Ninety-Three Years ofed Editorial Freedom E L4IE IE atIQ No tornadoes The skies will be cloudy, leaving a definite possibility for rain. High around 55. Vol. XCIII, No. 122 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, March 8, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages w Cut Ed. School undergrads, panel says East Quad resident shoots self in dorm room By HALLE CZECHOWSKI An LSA freshman who was described by housing officials as being in "above average spirits," took his own life Saturday afternoon in an East Quad dormitory. Robert Katz of West Bloomfield died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, Ann Arbor Police said. The shooting occurred between noon and 1 p.m., they said. Katz' body was found by his roommate at about 11:30 p.m. EAST QUAD housing officials said there was no indication Katz might try to kill himself. "Unlike most cases there was no warning. He appeared to be in better than average spirits. When Shis roommate left he appeared okay, See EAST, Page 3 I i Advises 40% budget cut, huge Look, Au nieE m! Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD Storm clouds hang ominously over a playground yesterday as tornadoes whirled through the Washtenaw County skies. Tornadoes were sighted in Manchester, Saline, and Tecumseh. Although none of them touched down, some were as close as 90 feet off the ground. University students in the dormitories and libraries were forced to flee their rooms and carrels to seek a safe haven in the basement. Sporadic power failures were reported throughout the city. faculty r By BILL SPINDLE The School of Education should cut its undergraduate enrollment almost completely over the next three years, a special panel reviewing the school recommended in a recently completed report. The report also recommends that the school's budget be cut by 40 percent, the faculty be reduced to nearly half its. present size, and the graduate programs be cut substantially. THE PANEL suggested the school shoot for a total enrollment of 500 students in 1986-87, down from about 1,100 in winter term, 1982, according to estimates from the Office of the Registrar. The report is now being examined by the University's top budget committee, the Budget Priorities Commitee. Faculty and students on the budget committee will decide to accept the report, or change the recommendations before advising Billy Frye, the vice president for academic affairs and provost. The report will not be released for several weeks, Frye said. SEVERAL members of the school's faculty and administration said yester- day that the report also suggests the school substantially reduce enrollment in graduate programs. Undergraduate enrollment in the school should be reduced to only 50 students by the 1986-87 school year, the report said. The school does not need to emphasize undergraduate education, it said, because there is not a large market demand for their skills, and the school's strengths dictate an emphasis on graduate studies. The panel's recommendation would mean an undergraduate reduction of almost 400 students from the Winter, outncil passes backup pot law By SCOTT KASHKIN Ann Arbor City Council voted 7-4 last night in favor of an ordinance that would place stricter penalties on the sale or use of marijuana if voters decide to repeal the present $5 pot law in the April elections. The new ordinance would make possession of less than an ounce of marijuana a $25 fine. Possession of more than an ounce would mean a fine of ua to $500 or 90 days in prison. DEMOCRATIC councilmembers accused the Republican majority of using the ordinance as a gradual step toward much stricter state laws. Coun- cilmember Rafe Ezekiel (D- -3rd Ward) called the ordinance a "con game," saying the Republicans know the voters won't repeal the law under the threat of stricter state laws. He described the new ordinance as a "soft alternative" to the state. Democratic mayoral candidate Leslie Morris (D- 2nd ward) said she was against taking the issue out of the hands of the voters. Another democratic coun- cilmember, Lowell Peterson of the 3rd Ward, said it was against his principles to vote on an issue that should be up to the people. Debate over the ordinance heated up after coun- cilmember Gerald Jernigan (R-4th Ward) said Ezekiel was running scared. "I'm not running scared, I'm running disgusted," Ezekiel snapped back, calling the ordinance "a nice law for citizens to look at so that the red flag of the $5 fine does not fly over Ann Arbor . . . The process is silly." eduction 1982 term, according to registrar's of- fice statistics. THE SCHOOL should also offer several teacher certification programs through other units of the University, the report said. The music school was specifically mentioned in the report as one of those areas. The panel recommended that the school's total enrollment be broken down into 100 Ph.D. students, 150 special education program students, 200 masters students, and 50 specialized undergraduates. With an enrollment of that size, the report said the school could reduce its faculty by 45 members, from 105 to 60. THOSE PROFESSORS could also serve as instructors in several campus units which would continue to offer teaching certificates, the panel said. The