Ninety-five Years of Editorial. Freedom P LIE 43 IU iai1Qt Squish Windy and cold with snow showers and highs near the mid- 30s. ol. XCV, No. 120 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, March 5, 1985 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages University oses bid or super- cornputer By ROB FRANK A National Science Foundation plan to finance four "supercomputer" cen- ters across the country has passed over a bid by the University to locate one of e centers in Ann Arbor. The University was in contention for one of the $40 million machines when the foundation made "seven or eight" sight visits last September. However, in a press conference last Monday, NSF officials turned down the University in favor of Princeton University, the University of Illinois - Urbana-Cham- paign, Cornell University, and the University of California-San Diego. UNIVERSITY researchers involved in writing the proposal and organizing the sight visit expressed disappoin- tment over the selection. William Martin, a professor of nuclear engineering said that while present research projects in the depar- tment will not suffer, the computers could have "started some new projec- ts" at the University. :Martin had been working with Greg Marks, the University's computer systems specialist, and Mathematics Prof. L. Ridgeway Scott for two years to obtain the supercomputer for Ann Arbor. A Supercomputer allows much faster access to information and has a greater memory capacity than any other com- puter available. Martin said the machine could potentially accelerate the University's present system by a factor of fifty. APPLICATIONS for the machines include traditional mathematics and physics disciplines, but also extend into social sciences and medical sciences. Faculty members from the departmen- ts of economics, political science, and health physics were among those who made presentations when NSF officials , visited in September. Jim Bottum, a staff associate at the foundation refused to comment on why the University was not selected, but Martin said the ieason may be that the University's proposal' asked for a Japanese-made supercomputer. The four sites receiving funding had asked for Ame~rican made equipment. MARTIN SAID the Univesity had requested the Japanese-made Fujitsu computer because it could be most easily integrated into the University's present system. "We could have just dropped it in UMNet," said Martin, referring to the network which connects the computer }systems of various departments across the University. See COMPUTER, Page 3 PSN MEMBERS MEET WITH SH APIRO Activists request c1_ 4 anapiro By CHARLES SEWELL Two members of the Progressive Student Network, released from prison Sunday night after serving a twelve day jail term for trespassing, met with University President Harold Shapiro yesterday to try to persuade him to ban research with potential military applications from campus. Nancy Aronoff, an LSA senior, and Ingrid Kock, who is taking this term off, were arrested last March along with nine other members of the PSN for blockading an engineering research laboratory. ARONOFF AND KOCK said they discussed with Shapiro the dangers of the arms race and the contribution to it made by the University when research for the defense department and other government agencies is conducted on campus. Shapiro said although he thinks "the arms race is the most important issue of our time", his first priority as University president is "to do his best to assure the vitality of the University." He said this job includes making sure the teaching and scholarship programs are in good shape and seeing' that health and student services are running smoothly, among other things. "I want to see him feel something," Aronoff said. 'S aid She said Shapiro seemed "unemotional" and "aloof" about the issue of the arms race. IF HE SEEMED UNEMOTIONAL, Shapiro said, it may have been because he tries "to think clearly and carefully about a very complicated issue." "I do have very strong feelings about the arms race," he said. "The (campus military research) issue only comes up when (the PSN) makes a stink,-when we get arrested, when we hold a forum," Kock said. AS PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY, Shapiro should also draw attention to such a crucial issue, according to Kock. Shapiro said it is his responsibility to make sure all the rules regarding University research are followed, but that the creation of those rules is a responsibility of the Board of Regents. He said "day to day and week to week" responsibility for the kind of research being done at the University lies with the faculty and students of the individual's colleges. See ACTIVISTS, Page 3 'Unames By DAVID KLAPMAN University officials announced last week that Leo Heatley will succeed Walt Stevens as the University's direc- tor of safety. John Weidenbach, the University's director of business operations, said Heatley was "a very well qualified in- ternal candidate." Weidenbach said that other people were considered to replace Stevens, who retired two weeks ago, but none of the applicants seemedj as well qualified as Heatley. He didn't know how many other people were in- terviewed for the position. HEATLEY, who has served as , assistant director of safety since 1979, said he "is looking forward toy the challenge." 