Ninety- Two Years of Editorial Freedom Ll tic Sict tt l43kiittj CLOUDY N Increasing cloudiness tod~iy with a high around 44. Vol. XCII, No. 66 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Doily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 25, 1981 Ten Cents Eight Pages Art history profs ask for facts on union By JULIE HINDS Thirteen members of the history of art department last week became the seeond faculty group to request infor- mation about a possible faculty union. All but two members of the history of art faculty currently on campus sent a petition last Wednesday to the Commit- tee on the Economic Status of the Faculty asking that group to begin gathering information on unionization. THE PETITION - which supported an earlier request by members of the physics department - urged CESF to begin immediately to look into the possibility of faculty unionization. It emphasized, however, "any joint statement in favor of or opposed to unionization would at this time be premature." "Some of us think unionization is good; some of us think it's a bad idea. We just want more facts," said History of Art Professor Ward Bissell, one of the petition's originators. Also yesterday, CESF Chairman Ronald Teigen, an economics professor, said his group plans to send in 10 days a questionnaire to faculty members, to determine if they want more information on unionization. "THERE CERTAINLY are voices in the faculty culling for more information on unions, but we have no idea how widespread the support is," Teigen said. Teigen said the questionnaire does not ask directly if professors support unionization. "We don't feel the faculty has enough information on the subject to make a decision yet," Teigen said. The questionnaire will also ask faculty members how they feel about the way this year's salary increase was distributed to professors, Teigen said. MANY FACULTY members have expressed concern over the Univer- See ART, Page 2 Kelly 'trial set for. Feb. 16 By ANN MARIE FAZIO Leo Kelly, a former University student accused of shooting to death two fellow students in Bursley Hall last April, is scheduled to stand trial beginning next Feb. 16. Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Ross Campbell will preside over trial proceedings. A CHANGE OF venue motion, filed by defense attorney William Water- man, has been taken under ad- yisement, said prosecuting attorney Lynwood Noah. Waterman had asked that the trail be moved out of Washtenaw County on the grounds that his client would not receive a fair trail because of unfair pgblicity. The decision on the change of venue motion will depend on jury selection the morning of the trial, Noah said. Unless both the prosecutor and defen- se attorney have difficulties choosing jury members, he explained, the location of the trial will not be changed. inflation tumbles to .in L percent October AP Photo Snow showers Dorothy Smith, from Roanoke, Va., carries her umbrella to work because of Virginia's wetter-than-usual flurries. To see if it will be snowing where you're headed for break, check the weather map on Page 2. - 0 'U considers possible affilia*tion wth GMI WASHINGTON (AP) - After a disastrous September, inflation tum- bled to an annual rate of 4.4 percent last month as housing costs flattened out and food prices rose only moderately, the government said yesterday. The October figures, the lowest since the summer recession of a year ago, virtually guarantee that inflation for all of 1981 will be under 10 percent. And with another recession now under way, depressed consumer demands should keep the rate down in the months ahead. FOR THE first 10 months of this year, inflation - as measured by the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index - was 9.6 percent, said department of- ficials.# The new figures indicate that inflation for the year will dip beneath double figures, compared to 12.4 percent for 1980. "It looks like we're seeing the begin- ning of a major downturn in the rate of increase in theConsumer Price Index," said Allen Sinai, vice president and senior economist at Data Resources Inc., an economic forecasting firm in Lexington, Mass. EDWARD YARDENI, chief economist and vice president of the E.F. Hutton &Co., Inc., brokerage house, said the lower rate was "not a temporary aberration." The analysts attributed the hold down in prices to the dampening effect of the current recession. Most of the slowdown in the October index was attributed to a sharp easing of housing costs, which had gone up every month since declining 0.7 percent in July 1980, department officials said. THE OVERALL housing component - including house prices, mortgage rates and rent - was unchanged last month. "Home ownership costs, which had been primarily responsible for the sub- stantial increases in recent months, declined 0.3 percent," said the depar- tment report. "This decrease reflects declines of 0.7 percent in house prices and .1 percent in home financing costs." Food prices went up 0.2 percent last month, well off the levels recorded in the previous three months, the report said. Food bought at grocery stores was up only 0.1 percent, down from the 1.2 per- cent of September. PRESIDENT Reagan got a written ten briefing on the consumer price report at his mountaintop ranch at San- ta Barbara, Calif., where he is vacationing for a week. Murray Weidenbaum, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, told Reagan that further progress would be made in the months ahead, and pointed out that "lower inflation will help reduce the inflation premium in in- terest rates and should lead to further reductions in long and short-term in- terest rates," according to deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes. Meanwhile yesterday, the Commerce Department reported that orders for durable goods plunged 8 percent in Oc- tober, the biggest one-month drop in 21/ years and another graphic indication that a national recession is taking hold. By ANDREW CHAPMAN Officials from General Motors have spoken to various University ad- ministrators, including President Harold Shapiro and Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye, about the possibility of creating an affiliation between General Motors Institute in Flint and the University. "The University has held some very preliminary discussions with GM of- ficials on the possibility of a