Ninety- Two Years of Editorial Freedom Alt IgUU I~hIIIQ FAIR Partly cloudy and mild today with a high near 60. Vol. XClI,N No. 47 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 3, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages t . _ Warames ROTC cadets fight it out during weekend maneuvers Big Ten faculty rep considered resigning By MIKE McINTYRE BOOM! "Somebody just blew up out there!" Captain Michael Pearson yells to the squad of soldiers. "He's dead." John Denike had just marched through a trip-wire, detonating the mine that left him lying "dead" along the side of the dirt road. Moments later a resurrected Denike listens attentively as Capt. Pearson, assistant chairman of the University's Army Officer Education Program (ROTC), explains to a group of ten, cadets the -proper procedure for navigating a minefield. "It's a slow, tedious process to go through a minefield," Pearson says to his studen- ts, "But if you do it right, you can make it." THE MOCK minefield was one of five Tactical Applications Exercises (TAX Lanes) in which 61 University ROTC cadets participated Saturday - a day- long Field Training Exercise at Peach Mountain, near Dexter. According to Pearson, the purpose of the Field Training Exercisj, which was designed and conducted by the senior cadets, is t place junior cadets in leadership enrollment con....tinues Ce M to climb By JULIE HINDS Reserve Officer-Training Corps of- ficials are predicting an increase in national ROTC enrollment from a year ago. ROTC officials and students say the rise is due to student desire to use the program to both finance , their college education and as a stepping stone for their civilian careers after they've left the military. Although national ROTC officials are still in the process of tabulating enrollment figures, the Air Force ex- pects a 10 percent jump, while the Navy and Army predict some increase. PRESENT University ROTC enrollment of about 500 equals last year's figure, which showed a 30 percent See ROTC, Page 7 By ANDREW CHAPMAN The University's faculty represen- tative to the Big Ten athletic conferen- ce, , Thomas Anton, considered resigning from that post, a number of University officials reported. University President Harold Shapiro said yesterday, however, that Anton, a political science professor, will remain as the faculty's Big Ten representative and will continue to serve on the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics. SHAPIRO SAID he never had received a resignation letter from An- ton. However, Richard Kennedy, vice president for state relations and an ex- officio member of the intercollegiate athletic board, said yesterday that An- ton had written a letter of resignation, but he noted that it was not addressed to Shapiro or to University Athletic Direc- tor Don Canham. "There might be one (a resignation letter from Anton) around here somewhere," Shapiro said. Anton may have considered resigning, Shapiro ad- ded, but he has not done so. Anton ... resignation in question ANTON REFUSED to discuss whether he had considered resigning from his athletic board post. He said, however, that he had discussed with Shapiro over the past year his role as faculty representative. See BIG TEN, Page 2 LSA faculty demands ret renchmei By JANET RAE LSA faculty members,in an effort to increase their input into the Univer- sity's budget-cutting, yesterday passed a resolution demanding that the administration keep them informed during the retrenchment process. The Rohn resolution- named for its author, Residential College Lecturer Matthew Rohn - was the subject of ex- tensive debate before it squeaked through yesterday's faculty meeting on a vote of 40 to 36. It calls for the release of detailed information about review plans being made by LSA ad- ministrators acting on the University's itt updates "smaller but better" retrenchment motto. IN THEIR resolution, the faculty asked the administration to report on any plans for program cuts, the ad- ministration'a budgetary priorities, and hiring trends at the University. The points of the resolution were based on the earlier findings of a student- faculty group, It's Our University, con- cerned with the direction of retrench- ment at the University. IOU was formed last February. in reaction to the development of the ad- ministration's "smaller but better" plan. The group fought for increased See LSA, Page 3 I University formalizes ties with China . exchange program to begin in 1982 By JOHN ADAM Through the efforts of the ad- ministration and faculty, the Univer- sity is gradually formalizing ties to an awakening power: the People's Republic of China. During his trip to China in May, University President Harold Shapiro established a scholar exchange program involving eight different Chinese institutions and the University. It is set to start next fall. A SPECIAL CHINA Task Force Committee, which is chaired by political science Prof. Michel Oksen- berg, has