The Michigan Daily-Saturday, March 20, 1982-Page 3 Campus forum examines ways to prevent crime By NANCY MALICH Students with a sharp eye and a little caution can help prevent crime, panelists at a campus security forum said Thursday. The open forum, part of the Michigan Student Assembly's Security Awareness Month, brought city and University officials together to discuss current security problems on campus. The special month .was sparked by an MSA poll in December that showed security to be a major concern of students. Students attending the forum raised several questions on campus security problems such as poor lighting ij residential areas, confusion concerning where to report crimes, and failure to publicize where rapes occur on cam- pus. Concern was raised by students about a March 12 rape occurring outside Baits housing which was not reported to the press. Panelists agreed that students become more aware of dangers after word of a crime, such as the recent rape, is spread. This"awareness can be the best tool for preventing crime, city and University security experts agreed. One way students can help stop crime is to look out for suspicious behavior around residences. Students should not hesitate to report unusual behavior, ac- cording to Housing Security guard Gerry Bradshaw. "STUDENTS see a whole heck of a lot more than security does," Bradshaw added. John Atkinson, an Ann Arbor police sergeant, suggested that student vigilance could have prevented the murder of two University students at Bursley Hall last April. Leo Kelly, a University student and Bursley resident at the time is charged with the shooting deaths. "Someone must have seen him (Kelly) bring the shotgun and am- munition into the dorm," Atkinson said. ANOTHER WAY to prevent crime is to exercise more caution, said Ann Arbor police detective Jerry Wright, who reported in an earlier interview that a large amount of break-ins occur because of improper locks or because locks are not used. Students may fail to take more precautions for several reasons, in- cluding time pressure and preoc- cupation with schoolwork, Wright said. Many students are also used to living at home where parents look out for their safety, Wright suggested. The MSA Security Awareness Month has suffered from some lack of interest, said Chris Kolb of the MSA Security Task Force. Kolb said the low turnout was "frustrating." A crime prevention workship conducted by the Ann Arbor police earlier in March attracted only seven students. WRIGHT called students the "least interested" of all groups in taking preventative reasures against crime. Students become vocal, however, after they become victims of crime, said Wright. "The solution is not to have a cop on each block. People don't want a polie state," Wright said. "Students need to take time out of their daily routine to be safer." City Councilman Lowell Peterson (D- First Ward) disagreed that students are less conscious of security. Student activism has helped get many safety projects, such as the recently launched all-night-dial-a-ride, underway, Peter- son said. Dave Foulke of Housing Security, recently suggested that "students raising concerns" are one of the most effective ways of getting funds for University safety projects when money is tight. The Security Awareness Month will conclude on March 31 with a special "Security Day" in the Fishbowl. Wallets-sized cards with emergency numbers and Nite-Owl bus routes will be handed out to passersby. Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAS' UNIVERSITY PHILOSOPHY Prof. Frithjof Bergmann (left) anid moderator George Rosenwald field audience questions at a televised discussion on the future of American working life. Televised community discussion debates "future labor options By BEN TICHO plicated system to get the community with his lecture series, Bergmann said, Naylor to explain robotics at 'U' Ann Arbor Community Access involved, Schmidt'added. Television, with the help of a University BERGMANN'S program is unique in professor, is trying to bring public par- that it incorporates pre-recorded ticipation to local television, material (video lectures) with live and The community cable network is community-oriented discussions. holding an open discussion this after The discussion will center around noon featuring University philosophy Bergmann's ten-part video lecture :Prof. Frithjof Bergmann and members series, Culture After the Elimination of .of the community. The discussion, Labor, which is broadcast weekly on located at the Ann Arbor Public Community Access. The library will be Library, will be broadcast live on showing past episodes today to help Community Access cable channels 8 prepare the audience for the event. and 9. Bergmann emphasized that the show THE DISCUSSION is a new way of provides an opportunity to air and en- stimulating public interest and in- courage valuable input from the com- volvement with television, according to munity. Martha Schmidt, coordinator of Coin- "THE TV lectures raise very impor- Munity Access. tant questions," he said. "But the "The live sessions are very exciting, discussions propose possible answers." because they get the community in- Bergmann said he was pleased with volved in a