a6 OPENING TONIGHT L6UGH TR6CK COMEDY CLUB With Al's own comics FeaturingDOVE COUWLIER from the L.A. Comedy Store Page 2-Wednesday, January 14, 1981-The Michigan Daily Officials warn budget may see more cuts U-Club Mich. Union 9 pm l1 yAdVliesomw (Continued from Page 1) Clay noted some of the shortfall may be covered by normal surplusses or lapses. These are expected to fall far short of the $60 million which normally is left over. OTHER SOURCES of money are the voluntary pay deferral program with $10 million, one-day layoffs worth about $15 million to the general revenue fund, and the beleaguered Budget Stabilization Fund which could chip in Free Admission 1st night m A CAREER IN THE CHIPS If you're planning a career in Engineering, Finance, Marketing, or Data Processing, we know you're seriously considering the semi- conductor industry. We'd like to offer a little piece of advice: Choose the company that will give you the best opportunities right away. Choose AMD. Advanced Micro Devices started out a little over a decade ago with eight of the best people in the industry and a dream. Today, we're at the top of the integrated circuit field with 9,000 of the best-and friendliest-people, $225 million in sales, and over 800 products. We're still growing fast, with the best career opportunities to put you right in the chips with us. about $10 million. A further budget cut is "an alter- native that one would always have to consider in principle," Clay said, ad- ding budget officials still are studying the "degree of shortfall and trying to tighten down the estimate of lapses." Also yesterday, Milliken revealed a new property tax cut plan - expected to be the key feature of tomorrow's an- nual State of the State address. The proposal would cut most proper- ty taxes by 35 percent while hiking the sales tax to five percent. Budget cuts result in dismissal of carllonneur. (Continued from Page 1) present budget. LADD ESTABLISHED the only carillon curriculum in the country here at the University. With his departure, the program-which students oc- casionally take as an elective-will still continue, although no students will be admitted until renovation on the 46- year-old Baird carillon can be com- pleted, according to Boylan. Ladd, who termed his position "the number one post in the country," said he has "no idea who would have the credentials to (teach), unless they bring in someone from Europe."~ The 36-year-old carillonneur said he has not found a carillonneur position elsewhere but expects to go back to graduate school to study something else. Ladd called carillon playing "a growing art" that "might be stymied because of the economic condition, but administrators are not going to be able to stop it." LADD, A NATIVE Californian, said he first heard a carillon in 1968 in Am- sterdam. "I fell madly in love with the instrument," said Ladd. "My father was bound and determined his sons would end up in medicine," he said. Ladd studied at the Netherlands Carillon School at Amersforrt for two years under the instruction of Leen 'T Hart. After he graduated with honors in 1970, he came to the University to study. One year later he replaced Per- cival Price as University Carilloneur. "I feel married to the. istrument said Ladd, who was awarded the Prix d- Excellence, the highest honor one can achieve in the art. Ladd was the first of only two Americans to have ever received the award, which is considered similar to a Ph.D. and is awarded through the Netherlands government. to plea bargaineffort CHICAGO - Former fugitive Weather Underground leader Ber- nadine Dohrn was sentenced yester- day to three years' probation and fined $1,500 on charges stemming from the 1969 Days of Rage distur- bance in Chicago. Dohrn, 38, faced a maximum penalty of up to eight years in prison. Yesterday Dohrn, who was ac- companied by former Weather Un- derground member and University graduate William Ayres, agreed to allow attorneys to negotiate a plea bargain regarding the charges facing her. Circuit Court Judge Fred Suria told Dohrn that she will not be required to accept any offers that are made. He also said that she would be entitled to a trial if she rejects any settlement offer. INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports - Poles stage brief strikes WARSAW, Poland - Workers staged one-hour strikes yesterday in more than 100 factories to protest the use of hundreds of riot police to break up the occupation of government offices in a town near the Soviet border. Other workers who are seeking an independent union for Poland's five million private farmers, continued a separate sit-in and threatened a wave of strikes today because government officials failed to meet their deadline for negotiations. The strike threat appeared to signal a split in Poland's newly-formed in- dependent union movement since the national Solidarity organization said no strikes - regional or national - had been called and they could be or- dered only at the national Solidarity level. Dohrn sentenced, agrees, On-Campus Interviews Monday, January 19 Make an appointment today with your Career Planning & Placement Center. Or, for more information on AMD, call Sally Hazard TOLL FREE at (800) 538-8450. (In California, call (408) 732-2400, exten- sion 2799.) Advanced Micro Devices, 901 Thompson Place, M/S 57, Sunnyvale, California 94086. An equal opportunity employer. r riAvacdMroDevices ,. 1 Haig denies involvement in Watergate scandal WASHINGTON - Alexander Haig called the Watergate scandal "illegal and stupid" yesterday and denied he was involved in any way as a trusted aide to President Richard Nixon. ' Haig, who is President-elect Ronald Reagan's nominee to be secretary of state, portrayed himself instead as a White House chief of staff who fought to keepNixon from becoming enmeshed in criminal acts in the final months of his presidency. On the fourth day of his confirmation hearings before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the retired four-star general and former NATO com- mander exploded in anger under persistent questioning from Sen. PaulSar- banes, (D-Md.), who sought Haig's "value judgments" about the right and wrongs of Watergate. Haig acknowledged that "mistakes were made," but said he wasn't at the White House when the break in at the Democratic National Committee took place in June 1972 or when senior White House officials tried to cover up evidence.t Israeli official-loses immunity JERUSALEM - The Knesset stripped Religious Affairs Minister Aharon Abu-Hatzeira of parliamentary immunity yesterday, clearing the way for his trial on bribery charges. The action in Israel's Parliament makes Abu-Hatzeira, 42, the first Cabinet Minister in Israel's 32-year history to face a criminal trial. The Abu-Hatzeira affair has not implicated Prime Minister Menachem Begin, but it reflects badly on the integrity of his government at a time when it is on the brink of collapse over economic policy. Abu-Hatzeira is accused of accepting $15,000 worth of bribes in 1979 in return for funneling public funds to Jewish religious institutions. Paper to print leftist propaganda to save judge ROME - While members of Parliament exchanged blows on the floor of the Chamber of Deputies, Rome's largest newspaper announced yesterday it will publish radical leftist propaganda in an effort to save the life of a kid- napped judge held by the terrorist Red Brigades. Breaking ranks with the rest of the nation's major papers, whose editors have refused to yield to what they call terrorist "blackmail," I1 Messaggero said it will accede to the demands of the captors of Judge Giovanni D'Urso. The Red Brigades said the judge would be "executed" unless the nation's major newspapers printed the leftist proclamations by yesterday morning. The Communists have demanded a no-deals policy with the Red Brigades, who kidnapped and assassinated former Premier Aldo Moro in 1978. The Radicals broadcast the urban guerrillas' statements on their party radio station after an appeal from the wife of D'Urso, who was abducted in Rome Dec. 12. I 0 6 0 1 4 Pop Quiz: When does AMAZING NEW CANCER OPERATION UNVEILED. The doctor doesn't cut out anything. You cut out cigarettes. This simple surgery is the surest way to save you from lung cancer. And the American Cancer Society will help you perfQrm it. We have free clinics to help you quit smoking. So, before you smoke another cigarette, call the A.C.S. office nearest you. And don't put it off- The inor Vol. XCI, No.89 Wednesday, January 14, 1981 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. 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