a Page 2-Wednesday, April 15, 1981-The Michigan Daily Students organize to fight cuts SIN BRIEF By BETH ALLEN Last night's forum on the future of the University was a direct result of efforts by members of It's Our University, an umbrella organization comprised of students, faculty, and staff concerned about the University's smaller but bet- ter program. Formed shortly after Acting-LSA Dean John Knott's January announ- cement that discontinuance proceedings had begun against the geography department, IOU consists of students from other University organizations who banded together to form a cohesive unit to critically analyze, question, and suggest alter- natives to the University's current retrenchment program. IOU HELD A public forum last month which took a hard look at the smaller but better philosophy. Shortly after the forum, the group presented more than 30 questions to the administration in an effort to clear up ambiguities in the retrenchment process. IOU has also attempted to increase the flow of information on retrench- ment issues to the University com- munity by both sending letters to faculty members, and by having letters and editorials printed in local publications) Several concerns raised by the group include: *the need for total faculty and student input in all levels of the retrenchment process-including participation in high level committees deciding which academic and non-academic programs to target for cutbacks or elimination; *whether smaller but better will cost the University its diversity in course selection and student body and faculty composition; and *issues concerning student-faculty ratio, counseling services, and housing. IOU IS ALSO concerned about what is in store for the University over the next several years, according to Peter Railton, IOU member and assistant professor of philosophy. The group needs access to information to under- stand both the University's criteria for program quality and the "shape" of the University for the next five years, he said. "We don't even have a rough blueprint," Railton added. According to Jamie Moeller, an IOU and LSA Student Government member, the group doesn't have enough infor- mation to say that smaller but better is "bad" for the University. In addition to studying ad hoc review committee reports on academic and non-academic programs, the group has been attempting to obtain copies of preliminary budget contingency plans that were formulated by all University programs and departments after the administration's October announ- cement of 6 percent across the board cuts. However, the group has not access to the budget plans because they are preliminary, and thus do not fall under the Freedom of Information Act which allows access to final drafts, IOU member Shawn Goodman said. Exit members accused of murder LONDON (AP)-A macabre tale of "suicide kits" with plastic bags and sleeping pills unfolded yesterday at the start of a hearing for two members of Britain's voluntary euthanasia society who are accused of helping six people commit suicide. About a dozen supporters of the "Exit" society, which aroused con- troversy last year with plans to publish a do-it-yourself death guide, unfurled banners outside the Hendon magistrates court building before the hearing. MARK LYONS, 69, a member of Exit, and Nicholas James Reed, 33, the organization's general secretary, face a total of 16 charges involving nine suicidal people, six of whom died in 1979 and 1980. Lyons was charged with one count of murder in the death of a 90-year-old woman last year. Other charges against the men in- volved aiding and abetting suicides or conspiracy to help people take their lives. THE PRE-TRIAL hearing was to decide whether there was sufficient evidence to bring the twormen to trial. No formal pleas were entered. "This case has nothing to do with Exit's views on death," prosecutoreRoy Amlot told the court. "They are perfec tly entitled to do everything lawful and democratic to change the suicide law. Nor has it anything to do with the argument as to whether people are en- titled to advise suicide." Suicide has been legal in Britain since 1961, but as in the United States, aiding and abetting suicide is an offense, punishable here by up to 14 years in prison. Amlot said Lyons sometimes posed as a doctor and carried a suicide kit consisting of a quarter bottle of brandy, two plastic bags for placing over the head, elastic bands for the throat and tablets. He said police found the kit in Lyons' London home. 7MBA PRODUCT MANAGEMENT/ENGINEI American Digital Systems is one of the fastes instrumentation and data acquisition electronics firms In five years we have established an unparalleled success in the environmental technology field, incre better than 80'. per year. Our entry into the instrumentation market has created four immediate o entrepreneural MBA graduates to work in new PI DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCT MANAGEME ENGINEERING. MANAGEMENT. These assign lead to Director or Vice President level position in eighteen months. Current positions require managers who possess und degrees in electrical engineering and business and wh five years industry experience, preferably in a high tec You must be a dedicated and fast track performer wit record of success, We offer a demanding small company work en coup~led with excellent benefits and integral. higl participation in a small and rapidly growing manager Beginning salaries $35K - $45K ranc For more information write to: Tom Thra AmericanI Systems, I 2227 Drak ________im ______1 Huntsville 0 U M N An Equal Opportunit r ini_____ -.