4 Page 20-A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 8, 1983 Get the Inside Story jC~arinal rc Cardinal" Slant-D° is a totallly different ring binder from the inside out. The ring is angled for optimum sheet movement. Since pages move more easily, they're less likely to wear out.. to tear out. The unique Slant-D design keeps sheets flat, creating an ideal writing surface and room for more paper. . . up to 25% more! The extraordinary Slant-D ring mounted on the back cover allows the front cover to fold completely under for use as a notebook. Outside, the cover story features heavy gauge, virgin vinyl with ribbed hinge reinforcements and clean, split-resistant edges for long life. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Don't look back Summer may have been filled with scrapbook moments like this one on the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, but it's best to put that out of your mind, because school and Ann Arbor's slushy winters are just around the corner. __________ Union facelift nearly complete The moral: not all ring hinders are created equal. Cardinal Slant-D. V"jdS (313) 662-3201 For the best value, ask for Electronics Showroom: ii 1S. University Main Store: 549 E. Unicrsa I I * * 0p Ic I ** O - 1 CO e OPN NRJ (Continued from Page 1) planned to match the architectural style of the building. Bricks were removed from the West Quad courtyard adjacent to the southside of the building to allow sunlight to shine through Union windows, Cianciola said. Woodwork was re-stained to its original color and new lighting will "brighten up" the building, said Cian- ciola. Some of the additions, however, don't seem to blend in. For example, each of the fast-food counters are decorated with bright linoleum tiles which sharply contrast with the old-fashioned style of the Union. But old faithful features highlight the Union. The "M" shop still sells Univer- sity paraphernalia and the general store in the lobby stocks necessities such as toothpaste and cookies. The ride board, formerly in the basement of the Union, is now in the lobby, but still lists students' needing a ride or travel companion to practicall every major city in the U.S. Corporation to market research ideas (Continued from Page 3) Yet there has been one rather prominent detractor to the MRC - University President Harold Shapiro. Shapiro thinks the possible conflict of interest problems can be ironed out, but doubts the MRC will ever prove to be a commercial bonanza for the Univer- sity. SHAPIRO SAID HE is not convinced that groups like the MRC are the key to a lucrative patent. He pointed out that when the University of Wisconsin suc- cessfully marketed its technique of syn- thesizing vitamin D in 1927, "there was nothing even approaching the MRC at that time." He also has doubts that the MRC will be able to lure top people needed to recognize first-class research ideas and then find the companies who can make a success of them. "Those skills are scarcer than the capital itself," he said. Thus far, $125,000 has been pledged to the corporation by one venture capitalist firm, but considerably more will be needed if the MRC is to make a go of it. Diehn said the MRC plans to in- vest around $1 million a project. After the University'a initial $200,000 'investment, it will be up to the cor- poration to come up with investors, or face closure. "TO BE INDEPENDENT from the University and for-profit puts a strong pressure on us to be successful," Diehn said. "If you're allied with the Univer- sity you can languish for years and keep asking the Regents for more money. Now we swim or sink and I in- tend to swim." Some of the first projects the fledgling corporation will sponsor may be in the area of research on medical diagnostic equipment. Diehn said he had been looking at an ear device developed in the Medical School which would signal doctors when a patient was going into shock. That deal fell through, however, when the professor left the University for Florida. If the University does decide- to ap, prove the MRC idea, it will be following the lead of two other Michigan schools which recently took steps to begin more intensive development of faculty research ideas. At Michigan Technological Univers sity, the school has recently developed two spin-off firms: one recycles waste, copper, and the other is a computer firm. The school expects to add one or two new firms a year, according to Ray Decker, vice president for research. Although the school will receive 33 per. cent of any royalties generated by company patents, Decker said there has not yet been a significant amount o royalty money. At Michigan State, The Neogen Corv poration is supporting one project on developing bovine insulin, and another one on how to grow the morel mushroom commercially. John Cal; tlon, MSU's research vice president said it is "much too early" for royalties to come into the school. Humanities profs face dim future (Continued from Page 1) case by case basis. Hubert Cohen, who teaches film in the humanities depar- tment, said he hopes to join the Residen- tial College, but others say they have no idea where they will go. Sixteen of the eighteen faculty mem- bers have tenure and Holbrook said none of them will be fired if they want to stay at the University. The fate of the two non-tenured faculty - one a professor and one a lecturer - is up to the college he said. Vest would not comment on what will happen to those two, but he did say there would probably not be any significant changes in the department during the 1983-84 school year.' Don't Let a Bad Break Disrupt Your College Budget Whether it's an intramural football injury or a surprise attack of appendicitis, an unanticipated sickness or accident can result in large medical bills. And if you're like most college students, your budget doesn't allow for any "bad breaks." That's why it's a good idea to help protect yourself against the medical expenses of an unexpected sickness or accident by enrolling now in the 1983-1984 Accident and Sickness Insurance Plan, approved by the MSA for University of Michigan students and their dependents. Underwritten by Mutual of Omaha, this plan provides hospital-surgical protection for covered sickness and accidents - plus benefits for X-ravs. K2 UNDERWRITTEN 8 Mutual The majority of the reviews conduc- ted in the University over the last few years have had budget savings as their goal, but the humanities review is not likely to save a significant amount of money. ONE OF THE main rationales the college offers for closing the depar- tment, is that attrition has greatly weakened the department over the past few years, and the cost to bring it back up to par would be prohibitive. The review panel estimated that $90,000 could be saved by having teaching assistants in LSA teach in- troductory courses to engineering students rather than full-time humanities professors, and by not in- creasing the department to its former size. Since 1979, seven professors have left the department, and the college has not replaced them, concentrating instead on trying to keep up the college's technical units. "THE DEPARTMENT here has been severely weakened, but that was a con- scious choice of the administration," Beauchamp said. "The way we put it, is they've been strangling the department for years, and then (Dean James Duderstadt) just decided to lop it off," he said. When the review began in October, the college had already made a "preliminary conclusion" that it would be moved to LSA, and faculty members criedfoul.' "It does seem that they made their decision and then looked for something to support it," said English Prof. Ralph Loomis, who works in the department: THE DECISION to not replace faculty led to mushrooming class sizes, but administrators at the college hav contended that they have a respon sibility in hard times to bolster the technical areas which are central to the college. The College of Engineering should not be in the business of teaching liberal. arts, these administrators say, especially when LSA offers a top: ranked liberal arts education. "The whole situation is best if studen- ts do take their liberal arts educatio with the wide variety of students in. LSA," Vest said. "IF YOU WANT to take art, go to the art school If you want to take English go to the English Department," he said. For engineering students, who have the highest SAT scores on campus, the transfer is not likely to be too difficult. "I think it would be better to take LSA classes. I feel it's less competitive in the engineering English classes," said engineering senior David Compeau. For some professors, though an engineering college without a humanities department means the loss of something fine. Loomis talks happily about the feeling he gets when engineers "find they like something they hated before." Now, Loomis said, the future is "all a dark picture." i