Ninety-five Years Of Editorial Freedom cl ble La46 1~k~ilQ Crystal Mostly sunny with flurries and highs in the mid-20s. Vol. XCV, No. 96 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, January 26, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages Gov. to seek 9% more state ai( By KERY MURAKAMI Gov. James Blanchard will recommend that the' University receive a sizeable chunk of the $300 million state education budget increase he proposed Wednesday, The Daily learned yesterday. Blanchard will request a $16.3 million increase in the University's operating fund as well as monies to renovate the Chemistry Building and Natural Science Building, according to Bob Naftaly, director of the state's management and budget office. THIS IS an increase of about 9 percent from the $182 million the University is currently receiving from the state. The governor is scheduled to make these recom- mendations on Tuesday. In addition, Blanchard will request that the for University University receive "the largest chunk of the research excellence fund,"-a special fund designed to promote research-Naftaly said. The fund was recommended in a report by the Governor's Commission on the Future of Higher Education, which was released last month. RICHARD KENNEDY, the University's vice- president for government relations had not heard anything about Blanchard's expectedrecommen- dations. However, he did say that if the requests outlined by Naftaly are accurate, they will serve as "an extremely helpful boost" to the Univer- sity-especially if the funding from the research ex- cellence project is not included in the $16.3 million in- crease. In his State of the State speech Wednesday night, Blanchard urged universities to keep tuition in- creases below the inflation level. However, Kennedy said that the $16.3 million in- crease will not be enough to check tuition levels. But, he added that if the research fund comprises an "ap- propriate share" of the budget, "then we'll-see." LAST FALL, the University requested $40 million in appropriations from the state legislature. And although the increase of about $16.3 million falls short of that figure, Kennedy said that it is hardly a disap- pointment. Last year, the University received an increase of about $16 million. However, this figure did not include the research excellence funding or the approximately $40 million needed to renovate the two buildings. State money will be used to pay the full $10 million needed to renovate the Natural Sciences Building, See GOV., Page 3 'U' exar By ERIC MATTSON It took quite a jolt to get things going, but it seems that the University is finally going to take a comprehensive look at the problem of rape in Ann Ar- bor. The catalyst for the study was an ar- ticle appearing in this month's Metropolitan Detroit magazine which quoted an administrator as saying that the University downplays the problem to "present an image that is receptive and palatable to the student cohort." VICE PRESIDENT for Student Ser- vices Henry Johnson, the ad- ministrator quoted in the article, later said his comments were taken out of context, but he said the furor following nines city rape problem 'Women on this campus are constant, chronic victims of sexual assaults.' - Anne Ryan graduate student University, Michigan State University, Ohio StatecUniversity, and the Univer- sity of Chicago. . Johnson said he supported the protesters, who spoke out against what critics say is a decentralized, un- publicized, and underfunded rape prevention program. Graduate student ,Anne Ryan; a member of the protest group and chair- person of Michigan Student Assembly's Women's Issues Committee, said she and other committee members will be keeping tabs on the progress Johnson's office is making on the study. IF THE PROCESS is too slow and the recommended programs aren't im- See 'U', Page 3 Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH 0So e l eItc d Some like it cold iyPoob T The University's Power Center captures the frozen tundra of the campus in its reflective glass yesterday during a brief moment while it wasn't snowing. the story may actually lead to new ap- proaches to the problem. He also noted, however, that "the fact that it led to dialogue has little to do with its journalistic merit." The article sparked an eight-hour sit- in in Johnson's office, and the 30 protesters presented a list of suggestions to fight the rape problem. THE UNIVERSITY'S executive of- ficers reacted by asking Johnson to head a study of the situation. The study will focus on the problem in Ann Arbor, but will also take a look at programs at other universities, including Cornell 'U' officials request new nuclear reactor license WHYT hoax 'Takeover'is a prank By JERRY MARKON University officials have filed a request with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to renew the 10-year-old operating license for the Phoenix nuclear reactor on North Campus. The Phoenix Project, which was licensed in 1957 as the "first nuclear facility devoted to the peaceful use of nuclear energy," according to James Duderstadt, engineering school dean, will continue operations during the NRC inspection. THE INSPECTION, which is expected to take six months, will check for violations in several key areas of the reactor's operation. Inspectors will insure that the reactor has operated within the constraints of its license-in such areas as power level band temperature control-and on schedule. Gary Cook, assistant reactor manager, said he places special importance on the subsequent test for radiation ex- posure. "THE POSSIBILITY of radiation over-exposure is always there," he said, adding that "we have a responsibility to con- tinuously watch for mistakes and run a clean operation." Despite the remote possibility of human error, Cook repor- ts that the nuclear facility has never had any problem with radiation leakage. The "special nuclear material" that the reactor uses will be monitored, Cook said, as the commission will insure that fuel rations have been safely followed. THE NRC also mandates an emergency plan in case the reactor building ever has to be evaculated because of the "fall out from Three Mile Island," Cook said. Finally, he said, security procedures will be examined, since "the threat of sabotage or theft is real." Despite