'He began his new job last Friday. Heatley s "Our campus is as safe as any in the Big Ten," leatley said. Although he doesn't "think the campus is what could be called unsafe. Heatley said "there's a lot of things that can be done to make it safer." Though he didn't suggest any radical changes in the University's security procedures, Heatley said he would like to increase the number of campus patrols. HEATLEY is also in favor of the controversial proposed Student Code for Nonacademic Conduct which is currently being discussed by the University Council. "(A code) would certainly have an af- fect and make this a safer campus," he said. "We would have a vehicle to remove serious offenders from the academic community." See 'U', Page 2 ifety chief The right stuff Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Wolverine center Roy Tarpley jams one home against Wisconsin last Thur- sday. His play that night and his 21-point performance against Northwestern Saturday earned him two awards, and his consistent scoring and rebounding this season earned him another. See story, page 9. Heatley ...plans no major changes Hunter u By AMY MINDELL City Councilman Larry Hunter (D-1st Ward) plans to introduce a resolution in two weeks asking the city council to back a plan to withdraw city in- vestments in corporations doing business in South Africa. Hunter, the council's only black member, says he will ask the city to stop buying stocks in con- troversial companies and to slowly divest present financial holdings, which total $19 million or about 22 percent of the city's holdings. ,IF THE COUNCIL endorses his resolution, it rges ivs would apply political pressure - but force no ac- tual mandate - to the city's pension board, which invests the city's funds to be used as retirement benefits for city workers. The board is autonomous from the council. Three of the nine pension board members are appointed by the city council. The others are selected by local labor unions. Hunter's resolution calls for a bipartisan committee of council mem- bers which would assist the pension board mem- bers in setting up a schedule for gradual divest- ment. Hunter said his plan is a spin-off of tment of S.A. stocks divestiture in other cities and the 1982 state law, proposed by Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), which required all state-funded colleges to divest its stocks in firms operating in South Africa, where a policy of apartheid is practiced. The University's Board of Regents voted two years ago to withdraw nearly all of its financial holdings- in those companies. THE CITY council's move isa "progressive and a moral stance," Hunter said, adding that resear- ch he and local groups have done indicates the city's money can be reinvested without suffering any financial losses. , "It's the people's money we're dealing with," he said. "We made sure it was safe." But Mayor Louis Belcher, who leads the Republican majority on the council, has criticized Hunter's resolution as a political maneuver timed a few weeks before the council elections. HUNTER, elected to a two-year term last year, is not running for re-election this year. He said he, has not met with other Republican council mem- bers. In other action, the council unanimously decided last week to dismiss the 917 emergency snow removal parking tickets given recently. .. _ Snow slows state From staff and wire reports Winter roared back into action yesterday and brought Michigan to its knees with blinding show, sleet, ice, gale-force winds, and scattered flooding. A blizzard dumped about five in- ches of snow on Ann Arbor and up to two feet of snow in parts of the Upper Peninsula. Roads all over the state were closed due to gusting winds. A TRAVELER'S advisory was in ef- fect through last night as more snow was expected before temperatures warm up in the afternoon. All schools in Washtenaw county and 135 other districts throughout most of Michigan including the University's Dearborn campus, were closed, giving thousands of students - but no University folks - an un- scheduled holiday. Snowplows buried cars parked on roadsides in snow up to their doors and other cars were stuck across the city yesterday. Blinding snow forced police to close the Mackinac Bridge at noon yester- day. Maintenace vehicles were sent out onto the five-mile span to rescue two stranded motorists. Detroit Metropolitan Airport shut down at 7 a.m. yesterday while snow- clearing crews tackled 13-inch drifts on the runways. Incoming and. outgoing flights were delayed for several hours. The'storm maintained its strength yesterday over the upper Midwest as snow, heavy at times, fell from the Dakotas across the northern half of Michigan, and also fell across New York state and northern New Jersey. A. blizzard warning was posted -for eastern North Dakota, and winter storm warnings covered much of South Dakota, Minnesota, northern Wisconsin and northern portions of Michigan. Daily Photo by CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA A car sits surrounded by snow yesterday after being parked on East William street over the night. The owner said that she'd get a bunch of friends together to help dig out her car. TODAY Shakespearean graffiti SOMETHING IS rockin' in the state of Denmark. Hamlet spray paints graffiti. He plays with a Slinky. He Dances to New Wave tunes. It's all part of a new production that makes Shakespeare's masterpiece look like a music video. There are video Hamlet, the prince who struggles with the question of how to avenge his father's murder, Quinn is despondent but determined, and he vents his anger like an urban vandal. His famous soliloquy, beginning "To be nor not to be," is part spoken, part painted - with Quinn scrawling the first line on a stage wall with white spray paint. 50-cent troll? park. The move is expected to drum up an extra $30,000 in revenue each year, he said. But while the 19-year-old tolltaker is no troll, some of the folks who encountered him on his first day on the job acted like he was. "Toll? What toll? I never paid this before," said one man, who drove his boat on through without paying. The violater was later cor- nered by park rangers and paid the fee. TnlwBc fi,~ 1r~ia] recently when the planning commission needed legal ad- vice about a large retirement development. The lawyers for the project were in Chattanooga, about 100 miles away. "An attorney not having a telephone at this time in our history is certainly a unique approach to the practice of law," said one of the Chattanooga attorneys, Joe Gaston. "I'm really curious that Putnam County can operate under that kind of situation." Efforts to reach Burgess for comment were un- I I {