The Michigpn Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981-Page 9 Even Ann Arbor not immune to violent crime G ood luck Doily Photo by KIM HILL New students and late enrollees wait in line Tuesday for their last chance to pick courses before the general student population begins the drop/add ritual today. By ANN MARIE FAZIO Last April's killing of two University students at Bursley dormitory on North Campus was not, much to the distress of the University community, the only such incident to plague the area during the past year. The previous September, a Univer- sity graduate student was found stab- bed to death outside of her west Ann Arbor apartment. Rebecca Huff, 30, was the third local resident in five mon- ths to die under similar circumstances. THE FIRST MURDER victim, Shirley Small, 17, was found dead on April 20, 1980 near her home in the Georgetown Townhouses, an Ann Ar- bor subdivision. On july 13, the body of Glenda Richmond, 23, was discovered outside the front door of her University Townhouse Apartment, also in Ann Ar- bor. Ann Arbor Police Chief William Cor- bett said there were several similarities in the murders which lead police to suspect the possibility of one killer. RAPE IS ANOTHER problem to which the city is not immune, and last summer a special community program was organized to help combat it. The most recent reported rape oc- curred last July when an intruder, en- tered a home on the city's east side. The victim was reportedly sleeping down- stairs when he. entered. The suspect allegedly dragged her upstairs, blin- dfolded her, gagged and tied her up, and then raped her, police said. That incident was the second repor- ted in less than two months in Ann Ar- bor. In May, a University Hospital em- ployee was abducted at gunpoint and raped near hospital property. The victim had reportedly been war- ned by her assailant that she would be killed if she tried to scream for help. She attempted to resist once, police said, and was choked "nearly to uncon- sciousness." AT THE BEGINNING of last Winter term, a 36-year-old woman was ac- costed in one of the music practice rooms of the Michigan Union. When she was practicing, two men in their late teens entered, pulled a gun on her and told her to remove her clothes. When she refused, the assailants allegedly knocked her down and hit her in the head several times. Later on in the term, a man from Eastern Michigan University was arraigned on charges of arson in con- nection with a rash of trash fires at the University Towers apartment complex on South University and South Forest Avenues. There were 14 minor fires in 19 days at the apartment building, according to one source who lived in the building. THE SUSPECT, Mehrdad Mohyi, was a resident of the 14th floor of the complex, where most of the fires had been set. Ann Arbor Detective Robert Lavansler said Mohyi gave police a statement admitting responsibility for the latest fire that had been set, but Lavansler did not, rule out the possibility that the other fires were set by someone else. A few weeks before the fires, a fight at a Bursley Hall party ended in a gun shot and one arrest for assault with in- tent to commit less than murder and for carrying a concealed weapon. On March 8th, a Bursley security guard discovered 20-year-old Billy Jackson and another man fighting in a second floor bathroom. As the security guard was escorting Jackson out the door, he allegedly pulled out a .32 caliber handgun and fired one shot, before fleeing to his car. POLICE AND security officials agree that the most problems students have is with break-ins, especially during vacation breaks. Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Harold Tinsey said the best way for people to avoid thefts during the breaks is to simply take the usual precautions, making sure the doors and windows are securely locked. He added that taking home valuables and finding out if a neighbor can keep an eye on things can help thwart would-be burglars during vacation. "Use common sense," he said. The Ann Arbor police department has a special unit devoted to crime preven- tion. The unit is headed by its sole member, Detective Bernie Price. The idea behind the crime prevention is community awareness. "A lot of crime prevention is just educationg the public," Price said. State colleges cooperate amid financial problems By BETH ROSENBERG and KEVIN TOTTIS Daily News Analysis As Michigan's public colleges and universities grapple with declining state subsidies, most will have to carry out severe cutbacks and discontinue. some programs. But because these institutions are 'U' tition- inCreases i cra18 percent. .or '8 1-82 (Continued from Page 1) universities and colleges both in Michigan and out of state. According to a study in the Lansing State Journal, tuition and fees at Michigan's 15 public colleges and universities will increase by an average of 16.6 percent this fall. Increases range from 6.8 percent at Wayne State University to 33.9 percent at Saginaw Valley, Frye said. Michigan State University anticipates an increase