- INS -l S ERING st growing in the U.S. record of asing sales industrial penings for RODUCT IENT and nments will n less than ergraduate ohave two- h business. th a proven nvironment ghly visible ment team. ige. ilkill Digital nc. ke Avenue , AL 35805 'U' faculty members wince as budget cut blade leaves wounds Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports 'U' researchers discover possible cancer link in blood ATLANTA-University medical school pediatrician Stanley Schwartz said yesterday that he and University researcher Dr. Madhaven Nair have discovered a "suppressor factor" found in the blood of cancer patients, and even some healthy people, that blunts the body's natural defense against tumor cells. Schwartz told the convention of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology in Atlanta that the suppressor factor was found in small quantities in the blood of most people, but levels were two to three times higher in cancer patients. Schwartz said the discovery may help explain the "vicious circle" suf- fered by some cancer patients, in which the ability of the body's immune system to resist cancer actually decreases as the size of the tumor increases: Basque guerrillas release captive; three others killed MADRID, Spain-Basque separatist guerrillas yesterday released Sunyer Sanchez, Spain's version of America's Col. Sanders, who they kidnapped three months ago, but later shot and killed two retired army officers and a business executive in the nation's bloodiest day of political violence this year. With crack army units sent to the region two weeks ago to combat terrorism, the new assassinations raised the possibility of a state of emergency being declared in the Basque region. . The opposition Socialist Party charged the increased terror campaign by ETA Basque Land and Liberty guerrillas in the seven weeks since a right- wing coup attempt was aimed at goading the military into a new rebellion. Lebanese officials trapped by Syrian artillery BEIRUT, Lebanon-Lebanon's prime minister and four members of his Cabinet were trapped in Parliament yesterday by a four-hour artillery duel between Syrian forces and Christian Phalangist militiamen. Government sources said Prime Minister Chefik Wazzan, the Cabinet ministers and 15 other members of Parliament escaped without injury after President Elias Sarkis arranged a cease-fire. Phalangist radio reported three rockets also struck the entrance of the presidential palace at Baabda in the hills overlooking the capital, injuring a Lebanese soldier. Reagan team huddles to plan budget battles WASHINGTON-President Reagan, determined to gain political leverage for his economic package while Congress is on Easter recess, met with top aides yesterday to plan future tax and budget battles on Capitol Hill. Acting White House press secretary Larry Speakes, refusing to divulge specifics, called the meeting on the economic package "an in-depth update for the president" on votes in Congress during his hospital stay. Among those in the 30-minute discussion were Vice President George Bush, counselor Edwin Meese, budget director David Stockman, chief of staff James Baker and congressional liaison Max Friedersdorf. Coal talks still at impasse WASHINGTON-Negotiations between the United Mine Workers union and the soft coal industry to end a strike by 160,000 miners recessed yester- day until Friday, with industry officials reporting no progress toward set- tlement. Chief industry negotiator Bobby Brown told reporters as he left the session after five hours of talks that the industry had rejected union proposals to reinstitute a royalty on non-union coal. In many coal fields yesterday, miners and their families began to apply for food stamps. In West Virginia, state Welfare Commissioner Leon Gin- sberg said his agency expected 30,000 applications. State offices in eastern Ohio said they have received several hundred applications for food stamps from strikers. Bradley laid to rest WASHINGTON-General of the Armies Omar Bradley was buried on a rolling hillside at Arlington National Cemetery yesterday among the "G.I. Willies and Joes" he led from the African desert to the Nazi heartland in World War II. The hero's burial followed a solemn service in the National Cathedral paying tribute to the last of America's five-star generals, who died of a heart attack at the age of 88 Wednesday in