4 Page 2-Wednesday, January 5, 1983-The Michigan Daily Nat. Resources dean to leave IN BRIEF By JIM SPARKS After heading the School of Natural Resources dur- ing one of its most difficult times, William Johnson ended his term as dean last month. Johnson, who has been dean since 1975, including the school's current budget review, said he plans to take a sabbatical and hopes to return to the Univer- sity as a natural resources professor this fall. , "I REALLY NEED a break," Johnson said. "I'm anxious to do some creative things. I left my own personal, professional work eight years ago and I'm thirsty for it." Reflecting on the review process that has dominated his work for nearly a year, Johnson found much to be unhappy about, but said the University is learning from these first reviews. "I wish it (the review process) could be more sen- sitive and less hostile, but I don't know how," he said. "If you're going to charge a unit with less-than- adequate performance, you've started a sequence of events you must face." ALTHOUGH the review process provides "enor- mous leverage" for change in a school, he said, the cost in terms of "lost trust, lost people, and lost ex- cellent students" is high. Johnson explained that to a large extent the review panel reiterated problems the school was already trying to correct, problems which could have been dealt with internally. But he noted that the report commended the school's integrative approach, where students and professors go beyond narrow disciplines in solving problems. He also said the school did a "remarkable job of keeping the review on the constructive side, and it was very hard to do that." Nat. Resources may be c ut by 30percent (tontmued from Page 1) selective in the students it admits, ac- cording to the committee's statements. THE QUALITY of undergraduate students in the school has been one of Subscribe to The Michigan Daily the major concerns throughout the review. The average grade points and SAT scores of students admitted to the school are below those of the average LSA student, and reducing the quota of students will allow the University's admission's office to be more selective, according to John Basset, the school's director of undergraduate programs. While Johnson agreed with that recommendation, he opposed the proposal to boost the school's Pih.D program. "Additional doctoral graduates are needed less than well-trained, effective, analytic master's-level graduates ..-. quite simply, where will the expanded set of Ph .Ds get jobs?" Johnson asked. WHILE increasing the amount and quality of research has been an ongoing effort of the school, Johnson expressed concerns about the budget panel suggestions for just how to do it. Boosting the number of Ph.D studen- ts and other reorganizations may make the school too "theoretical," he said, leading toward simple expansion of knowledge, and away from training professionals for careers. Johnson suggested the public review process mayu have been unnecessary. He said the problems of student quality, research levels, and cost per student - the main issues brought out by the reviewers - were already being dealt with by the school. "There is some loss of confidence in the University for allowing the school to go through the review for the same reasons we were endeavoring to solve before the review," he said. The next step for the school comes Jan. 17, when the University executive offices will hold a public hearing on the budget committee's recommendations. Then the officers will vote on the proposal and the final decision rests with the University's Regents. x*i tt t PFFASS Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Release asked for suspected accomplice in Pope shooting ROME - The lawyer for a Bulgarian charged with complicity in the shoot- ing of Pope John Paul II said yesterday he has presented more alibis for his client and is ontimistic the man will he released. "My client is innocent and I have asked for him to be released," said Giuseppe Consolo, lawyer for Sergei Ivanov Antonov, station chief of the Bulgarian airline. He spoke in a telephone interview. Consolo, who formally asked Italian magistrates on Monday to release An- tonov, said he expected a decision within a week. In the past week, state prosecutor Ilario Martella has interviewed 10 people who said they saw Antonov on the day of the shooting, May 13, 1981, Consolo said. The lawyer said the witnesses also saw Antonov on the two days before the attack in his office at Balkan Air, at theBulgarian Embassy and at Rome's Leonardo da Vinci airport. Consolo said there "was ab- solutely no proof" that Antonov was involved in the shooting. Mehmet Ali Agca, serving a life sentence for shooting the pope, told Italian prosecutors that Antonov was with him during those three days, helped him plan the shooting and was in St. Peter's Square at the time of the attack, ac- cording to testimony leaked to the press. Rebels in Corsica seek independence from France PARIS - President Francois Mitterrand yesterday fired Corsica's two top police officers and sent fresh police reinforcements to the Mediterranean island to halt a terror offensive by nationalists seeking independence from France. The actions followed a new series of terrorist attacks, many of which have been claimed by the Corsican National Liberation Front. They included a shotgun assault Monday on a police station in southern Corsica and three bomb attacks in Ajaccio, Napoleon's birthplace and capital of the French- ruled island. Official statistics indicated there were a record 805 terrorist attacks on the island of 230,000 inhabitants in 1982, twice as many as in 1981, despite refor- ms last year that give Corsica a decentralized administration and some political autonomy. Salvadoran murder trial stalled SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador- The trial of five soldiers charged with killing four American churchwomen will be stalled until March, a defense lawyer said yesterday. The delay was seen as possibly jeopardizing con- tinued U.S. military aid to El Salvador. A magistrate in San Vicente, 30 miles east of San Salvador, said defense lawyers won an appeal Monday to review evidence against the five former national guardsmen charged with the Dec. 2, 1980 slayings of three Roman Catholic nuns and a lay social worker. He said the review will take about a week and then the San Vicente court will rule if "there are merits" to bring the soldiers to trial in the nearby city of Zacatecoluca, about 25 miles southeast of the capital. Zacatecoluca Judge Bernardo Murcia, who has handled most aspects of the pre-trial review, already has ruled there is sufficient evidence to try the former guardsmen. One-defense lawyer conceded that the appeal for the review was merely a legal tactic to stall the case. He predicted that the trial would not start until March. Agnew pays in kickback suit BALTIMORE- A check for more than $268,000 from Spiro Agnew was presented to state Treasurer William James yesterday, ending a 6-year-old bribery suit against the former vice president begun as a student law project. The payment represented the money authorities said Agnew accepted in kickbacks from highway contractors while he was Maryland governor, plus interest. "We can't put it any more bluntly," state Attorney General Stephen Sachs said as he handed Agnew's check to the state treasurer during a press con- ference. "Crime doesn't pay." A Maryland Circuit Court judge ruled in 1981 that Agnew, 64, violated his public trust by accepting $147,500 in kickbacks from 1967 to 1969. The judge ordered Agnew, vice president under Richard Nixon until he resigned in 1973 and a leading Nixon administration proponent of "law and order," to repay the state the money, plus $101,235 in interest. The payment was more than the original amount of $248,735 because of the addition of post-judgment interest on the original principal judgment, the at- torney general's office said. Israeli army claims Syria is building new missile sites TEL AVIV, Israel- Syria is building two bases deep inside its territory for advanced Soviet SAM-5 anti-aircraft missiles, the Israeli army said yester- day. The state radio indicated the missiles would jeopardize Israeli recon- naissance flights over Syria. In Washington, U.S. intelligence sources confirmed Syria was making the missile preparations and said the weapons could seriously threaten Israeli aircraft within their own air space. The sources asked not to be identified. One source said at least one of the batteries was under construction near Damascus. Neither the Pentagon nor the State Department confirmed the Israeli military report. Vol. XCIII, No. 77 Wednesday, January 5, 1983 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: $13 September through April (2 semesters) ; $14 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $7.50 in Ann Arbor; $8 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 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