Draft registration: A garbled message See Editorial, Page 4 \'. ' Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom ?EtaiIu Hazy lazy Mostly hazy today with short bursts of sunshine and a high in the upper ?0s. M Vol. XCIII, No. 24 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 6, 1982 Ten Cents Ten Pages W ,.. State u By BILL SPINDLE The University's extension service was the first to go when the budget pinch hit. When * things got even tighter, the geography depar- tment was sacrificed to help keep the rest of the University above water. Now the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation and Related Disabilities may be on the road to elimination. But what about other universities in the state? What cuts are they making to survive the financial environment the state's lieutenant governor called "the economy of the shrinking pie?" LAST APRIL, as the snow melted around Northern Michigan University, the board of governors faced the fact that harsh economic times had arrived. niversities cut budgets to survive Faced with several years of declining state aid, enrollment declines of nearly 500 students, and Michigan's sluggish economy, the Board of Governors at NMU officially resolved that there was a "financial emergency" at their university. Late last month NMU administrators sent out layoff notices to 19 professors who were tenured or on their way to being so. THE ONLY way administrators could im- mediately balance the instructional budget was to ask unions to accept a pay freeze for this year, said Paul Soumi, communications direc- tor for NMU. "They (unions) all had a choice of taking freezes or having layoffs," Soumi said. The bargaining unit for the professors, the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), claimed that raises were a part of their contract with the university and refused to accept the freeze, said local AAUP President John Kiltinen. KILTINEN called the layoff notices a. "pressure tactic" to force salary concessions. While professors and administrators say negotiations are continuing, they appear to be deadlocked. The AAUP claims cuts could be made in other places, and administrators say everything else that can be cut has been. Should tenured faculty members actually be laid off at Northern, the rest of the schools in the state, including this University, will be watching. Nationally, cases of laid-off faculty suing institutions have resulted in controver- sialand contradictory decisions. But at NMU, no one has taken legal action as of yet. FOR MICHIGAN State University, the problems arrived earlier than at NMU. Early in 1980, Gov. William Milliken was op- timistically hinting about giving universities five to seven percent more money in 1981 than they received the year before. By the end of the year, however, the governor had cut the '81 payments to five to seven percent below the previous year. "MSU was one of the schools hardest hit. "We had a budget shortfall determined to be serious and ongoing in nature," said Robert Lockhart, director of MSU's budget office. The MSU Board of Regents adopted a statement of "fiscal crisis" when they made the cuts to relieve the problem. IN A DESPERATE situation, Michigan State chose to eliminate its nursing school, its College of Urban Development, and a college of the physical sciences. Those plans, however, didn't work out per- fectly for the MSU administration. After 300 demonstrators marched around the ad- ministration building, and other opposition to the cuts surfaced, the board of governors decided against eliminating the nursing school, although they cut deeply into its budget. The early lesson of declining state support which every other school in the state is now learning has not been forgotten at MSU. See STATE, Page 2 NR school's backers pack 11 heaing a $y JIM SPARKS A In their last chance to defend the TI School of Natural Resources, 300 people Curnedout at Rackham Auditorium last f night for a second public hearing on the e school's fate. P Speakers at the meeting, which ran m four hours, twice as long as scheduled, expressed their dismay at the N possibility of cuts in the school's budget, i] or its possible closure. r THE NEARLY 40 faculty, students, t alumni and others who spoke em- t phasized the school's nationally and in- ternationally acclaimed reputation. h; Some criticized the review process it- s self and urged budget increases, not f reductions. The review process could cultivate an unhealthy atmosphere in the University by pitting faculty members against w each other, said Raphael Ezekiel, ssociate psychology professor and Ann Arbor City Councilmember (D- rhird Ward). "In these high stress situations, the aculty has to rush together to save the nterprise, and not get into a com- petitive situation," he told the six- member review panel. EZEKIEL charged that the cuts are being made for the purpose of investing n robotics, business and defense esearch and that the review commit- ee may unwittingly be supporting hese goals. "If you take literally the charges you have been given, and like good, respon- ible, faceless people, carry out your unction, what you really will be doing will be to collaborate with the Ad- ministration's goals," he said. The Budget Priorities Committee, which began reviewing the school in See SCHOOL'S, Page 5 Members of the Rowing Club had some trouble with their rowing tank on the Diag yesterday. After an Ann Arbor fireman filled the tank (top left), mem- bers of the club noticed a slow leak (bottom left). The leak turned into a lake (above), but the water level was a bit too low for rowing. MSA okays PIRGIM funding plan By ROB FRANK The Michigan Student Assembly last night endorsed efforts by the Public In- terest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) to change thenmanner in which students contribute to the research group. If implemented, the new system would have students pay the $2 PIRGIM fee on their tuition bill, then have it refunded if they decided not