Ninety- Two Years ofr Editorial Freedom I E Mitn 14I i1Q COLD Mostly cloudy today with a high in the mid 508. Vol. XCI. No. 33 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 17, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages 'U' budget cut by $4.5 million U-Cellar will stay .inUio By JANET RAE The University Cellar will remain in the basement of the Michigan Union, U-Cellar officials promised Union Director Frank Cianicola yesterday. Negotiations between U-Cellar and Union officials will con- tinue in an attempt to iron out differences over a proposed new contract with the University, but U-Cellar officials, squeaking in just after the deadline set by Cianciola, gave an official promise that they will not move from the Union because of the disagreements. CIANCIOLA HAD earlier declared some points in the con- tract dispute "not negotiable," and had given U-Cellar of- icials an Oct. 15 deadline to notify him if they intended to remain in the Union. U-Cellar representatives have been up- set over a number of points in the proposed contract, in- cluding a sizable jump in the rental rate the bookstore pays for its space in the Union. But, representatives from the student-run bookstore agreed yesterday to the 65 percent rental rate hike and will start paying $9.07 per square foot of store space. But Cian- ciola in turn agreed to charge the store only half that rate for each square foot of the storage space U-Cellar rents from the *Union. The store will resume paying the full rental rate for storage, however, after it moves to a new location in the Union following extensive renovations. The cost of the planned renovations are another major stumbling block to an agreeable contract. Cianciola wants U- Cellar to pick up the tab for the massive renovations involved in U-Cellar's move to a larger location in the Union, a cost estimated between $250,000 and $350,000. But U-Cellar of- ficials have balked at the $350,000 figure. Officials reported that U-Cellar will pay the renovation costs, however. IN ADDITION, construction of a fire wall and ventilation system, and installation of a sprinkler system were part of the disagreements concerning renovation costs. Caballero See U-CELLAR, Page 5 _ _ Gov. Milliken trims state aid By ANDREW CHAPMAN An expected executive order from the governor, reducing the state's ap- propriation to the University by more than $4.5 million, will cause another round of budget and program cuts at the University, Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye said yesterday. The executive order, which Gov. William Milliken is expected to present to the legislature Thursday, comes on the heels of an earlier $6.1 million cut last month in the University's funds from the state. FRYE SAID THE new cutback is smaller than administrators expected, but that it would nonetheless require more program cutbacks at the Univer- sity. He said he has "notions in my mind" about what departments or programs may now face discontinuan- ce reviews as a result of the new state cuts. Frye said he expects the University will now have to embark on a new round of cutbacks, making either across-the- board budget cuts or, selective elimination or cutbacks in some programs. Frye said he favors a program of selective discontinuance of programs. HE EXPLAINED that the University will try to "weave" this latest state. budget reduction into the University's long range "smaller but better" plan of retrenchment. University programs that are of "low priority, low quality, and not central" to the University's goals, will be the hardest hit by the new retrenchment, Frye said, echoing the criteria by which the University's geography department and physical therapy program were targeted for elimination. The governor's recommended Frye .. . warns of more program cuts executive order budget reduction will cut $20 million from Michigan's higher education system and $270 million from overall state spending.- THE EXECUTIVE order recom- mended that 3 percent of the $670 million given by the state to higher education institutions be cut, said Doug Roberts, assistant to the State Depar- tment of Budget and Management. The decision to cut only $20 million from the state's higher education aid was not based on any preconceived formula; but was completely based on Gov. Milliken's personal judgement, Roberts said. Roberts claimed that the governor is concerned with the permanent harm See MILLIKEN, Page 2 Bouncing for beats Mark Nudelman and Alan Goldstein of Sigma Alpha Mu, bounce basketballs with their frater- nity brothers to raise funds for the American Heart Association. 'U'r By JOHN ADAM The University has begun its push to make Ann Arbor and the University of *kichigan the world center of excellence in both robotics and molecular biology research. Within the University's College of Engineering, Dean James Duderstadt has established the Center for Robotics and Integrated Manufacturing, which is expected to play an important role in the proposed $200 million robotics in- stitute and industrial park. IT IS HOPED by many University administrators that a robotics center will be established in Ann Arbor during the next 10 years. 0 General Motors, the Army Research Office, and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research have already ex- pressed interest in the CRIM project, officials said. ea chin There have been proposals in the vicinity of $1.5 million a year in basic research already drawn up by these companies for the CRIM project, Duderstadt said. "Quiet negotiations" are being made to bring more robotics experts to the f University by the fall of 1982, Duder- stadt said. DUDERSTADT added that they are recruitig scholars from Europe and Japan as well as the United States to in- crease the staff of 30 faculty members which currently makes up the CRIM project. The molecular genetics research within the University already involves more than 35 faculty members and en- compasses six different departments within the Medical School and LSA. It would be impossible to consolidate the molecular genetics research at the for robotics University within a single department or program such as CRIM, Dale Oxen- der, professor of biological chemistry, said. However, the recently formed molecular genetics steering commit- tee, of which Oxender is chairman, is attempting to establish a genetic engineering institute connected with the University. Oxender is working closely with leaders of Bendix, Dow Chemical, and Upjohn corporations, and has recently been approached by several Ann Arbor firms for possible joint ventures with the University. THE UNIVERSITY is also looking for eight or ten senior faculty mnembers in molecular genetics, Oxender said. At the University the CRIM project already has an initial funding of $2 million