0 Page 2-Sunday, April 3,1983-The Michigan Daily Strong winds may delay shuttle blast off From AP and UPI CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Challenger stands ready at last to take its place as the second ship in America's space fleet, with only whip- ping high-altitude winds posing an ob- stacle to a launch tomorrow. Liftoff of the shuttle, a slimmed down, slightly more powerful version of Columbia, is scheduled for 1:30 p.m. EST from Kennedy Space Center with a four-man crew. CREWS removed work platforms and tidied up the launch pad yesterday, preparing to pick up the terminal coun- tdown early tomorrow after a day off for Easter. the threat of high winds and heavy rains disrupted pre-launch training plans for Challenger's crew yesterday. But forecasters said skies shouldsclear for blastoff of the toughest space freighter mission yet. The black-and-white shuttle, an- chored to its oceanside launch pad, was tightly battened down to protect a $100- million data relay satellite in itsecargo bay from salt, sand. and othe con- taminants such as those that blew in during a strom that swept the Kennedy Space Center Feb. 28. WEATHERMEN kept a close watch on jet stream winds 40,000 feet above the spaceport. Winds up to 140 mph were expected tomorrow and could for- ce a day's launch delay, depending on their direction and intensities at various altitudes. The Air Force sent up - balloons frequently to sample the winds aloft. If the launch had to be postponed, it would be tried again 24 hours later. But if it slips beyond Friday, officials said, there would be a delay of 10 days to two weeks because of the need to replace batteries used to deploya satellite the shuttle is carrying into orbit. The ships commander is Paul Weitz, a 50-year-Old retired Navy captain who was the pilot on a month-long Skylab mission in 1973. Col. Karol bobko,45, an Air Force Academy graduate, is making his first space flight as pilot. THE OTHER two crewmen are space rookies, too. Story Musgrave, 47, a medical doctor, and Donald Peterson, 49, a retired Air Force colonel, will make the first space walk of the shuttle program with a three-hour work-test tour of Challenger's open payload bay. It is the most complicated mission yet attempted, including the launch in orbit tomorrow of a 21/2-ton special com- munications satellite attached to a 16- ton rocket and a spacewalk Thursday by Musgrave and Peterson to test new two-piece spacesuits designed for use by men or women. The ship will circle the globe 80 times during its five-day, 19-minute mission, with landing scheduled on the concrete runway at Edwards Air Force Base in. California next Saturday. AP Photo The space shuttle Challenger covered with service towers and equipment sits on the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center yesterday as the countdown continues for tomorrow's blast off at 1:30 p.m. A - OK Residential College cut $36,000 "ENERGYSAVING LIBERAL ARTS EDUCATION IN THE O'SO AND BEYOND 1. Panel Discussion and presentation of the successes and failures of liberal arts education. 2. Discussion of the effects of cutbacks instituted by the present administration upon liberal arts education. 3. Come and express your views on the quality of education at this university. HENRYK SKOLIMOWSKI - Professor of Humanities at Engineering School FRITHJOF BERGMAN - Professor of Philosophy JENS ZORN - Professor of Physics, Head of Curriculum Committee WILBERT McKEACHIE - Professor of Psychology, Director CRLT, Former head of American Psychology Assoc. APRIL 5 at 8 PM EAST QUAD, ROOM 126 L.S.A. Student Government THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL764-0557 (Continued from Page 1) but were not connected to our concen-, tration programs so they were vulnerable from that point of view," he said. The Residential College is a degree- granting unit within LSA. Formed in 1967 as an educational alternative to LSA, the college offers degrees in drama, creative writing, arts and ideas, social science, and international studies. The college has about 650 stud- ents and 50 full and part-time faculty. THE COLLEGE will be offering fewer social science courses, for exam- ple, because professors from that discipline will be teaching more fresh- man seminars, Mersereau said. He described this move as "robbing Peter to pay Paul," but said the college had to protect the programs which are, most essential. "We must maintain our freshman seminar program because that's part of our advertised curriculum, but at the same time, in order to maintain the same size freshman class, we have had to preempt people from these other programs," Mersereau said. THE UNIVERSITY might be working against itself by cutting the college's budget since it attracts a large number of out-of-state students with valuable tuition dollars, Mersereau said. In 1981, 50 percent of the students enrolled in the Residential College were from out-of-state. In 1982, after the college suffered a 5 percent cut, the number dropped to 42 percent. The out-of-state tuition money from freshmen alone is more than enough to support the college, Mersereau said. "The college is certainly not only sup- porting itself, but provides funds that subsidize other activities, which is as it should be," he said. MERSEREAU said he thinks out-of- state students will not be discouraged by the cuts because the college has been able to maintain its "academic in- tegrity." But Residential College Prof. John Reiff said he thought