in tuition and fees of about 11 percent. ' FRYE SUGGESTED that MSU's hike is so much smaller than the Univer- sity's because MSU officials instituted a mid-year increase between semesters, while the University did not. However, -a mid-year increase is a possibility for this University's future if badly-needed state appropriations do not materialize, officials said. Legislation recommending a 12.2 percent increase in state funds to the University for the 1981-82 academic year was approved by the state Senate and House and signed by Gov. William Milliken last April. HOWEVER, Bob Sauve, assistant to Frye, said that "nobody believes (the promised 12 percent) is there, and the chances are 99 to 1" the governor will issue an executive order reducing the appropriation. Frye said he and the rest of the ad- ministration favor raising tuition rather than cutting back academic programs. Proper reviews to select weak departments for reduction takes a lot of time, Frye said. "We can't reduce too fast," he said. SHOULD STATE aid continue to dwindle, Shapiro said, "we'll have to start reducing programming rather rapidly." If disaster does occur, "we may have to go back to hiring freezes and across-the-board cuts," Shapiro said. Daily staff w'riter Mark Gin din: .:tfle~d a report/for this story. part of a state system of higher education that is autonomous and decentralized, there's little guarantee that cuts won't be made in the same academic programs at each institution, thus crippling the state-wide university system. DURING THE 1970's Gov. William Milliken and other state officials at- tempted unsuccessfully to establish a much-needed central governing body for Michigan's systerA of highter education to coordinate education across the state. University officials opposed the plan because they feared bureaucracy and increased politics in resource allocations. As these same officials face state cutbacks now, they are becoming in- creasingly responsive to the concept of some sort of state control body. "I think I'm hearing more recep- tiveness to this idea (as a result of cut- backs) but we still don't have active support," said Doug Smith, higher education consultant to Milliken. PRESIDENTS AND academic vice presidents of state colleges and univer- sities do meet to discuss program plan- ning in their respective universities, but, for representatives of one univer- sity to suggest changes for another campus. "I don't think that (discussing' programming) has been all that suc- cessful," Smith said. "It's like the fox watching the hen coop. You have one school challenging another. It's not the best process."~ Another problem with interaction between state educaitonal institutions, Smith said, is that representatives of smaller colleges, such as Saginaw Valley State College, may feel vic- timized by larger institutions which have greater clout with the legislature. PROF. MARVIN Peterson, director of the University's Cneter for the Study of Higher Educaion, said that if state universities don't hake plans to deal together with the current crisis, the legislature and governor will have to become more involved. "Ultimately the rational decison is to make a choice that certain institutions and departments aren't needed and then close them," he said. "If nobody will close these places, then they'll starve and eventually have to close. But no legislator will vote to cut back the pipeline in another (colleague's) area," Peterson siad, because that lawmaker might then turn around and vote again- st the first legislator. See BUDGET, Page 18 ACNE? The Department of Dermatology, UM Medical School, is try- ing to learn more about acne and its treatment. We are treating all types of acne with newly designed products to determine which are the best. These treatments are FREE. Many times the developer will pay you up to $100 to try their .new medication for a few months. For more info, call (313) 763-5519, 8 am-4 pm, M-F. Please call when you arrive on campus, or a few days before. -.00 ...- r DO YOUR MOST COMFORTABLE PAIR OF SHOES LOOK THISG00OD? If they're Timberlands they do. Because Timberland handsewns have a unique construction which allows the shoe to conform to your foot instead of vice versa. The uppers are made of the finest full-grain leathers. They're sewn with sturdy nylon thread. The eyelets are solid brass. And the soles are long-lasting, rugged Vibram The result? Handsewns so comfortable, the breaking-in period ends the day you put them on. 1imbedai .~ - r0 -- t~ younee:fr al he coursesyib Enieering textabook tdsonprices. -:V An extensive inventory of prfessional :: : A ::comp:en:sve selection of scientific, pr-ogramabl cacuators. -. Quality,:bran:e:drafting materials -S C.ont Uschool0s ppl ........ . ............. ............ Cneniritly od .: one ~.est 6oh :.:.:::::: :: En:~ein Sc~[ihe Michigan U:o Ad tor tdr iza aron- ::r. p.: a ee ...- y O d00 61 ,. . ,..,,,, M..,.,. U MAST'S =VbX I CAMPUS 619 E. Liberty SHOP 662-0266 ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. Fourth Ave. 996-9059 (IfL D WE BUY MPi OAOLDfia