' I v, In tomorrow's SUdY magazine: Model cities--- Keeping them, alive Mark Russell- Washington's best kept secret Plus-God and man at Harvard, and more . . . '-4 SOCIAL SECURITY See Editorial Page V' Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom III aug B -R-R-R! High -13 Low --8 below See Today for Details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 116 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 17,1979 Ten Cents Eight Pages By BETH ROSENBERG and TOM MIRGA Project directors at the Institute for Social Research (ISR) often find themselves working as employers, em- ployees, experts in their fields, entrepreneurs, as well as salespersons. "They (senior researchers) have to do everything," ex- plains Stephen Withey, Director of the Survey Research Center (SRC), a branch of ISR. "THEY MUST think up ideas, write propositions, get funding, administer research, and write reports," he says. ISR is different than most research organizations, ac- cording to Richard Curtin, a SRC senior researcher studying consumer behavior, since each project is self- sufficient. (This is the third in a four-part series describing the Institute of Social Research-the people who work there, the work they do, and the changes to come. Today's article takes a look at the senior research staff.) ISR senior researchers Iare jacks-of-all-trades private angel," Caplan states. SINCE EVERYONE is in the same boat when it comes to funding, says ISR Director F. Thomas Juster, the at- mosphere at the Institute is supportive between resear- chers. Curtin states that during his eight.years at SRC, he has found the Center and the University compliment one another because he can research and teach concurrently. "Students are eager to apply research to the real world to understand real events," says Curtin. "I try to fit in the new data during class. "WORKING AT ISR makes for a lot to do, but when you're interested and challenged, it's time absorbing. I want to give life to the data," he adds.; The research system at ISR is viable because it frees investigators from everyday worries about logistics, bookkeeping, and computing, while allowing them to See ISR, Page 2 "If you have no money, you have no project," says Cur- tin. "Some projects get funded one year and not the next. It's up to the individual researcher to make sure he does not run out of funds." NATHAN CAPLAN, who studies Social Research and Social Policy in the Center for Research and Utilization of Scientific Knowledge (CRUSK), states that ISR is one of the best places in the nation to find project sponsors and to initiate research. "By and large, people can practically write their own ticket here," Caplan remarks.} Research proposals are generally self-generated, ac- cording to Caplain. He says the average cost of developing a study in its first six weeks is betwen $20 thousand and $40 thousand. ONCE A PROPOSAL is submitted to possible sponsors, Caplan explains, "it's in the hands of the Gods, and all you can do is sit and wait." He says that ISR's national prestige helps in getting funds, but that having connections with the Institute is not an exceptional advantage. "No one here has a private pipeline to funds; or some, }' / r Regents grant interview rights Daily Photo by PAM MARKS They're lumberjacks and they're okay, THERE WAS PLENTY of square dancing to the country twang of the Sharon Hollow String Band among other groups last night at the Paul Bunyan Ball. Tomorrow's Arts Page will carry a story on the rip-roaring event. American evacuees flee Iran, U.S. plans to maintain relations BY LEONARD BERNSTEIN The Regents yesterday granted the student, faculty, and alumni presiden- tial search committees the right to in- terview University presidential can- didates, ending a major conflict which has divided students and the Board sin- ce the selection process began last Oc- tober. The seven Regents present unanimously approved a resolution in- troduced by Robert Nederlander (D- Birmingham) allowing members of the three advisory committees to question the final group of candidates, a group the Regents say they hope will be "less than eight persons." THREE FACULTY committee members and two members from both the student and alumni groups will in- terview presidential hopefuls along with the Regents - reflecting the size difference between the 15-member faculty committee'and the ten-member student and alumni committees. Under the new guideline, each ad- visory committee will determine for it- self which members will interview each candidate. According to the resolution, the University will pay for the inter- viewers' traveling costs. The resolution forbids advisory committee members to communicate "directly or indirectly with persons recommended for the presidency unless expressly authorized in writing by the chairman of the Regents Selec- tion Committee (Nederlander)." STUDENT LEADERS and Regents have been feuding over the right to in- terview presidential candidates since the Regents announced selection process guidelines last October. Point 12 in those guidelines specifically stated that "the Advisory Committees are not to conduct any interviews. This is the prerogative *of the Regents Selection Committee alone." mw un th neenis r oiesclose participation "somewhere down the line," the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) boycotted the selection process until Dec. 12 by refusing to choose a student advisory committee. The Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- sity Affairs (SACUA) selected a com- mittee, but asked for more involvement in the process. After its formation, the student ad- visory committee drafted a resolution that it would "recommend to MSA the recall of our committee" if "we per- ceive a lack of meaningful-student par- ticipation in the selection process, specifically inadequate access to can- didates, including interviewing.. ." However, the group opened See INTERVIEW, Page 2 Nederlander Regents set