television dialogue," Sch- the response to the discussions. "A midt said. great diversity, of people discuss the Several modes-of viewer participation problems thoughtfully and seriously," have been tried throughout the country he said. "It's been quite astounding," such as recording responses from home showing all the best aspects of a town viewers via computers,,Schmidt said. meeting." The smaller-sized cominity 'of Ahn Anyone is welcome to attend the Arbor- does not require -such a. com-. ,discussion, including those unfailiar HIGHLIGHT The School of Music Dance Company will present its Spring Concert at 8 p.m. today in the Power Center. The concert will feature choreography by University faculty members Elizabeth Weil Bergmann, Vera Embree, Susan Matheke, and guest artist Manuel Alum. Also contributing to the con- cert are composer Gregory Ballard and the Current and Modern Consort, a local ensemble devoted to the performance of contemporary music. adding that two previous library sessions have drawn a diverse crowd. - BERGANN'S discussion will focus on the effects technological advances may have on the amount of work an average person does. Conflicts between the need to work-for social, cultural, and finan- cial reasons-and technology's escalating ability to make many jobs unnecessary has created what .Bergmann calls "excess labor." To combat what he sees as an inevitable increase in unemployment, Bergmann proposes to reduce the amount of time each person spends at work, opening up more time for in- dividual pursuits. Only a redistribution of work will ensure that a large section of the population will have a source of income, Bergmann said. The response to Bergmann's lecture- discussion sessions on technology's ef- fect on work has been "overwhelming and positive," Schmidt commented. Other cable companies in Detroit and Lansing have expressed interest in the series as well, she said. By SCOTT.STUCKAL Ever since Gov. William Milliken's High Technology Task Force recom- mended the development of robotics as a way to diversify the state's economy, the proposal and subsequent developments have become points of continuing controversy and discussion. A forum, entitled "Robots and High Technology: A new direction for Michigan?", to be held today in Rackham Hall, is the first major public forum for discussion of the high ' technology issue. ANN ARBOR has been the focal point of the state-wide debate because the Task Force has recommended that the $200 million robotics center they proposed last year be located in the area. The center has been named the Industrial Technology Institute. The ITI, however, is not just a robotics institute, according to Arch Naylor,-the institute's acting director and a featured speaker at today's con- ference. "Robotics is just a small part of what ITI is going to do," he said. The urgent area is flexible automated manufacturing." "Flexible automated manufacturing is created by merging small, cheap computers with robotics machinery," Naylor said. The computer systems will tell robotic machinery what to do in order to maximize efficiency. NAYLOR CITED increased manufacturing productivity as an ad- vantage of technological advancement. "We've been automating every shred of industry in the U.S. for as long as I can remember,,and we've increased productivity," he said. Although ITI was formed with the eventual goal of $200 million over a period of ten years, the institute does not have a physical presence aside from its office in the Department of Highway Safety. In a research park land development agreement the University signed with lawyer Richard Wood early last month, 20 acres were specifically set aside to be sold to ITI if it wanted to buy them. JAMES LESCH, University director of research and development, said this clause "was a 'come on' by Mr. Wood to attract ITI to the research park. Lesch and James Brinkerhoff, University vice-president and chief financial officer, are presently negotiating a master plan for the development of the research park with Wood. The park is located on almost 400 acres of land on Plymouth Road east of U.S. 23. According to Wood, "The Univer- sity's role is in planning the park, designing it with the Johnson, Johnson , and Roy architectural firm, and deter-, mining what companies meet the high- technology criteria." In return, Wood . will sell the land that his investors own to high technology companies at fair' market value, which Wood will deter- mine. ONE ISSUE that will be raised at today's robotics and high technology conference is the propriety of the University, a teaching institution, being so closely tied to the development of a private robotics high technology in- dustry in Michigan. Naylor stressed that ITI is not a part of the University and said, "I think the flow of the resources will be in the University's favor." ITI will work in conjunction with CRIM, the Engineering school's Center for Robotics and Integrated Manufac- turing. Parts of the University will also "conduct separate investigations that will aid ITI in its day-to-day job," Naylor said. He added: that this could include studies of the impact of the robotics and flexible automated manufacturing. Naylor said that the ITI is an impor- tant