1982 ockey Guide Inside PIRGIM's folly See Editorial, Page 4 '. ' Ninety-three Years of Editorial Freedom IaiIQ Obvious Partly sunny and breezy today with a high of around 60, turning colder toward nightfall. Vol. XCIII, No. 32 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 15, 1982 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages plus Supplement Regents pass budget, question wage plan By JIM SPARKS raises from other funds. school starts, were $1.5 million les s The University Regents voted in a record budget yesterday, but not without some controversy, both inside and outside the meeting. Outside the Regents' room, about 100 demonstrators protested against the University's budget cutting plans, while inside, some Regents raised questions and argued over salary plans, defense research, and the quality of the University's faculty. REGENT GERALD Dunn (D-Garden City) cast the only 'no' vote on the $285.5 million budget plan, but more than one Regent questioned the way the budget's salary plan will be distributed. Before the vote, Dunn said he wanted 'an across the board increase for the 11,500 University clerks and techinicians, not an increase based on the employee's performance. When Vice-President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye said the increase would be from zero percent to 12 per- cent at the discretion of each program's administrator, Regent Nellie Varner (D-Detroit) exclaimed: "That will mean some will not get any increases at all." Varner still voted for the budget. Under the plan, 3,500 of the workers will get $2 million from the General Fund, while 8,000 of them will get proportional University faculty received a $5 million raise in September.The clerical workers plan starts in January, but some of the employees are trying to unionize workers for higher pay. State funds still provide most of the General Fund budget, but that share has been steadily decreasing, forcing tuition to rise by 15 percent. THOSE STATE appropriations, which are normally known by the time than officials hoped for in July, and even then, the $136,236,000 ap- propriation is taken with a grain of salt, because of past cuts or deferments. "We're dealing with a house of car- ds-monopoly money," said Regent. Sarah Power, referring to the unstable nature of current state support. President Harold Shapiro granted that the projected budget is See REGENTS, Page 9 Student rally attacks 'U' budget redirection Doily Photo by BRIAN MASCK A smaller but bitter crowd listens to speakers protest the University's budget policies outside the Fleming Ad- ministration Building yesterday. Not many students showed up, but those who did threatened serious action if the Regents don't listen to their demands. By NEIL CHASE Before a disappointingly small and somewhat chilled .crowd in Regents' Plaza, student and city leaders joined together yesterday to call for an im- mediate end to the University's finan- cial redirection plans. "Today at the University, humanities are not important. Social studies are not important. Students are a low priority at this university," City Coun- cil member and psychology Prof. Raphael Ezekiel said to approximately 100 students standing in front of the administration building. THE RALLY, organized primarily by the Michigan Student Assembly, was planned to excite the protesters before they appeared at the public comments section of the Regents meeting, which followed the protest. Most of the students who braved the windy afternoon chill attended the meeting to voice their concern over the future of the schools of art, natural See STUDENTS, Page 9 .300 turn out for art school at By FANNIE "You shout school stude review heari "Well," sh there's a sch And to sh sity's Schoo budget revie earin WEINSTEIN Robert Altman, who is a visiting ld take ceramics," one art professor this term in the com- -nt said to another at a munications department.iAltman said ng for the school last night. the school's elimination would make e answered "it depends if the University sterile, and virtually ool " turn it into an industrial trade school. ow they want the Univer- "If the art school disappears, the ar- l of Art-now under a tists aren't going to disappear," he w that could result in cuts said. "They'll go to where they can find -- - ~. ~it. or elimination-to continue to exist, almost 300 students, faculty, and com- munity members turned but at Rackham Amphitheater for the hearing. AMONG THE roughly 40 speakers supporting the school was filmmaker A number of past and present studen- ts also defended the school, although along with the other speakers most did not address the specific questions the review committee is asking. Kenneth Aptekar, a 1973 art school graduate who traveled from New York to speak, said he is still in touch with his former professors. "I entered the art school here to be an artist," he said. "The faculty was energetic, personal. These people were important role models for some kid who never knew real artists." ONE ISSUE the school's review committee has been examing is whether the school is isolated from the nation's leading cultural centers. "I transferred here and found things I couldn't find elsewhere," said art school senior Janet Page, who also at- tended what she described as a "brand name" school in New York City. "I feel strongly