committee also said the school should preserve some of its strong poin- ts - the education and psychology Ph.D. programs, and the speech and hearing science units - by keeping faculty members in the units and replacing them when they retire. With the enrollment and staff reduc- tions the school would be able to cut 40 percent of its $5 million budget, the panel said. A cut of more than that would cause "unacceptable" damage to the quality of the school. EDUCATION SCHOOL Dean Joan Stark, however, said that under the report's guidelines the cut would be 50 percent. The 40 percent cut did not include reductions the panel suggested in the Department of Physical Education, and the Bureau of Schools Services, she said. She declined to comment on any other aspect of the report. The 40 percent cut is the largest See SCHOOL, Page 5 Outspoken bishop explains munoraliy of war By KRISTIN STAPLETON Controversial Bishop Thomas Gum- bleton told an audience of 300 Sunday night that almost all modern wars are immoral, and Catholics should refuse to participate in them. Gumbleton, a vocal, pacifist priest and former Vietnam War protester, appeared at Ann Arbor's United Methodist Church Sunday to discuss a letter on nuclear war, authorized by himself and four other bishops. THE FIRST DRAFTof the much- publicized "American bishops' letter" met much criticism from the media, the military, and church members because it seriously questioned current U.S. nuclear policy. Gumbleton outlined the basic ideas of See CONTROVERSIAL, Page 2 i:s::EE> ?i <":::";:;:":; >:;">::.o-:":;;::"::.;:;:::.::;:.;: :>:;i;i isi i i s i i;r i; :i>isi i ' = i ::> i;? i;i::Si =:>i i as> - : X,-:: :::: >: xix Harvard scientists start search for E. T. HARVARD, Mass. (UPI) - Scien- tists switched on sophisticated com- puterized radio telescope yesterday, beginning the first intensive search for intelligent life among the stars. An 85-foot-diameter radio telescope at the Oak Ridge Observatory, run jointly by Harvard University and the Smithsonian Institution, began scan- ning the Northern skies for radio transmissions some astronomers believe could be directed toward ear- th from deep space. THE PROJECT, known as the Search for Extra-Terrestrial In- telligence, is headed by two of the nation's leading astronomers, Carl Sagan, a Pulitzer Prize winner, and Paul Horowitz of Harvard University. "Now it's up to them," said Horowitz as he punched a small but- ton on a huge control board and put the telescope into operation. "This is the first sustained, multi- year, highly sophisticated search for extraterrestrial intelligence," said Sagan. "LIFE ALMOST certainly exists near many of the 300 billion stars of our galaxy," said Horowitz. "Nature never does anything just once." Horowitz designed the telescope's special receiver, which can do as much in one minute as equipment used in short-term searches in 1960 could do in 100,000 years. It will monitor 130,000 frequencies simultaneously. The radio telescope will concentrate on frequencies called "magic waves," those that stand out from random galactic noise. Scientists say such waves are close to the atomic frequency of common elements, such as hydrogen, the most plentiful element in the galaxy. The search is paid for by private donations, including grants from the Planetary Society, an international group of astronomers. Doily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Catholic Bishop Thomas Gumbleton addresses a crowd at the United Methodist Church Sunday. Gumbleton is co-author of a letter from American bishops which condemns nuclear war and the arms race. _, TODAY It's not too late DUE TO popular demand, the Daily has printed an additional 200 copies of the faculty and staff salary listings. This limited offer is available on a one-time basis only-unless of course we sell these fast, then maybe we'll print some more. How much would you pay for a copy of the salaries? Don't answer yet, The entire $781.46 was paid in 50-cent pieces. "I've been collecting them for 12 years and I just decided to use them to pay," Haugen said. He said the 40 pounds of coins fit in "not too big a can." Roll was not surprised. Haugen had called her beforehand to find out if it would be OK to make his unorthodox payment. She gave him four pennies in change.agQ Vegetable wars MTEXYAS AGRTCTTLTTTRE Cnmmissinner .im Hightower said Thursday. "We certainly don't ship as many onions as they dump peaches in Texas periodically," he said. Hightower said the if Georgia inisisted on competition, the Texas legislature might have something to say about chili shipped from Georgia to Texas. "Austex chili is made in Augusta, Georgia, for instance, and our Legislature would probably have to ban it from Texas for deceptive labeling," he said. "We take our chili seriously here and, by the way, we eat it with sweet and mild onions on the side." 04 Gargoyle gave its March issue away for free. " 1954 - The Panhellenic Association voted to adopt a fall rushing system. * 1963 - The Office of Student Affairs decided that it would still retain control of dormitory dress codes and im- posed new limitations on the codes revised by Alice Lloyd residents. The office did relent and allow the women to wear blue jeans on Saturdays. D I I