the reductions might keep out-of-state students away. "A lot of students who come to the Un- iversity come for the Residential College," he said. "If the attractiveness of the college dropped for them, then they might not come to the University. The college has also had to reduce its faculty because of the budget cut. Some professors had their Re sidential College course load reduced, but others lost their appointments completely, Mersereau said. SENIORITY was only one factor the college considered when deciding which faculty to cut, according to Mersereau. "Two things being equal, if someone had seniority, then that might be the person who stayed. But generally speaking, it was based on the academic effects on the college," he said. Mersereau said the faculty "reacted in a very dignified way,"but Reiff said the faculty as a whole "was pretty disturbed." Reiff, who is also a lecturer with the English Composition Board, has had his Residential College course load cut from two classes to one class. he will also be helping out with one class. SARAH WARREN was not as for- tunate as Reiff. When her position as an advisor in the college's counseling of- fice was eliminated, Warren found her- self out of a job. The shift away from counseling might mean a change in the college's philosophy, said Warren, who has ac- cepted a position at Northwestern University for next year. The elimination of counseling positions "reflects an emphasis on standard educational priorities, as opposed to in- dividually oriented priorities," she said. "As we shrink, our essence has to change. (The) kind of values un- derlying the college won't be able to be supported," she said. MERSEREAU said that the 5 percent reduction in 1981 had eliminated most of the "fat in the program. this time "we were taking out bone and muscle," he said. In 1982, Mersereau said he was asked to prepare a contingency plan to cut $50,000 from the college's $556,000 budget. In the fall of that year, Univer- sity administrators notified Mersereau of the $36,000 cut. Mersereau said he is disappointed about the cuts, but understands the adminstration's position. "We're not happy with what's happened, but we recognize its inevitability, and ap- preciate what I think is a fairness on the part of the administration," he said. One Residential College junior said he thought many of the cuts were poorly made. "some of them were poorly chosen - cuts that go against the spirit and original purpose of the Residential College," said David Mikelthun. "I don't feel that in dealing with the cuts that all the alternatives were ex-, plored," he said.' IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports KKK march in Houston HOUSTON - About 60 costumed KuKlux Klansmen yesterday marched between walls of riot-equipped police through a jeering, angry crowd that shouted down their leader's speech from City Hall steps with chants of "Death to the Klan." The 40-minute march drew an estimated 2,000 counter demonstrators despite pleas from the city's black police chief, a white supremacist leader and human rights groups that citizens ignore the march. No injuries were reported. Five adults and one juvenile were arrested on charges of "disrupting a legal procession," but police drawing on experience from an earlier Klan rally at the state capital in Austin were credited with preventing violence. Anti-Klan demonstrators lined the 10-block parade route, shouting insults and obscenities at the Klansmen, who wore traditional white robes, black uniforms with riot gear or camouflage fatigues. The most vocal group in the racially mixed crowd of protesters was the In- ternational Committee Against Racism. Its members marched in a circle at the parade's announced starting point and followed the march on either side of the street. King's death remembered ATLANTA - The civil rights organization founded by the late Martin Luther King Jr. will mark the 15th anniversary of King's assassination Mon- day with a "jobs and peace" rally and a five-hour prayer vigil. The Rev. Joseph Lowery, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said the anniversary activities will focus on the problems that must be solved for blacks to participate fully in the American political and economic system. On Monday morning, Lowery and King's widow, Coretta Scott King, will lay a wreath on the civil right leader's tomb. The rally at the Richard Russell Federal Building will get under way at noon and will be followed by the prayer vigil. Lowery said SCLC chapters across the country will be holding rallies Monday to note the assassination of King, who was gunned down April 4, 1968, at a motel in Memphis, Tenn., where he was leading a protest by city sanitation workers. Senate divided over Adelman WASHINGTON-With undecided Republicans in the balance, the Senate appears nearly evenly divided over President Reagan's choice of United Nations diplomat Kenneth Adelman as arms control director. An informal survey shows that more than a dozen GOP senators have not made up their minds about Adelman's nomination to be director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Strategists on both sides in the fight, basing their case partly on private assurances from -publicly uncommitted senators, said their latest tallies showed around 45 probably votes against Adelman. That many, even if they were not joined by others, would be enough to sustain a threatened filibuster of the nomination, since it takes 60 votes to choke off