about my academic study here," she said. Page said she has appreciated the opportunity to study sciences and languages, something she would not have been able to do at an art institute. Education student Thomas Hamel, See 300, Page 2 Suspect arrested follo wing bouncer's stabbing By DAN GRANTHAM A man suspected of stabbing a University student working as a boun- cer at a local bar was arraigned yester- day on charges of assault with intent to do bodily harm. Armour Ketzner, of 3460 Lasalle St., was arrested after allegedly stabbing a 20-year-old bouncer in the stomach at the Second Chance bar Tuesday night, police said. The victim, whose identity hasn't been released, was rushed to University Hospital, where he was listed last night in stable condition. DAVE URBANIAK, manager of the Second Chance, said Ketzner had been thrown out of the bar earlier in the evening after he went in without paying the cover charge. The suspect returned at about 11:30 p.m., Urganiak said, and was thrown out again. Moments later, he said, the suspect returned and stabbed the bouncer. Ann Arbor Police Sgt. Harold Tinsey said of- ficers arrested Ketzner after a witness pointed him out. Urbaniak said the stabbing was an "extremely isolated incident," and that he couldn't say whether the club would now beef up its security. Urbaniak would not identify the boun- cer, but said he had worked at the bar for about two years. -, Mega-Moonies AP Photo Nearly 6,000 couples stand before the pulpit yesterday in Seoul, South Korea, as Rev. Sun Myung Moon conducted the largest mass wedding in history. 11,800 people from 80 countries were joined in holy wedlock in the Chamsil Gymnasium as Moon's Unification Church took the world lead in massive matrimonies. Polish roting claims first victim WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Riots over the ban on Solidarity claimed their first victim yesterday-a young man who died of gunshot wounds-and police fired tear gas to disperse mourners lighting candles for the victim at a church. Worker anger was reported spreading through Poland's coal and steel hear- tland. The official PAP news agency said Bodgan Wlosik, 20, died yesterday in a hospital after being shot by a plain- clothes officer who was attacked Wed- nesday during fierce street righting that left nearly 100 people injured in the Krakow steel-making suburb of Nowa Huta. Police fired tear gas into a crowd of mourners placing candles and a floral cross at a local church yesterday in honor of Wlosik, PAP and reliable sources reported. IT WAS THE first officially acknowledged death in the riots spawned by the outlawing of the Soviet bloc's first independent labor federation a week ago. The Communist Party newspapaer warned that new riots and strikes could extend martial law, and the official in- formation service Interpress said leaflets urging street protests and a boycott of pro-government unions set up in place of Solidarity have appeared in factories in Katowice province. Miners at the Jankowice coal mine near Rybnik refused to work for one hour Wednesday despite the martial law ban on strikes, but had gone to work after talks with management and party See POLISH, Page 11 A lmn a ... argues for art school TODAY Jailhouse hero LL THE INMATES in the Cumberland County Jail in Portland, Maine, were watching last Sunday when 'reliefer Peter Ladd became the winning pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers as they clinched the American League Championship. Ladd, a Portland native, was once a art-time jail guard at Cum- Officially needed F YOU SEE yourself as a frustrated politico, you need be frustrated no longer. The student government of the school of Literature, Science and the Arts (LSA-SG) is currently looking for someone to coordinate their upcoming elections. Though the job requires a significant amount of time, a $375 stipend is provided. Interviews are also being conducted for an assistant elections coordinator. A stipend is available for that job as well. Interested persons should contact Margaret Talmers at the LSA-SG office on the four- Then the 39-year-old woman decided it must be a mistake, and began an effort to find the bracelet's rightful owner. Local police were no help. She tried calling the manufac- turer, RJ. Reynolds Industries in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. A spokesman for the company, Nat Walker, said that if Mrs. Koester returns the pack and bracelet to the company, he personally will reimburse her for the postage. He said he may be able to tell from the numbers on the side of the pack which assembly line it went through, and then track down the owner. Walker said it was hard to believe the bracelet could have filtered through the company's automated production process. But a couple of years ago, derstand moving pictures, dancing, motor cars, and machinery." Also on this date in history: * 1957-President Eisenhower conferred with top scien- tists on whether the U.S. ballistic missiles program should be speeded up now that Russia had claimed to have an in- tercontinental missile. " 1932-Kappa Delta sorority hosted a tea dance where arrangements were made for guests to listen to Michigan's 14-0 victory over Ohio State. * 1967-War protesters in 30 American cities began to demonstrate and turn in draft cards in the opening stages of