to contribute to the organization. THE STUDENT government body also voted to hire an investigator to probe possible violations of the Univer- sity's military research policy. The investigator would be paid $1,000 over the course of the term for 240 hours of policy research, according to the proposal approved last night. Since its appearance in 1962, PIRGIM has used a positive checkoff system to fund its activities, which include con- sumer information, lobbying efforts, and environmental protection ac- tivities. STUDENTS are currently asked to return signed a portion of their Student Verification Form (SVF) to have the $2 charge appear on their tuition bill. The new system would automatically charge each student the $2, then offer refunds to those who wished them. In the past, only 20 percent of the students have volunteered the needed funds, said Ellen Shachter, a member of the PIRGIM board of directors. "When you're standing in a CRISP line, the last thing on your mind is an organization trying to get money," she said. Amy Gibans, also a member of the board of directors, said that the proposed "refusable refundable" fun- draising scheme would double their present revenue. "Most schools (with PIRGIM chapters) have a refusable refundable fundraising system." PIRGIM has tried in past years to change its funding system, but the Regents have turned them down. Critics of the proposed system say that asking students to be assessed the fee automatically would put PIRGIM at an unfair advantage over both students and other student groups. The vote on the defense researcher was reproposed by MSA, having tabled the motion to hire a researcher last See PIRGIM, Page 5 -iA:{<::C:L $:i:$ ii:ij}jj;i:ii: ii: :^}:X"iiiivii:ii:?:; "i}:4ii:<} iijJ:": i::4:;: Jiii:Lii:: v::;,;:: _.;; v: i:?:t". u:4:4: :::: {::::.:.::. : i. " '"" w.vi".. ::. ::::.::: i : is }:.: ..... v: 4: iiii:::. 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T........v.. u.}.. ............... .... ............ ..... .................................. ..........S: r::iii:::::::::::::: -.... w :.: i:4 ".v .,v ... ......... ...... x ::::.......... u....fri?:tiv:}:i+4iiv:4's. ". :::.i i :.y} :. $y..;t': r. . . yv.; Beaten and battered: Old classroom furniture up for sale By BARB MISLE When the anthropology department had a dead gorilla shipped to it last year, Hugh Wenk got the box it came in. Wenk sold it to a man who made it into a fish tank. Wenk, head property disposition manager for the University, works at a large warehouse on Baxter Road, past North Campus, which serves as a "half- way house" for all of the University's unwanted fur- niture and equipment. FROM HIS perch, distant from the activities of central campus, Wenk oversees the nearly 600 classrooms, 30,000 desks, and the innumerable win- dows and chairs that comprise the University's daily academic settings. "Students don't see the plant side of the operation at the University," Wenk said. "They don't see how many things go into supporting this institution-it's mind-boggling." This year, Mason Hall received 821 new chairs, costing the University nearly $20,000. But to those who thought the purchase was a waste of money, Wenk replies that many of the 40-year-old seats were cracking and the graffiti was incredible. WIlEN A department doesn't want a desk anymore, or the hospital needs to get rid of a surgical lamp, they send it to Wenk. That odd collection of furniture and equipment then is sold to the public or transferred to another department within the University. It's a "there's a buyer for everything" type of job. "Every piece of furniture that is sold from the University must come through the property disposition office," Wenk said. "We are concerned about funds going back into the University, naturally. See FOR SALE, Page 3 AP Photo Happy Days Students wait outside Detroit's Cass Technical High School yesterday at noon following a vote by teachers to end the 16-day strike. See story, Page 2. ........... . . .. ........... .... ........... ........ .... .. ...-..:.:. ::": ...... ..::v::::.".":::::-..:..,...... . . . . . .... .... . .... . . . . . .... ............. . . .............. ....... . . . ....... . v......... .:...."........ ...:.. . . . . ..rx 4: i?::. 'S. ' TODAY- Smoke em all TTENTION, enterprising and glory-bound marketing and communications students! Philip Morris, Inc.-of Marlboro, Merit, and Virginia Slims fame-has announced its 14th Annual Marketing/Communications Competition for Students. Don't miss out on a chance to sharpen your marketing and communications skills. To tempt all those brilliant marketing and communications majors out there, the com- Coordinator at 120 Park Ave., New York, N.Y., 10017, to find out just what they want. Smoke 'em all. E What's a Wuppet and why? O H, HOW I WUV those Wuppets! Yes, there are such things as Wuppets, and they are really wuvable.j Wuppets are of various sizes, shapes and colors, are furry, soft, and have cute little bug eyes. Bob Lorsch, personal manager for the Wuppets, has recently been faced with a problem. Lorsch wants a new name for the Wuppets and he is offering $1,982 in Christmas Wishes to anyone who can re- name the Wuppet by Dec. 10. For more information on Wuppets and their search for a weal name, contact Marcy MacDonald (213) 386-2042 or (213) 851-6682. OL The Daily almanac f\N THIS DATE in 1972, the State House of Representa- Michigan's mistakes to pull out a tight victory (9-0) before a crowd of 101,001 in the Wolverine Stadium. " 1950-Old-time staffers met as the Daily hit its 60th year. Alumni who remembered when the Daily was five columns wide and reported only local news began to drift into the Student Publications Building to help celebrate the paper's anniversary and revive old memories. For instan- ce, 19 men made up Daily's first staff, and in a first-year editorial, called for more students to turn out for football games. In 1900, the Daily's size changed, making it the largest college paper in the country.n y 1 . i