these requirements, the reactor has proved relatively mistake-free in its operations, Cook said. "OUR RECORD is good in terms of NRC compliance, and we have been inspected regularly," he said. See REACTOR, Page 3 DETROIT (UPI) - The president of a Detroit radio station has admitted what many listeners probably already suspected - a disc jockey's "takeover" of the WHYT-FM studio was a hoax. In a prepared statement read over the air Thursday night, WHYT President Ron Pancratz said: "Ob- viously it was not funny, as sub- sequent events and the degree of at- tention the incident has received made clear." Pancratz, who also presides over sister station WJR-AM, added: "WHYT is sorry for any voncern or inconvenience those events may have caused our listeners... You may be sure that events of this kind will not occur on our station, in the future." The episode started Wednesday af- ternoon when J.J. Walker, the drive- time DJ for WHYT-FM, locked him- self in the station's broadcast booth and said over the air he would not leave until they reinstated morning DJ Bobby Mitchell. / Dude rstadt .supports reactor relicensing :. ................ ......................-.--....... Lorch employees ponder move By ARONA PEARLSTEIN Reagan may cut medical research grants By THOMAS HRACH University medical school research grants could become tougher to obtain next year if President Reagan follows through on several budget-trimming measures. In order to combat the growing federal deficit, the Reagan ad- ministration may attempt to curtail the number of new research grants given by the National Institute of Health (NIH), the New York Times reported on Monday. NIH GRANTS amounted to 29.5 per- cent of the research money received by the University medical school in the fiscal year that ended last June, which translates to about $43 million, accor- ding to the University's Division of Research Development and Ad- ministration (DRDA). Officials at NIH refused to confirm the reports this week. Storm Whaley, an institute spokesman, said, "at this stage the rumored cuts are purely speculative." If the cuts are implemented, existing grants will not be affected, only the number of new grants offered, Whaley said. REAGAN IS scheduled to release the details of his 1985 budget early next month. NIH gives money to universities and private institutions for research specifically dealing in health and medical related areas. The 98-year-old agency is a division of the U.S. Public Health Service which is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health and Human Services. Jim Randolph of the DRDA said NIH cuts could make it more difficult for See MEDICAL, Page 2 Office workers annoyed by construc- tion in Lorch Hall may have a chance to temporarily move to other quarters of- ficials said yesterday. In addition to complaints of asbestos in the air and excess noise, a light fixture fell last week outside the center for Afro-American Studies (CAAS) of- fice, narrowly missing students in the hallway. "WE ARE relocating people. We are giving them the option of what to do in the future," said Bland Leverette, the LSA administration manager. "One of the options is to move offices tem- porarily to other space in East Engineering." Another solution could be to move the offices to other parts of Lorch Hall where there is less noise due to con- struction, Leverette said. But Gary Fleming, associate project director for CAAS, said he was not pleased with the alternatives presented yesterday. "I'M FROM the ounce-of-prevention school," Fleming said. "We're faced with options that aren't positive op- tions. They're not conducive to getting our work done-and safety is a problem. There are a number of minor inconveniences that shouldn't have existed in the first place. These things keep piling up. They have a cumulative effect." Leverette said Lorch Hall is safe. "Accidents can happen in any building." Other University officials also down- play safety concerns. "WE DON'T have any problem with Lorch Hall," said Kenneth Schatzle, University Director for Occupational Safety and Environmental Health. Schatzle also said the building's asbestos levels are not a problem. But safety concerns still persist among the people who work at Lorch Hall. A phone call to the Film and Video Office will be answered with the recor- ding: "Thank you for calling the Film and Video Office. Due to hazardous conditions in Lorch Hall, we are closed indefinitely." The construction noise is annoying, said Anne Manikas, an assistant who made the recording. She added that there are plans to move the office to another part of the building. "Other people were moving out of their offices (in her part of the buildings, and I just wanted to make sure it's safe here first." Lorch Hall is currently being renovated to house the Institute for Public Policy. . . . . . . . . . . TO0DAY Millionaires' disease hat happens to million-dollar winners of lotteries after the big thrill wears? Boredom, with a capital B. Mike Wittkowski, who won $40 million, the single biggest prize known in lottery history, says he's bored and might buy a bowling alley. Wittkowski, winter. Harris was decked out in a white. fur coat and matching hat. She had spent 30 years sealing cans for a. packing company. "At last, I finally got my mink," she said said. BB cult C OLLEGE COURSES just keep getting harder and harder. One of the most popular classes at Middlebury College in Vermont is "The Cult of Brigitte Bardot," a four- week study of the French sex symbol and her influence on has intellectual content," said Karl Lindholm, Mid- dlebury's associate dean of students. "The mistake we made is we should have had limited enrollment. This is the biggest number of students I can remember in a course, at least this year." Tourist lampoon ure, tourists pump $4 billion dollars a year into Colorado's economy, but would you want one to marry your sister? That's the tongue-in-cheek thrust of the state "test to see if you dislike tourists as much as you claim." "If it is true that a sense of humor creates a sense of per- spective let our perspective be that tourism brings us new opportunites for a better lifestyle in Colorado," said tourism board chairman Gerald Groswold. On the inside.... The Oninion Pan gexamines the University ad- I' i i I