Ninety-One Years Of Editorial Freedom LIE ig]9an EtiIQ DAMP Mostly cloudy with scat- tered showers today. High around 70. Vol. XCI, No. 156 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 11, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages . IN Tanter named to National *Security Council New dean selected for By MARK GINDIN University Political Science Prof. Raymond Tanter has been appointed to President Reagan's National Security Council as senior staff member for Mideast affairs. Tanter, currently scheduled to teach a course in international security af- fairs next fall, requested a leave of ab- sence from the University. He will leave for Washington next month. TANTER IS AN "expert in strategic affairs in the Middle East," said Political Science Prof. Jerrold Green. "It (his appointment) reflects the current stress by the administration on that area." During Reagan's presidential cam- paign, Tanter served as an advisor on Mideast affairs. He co-chaired the president's Middle East Task Force when Reagan was campaigning as the GOP presidential nominee. Tanter - notorious among students for passing out meticulous lecture notes at the beginning of each class period - has taught American foreign policy and international security and arms control courses since he came to the Univer- sity's political science department in 1967. THE PROFESSOR IS a specialist on America's role in the Middle East and has done research on -Israel's crisis decision making and on American foreign policy. He has taught at North- western University, Stanford Univer- sity, University of Amsterdam, and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Tanter will become the third Univer- sity political science staff member to serve on the National Security Council. Prof. Richard Soloman and Prof. Michel Oksenburg served con- secutively as the National Security Council' s senior staff member for China. Tanter was out of town yesterday and could not be reached for comment. School of Boardwalk Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL Engineering student John Illikman (front) tests his competence level as he attempts to walk across the Diag on boards and garbage can lids without touching the ground. The exam was part of yesterday's Engineering Ap- titude Tests. Tanter .. National Security Council member Nursi By JANET RAE Rhetaugh Dumas, deputy director for the National Institute of Mental Health in Washington, D.C., has been offered the deanship of the University's School of Nursing, Nursing School officials confirmed yesterday. Dumas was chosen to replace Dean Mary Lohr, whose five-year term in of- fice expires June 30. WHILE THERE was some confusion as to whether Dumas had agreed to the University's offer, several sources reported that she had accepted verbally early yesterday. Dumas, who could not be reached for comment, left'word that she would prefer no advance publicity. Students and faculty alike said they were pleased that Dumas had been of- fered the position. "She is recognized on a national level," said Dean Search Committee member Michael Meade, who was the undergraduate represen- tative to the selection group. "We would be fortunate if she chose to come here." Assistnat Dean for Academic Affairs Norma Marshall described Dumas as being "very much in tune with the need for retrenchment... she's a person who can bite the bullet and is not easily ruf- fled." Marshall said a number of faculty members are-relieved that the search is finally drawing to a close. "It has been unsettling not knowing who the next dean will be," she noted. ALTHOUGH KAY Jersey, president- elect of the Nursing Council, met with many of the candidates for the dean- ship, she did not meet Dumas, who was interviewed by committee members during Spring Break. "We've heard nothing but good about her, though," Jersey said. "Rumor has it that she's a very vibrant and exciting person."" Upon her official acceptance, Dumas will become the University's only black dean. Jersey said Dumas' selection would be "significant for the morale of minority students in the school" Jer- sey said she hopes Dumas' selection will regenerate the morale lost when the School's Minority Affairs Office was closed following Director Barbara Norman's resignation. "She has a very distinguished background," said Marshall. "She has received much recognition from the black community." According to Mar- shall, Dumas was named one of 200 out- standing black Americans in 1975. Dumas began her nursing career with a bachelor of science degree from Dillard University. She earned a masters degree in nursing frgm Yale, and a Ph.D. degree in Social Psychology at Antioch. In addition to substantial clinical. work in nursing, Dumas has served as an associate professor at Yale, where .se. was chairwoman of the psychological nursing department. She 'presently serves as deputy director of NIMH, a subdivision of the federal department of Health and Human Ser- vices. A tentative date of July 1 has been set for her installment as dean. I E .........~ ~ .............. .....................*...*.....................*...........*..*.*.