part of Michigan's economic recovery because "the state is in a worldwide economic competition. Chicago bans new handgun CHICAGO (AP) - A ban on new registration of handguns was approved yesterday by the Chicago City Council, with Mayor Jane Byrne calling it the "first step in a nationwide campaign" for tighter gun controls. Besides prohibiting ownership of handguns not alredy registered with police, the ordinance requires holders of registered weapons to renew their applications every two years. A $5 fee was established to cover all handguns owned by a registrant. THE BAN, proposed in January by s e registration Byrne and passed by a 30-11 vote, takes effect after its official publication in council records, expected to take several days. "I'm very gratified,", Byrne said. The ban does not apply to on-duty law enforcement and military personnel. Police Superintendent Richard Br- zeczek said there are some 717,000 registered handguns in Chicago, the nation'l second-largest city with a population of 3 million. He estimated ' that up to 1.5 million illegal handguns are in the city. FILMS I Mediatrics-Altered States, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 3. Alternative Action-Marathon Man, 7 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema IID.O.A., 7,8:40 & 10:26 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Ann Arbor Film Co-Op-Tess, 6 & 9 p.m., Lorch. Classic Film Theatre-Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 4, 7, 8:45, 10:30 & midnight, Michigan Theatre. PERFORMANCES Musical Society-Tokyo String Quartet, 8:30 p.m., Rackham Aud. School of Music-Piano Recital, Xiao-Li Ding, 2 p.m.; Piano Chamber Music Recital, Rebecca Happel, 4 p.m.; Clarinet Recital, Yoshinori Nakao, 6 p.m.; Piano Recital, Youngsun Koh, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Canterbury Loft-"You Can't Hurry Love," by The Clown Conspiracy of New York City, 8 p.m., 332S. State. Eclipse Jazz-Woody Shaw, 8 & 10:30 p.m., U. Club. Ark-Utah Phillips, The Golden Voice of the Great Southwest, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. Barbershop Quartet Concert-"Barbershop '82," 8 p.m., Pioneer High School Aud. MEETINGS A2 Go-Club-2-7 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Graduate Christian Fellowship-Worship, 7 p.m., Rms. D & E, League. MISCELLANEOUS WCBN-FM-Patchwork: A folk music radio show of Irish, British & American music hosted by Adam Price & Jeanne Greenblatt, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., 88.3 FM. Trotter House & Eclipse Jazz-Jazz Demo Workshop with Woody Shaw, 5:00 p.m., Trotter House., Committee on Ethics, Humanism & Medicine-9th Conf. on Ethics, Humanism & Medicine, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Thomas Francis, Jr. Bldg., SPH, 1420 Washington Heights. Affirmative Action, Career Planning & Placement, Sixth Annual Women's Career Fair, 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., MLB. Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra-"Viennese Spring Gala," dinner & dan- cing, 8 p.m., League ballroom. School of Metaphysics-Crystal Ball Expansion Project, food, entertain- ment & dancing, 7:30 p.m., 1029 Fountain. Baits dorm-International Night, food, 8 p.m., North Campus, Baits. Were you closed out of the Dorm l otteiy? OPEC to cut production and stop oil price collapse (Continued from Page 1) the University of Virginia. Demand for oil has fallen sharply worldwide due to recession in the in- dustrialized West and to the huge oil- pice increases of the 1970s. THE PRICE of oil on spot markets, where oil not sold by contract is traded, has dropped far below the official levels quoted by OPEC producers. At the retail level, gasoline prices in the United States have dropped about 10 cents a gallon in the past year to an estimated average of $1.25. Prices in "Europe are well above $2 a gallon at the gas pump, but some coun- tries have seen modest reductions in the past year. SECURITY authorities, mindful of the 1975 attack on OPEC ministers in Vienna that left three security men dead, called in police reinforcements to protect the delegates. Guards with submachine guns flanked the doors of the minister's hotels and the restaurant where they had lun- ch. the ministers were hurried from their limousines by phalanxes of bodyguards as they went to their ap- pointmnents. Passers-by were not allowed in the immediate vicinity whenever the ministers went outdoors. The international terrorist "Carlos" was said to be the mastermind of the 1975 attack in which the terrorists seized OPEC headquarters for 2 hours, then flew to Algiers with 41 captives, in- cluding 10 OPEC oil ministers. How many Foreign AlMedical Schools have requested N.Y. State approval for Clerkship Training Programs? Only NORESTE. AiWhy? 1. Fine Faculty 2. Good Facilities 3. Small Classes Noreste partci pates in Guaranteed Student Loan Programs to $8000 has a 4 year program and a WHO listed School of Medicine Tampico. Mexico Universidad Del Moreste Admissions, Inc. 120 East 41 St NY NY 10017 212 594-6589 UNIVERSITY TOWERS now has the winning numbers! d -accommodations starting at $ 1 0250 per person* -your own bedroom from $ 5 -heat included-furnished apartments -plus convenient location -- - ,_ . 1