAILY SWEETEST DAY SPECIAL, Saturday, October 21. Fill out the form and mail it to: SWEETEST DAY AD 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI, 48109 Or come in personally to the Daily, located next to the Student Activities Building and behind Betsy Barbour Hall (we're on the sec- ond floor) by 3 p.m. Thursday, October 19. Make checks payable to the Michigan Daily. The cost is $1 for 2 lines (14 words). Each addi- tional line is 50ยข. ------------ ------------------------ -------------- Mail to: SWEETEST DAY AD 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Ml, 48109 11 !2 - - -- - - - - - - - - -I 3 Y4nm Your name Minister Olivier Stirn of France - for an hour with South African Pren Pieter Botha and Foreign Mini Roelof Botha. THE MOST crucial issue is how to around South Africa's announcem last month that it would hold its elections in the territory Dec. 4-8. West has tried to dissuade South Af from its plan, claiming there would no international recognition of the member constituent assembly. Several factions in Namibia also h announced they would boycott a Sb African-sponsored election. The xn important of these groups is the Sou West Africa People's Organizati which has been waging a 12-y guerrilla war against South Afri troops garrisoned in the territo South Africa has administered't territory since 1920 under a mand from the League of Nations, which, s ce has been revoked by the Unit Nations. The sources said South African ficials have indicated they would willing to redefine the election to ma it clear that the assembly will not be sovereign body, that South Africa w continue to administer the territory f the time being and that unilateral i dependence will not automatical follow. Several alternatives to enable t election to go on while not really bei considered an election as such we being discussed, the sources said. Contact for your placement office interview dates. r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 HUGHES- Creating a new world with electronics AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/FP a J I