Page 6-A--Friday, September 11, 1981-The Michigan Daily 'U' budget again hit by state fund roliba (Continued from Page 1) feduct on mth hslary oul not make The possibility of faculty and staff SALARY RA rASKED ABOUT the state's move at a salary reduction has a 'demoralizing faculty and sta reception last night, ' moversty effect" on attitudes, said mathematics with inflation for resein lastd nightUniyersity Prof. Morton Brown, chairman of the Frye warned the President Harold Shapiro said the Senate Advisory Committee on Univer- meeting that ev executive order will "make oursiyAfr.tuiohkean situationi that much harder and that sity Affairs. - tuition hike, and much more challenging." Shapiro said Not only will a poor salary program tually deliversn muchmers abudget officials have no mean established faculty and staff increase, the Un University lbustocalhveo members may leave for higher paying able'to raise fa specific plans to deal with the proposed jobs, but also cause hardships in hiring percent, well bel d arito Qtndtip to ;att a nhino Tnxnc+rn4 6 V ck RISES for University ff have not kept pace r a number of years and e Regents at their July en with'the 18 percent d provided the state ac- next year's 12 percent niversity only would be culty salaries about 8 ow the inflation rate. ministrators now say cuts this year's Univer- on by 5 percent, and in- ar's funds 12 percent, might still rise as much Subscribe Now to the U iI 764-0558 graouaLe swuenLS LU ac asL e Lcng assistants, Brown said. The teaching assistants,' being both students and staff members, are hit with higher tuition as well as salary deterioration, he said. University am that if the state c sity appropriatic creases next ye faculty salariesn as 7 percent. . Prof:Reagan plan to cause economic shift I Daily Photo by KIM HILL Arabic at 8 a.m.? Students check the dwindling list of open courses at CRISP yesterday. F INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave ot Liberty 7614700 1981 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM DELECTABLY FUNNY!. Now see why the Academy voters fell for this endearingly romantic comedy -Kthlreeqt (:nrroll. Ve~c lork IOaiv N\ews. "FILM MAKING AT ITS BEST...", 'The Funniest, Tenderest Love Story Of The Year' .1 Fri.-6:50, 9:30 Sat., Sun.-1:20, 4:10, 6:50, 9:30 The only sure results of the Reagan administration's supply-side policies are redistributions of income, wealth, and power, a prominent economist wrote in the summer 1981 issue of Economic Outlook USA, published by the Univer- sity Institute for Social Research. James Tobin, Yale University's Sterling Professor of Economics, says these wealth-power shifts will go from government to private enterprises, from workers to capitalists, from poor to rich. "WHETHER supply-side budget cuts, tax cuts, and other measures will, as advertised, lift the American economy from stagflation to a new era of prosperity, productivity, and growth depends on empirical magnitudes of in- come and substitution effects that are not very well established. Supply- siders' diagnoses of our economic ills do not fit the facts," Tobin wrote. Tobin disagreed with the contention that rising federal tax levels have slowed national economic growth and called current attempts to use tax cuts as investment incentives "half-baked proposals." "A revolution is in process all right, social and political more than economic," he concluded. "A capsule symbol is the nearly universal en- thusiasm in Washington to rid the federal tax system of all semblance of taxation of intergenerational transfers of wealth. By ANDREW CHAPMAN University President Harold Shapiro welcomed an enthusiastic crowd of freshpersons to the University last, night at Alice Lloyd residence hall. Shapiro spoke at an introductory meeting of a Pilot Program course called "Making it at the University." SHAPIRO emphasized the importan- ce of receiving a superior education' while attending the University. "The hardest thing toAdo later in life is to replace the educational opportunity you had at the University," Shapiro told his audience. "The first thing to think about is what you are going to do academically for the next four years," he said. "Don't cut yourself off from a meaningful exposure in the humanities," Shapiro added. The University president stressed the, need for student to participate in non- academic activities, but, he added, "I think extra curricular activities are important, but secondary." AFTER HIS LECTURE Shapiro an- swered questions raised by students Shapiro greets new class who were interestedin the University's financial situation. . When asked why instructional areas of the University had to suffer from budget reductions Shapiro replied, that out of the 11 million dollars cut from this year's University budget, " . .. only a small share of the cuts were in the in- structional area." When asked what the administration was doing to increase falling minority enrollment at the University Shapiro said,"We're trying our best to attract more minority students, but we must be doing something wrong." l~At 1140 S. O Shapiro, VPs receive pay hikes ,e 5OWith this entire ad, one tic- ket s1 .50 Mon. thr u Thu'-s' eve. xgood thru 917.81 ~1 University 668-8411 / By DAN OBERROTMAN University President Harold Shapiro received a 6.6 percent pay raise in February. N Shapiro's salary hike and pay boosts for the six University vice presidents became known in late August after press inquiries were made to compare Shapiro's pay with Michigan State University President Cecil Mackey's salary of $88,000. EFFECTIVE LAST Feb. 1, Shapiro's salary was increased to $79;950, up from the previous $75,000 annually. Salaries of the six vice presidents were increased from between 3 percent and 9.5 percent. Pay raises made last fall for University staff and faculty mem- bers averaged 9 percent. "We can't attract quality people if we 'U' therapy unit faces elimination a0 don't pay them appropriate salaries," Shapiro said yesterday. He said University officials,"really didn't think about" announcing the raises in February. Joel Berger, University Information Services Director, said he would have announced the raises if he would have known about the pay hikes. Usually, raises are given in the fall. Berger said, however, the Regents and the president postponed executive officers' raises un- til more information was available con- cerning University appropriations. "It was so far out of the ordinary in terms of the timing that no one bothered to call this office and say, 'Hey, make an announcement,' Berger said. According to Shapiro, he ,,proposed the vice presidents' pay hikes based on eir performances and funds vailable. The Regents approved those raises, as well as Shapiro'ssalary in- crease. The other pay hikes follow: James Brinkerhoff, vice president and chief financial officer, $74,666, up from $70,440; Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs, $72,000, up from $70,000; Henry Johnson, vice president for student services, $51,742, up from '$48,357; Richard Kennedy, vice president for state relations, $53,498, up from $48,857; Charles Overberger, vice president for research, $67,747, up from $63,300; and Michael Radock, former vice president for university relations, who has since-resigned his post for a new one in California,$63,068, up from $59,236. Every night low price A film by FRANCOIS TRUFFAUTS Catherine Deneuve Gerard Depdrdieu (Continued from Page 1) University President Harold Shapiro will hold an open forum to hear public opinion on the proposal and also schedule ;private sessions with in- dividuals. Frye probably will formulate a decision to present tp the Regents at their Oct. 15 meeting, according to Ed- ward Dougherty, assistant to the vice president for special projects. The program-which supplies 36 of the state'S 87 physical therapy graduates each year-has been struggling for three years for financial and administrative support from the University, according to Physical Therapy Curriculum Director Richard Darnell. Citing a "decade of neglect" primarily due to the University's stronger commitment to medical doc- tor training and research the program's faculty requested that either the physical therapy program. "be operated within the current educational realities or be discontinued in an or- derly End equitable fashion," Darnell said. According to Gronvall's recommen- dation, the program is "not central to the mission of the medical school" and its elimination would not "adversely af- fect the hospital's ability to provide physical therapy services to its patien- r 0 0 m Am