relation- ship (with the University)," Shapiro said. GMI is a four-year undergraduate in- stitute designed to teach industrial ad- ministration, industrial engineering, mechanical engineering, and electrical engineering. SHAPIRO SAID it was too early ,to speculate on what relationship might come out of the discussions, but he ad- ded, "everything is open and anything is open." Discussions were initiated because General Motors is looking for a way to make GMI independent from the car company, Bill Winters, GM news relations official said yesterday. Most of GMI's funds currently come from General Motors. General Motors is considering less costly alternatives for supporting the engineering institute, Winters said. ONE POSSIBLE reason suggested for GM's decision to no longer fund GMI is the current recession plaguing the car industry in Michigan. Engineering Dean James Duderstadt said several possibilities exist for GMI in the near future. GMI could become a private institution, Duderstadt ex- plained, or it could affiliate itself with another university. "Several other universities have been contacted. U of M is just one of them," Duderstadt said. He would not com- ment on which other universities had been contacted by GM. The understanding is that any university that affiliates itself with GMI would not have to support the in- stitute, Duderstadt said. "IT WOULD be financially autonomous," he said. See 'U', Page 2 'U' lecturer brings outer space odysseys alive By PERRY CLARK The-hundreds who flock each month to hear Jim Loudon speak rarely are disappointed - they are treated to a three-hour blend of science facts and humor called AstroFest. Loudon, a self-proclaimed "wan- dering astronomy popularizer," has created a lecture format that features a visual extravaganza interspersing the lecture with NASA films and an array of slides. Loudon's lecture style, however, and reputation as Ann Ar- bor's resident space guru are the main sources of AstroFest's popularity. HE'S GREAT in every way, and a better comic than Johnny Carson," said Ann Arbor resident Elaine Lynch. "Extremely knowledgeable, dynamic, and entertaining," was the opinion of social work graduate student Joan Kraemer. "If you ever need a vote for Jim Loudon for anything, look me up," added Milan computer programmer Frank Houser. Loudon, currently staff astronomer at the University's Exhibit Museum, came to Ann Arbor in the mid-1960s. His beard and longish hair hark back to that era. , Loudon began AstroFest nearly a decade ago. At first the program, held each month in the Modern Language Building Auditorium 3, featured more films than talk. But with Loudon's growing popularity, people now come just to hear him talk-the movies are a bonus. "I GOT INTO IT (lecturing) so gradually there's no way to say when I. started," he said. Loudon first began talking publicly while working for the student radio station in Philadelphia at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania where he did his undergraduate work. After coming to Michigan for graduae work, Loudon began lecturing on an informal basis for the astronomy department. He later held a teaching appointment in the Residential College. His reputation as a lecturer grew during his time at the University. LOUDON TRAVELS extensively gathering information for his lectures. He frequently visits Cape Canaveral, Fla,, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. Loudon has used his ex- pertise outside his lectures to write ar- ticles for space magazines and cover NASA activities for National Public Radio. The enthusiasm Loudon has for space is unbridled. His voice rises with ex- citement as he speaks of the 100,000 rings of Saturn and the planet's numerous moons. In fact, he often gets annoyed that people focus on that en- thusiasm rather than his ability to ex- plain science. "I feel the way a woman does who is beautiful, who enjoys being beautiful and likes being told that she's beautiful, and wouldn't have it any other way, but wishes to God somebody would mention something else about her on occasion," he said. "ANYBODY CAN be enthusiastic," he added. "I don't want to come off sounding like a Moonie."' It's hard to quarrel with the notion that Loudon knows his stuff. Not many people could recite the names of the See LOUDON'S, Page 2 Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS JIM LOUDON, a self-proclaimed "wandering astronomy popularizer," proudly wears his Saturn button. Loudon works as a staff astronomer for the University's Exhibit Museum. Study sabbatical T)DAY'S DAILY is the last until we return from Thanksgiving break. Happenings through the rest of November are on Page 3. The Daily will be back Tuesday, Dec. 1. See you then. e Prune bombs, banana splits Oklahoma's Northeastern State University students have mascot was launched after a caricature Indian came into disfavor. Last year, public relations director Ed Brocksmith unveiled a 6-foot banana "to help motivate the students." The students didn't find the banana appealing, however, so it split. i Macho pigs make more piglets Macho pigs that mix regularly with their eating and drinking buddies are better barnyard Casanovas than their milquetoast brethren who live in pampered isolation, researchers report. That finding by a Kansas State University research team is of nartieular imnortane tn the couple of encounters with the opposite sex. * And a failure in love can produce impotency in even the most macho of swine. The findings encouraged the rearing of young hogs together in one pen where they can compete for food and water rather than protecting them from possible injury by use of individual enclosures and feeding arrangements. 0J Symph ny wants hacks eliminated The Denver Symphony, tired of competing with the hacks 3 rob college nurses Three men, one armed with a shotgun and another with a pistol, took cash and valuables worth nearly $3,000 from 16 female nurses at LaSalle College in Philadelphia, police said. The three men entered a second-floor classroom in the college's science building Monday night where 16 nurses were taking a graduate course, police said. The robbers left quickly without harming anyone, police said. No shots were fired. Robert Lyons, a college spokesman, said the three men entered the room in Holroyd Hall and announced: "This is a stickup." After the rohherv the men fleda fter ; i ;I