'I Page 6-Tuesday, October 7, 1980-The Michigan Daily Georgia. prof welcomed back from prison term ATHENS, Ga. (AP)-Professor James Dinnan, jailed for three months because he wouldn't reveal his vote in a faculty promotion case, returned to work yesterday and was welcomed by a banner stretched across the doors of his department by his University of Georgia colleagues. Dinnan, who was sentenced for con- tempt of court, arrived on campus shor- tly before 9 a.m. to resume his duties as a reading and adult education specialist. THE SMILING, 50-year-old Dinnan was greeted by a large banner that read: "The Reading Department Welcomes Dr. Dinnan Back Home." Many doors inside the department were adorned with red and black rib- bons, theschool colors, in his honor. Dinnan wore the suit he was issued when he left the prison at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida, where he drop- ped 45 pounds while working as a dish- washer and toilet scrubber. He weighed 212 when he entered prison. "MAYBE THAT'S my reward," Din- nan said of his weight loss. He said the prison food was "pretty good . . . but since it was 130 degrees in the washroom, it was easy to lose weight." Dinnan, who was released from, prison last week, surrendered to authorities in July wearing his academic robes. "I just want to go back to my resear- ch and teaching," he told reporters at his office yesterday. "I suspect it will be back to normal in a few days." He said he will teach his first class tomorrow. DINNAN WAS found in contempt of court, fined $3,000 and sentenced to 90 days in prison after refusing the tell U.S. District Judge Wilbur Owens how he voted on the tenure and promotion request of a female faculty member, Maija Blaubergs. Blaubergs had filed a sex discrimination suit against the university. Dinnan served on the faculty commit- tee that denied her request for tenure. Six committee members divulged their votes, two others were not asked and Dinnan refused. A hearing has been scheduled Nov. 3 before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals in Atlanta on Dinnan's appeal of the contempt order issued by Owens. "We're appealing the aspect of him forcing me to reveal my vote," Dinnan said. "I'm still in contempt, becuase I haven't complied with his request." If he loses the appeal, Dinnan could be asked again how he voted. He said he still would refuse to answer. DR. JAMES DINNAN, a professor at the University of Georgia, is welcomed back to work by a colleague. Dinnan has just completed a 90-day prison term stemming from contempt of court charges, for failing to reveal his vote in a faculty promotion case. _ Grad. Students Rackham Student Government FALL ELECTION October 21 and 22 CONDIDATES NEEDED Apply at RSG or Deadline: 2006 Rackhaf call 763-5271 Oct. 10 M-F 8:30-12:01 China protests Soviet intrusion m )0 p i PEKING (AP)-Four armed Soviet intruders crossed into Chinese Mongolia, killed a shepherd, then began a firefight with Chinese border guards in which one of the Soviets was killed, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said yesterday. It was the first China-Soviet border incident reported in more than a year. China lodged a "strong protest" with the Soviet Union over Sunday's incident, which Peking said began when the intruders crossed the Argun River in- to Inner Mongolia and tried to abduct a Chinese shepherd. The shepherd, identified as Li Zhong, resisted and was killed. The Soviets opened fire on Chinese frontier guards who had rushed to the scene, the protest note said. IT SAID THE CHINESE fired back in self-defense, killing one Soviet intruder inside China, and the three others escaped in their motorboat back to Soviet territory. The Chinese protest, delivered to interim Soviet Charge d'Affaires G.V. Kireev, declared, "In disregard of the repeated warnings of the Chinese side, the Soviet authorities now have created another incident of bloodshed along the Sino-Soviet border, killing a Chinese and encroaching on China's territorial soverignty. "It must be pointed out that the Soviet side is doomed to failure in its attempt to profit from creating border tension and that it must bear full responsibility for all the consequences arising therefrom," the note continued. IT DEMANDED THAT Moscow "punish the culprits of this incident and stop all armed provocations along the Sino-Soviet border." The last reported border incident between the communist giants came in July 1979, when Peking alleged that Soviet soldiers killed one Chinese and wounded another in a cross-border ambush along the Sinkiang Province frontier. That came as the two sides were preparing to begin talks on improving relations strained during the last two decades amid Chinese charges of Soviet "im- perialism." NO PROGRESS WAS reported in the first round of talks last fall in Moscow. Before the planned second round could begin in Peking this year, the Chinese declared that continuing the talks would be inap- propriate in the wake of Soviet intervention ilo Afghanistan. The Soviets sent some 100,000 troops irto Afghanistan late last year to help the Marxist regime in Kabul put down a rebellion by anti-communst Moslem guerrillas. The State Department says most /of those Soviet forces remain in Afghanistan. China claims Moscow has more than one million troops stationed along the China-Soviet border, and has described the Soviet Union as "the main danger of war" in the world. The Soviet Union's armed forces total some 3.5 million men, according to The International Institute for Strategic Studies. The institute says China ha* almost a million more men under arms, but that Moscow's strategic weapons make it a far superior military power P&WATAll Day E veryday PONDEROSA choice Chopped Beef t Dinner Special dinners feature choice of Chopped Beef or Fish Filet and both include All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar Baked Potato and Warm Roll with Butter Filet of - Fish Dinner Shapiro, (Continued from Page 1)' long-range projections for their resear ch