* Reagan to WASHINGTON (AP) - Barring complications in his bullet-scarred left lung, President Reagan will return to the White House today and probably will be working in the Oval Office on a half-day schedule by the week after next, Dr. Dennis O'Leary said yester- day. 27-28 has been postponed. YESTERDAY, SPOKESMAN Larry Speakes an- nounced that the president would not be going to California later this month to attend the marriage of his daughter Maureen. fVTn~n~ Ann f linn~ afniet3ftha hneit l 4 The physician said Reagan will spend most of next Leary e of ii atairs at the nospJILt re tu r n to week in the White House, but that it is "not where Reagan was rushed after being shot in the unreasonable to expect that he will be going to Camp chest 12 days ago, told a White House briefing he con- David" in a few days. It is only a half-hour flight by tinued to be optimistic about Reagan's progress but " helicopter from the White House lawn to the admitted doctors have been somewhat puzzled by i te O il S e Maryland mountain retreat symptoms of a possible infection. "WE'RE LOOKING FORWARD to him being able A persistent fever - his temperature rose to 102 to sit outside and get a little bit of fresh air," said degrees at one point - suggested to his doctors that O'Leary. "If for no more than the psychological ef- his wound might have become infected... feet, it's important." However, the temperature has been normal for the Despite the president's substantial recovery, past couple of days, and O'Leary said, "We have not O'Leary said, "It is prudent to hedge a bit found any evidence of infection." he can travel" beyond the short hop to Camp David. O'Leary said that 'press secretary James Brady, In that vein, the White House announced that "the person you all have known, will almost certainly Reagan's two-day trip to Mexico scheduled for April be back" to his job. _.. .. . . . . :............. Murphy's Law bedevil.s Columbia's maiden launch CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Murphy's Law of Launches was there when Alan Shepard made the first American space flight. Ten times it bedeviled John Glenn. And yesterday, it stopped the maiden launch of the shuttle Columbia. Proof that, even with the most sophisticated equipment, if anything can go wrong, it will, and at the last possible moment - with the whole world watching. FIRST THERE WAS a problem with the ship's electricity-producing fuel cells. A warning light glowed for cell No. 3. That was fixed quickly. Then the computer went askew. The crew got a signal in the cockpit. It showed, too, on the boards in launch control at the Cape and Mission Control in Houston, Texas. The problem yesterday was getting the fifth computer, a back-up to five primary computers, to synchronize with the other four. THE COUNTDOWN clock, which had been moving effortlessly to zero, stood still at 16 minutes. Instead of riding the first reflyable spaceship on its trial run, John Young and Robert Crippen crawled out of the hatch on their hands and knees with disappointment engraved on their weary faces. , "It was just one of those things," Crippen said. "Y'all did real good," Young told his flight controllers. "We're sorry we didn't go." THEIR NEXT CHANCE will come no earlier than tomorrow morning - at 6:50 a.m. again - but officials of the Nationl Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministraion had set no firm date. Randy Stone, a data systems engineer who monitors the shuttle computers at Mission Control, said: "This is something we have never seen before." The $10 billion ship, designed to go up on rocket power with cargo to be put in space and then to land again on a run- way like a glider. The shuttle never had been tried unmmanned, unlike the Mercury, Gemini and Saturn capsules that preceded it. - "WHEN YOU'RE dealing with a system as sophisticated as this one, there is always the potential you'll turn up something you've never seen before. And it surprises you," said Stone. "Unfortunately, this one came at a bad time. But we think this system works like a charm. We've seen it in thousands and thousands of hours of runs all over the country in all the facilities of NASA and the industry." Hutchison described the countdown prior to the malfunction as "absolutely super" and said he saw "no reason at all why we can't go Sunday" after the problem was solved. As the U.S. space shuttle launch was scrubbed, two Soviet cosmonauts or- bited the Earth, and Moscow lavishly marked the 20th anniversary of history's first manned space shot - by Yuri Gagarin. Cosmonauts Vladimir Kovalyonok and Viktor Savinykh were launched in- to low orbit March 12 in a Soyuz T-4 space ship on a mission of undisclosed length. Unlike the space shuttle Colum- bia, the Soviet space ship is not reuseable, although the Soviets are believed to be working their own ver- sion of a vehicle like the shuttle. Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL Taking back the nightI The leaders of last night's "Take Back the Night" lead a group of outraged men and women through some of Ann Ar- bor's highest risk rape streets. See story, Page 7. TOIDAY No Fines! No Questions Asked! BUSINESS STUDENTS and others who have been waiting to return overdue materials to the Business Administration Library can return them free of charge on Tuesday, April 21 through Thursday, April 23. Library officials promise that no questions will be asked and thiat the library drop box will be onen all day during the three-day moratorium. I Democratic panel, takes daily criticism from committee members for his efforts to save List's budget from legislative cuts. Alastuey laughed and turned progressively deeper shades of red when the plaque was presented Thur- sday. Said Assemblyman Nick Horn: "That's the first time I've seem him smile in six months." Q Thanks for nothing , A thank-you note sent on behalf of ailing Seattle Post- master James Symbol to all 3,300 postal employees in the area .mq a URAimnroner ue n fthe pnv's free mailingI dated April 3 and signed with a "signature block" bearing Symbol's name, cost $636 to print and mail, Postal Service spokesman Ernie Swanson said Thursday. LQ Egg drop soup Sixth graders at a Columbia, -S.C., private school were given a mission impossible-protect an egg so that it would not break when dropped 1,200 feet from an airplane. Seven out of eight eggs, wrapped in everything from vegetable chnrtcinriyt oi anmhinaion nf npenut butter and netroleum aviation company over the school's soccer field while the anxious students awaited the "bombs away." After testing the wind with streamers, the pilot hurled the shoe boxes out. One shoe box was demolished when it hit the ground, but the egg inside was floating safe and sound in a "water bed" fashioned from six plastic bags. The one egg that wound up a little scrambled was wrapped in a tennis ball. Q I I I