Ninety- Three Years of Editorial Freedom C I tr L it igant~ 1E4i1 Downhill Partly cloudy and cooler, with a high in the mid-40s, Vol. XCIII, No. 128 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, March 15, 1983 Ten Cents Ten Pages .. Police ivestigate Major Events By ROB FRANK Ann Arbor Police detectives and University officials will meet today to determine whether to lodge felony charges against present or former em- ployees of the University's Office of Major Events. The two top officials of the office, which is responsible for producing con- certs on campus, have left the Univer- sity in a shake-up which followed a University audit last month. A Major Events bookkeeper also has been suspended pending further in- vestigation. BOTH KAREN Young, who was director of Major Events, and Robert Davies, her assistant in charge of booking and production, have left in the shake-up. Detective David Jachalke of the Ann Arbor Police, who has been in- vestigating the case for the last two weeks, said he will make a recommen- dation concerning whether or not See POLICE, Page 3 Dean: No reason art for cut in By GLEN YOUNG The University's top budget commit- tee has given "no justification" for asking that the School of Art's budget be cut by one-fourth, the school's dean told University administrators "and a packed house of 500 students and faculty members last night. The recommendations of the Budget Priorities Committee "are utterly in- consistent with the goals the BPC calls for," said Art School Dean George Bayliss at an open hearing held by the University's executive officers, who are preparing their decision on a budget cut for the school. The BPC has recommended that the school take a 25 percent budget cut, although a committee that reviewed the school for six months recommended only a 10 percent to 15 percent cut. The only justification the BPC has given for the higher cut is that all units must contribute to the University's financial dilemma, Bayliss said, but "so far, this does not appear to be true." THE DEAN said the school could ab- sorb a budget reduction of 14.2 percent if the cut were administered over time. He said the school could retain its character and that no tenured faculty would have to be released. But he also said the University would be losing over $500,000 a year in tuition if the un- dergraduate ranks were thinned frm the current 571 to 400, one hundred more students than the BPC recom- mended. The executive officers heard more than 30 speakers at the Chrysler Auditorium hearing. Professor Mary Ann Swain, chair- woman of the budget Priorities Com- mittee, defended her panel's report, primarily by reading aloud directly from the document they've already submitted to the administration. She said her committee supported a strong School of Art and listed the areas in which the group felt the school should strive to enhance. THESE AREAS included the distin- ction of the faculty and the graduate program, as well as increasing visual literacy among non-art majors. But Swain went on to say her committee did not feel it "appropriate to support as large a School of Art as now exists." Swain said the school would have to cur- Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD Art students in front of Angell Hall yesterday lined up to protest the 25 per- cent budget cuts recommended by a key University committee. They used an exacto-knife to illustrate the effect that cut would have on the art school by "cutting" one-quarter of the demonstrators. Ba .iiss ... sees inconsistancies in report tail some current programs, though she did not name any specifically. In response to a question Prof. John D'Arms, who chaired the art school's special review committee, said that a See 500, Page 5 'Atomic art': The positive side of world destruction By JERRY ALIOTTA In his 1960 film Dr. Strangelove, director Stanley Kubrick uses black comedy as a means of penetrating viewers' minds to convey the direction of where nuclear man is headed-world destruction. In The Atomic Artist, producers Glenn Silber and Claudia Vianello try to teach viewers the same lesson more than twenty years later. THE FILM documents a modern sculptor, Tony Price, and his unique art which is made from remnants found in a salvage yard at Los Alamos, birthplace of the atomic bomb. Price's works bring his audience to look beyond their sometimes humorous images and explore the possibility of nuclear war and its devastating results. The film was featured at Sunday's opening reception of "Art at Ground Zero." The East Quad exhibit by Michigan artists, including some University professors, demonstrates their belief that nuclear war is not only a possibility, but a probability. ONE OF Price's sculptures, a conglomerate of scrap metals called "The Last SALT Talks," shows the United States and the Soviet Union facing off as a beast machine and a knight machine, with an umpire in the middle. The two super powers are discussing what to do with the planet after everything has been blown up. "I try to convert art into something that will affect people in a positive way,"Price explains in the film. Producer Vianello is a 1974 University graduate whose documentary El Salvador: Another Vietnam was nominated for an Academy Award. "We (the filmmakers) consider ourselves catalyst to the audience," she said at Sunday's reception. "We want to reach people through an art film, not