programs as part of the Univer sity's budget and planning process? do imbalances exist among unit; between external and internal suppor for research? -should the UJniversity revitalize it relationship with universities an research insittutes in other countries? SHAPIRO ALSO said another are with growth potential for the Universit is affirmative action in employmen He said new initiatives in the studen area are also required, "but these wi be discussed in more detail later thi year in out annual report to the Regent on minority student enrollment." "For many of us, including myself, * B th H Al "" East Washtenaw Ave. (Across from Arborland Shopping C .nter) On West Stadium Blvd. (Just North of int.rs.ction of Stadium 8dLibertY) ,C1980 PonderosaSysem Inc ring the kids, too!... ey'll love our NE W Kid's Menu Includes AMBURGER or French Fries l-Beef HOT DOG or Baked Potato, Only $1.29 Pudding or Gelatin urges increase Shapiro continued, "issues of affir- * mai mative action did not form a part of our ts so t evolving consciousness until our sibilityf working lives were well underway. I all resp s may not' have developed a full ap- Univers t preciation and integrative understan- IN AD ding of how our society and how our appropr is University should meet both our conside d obligations and opportunities in this tion m area." ministr a "IN SPITE OF our increasing com- might b y mitment to this area," Shapiro lamen- "In ti t. ted, "our efforts have not resulted in importa t the kind of significant change that all its ill many hoped, perhaps naively, would ficulties s result." support s He said the proportion of women and must al other minority, members on the faculty tions fo '' over the past five years has increased and wh "modestly," and the University's asasch achievements in this area "cannot be Prior considered a major advance." membe Shapiro outlined several objectives to increase women and minority hiring: " renewed efforts-in recruiting and seeking out qualified women and minority candidates for faculty and non-faculty positions at every rank in which openings and hiring oppor- tunities exist; of * University units' familiarization and observation of new procedures for the hiring of candidates for both faculty WAS and non-faculty positions, and; prosecu e in nnor nstreaming of University effor- hat commitment and respon- for affirmative action lies with onsible decision-makers at the ity. DDITION, Shapiro urged all the riate units at the University to r research and affirmative ac- atters and advise the ad ation on how the University est achieve its objectives. mes like these," he said, "it is nt that the University not focus attention on the genuine dif- s it is facing in the state- ed components of its budget. We so nurture and develoD the op- r growth that are available to us ich speak to our commitments holarly community." to the president's speech, 16 ers of the University faculty ity hiring were honored for distinguished scholarship, teaching and service. The recipients were awarded $16,000 collec- tivelyand in four separate categories. The five winners of the University Distinguished Faculty Achievement Award were: Thomas Adam- son, professor of aerospace engineering; Sanely Garn, professor of nutrition and anthropology; Myron Levine, professdr of human genetics; Michael Sanders, professor of physics; Charles Trinkaus, professor of history. The AMOCO Foundation Good Teaching Award was given to: Jack Goldberg, associate professor of mathematics; Frank Grace, professor of political science; Warren Hecht,electurer in the Residential College; William Martel, professor of radiology; a Warren Wagner, professor of natural resources and of botany. The U-M Faculty Recognition Award was presen- ted to: Donald Deskins Jr., professor of geography; Barbara Forisha, associate professor of psychology, U-M-Dearborn; Steven Lavine, assistant professor of English; Peter Smouse, associate professor of human genetics; and Rudolf Thun, associate professor of physics. The Josephine Nevins Keal Fellowship was awar- ded to Zane Udris, assistant professor of classical studies. Cannot be used in conbinaton with other discounts. Applicable taxes not included At Participating Steakhouses TUESDAY SPECIAL all zip front SWEATSHIRTS 25% off BIVOUAC( nickels arcade ise against ex-FBI qcials almost solved . { . n ess y4 wrappi former approv fugitive Chief chose n H INGTON (UPI)-Federal utors questioned their 23rd wit- yesterday and moved toward ng up their case against two top FBI officials charged with ing illegal break-ins in a hunt for e radicals. f prosecutor John Nields Jr. ot to call as a witness former At-, /1R ' y f / , t r'; (/ r 1 KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR! " 4 Barbers * No Waiting " Men & Women THE DASCOLA STYLISTS " E. Univ. at S. Univ. " Liberty off State torney General Richard Kleindienst, whose approval was required for fhe bureau to conduct legal break-ins in a national security probe. PROSECUTORS CONTEND the two officials, W. Mark Felt, the FBI's for- mer No. 2 man, and Edward Miller, its former intelligence chief, acted without Kleindienst's knowledge in approving the so-called "black bag jobs." The prosecution did not explain why it decided not to call Kleindienst. He may still be asked to testify as a gover- nment rebuttal witness, or for the defense, since Felt and Miller argue Kleindienst delegated the surveillance authority to the FBI. Defense lawyers have said that in presenting their side over the next four weeks, they may call former President Richard Nixon and attorney generals dating as far back as Herbert Brownell, who served in 1954. edipseRAI CHARLES THE RAELETTS and the RAY CHARLES ORCHESTRA Special Guest: Ernie Krivda Quartet November 12 Wed. 8:00 p.m. Hill Auditorium Tues. October 7 Tickets on Sale Box Office Michigan Union $8.50 7.50 6.50 reserved seats Wed. October 8 Tickets ~~1~ ATTENTION 10 aq REGISTRATION INFORMATION FOR COLLEGE BOWL '80 **The Varsity Sport Of The Mind** 1 A. ..LL. n r . T..._j _AY 4 7 m I