detailed the arrangement in a soon-to-be-released report to Univer- sity researchers and faculty. Under the exchange program, University faculty and graduate students will be able to conduct resear- ch in China. They will have basic ex- penses paid for by the Chinese in- stitutions, Oksenberg said, adding most of the Chinese acadamies and univer- sities have agreed to provide inter- preters for researchers. Studies, said possible research oppor- tunites exist in all areas ranging from working in any of the Academies of Medicine and Science to studying of ur- ban planning in Peking. University researchers may stay in China from one or two months to a year, Oksenberg said. Because the program is based on reciprocity, the University will pay the expenses of Chinese scholars here. The future program support is hoped to eventually be entirely funded by private donors and firms doing business in China. Already, Oksenberg said, the Burroughs Corporation has agreed to fund two fellowships. In previous years, University scholars often had a difficult time arranging research opportunities in the People's Republic of China, though numerous Chinese scholars were at the University. Oksenberg said this ex- change program is a modest way to facilitate University scholars conduc- ting research in China. OKSENBERG emphasized that the Chinese situation is a delicate one, although the country is opening up, it is still an authoritarian state "without a tradition of unfettered research." For example, even Chinese researchers in China do not have free stack access and many of the books in the libraries are classified, which limits the research opportunities, he said. Consequently, Oksenberg said University scholars will have to be realistic about the restraints on their research opportunities, But, he stated, several University faculty and graduate students have recently been able to successfully research in China. See UNIVERSITY, Page 8 Many Chinese scholars here at 'U' alread By JOHN ADAM During the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s in The People's Republic of China, Rongqu Luo, a history professor at Peking University, was exiled along; with other university intellectuals to a Chinese labor camp. Now, with China emerging as a world power and strengthening its education programs, Luo is one of the more than 6000 Chinese schoilars in the United States - up from zero two years ago. LUO IS A visiting professor at the. University's Center for Chinese Studies. He is currently doing research on a book about American life " to in- troduce the reality of the United States" to the Chinese people. He is here on a grant from the Center for Chinese Studies. Luo, however, is an exception. Of the more than 80 Chinese scholars. at the University, most are engaged in research in the hard, physical sciences, such as engineering or physics. They are sponsored by government or private sources, said Michel Oksen- berg, a political science professor and a See MANY, Page 8 Oksenberg, associate at who is also a research the Center for Chinese TODAY li Classy vending machines HE CHAMPAGNE brunch, once a dining tradi- tion of the elite, is now available at New York City's only remaining automat. The Horn & Hard- art Automat at 42nd Street and Third Avenue began serving the brunch Sunday. Although the buffet-style meal was served in an elegant stvle amid the Art Doln The Pony Express returns In a demonstration touted as evidence that the Postal Service needs "a stiff shot of competition," an Idaho, senator left virtually no doubt that a good steed, given a motorcycle escort, can beat the U.S. Mail out of town. Republican Steve Symms is the sponsor of a bill to let private companies deliver first-class mail, and he had an idea for calling attention to that proposition. So he invited jn !_ _ L_.-- L_ e & , . would normally arrive Wednesday. A first-class letter to Boise, Idaho, he noted, might take a day longer, at the same new rate of 20 cents, up 2 cents as of Sunday. But the mail agency's express service would get up to two pounds of mail to either Harpers Ferry or Boise overnight for $9.35-or your money back. Symms didn't say how long it might take the horse to get to Boise. Nor did he say how much it cost to operate the horse, or tie up two police escorts. The horse had a head start, thanks to the fact that Symm scheduled the event at 10 a.m. and the next pickup time for\ the mailbox was 1 p.m. "I didn't select this point," Symms aid- "I nues the Pntal Srvice onuld onme by and get it " public-to ensure that there will be a universal service at a universal cost." Symms dismissed a reporter's question as to whether his proposal might revive the Pony Express. "The Pony Express is the most publicized but the least-suc- cessful of all the mail services in our history," he said. Q On the inside .. . Arts has a preview of tonight's Siouxsie Sioux and'the Banshees show... Howard Witt fires off at Big Business i . I