by something that is dogmatic." Vianello said she and her co-producer chose Price as the documentary's subject because his interests are similar to their own philosophy about filmmaking. "We also wanted to help out Tony," she said. It is becoming more and more difficult to be an indepen- dent producer, according to Vianello. "Usually you're spen- ding the money as fast as you make it," she said. Seminar explores reactions to Holocaust By TRACEY MILLER "The moral response to the Holocaust is to take power," said Irving Greenberg, a noted professor from the Department of Jewish Studies at the City University of New York. "Any potential victim has to have enough power to protect themselves. If you don't take power, then you have to go along with the genocide," Greenberg told a crowd of about 250 people in the Rackham Amphitheatre last night. GREENBERG was speaking at the three-day campus conference on the Holocaust, called "A Glimpse into Darkness." Greenberg summarized the tragic events of Eastern Europe in the 1930s and '40s and said that acknowledgement of its existence is the first step towards rebuilding. See SEMINAR, Page 3 Daily Photo by WENDY GOULD Patrick Savageua (right) observes "Art at Ground Zero"-Artists' statements on nuclear war last Sunday at East Quadrangle. The exhibit sponsored by the Residential College opened on Sunday and runs through March 20. Conflicting jobs force MSU trustees to quit LANSING (UPI) - Licensing Director Elizabeth Howe and State Employer John Bruff resigned yesterday from the Michigan State University board of Trustees due to potential conflicts of interest and were immediately replaced. Gov. James Blanchard announced the resignations simultaneously with his appointment of Malcolm Dade, a former aide to Detroit Mayor Coleman Young, and Patrick Wilson, a Traverse City attorney, to the board. BRUFF AND Howe submitted their resignations after Attorney General Frank Kelley informed Blanchard that their dual positions presented a potential for conflict. Both Howe and Bruff had asked Kelley to rule on the conflict question. It had been rumored for some time that Kelley believed there was a con- flict. Senate Republicans, in addition, had asked the state Board of Ethics for a ruling on the issue. IN THEIR request, the Republicans had cited Bruff's role in helping to shape the state budget and Howe's power to license some of the professionals who are trained at MSU. Howe heads the state department which oversees professional licen- sure, while Bruff is the state's top labor negotiator. Dade, manager of local and state government affairs for Detroit Edison Co. will serve out Bruff's eight-year term. Wilson will complete the six years remaining on Howe's term. "I am especially proud to announce my selection of Malcolm Dade and Pat Wilson," Blanchard said. "As one of our state's major resear- ch universities, Michigan State will need to play an increasingly significant role in the economic revitalization of our state." Doily Photo by WENDY OULD Dr. Irving Greenberg, a ioted scholar on the Holocaust, tells the crowd at last night's conference in the Rackham Amphitheatre what the modern Jewish response to the Holocaust should be. TODAY- Dumping on Ann Arbor REMEMBER THE big snowstorms that socked Ann Arbor this year? Neither do we. So the people who bring you this column every day were wondering why the Daily was charged $229.60 by the University's Plant Department for snow removal this winter. The Daily probably could have bought a snow blower for less-and then never used it because there was never enough snow to bother. The Plant Depar- OMMM4 the University, including a $300 tab to install a wood mailbox in the Student Publications Building. It turns out that figure was wrong, and Publications actually was charged nearly $450. Mysteriously, though, a $151.36 refund showed up on a February Plant Department bill for over- charges on the mailbox, bringing the total amount back down to about $290. Such a deal. Hurry, hurry F YOU WANT to run for a seat on the Michigan1 Student Assembly and you haven't bothered to file as a r-adidnp tnrav is ,.vnim act v o an - Tn,.rp p commissioners recently approved a contest among county departments to see which employee can lose the most weight from April through July. Each employee of the win- ning department will get a day of vacation, and the em- ployee who loses the most weight overall will be awarded a four-day weekend. Diane Thorson, the county's director of public health, said the contest was sparked by the county's $29,000 health insurance bill last year for cardiovascular , disease. She said she hopes the contest will encourage em- ployees to excercise and quit smoking, thereby reducing, the likelihood of heart disease-and cutting future insuran- ce bills. ilD number of "approved" rooming houses to just enough homes to accommodate incoming freshmen. The students felt that cutting the number of approved homes would en- courage competition among landlords and cause rents to fall. * 1947 - Staff members of the Michigan Technic announ- ced that they would try to oust the Gargoyle sales staff from the Engineering Arch when the two publications went on sale. "There just isn't enough room for both of us around the Arch," said Technic editor Milt David. * 1952 -The Michigan hockey team became the first team. to win two staight NCAA hockey championships when the i I i