the parliamentary stalling tactic. Republicans control the Senate 54-46. No date has been set for a Senate vote on the matter, but Congress returns Tuesday from a 10-day Easter recess and the issue is expected to come up sometime this month. Reagan has insisted that he is sticking by his nominee, despite suggestions from both Republican, and Democratic critics of Adelman that he find someone else for the job. Columbian death toll climbs POPAYAN, Colombia - Cold, hungry and homeless, thousands of sur- vivors of a devastating earthquake buried their dead yesterday and sifted through piles of rubble to salvage blankets and pots and pans. Some begged for money to buy coffins. Rescue workers complained about delays in the distribution of relief sup- plies and said the army had held up the delivery of tents and medicine donated by the United States and France. Many people in this city of 200,000 slept on sidewalks and in parks without blankets or in makeshift shelters made of plastic sheets and wooden poles. The temperature has dropped each night since Thursday's quake to the mid- 40s. Survivors asked passersby to give them food and water. The sound of children weeping could be heard throughout this colonial city in southwest Colombia. Relief workers distributed poison to kill the rats swarming through the ruins. Fighting continues in Thailand NA GAM, Thailand - Thai military officers said Vietnamese troops pun- ched across the Cambodian border into Thailand for the second day yester- day, killing five Thai soldiers and wounding eight in hand-to-hand fighting. Thai and Vietnamese gunners pounded each other with tank and artillery fire across the frontier into the night, according to reports reaching Bangkok. A military officer at an army base near this Thai border village said at least 100 Vietnamese shells landed on Thai territory. The Thai army com- mander, Gen. Arthit Kamlang-Ek, later visited the base briefly and ordered 11 tanks to the border area to return fire against Vietnamese positions. The Vietnamese mounted a lightning attack last Thursday on Phnom Chat, a Khmer Rouge mountain stronghold straddling the border three-and- a-half miles west of Na Ngam. They killed at least 200 Cambodian refugees, wounded hundreds more, sent 3,500 guerrillas and 30,000 civilians fleeing, and then installed artillery on the commanding heights, government of- ficials said. On Friday, the officials said the Vietnamese crossed the border twice and wounded five Thai soldiers in one of the incursions. Vol. XCIII, No. 145 Sunday, April 3, 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. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associate Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syn- dicate and Field Enterprises Newspaper Syndicate. News room (313) 764-0552, 76-DAILY. Sports desk, 763-0375; Circulation, 764-0558; Classified Advertising, 764-0554; Billing, 764-0550. 01 Fair explores job strategies (Continued from Page 1) DeSimone, speaking with Viviano at a workshop on alternative possibilities in the media, also encouraged students to pursue careers outside the main- stream job market. I've really been surprised at my ability to work successfully as a leftist or progressive reporter at a main- stream newspaper," she said. "The Ann Arbor News has long had a well- deserved reputation as a conservative paper." When her editors assigned her to cover previously neglected areas of localactivity, including the cooperative living movement, DeSimone took the opportunity to "sneak things in through the back door" that might not have received exposure otherwise. DESIMONE stressed the importance of acquiring "real world experience to enter journalism after graduation. She recommended a broad-based un- dergraduate education. She said a graduate degree in journalism would be helpful, but it would probably be an un- necessary investment of time and money. Other workshops at the fair featured presentations by professionals in such fields as education, art, organizing, religion, law, government, and technology. Almost200 people attended the various seminars at the fair, said organizer Dave Guttchen. One student, LSA senior Tom Marx, said the fair was a "valuable experience. I was waiting for this. It gave me a set-up for contacts and I had an informal interview with a prospective employer." Editor-in-chief Managing Editor .............. Opinion Page Editors........... University Editor .. . News Editor . Student Affairs Editor......... Arts Magazine Editor.......... . Associate Arts Magazine Editors. Sports Editor ................. Associate Sports Editors......... ....... BARRY WITT ..... JANET RAE .... KENT REDDING DAVID SPAK FANNIE WEINSTEIN GEORGE ADAMS BETH ALLEN BEN TICHO s...LARRY DEAN MARE HODGES SUSAN MAKUCH .........JOHN KERR .... JIM DWORMAN LARRY FREED CHUCKJiAFFE son Fayey Chris Gerbosi. Pa Helgren. Steve Hunter. Doug Levy. Tim Mokinen. Mike McGraw, Rob Pollard Dan Price. Paul Resnick, Scott Salowich Amy Schiff, Paulo Schipper. Adam Schwartz. John Toyer. Steve. Wise. BUSINESS MANAGER ........ SAM G. SLAUGHTER IV SALES MANAGER:....................MEG GIBSON DISPLAY MANAGER....................JEFF VOIGT CLASSIFIED MANAGER...............PAM GILLERY OPERATIONS MANAGER ......... LAURIE ICZKOVITZ - NATIONAL MANAGER ............. .GITA PILLAI FINANCE MANAGER ................ MARK HORITA ASSISTANT DISPLAY MANAGER.. ... NANCY GUSSIN ASSISTANT FINANCE MANAGER .......,. JOE TRULIK CIRCULATION COORDINATOR ........TIM McGRAW I