New York. Vice President George Bush, first lady Nancy Reagan, Secretary of State Alexander Haig, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, three other Cabinet officers and two former secretaries of defense led a congregation of 1,500 mourning the "G.I.'s general." A 1 iA 10 y Employer M F ICI I (Continued from PageI1) decrease in the number of teaching assistants as a definite problem that adds to the faculty workload. If engineering professors "don't like the environment," Wilson said, there are plenty of jobs waiting in industry-an advantage instructors in other fields might not have. A problem shared by many faculty members is the rising cost of living with which their paychecks may not be able to keep pace. FOR THE past several years, History Prof. Sidney Fine said the rise in real income of both tenured and non-tenured faculty has not matched inflation rates. "Our raises barely keep up," agreed Kenneth Hill, Chairman of the linguistics department. "Everyone's hurting." Hill was concerned about the Univer- sity's fall in ranking among other states seeking federal funds in education. "IT'S A scandal," Hill said. "Voters think we're spending a great deal of money on education, and we're not." Fine said he feared that departments may shrink, and classes 'disappear, when the University cannot afford to appoint new faculty to the positions of those who leave or retire. "We cannot offer the tremendous variety we used to," Fine said. HOWEVER, Fine said he was con- fident that with a core of dedicated faculty, the University "will survive as an excellent institution." Although united in their disapproval of Michigan State University's proposed plans to at one time slash colleges like Nursing and Urban Plan- ning to balance their budget, faculty differed over the best procedure to handle University's own crisis. Fine commended the "smaller but better" philosophy-not "distributing the deficit"-as the best plan to main- tain the University's superiority. HOWEVER, English Prof. Lyall Powers said he was disturbed by the implication that anything smaller is necessarily better. "If you're obliged to save money, you do whatever you can, of course," Powers said. "But 'Smaller but better' i s the saddest way to meet the budget problem., Powers also disagreed with the im- portance currently placed on the market value of a degree since the costs of graduate school tuition have risen so sharply. "It seems to me that while graduate students earn a pittance, it's not a job, it's an apprenticeship," Powers said. Don't wait for a little birdie to tell y'ou .SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY r I 4 FINANCIAL AID Fall 1981 and Winter 1982 APPLICATION DEADLINE is WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15, 1981 Applications must be submitted to the Office of Financial Aid* 2011 S.A.B. and Family Financial Statements must be mailed to ACT by that day. * Hours: 8:15-12:15, 1:30-4:00 ii an t ati Vol. XCI, No. 159 Wednesday, April 15, 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. Sub- scription 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 Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press international. Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY: Sports desk, 76.4-0562; Circulation. 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557: Display advertising. 764-0554; Billing 764-0550: Aov, pp' -14\ r (ro EXPERIENCE THE THRILL 11 OF FLYING Be an Air Force navigator. Using highly sophisticated equipment, you'll be responsible for directing your aircraft to its destina- ion with pinpoint accuracy. You'll have to be alert to all aspects of flying and have a comprehensive understanding of your aircraft and capabilities. Our navigators are the best in the world. They train in the finest facilities. Editor-in-Chief.................SARA ANSPACH Monooging Editor ............. JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Editor ......... .. . LORENZO BENET Student Affairs Editor ............ JOYCE FRIEDEN City Editor.............. Opinion Page Editors ....... Arts Editor............... Sports Editor ............. . Executive Sports Editors .... . .ELAINE RIDEOUT ..DAVID MEYER KEVIN TOTTIS ....ANNE GADON .. MARK MIHANOVIC ..GREG DEGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ............... RANDI CIGELNIK Sales Manager ...................BOARB FORSLUND Operations Manager ........ .....SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager ........'.... MARY ANN MISIEWICZ Assistant Display Manager ....... ..NANCY JOSLIN Classified Managaer ............. DENISE SULLIVAN Finance Manager........ ..... GREGG HADDAD' Nationals Mnager.................KATHY BAER Sales Coordinator ......... _ .. E. ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Bob Abrahams. Meg Armbruster. Joe Brodo. Maureen DeLove. Judy Feinberg. Koren Friedman. Debra Garofolo. Peter Gottfredson. I . 1111111111 ',X111111;i!111 11 111111;! '11 11 1111 1111111\1\411\\\\\\l1\\\l\\\\\\\ \ _ _ El I