Page 2-B-,Friday, September 11, 1981-The Michigan Daily II . .y 'a I;. {r c, t SA\EThIsA1 AND SAVE I 2dBUK$ A GREAT BAC TO- ScW oL CINU ! T. CAN'T GUARANTEE tAEA i N' CLOTHES FRoM S A6ES uS9 W I IL. rMpovE YER 6RA DES, S- T- 2.E W - UL I - m OV E- VyE U . ANY PV)CPE OF . oR Mo ! (EXCEPT SALE MERIC"AN >ISE)W eN YOVu 1RIN6 Tr4IS 4bTo A NY S9EBgs U EoNE COVPO N'PER PU1RASE t THISiU U PCN VAUDU UAU UPtEfER 3q1 --t am m 0 a ot oEXT TO MEIJER THRIFTY ACRES ON CARPENTER ROAD " FORD ROAD AT CANTON CENTER b ~~~~~~Mon. thru Salmo A10mtop ti Sun. noon to 6p m - --- LSA facing more budget cuts By PAMELA KRAMER Although University administrators say the most dramatic budget cuts in LSA are over, the College's belt still needs to be tightened by $471,048 during the coming year on the University's road to "smaller but better." LSA's new dean, Peter Steiner discussed how those additional cuts would be made. "WE WERE GIVEN a major reduc- tion to achieve, and we were unable to achieve it in one year," Steiner ex- plained. So the College "in a couple of different ways borrowed money" to buy time for making the required cutbacks. In a letter to LSA faculty members released last June, then-Acting Dean John Knott said, "The six percent cut in the College's base budget confronted us last fall with a $2,187,795 problem." Officials tried to solve that problem by putting a hiring freeze on open faculty positions, planning varying reductions for individual departments, and eliminating the geography department altogether. BUT EVEN AFTER those plans were set down on paper, and after Vice President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye reduced the size of the required LSA budget cut by $300,000, the College is still left with the task of cutting an additional $471,048 to meet its 1981-82 goal. "I consider the problem very serious, but not impossible," Dean Steiner said. "Smaller but better means we can't do everything. (These times) force dif- ficult choices on us." STEINER SAID he hopes "perhaps to postpone" some of the cuts in the LSA budget for a year through taking out more loans. Beyond that, he said, "there will be a reduction in the size of the faculty, but not through random at- trition." Some LSA departments will be given contraction goals to meet during the next few years, and most of the cuts will occur at the departmental level, according to Steiner. Stu- dents will have input to the budget-cut decisions through the in- dividual departments' executive com- mittees, Steiner said. Additional plans for .budget reduc- tions are still in the early stages, he said. IN AN INTERVIEW last month, University President Harold Shapiro said that although more retrenchment is necessary for the University, cut- backs will not have to be made as rapidly as they were this past year. "I think we're over the hump in the sense of large, extremely rapid reallocations (cuts)," Shapiro said. "We are not over the hump in the sense that there are more adjustments ahead of us (in the next five years) than behind us. But I hope that these ad- justments will not have to be accom- plished in such a rapid time frame. "Because of last year's state budget," Shapiro explained, the University had to move extremely rapidly to cut back, and "you never do as well if you move rapidly as you do if you have time for a more thoughtful approach." THERE MUST BE cutbacks in non- academic support areas-areas such as the Extension Service, the Botanical Gardens, Michigan Media-Shapiro said. "It probably will be true that the non-academic areas will have more than their share of adjustments," he said. "Perhaps, therefore, the academic areas will be shielded somewhat." "I don't think what we have (at the University) is perfect," Shapiro con- tinued. "I don't think that the strength in the various academic departments is uniformly of the same quality. We have some extremely excellent academic departments and we have some depar- tments that are not yet extremely ex- cellent. Thus, I think that some judgment is called for (in deciding where to make cuts)," he said. SPECIFICALLY, Shapiro explained, the University has been trying to strengthen its programs in the natural sciences within LSA "because we felt on the whole that we needed strengthening in some of those areas." Steiner ... times force hard choices Increases are also planned for finan- cial aid programs. "I expect tuition to continue to increase (with inflation)," Dean Steiner said. "The amount of financial assistance will need to in- crease accordingly." The dean is currently seeking out- side, private sources for scholarship assistance and, he said, he hopes to soon announce some new programs available to . students with financial need. This story was reprinted from the Daily's summer edition. f~x n } .. . .v.n.:...... r.. ... . .. . . . .....:.f. ... ... . ....nn.:.....'.;..:".w... }}.... . . . ....r..... vN a ti.::.....n.al.. ........ ........ ... ...3.. ... ........ ......... s NatinalBank & Trust has a checking account that's right for you. 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Krusinski is suffering from am- nesia-the aftermath of head injuries suffered in a car accident that almost killed him. AFTER 12 MONTHS in a hospital room, Krusinski will return home Saturday, to join his wife, Janet, who has twice inspired his love. The ordeal began one evening in Sep. tember 1980 when Krusinski's car smashed into a tree. Krusinski, then 28, arrived at the hospital in a coma. A priest gave him last rites. Doctors were not certain he would survive. But his wife was. "THE ONE THING I remember was touching him for the first time there" she said. "I thought if I touched him, he'd be OK. God, he was still alive. "I remember people asking me if I was prepared if he would die," said Mrs, Krusinski, a 25-year-old beautician. "I just didn't think of it. It was like a dream standing there." For 10 anxious days, Mrs. Krusinski waited for signs that would give her4 hope. His eyes opened. His hands star- ted moving. BUT WHEN HE looked into her eyes he saw a stranger. He didn't recognize the swoman he had married three years earlier. "I didn't realize I wasn't going to be remembered," she said. "I kept trying to show him pictures. He didn't remember them. He really didn't know' what he looked like. He hadn't seen a mirror. The past was not a total blank. "He. remembers his family and most of my family," she said. "He could recall when he was a little kid just like yester- day. He recognized college friends and stories they told. He even remembered our first date when we went and played bingo." BUT THE MEMORY of their home and their days together was wiped out. Still, Mrs. Krusinski wasn't frightened. She visited him almost~ every day, bringing him pizzas, telling him funny stories and saying again and. again that she loved him. "I was trying to bring his memory back," she said. Throughout the long days of waiting, she said, "He was real honest. He didn't remember me. But he reallyseemed to like me. He trusted me right away." AND THEN ONE special day, after she told her husband she loved him, he repeated the words to her. "I think he fell in love with me all over again. He doesn't remember that he ever loved me before." PAID FOR USED LP'S and CASSETTES