over two years which is the same level the Carnegie-Mellon robotics center started at. According to Bartell, the CMU center now has an operating budget of $3.5 million and several more grants of more than $1 milliongre possibly forthcoming. THE CMU CENTER, receives most of its funding from the Westinghouse Corporation and the Office of Naval Reasearch, both of which maintain several representatives working in robotics research. Like Stanford and MIT, Carnegie- Mellon has a pod of industrial affiliates which contribute $10,000 to $50,000 to maintain closer ties with universities nationwide. A similar arrangement is being set up at this university, Electrical and Com- puter Engineering Chariman George Haddad said. Moshe Dayan di ,es of heart attack at. 66 Regents approve robotics funding By JANET RAE The University Regents yesterday gave the go-ahead for the establish- ment of a new engineering school research program in robotics that could seve as a base for the creation of a massive $200 million "world class" robotics center. The Regents approved the allocation of an initial $1 million over the next two years, to start the new Center for R obotics and Integrated Manufac- turing. Most of the money for the project will be provided by the state. ENGINEERING College Dean James Duderstadt said his office has already initiated a world-wide search to find eight top-quality scholars to staff the center. The new center could be the seed for a huge robotics research park that an aide to Gov. William Milliken said would be funded by a $25 million grant from the state and an additional $200 million in private investments. The aide, Robert Law, said Ann Arbor is the leading condidate as a site for the research center. Speaking before the Regents 'at their regular monthly meeting yesterday, Duderstadt said the center will work closely with other departments in the University to study the economic, social, and political ramifications of in- dustry's conversion to robotics, as well as the technological and scientific aspects. DUDERSTADT also told the Regents that Associate Engineering Dean Dan Atkins, who was appointed Thursday by the Regents, will serve as acting direc- tor of the center. In other business, University Viced President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, updating- the Regents on the progress of the review of the Univer- sity's physical therapy program, said he expected to present his recommen- dation on the program's proposed elimination by the Regents' meeting next month. The Regents also approved salary hikes for the University's top ad- ministrators. The raises, which are comparable to the 5.5 percent pay raise faculty members received earlier this fall, are as follows: President Harold Shapiro, $84,447 up from $79,950 last year; ,Chief Financial Officer James Brinkerhoff, $78,400, up from $74,666; Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, $76,300 as compared to $72,000 last year; Vice President for Student Services, Henry Johnson, $54,330 up from $51,7421/2 Vice President for Research, Charles Over- berger, now receives $71,500, up from $67,748; and Vice President for State Relations .Richard Kennedy's salary climbed from $53,498 to $57,175. Only Harvey Jacobsen, who was appointed acting vice president for university relations last summer, did not receive a pay raise. His salary remains $50,000 I From AP and UPI Moshe Dayan, soldier-statesman of Israel, died of a heart attack yesterday in a suburban Tel Aviv hospital. He was 66. Dayan as foreign minister was a key figure in molding the historic Egyptian- Israeli peace accords with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, and died 10 days after Sadat was assassinated by Moslem extremists while watching a military paradein Cairo. DAYAN, WHO was treated for cancer two years ago, was admitted to Tel HashomersHospital Thursday suffering chest pains. Egypt's minister of state for foreign affairs, Butros Ghali, said in Cairo that Dayan "played a main role" in the peace negotiations. He added, "He was among the Israeli politicians who believed in the possibility of achieving a peaceful coexistence and peace bet- ween the Palestinians and Israel." At home, Dayan was a hero in war and a statesman in peace, serving first as defense and then foreign minister. BUT TO THE world, Moshe Dayan, with his famous black eyepatch, was a symbol of the Jewish state and its struggle to exist in a hostile Arab world. Dayan's wife Rachel said he had not felt well after dinner Thursday and was taken to the hospital in an ambulance. Before becoming a peacemaker, Dayan was a soldier - a bold batallion commander in the 1948 war for in- dependence, chief of staff in the 1956 .Dayan ... former Israeli Defense Minister Sinai campaign and defense minister in the 1967 and 1973 Arab Israeli wars. HE ONCE described himself as a man who reacted to changes' and sometimes helped "create them." That occurred in 1979 when then President Jimmy Carter flew to Israel in a last- ditch attempt to win the Egyptian- Israeli agreement. Dayan suggested concessions that included an ac- See DAYAN, Page 5 TODAY Smashing solution WO BROTHERS from Menlo Park are market- ing a way to break the mind-boggling Rubik's Cube puzzle in record time. The answer, they say, is to take their small, mallet like club and smash the multi-colored cube to smitherines. The Cube Smasher, "r .. ^Y- - si-sa hacihtctacof tha rhPbutit s ins ef- like to sneak up on it when it's not looking and smash it," Hill said. The Hills say they have orders for 25,000 smashers and hope to sell a million, at $4 each, by Christmas. D Their right to go "You can't tell us where to go," is the latest slogan of about 800 students at the University of Massachusetts. Scantily clad in bathrobes and towels, the crowd gathered outside a faculty meeting to protest the recent elimination of nnal hathrnnms from the oamnus nrms "Coed . ned. noon Monday to meet their demands. They threatened to take over the administrationbuilding if the ban on coed bathrooms was not lifted by then. D E What a way to go James Johnson, 26, says Illinois' reports of his death are greatly exaggerated. Johnson and passenger Janice Rich,. 24, were injured when their car went out of control and tur- ned over Sept. 26. They were both treated for cuts and bruises at a hospital and released. The original copy of the It's tough to uphold West Virginia University student Andrew Mergler has been dismissed as the school's official mascot-the "Moun- taineer." The action stems from Mergler's arrest for public intoxication last week. "I'm sorry.I wish I could have lived up to the legend of the Mountaineer," Mergler was quoted in the campus newspaper. "I thought I had, but I guess I didn't. I guess this is my punishment. I regret what I did." n- I i i i I