While ~ theZ LoonLZLn pi ULUWnU '..RUOV Pres. criteria. r x. By AP and Reuter TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Shielded by young Moslem gunmen, a planeload of American evacuees fled Iran yesterday on the first flight of a massive air shut- tle operation that will carry thousands of Westerners to safety in the next few days. The evacuation will gather pace tomorrow when two chartered Pan American 747 jumbo jets, each capable of taking 400 people, will fly into Tehran. These flights will continuefor several days at the rate of at least two daily, spokesman Hodding Carter said. THE EVACUEES left behind an in- creasingly ominous anti-Americanism among Iranian revolutionaries. One 'U' Cellar emplymees resent job restructuring By RON GIFFORD A decision by the University Cellar Bookstore Board of Directors to create more supervisory positions has angered many Cellar employees, who claim the action will limit their par- ' i:nain: hn an ,,eAc :,.:i ,. Iranian cut in on a radio frequency of the U.S. Embassy and warned darkly: "We know where you are, Americans, and we will kill you." The five-day-old government of Moslem leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini executed four Iranian generals late Thursday, only hours af- ter a revolutionary Islamic court found them guilty of "torture, massacre of people, treason ... and earthly corrup- tion." A Khomeini spokesperson said about 20 other high-ranking military officers and officials of the old regime were on trial and also faced death sentences. HE SAID two former prime ministers - Amir Abbas Hoveida, government Saturday 7 * The next to last in a series of articles on University decision- making concerns the effects of toe budget on different groups within the University. See the Editorial Page. o Rep. Perry Bullard has in- troduced a job bill. See the story, Page 3. " The Michigan hockey team lost to Wisconsin, 8-3. See the story, Page 7. " Thanks to a recently-in- stituted state loan program, Ann Arbor will be eligible to receive housing renovation funds. See the chief in 1963-77, and Shahpour Bakhtiar, deposed last weekend - were in custody but were not on trial. Meanwhile, the Carter ad- ministration announced yesterday it will conduct normal diplomatic relations with the Khomeini gover- nment in Iran and angrily criticized the Soviet Union for spreading anti-- American propaganda there. A strong administration statement, See AMERICANS, Page 2 By MITCH CANTOR The University Regents yesterday released a list of 19 qualifications to be fulfilled by the next University President, citing strong leadership as a major stipulation. The board, during this month's meeting in the Administration Building, also granted interviewing rights to the three presidential advisory committees. Committee members will question candidates as the selection process progresses (see related story above). MANY OF THE guidelines in the' document are vague, such as the requirement that the president "possess scholarly background." Another criterion says the next president should "possess executive and administrative skills. There are also several specific criteria,. such as the stipulation, that former University President Robben Fleming's successor "must be able to serve at least ten years." Another guideline specifies that the next president "need not hold a Ph.D. degree." Prior to the listing of standards, an introduction states "a person having all of these desired characteristics may not be found; so some abilities will be See PRES., Page 2 How two student governments spend money MSA awash with funds LSA-SG spends readily By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) has had some trouble this year adjusting to the largest budget it has ever dealt with, due to an assessed mandatory fee. But now, with a somewhat more focused idea of what it ought to do with the money, MSA will probably be able to initiate more of their own projects rather than simply respond to requests made by other organizations. TWO-THIRD OF the $75,000 annual budget goes to funding student organizations and their projects. The groups asking for funding go through a rather critical analysis of their $.15 to the Course Evaluation program, $.06 to the Tenants Union, and $.97 for MSA internal expenses and external allocations to student groups. DURING LAST April's MSA elec- tions, students voted to pay this man- datory fee, which the Regents then okayed in July. This is the first year in recent years MSA funding has been mandatory. Assembly members agree that due to the increased funding-from $5,000 $10,000 to $50,000-they'll have more op- portunities to work for and through the students-and more clout to do so. Thev cite examples such a securing By ADRIENNE LYONS Unlike the Michigan Student Assem- bly (MSA), to which it is often com- pared, the Literary 'College's Student Government (LSA-Sg) has a relatively unstructured allocations system and no rigid criteria for its allocations. Con- sequently, rumors have circulated among campus organizations to the ef- feet that any group which needs money can just go to LSA-SG.' Most Council members seem pleased with their reputation as "liberal" spen- ders. "We're getting more groups coming strictly to us, rather than to MSA, because it's easier (to. get, money)," said LSA-SG President Bob Ct .s students. According to LSA-SG Treasurer Qeoffrey Cox, the Student Accounts Office charges each student 50 cents per term which is applied toward the student government of each school in the -University. Later this month, LSA-SG will receive a total of $5,985.95. As of Feb. 14, LSA-SG had $1,469.62 in its treasury, a sum left over from both last term's and this term's' spending. The revenues, Stechuk said, are used for two basic budgets: office expenses and allocations to groups. Stechuk proposed a basic working budget to Council at LSA-SG's Feb. 7 meeting and under his plan, total operational expen- ses would be $4,145. They would cover