Best of nn rbor See Weekend magazine Ninety-five Years y BW 4&igh Ray Ban Of X . IC C r 98 T Sunny and warn Awithh ighs inth Editorial Freedom tI tg n:31low eighties. Vol. XCV, No. 159 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, April 19, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pag ges e'U'profs trail others in salary study says By KERY MURAKAMI Serious morale and retention problems among the University's faculty will arise if they are not paid more, and according to merit, says a report by the Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty present ed to the Board of Regents yesterday. "The average faculty salary at the University of Michigan has fallen to 92 percent of the average salaries at our private peer institutions," said Beth Reed, professor of social work and chair of the committee. AND "'although we are still com- petitive with our private peers, our position relative to them has also declined slightly," she said. Reed didn't have the actual salary figures available, but she said that in * comparison with ten other private schools - Stanford, Yale, North- See REGENTS, Page 3 Students denounce DaIly Photo by MATT PETRIE University President Harold Shapiro shovels some dirt at yesterday's ground-breaking ceremony for the University's new Burn Center, which is expected to open in 1986. MICHIGAN SIGNS GLEN RICE Mr. Basketball tops solid freshman squad 'Star By JERRY MARKON Students opposed to President Reagan's "Star Wars" defense initiative attacked the proposal's feasibility yesterday amid University efforts to secure funding to research the controversial system. Gathering outside the University's Office of Research, Development, and Administration in the West Engineering building, about 80 students protested the University's decision to pursue the funding without student in- put. THE UNIVERSITY HAS submitted four proposals for $4,366,000 in Star Wars research funds to the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, a special government office created last year. The proposals originated from both LSA and the College of Engineering-two from engineering and one each from the political science and chemistry departments. Reagan originally an'nounced his Strategic Defense Initiative in a nationally-televised speech last year. In the speech, Reagan described the futuristic system as a defensive shield that would destroy incoming Soviet missiles in flight and eventually "ren- der nuclear missiles impotent and ob- solete." Students at yesterday's protest, however, doubted whether the system could achieve its stated objectives. "REAGAN HAS DECIDED that the way to end the arms race is to build this high-tech device that's going to magically shoot down ballistic missiles in space," said University graduate Tom Marx, a member of the Progressive Student Network. LSA senior Chris Faber said the "whole point is that the government plans to spend billions of dollars for something that's unsure and likely to destabilize the world peace situation even more." The Union of Concerned Scientists, a Cambridge, Mass., group investigating the effects of technology on society. Wars' recently conducted a study on Star Wars, concluding that "there is no realistic hope of achieving the President's goal of an impermeable defense against nuclear attack." "THE PROPOSED defensive weapons of the strategic defense initiative suffer from a combination of inherent technical limitations, intrac- table basing problems, and suscep- tibility.to Soviet countermeasures," the study continued. The Union of Concerned Scientists has produced a movie about the Star Wars proposal, which was shown in East Quadrangle Wednesday night. Residential College freshman Christine Tanner said the film solidified her op- position to Reagan's proposal. "The impression I came away with was an unworkable and unfeasible system," Tanner said. "The system is just too hypothetical and too easy to knock out." OTHER SCIENTISTS, however, have supported the missile technology as the issue has stirred heated debate within the scientific community. Another protester voiced his belief yesterday that the Soviet Union will in- terpret the Star Wars shield as an of- fensive weapon. Last month, Gen. Nikolai Chervov, a senior Soviet military official, told The Washington Post that if the United States pushed: ahead with Star Wars, the Soviet Union would respond by ex- panding its own offensive arsenal, rather than negotiating reductions. Beyond what they see as the faults of the Star Wars system, many students objected to - the way the University carried out its proposals for research funding. "WE FEEL THAT it's both inap- propriate for the University to be doing this type of research, and we resent the fact that no discussion was held with the students before the University went ahead and did this," said Residential College junior Helen Michaelson, one of the session's principle organizers. See PSN, Page 3 By STEVE WISE Special to the Daily FLINT-Glen Rice proved again yesterday that there's no place like home.. The scoring machine from Flint Northwestern High School an- nounced yesterday that Crisler Arena will be his basketball home next year, choosing not to move far from his house on Home St. in Flint. Rice, who averaged 28 points per game his senior year, said the University's proximity gave it the edge over two out-of-state schools he was considering. "I WAS making the decision whether to leave the area or to stay," he said. "First I had it down to Michigan, Minnesota and DePaul. Then I got it down to Minnesota and Michigan, but then I chose Michigan." "It's like he's still in Flint," said Rice's high school coach, Grover Kirkland. "His friends and team- See ANOTHER, Page 7 Legal service rewrites bylaws By DEBR A LADESTRO A new set of bylaws for Student Legal Services has cleared two of the four hurdles it must pass before being adopted. The new bylaws are necessary because they have become outdated in the four years since the service was founded, according to Steve Kaplan, who served this year as Michigan Student Assembly vice president and president of the SLS Board of Direc- tors. "THIS ORGANIZATION had two employees and a $20,000 (budget) when it was set up," said SLS direc- tor Margaret Nichols. "It's a little bit different now." The SLS board recently approved most of the proposed changes, and Tuesday MSA approved those same changes. The new bylaws must still be ap- proved by the University's Office of Student Services and the SLS staff. One major change in the new bylaws concerns the removal of a member of the board of directors. While members can now be removed only by the individual or body who appointed that member, the proposed bylaws would give the board the right to dismiss one of its members by a two-thirds vote for "failure to reasonably perform the duties of a board member." THE NEW bylaws would also give the board power to indemnify its members and SLS employees. In- demnification would make the board financially responsible for legal actions brought against SLS employees or board members. The new bylaws also call for monthly board meetings, as opposed to the presently required quar- terly meetings. "I felt it should be monthly because it gives the board a sense of what's going on," Kaplan said. The revisions have been in the making for the past two years, according to Kaplan. When current direc- tor Nichols took office at SLS, one of the things she was instructed to do was rewrite the bylaws, Kaplan said. "THEY'RE BEING rewritten basically because of bureaucratic momentum. Once they decided to write them, they got written," said Eric Schnaufer, the law school representative on MSA who served as See MSA, Page 2 I Linguistics faculty ready . for program's new path rim' E ;;; 4' 4 RT" -t By SEAN JACKSON Whenever there is an administrative change or a departmental alteration in the University, tension and conflict are natural by-products. The reorganization of the linguistics department into a program originally had the same result, but linguistics faculty have come to support the change. "The new program has a lot to look forward to in terms of support from the dean," said Madhav Deshpande, a linguistics professor. The reorganization will improve the teaching of linguistics, according to linguistics Prof. Alton Becker. "The idea we see this as a way of strengthening linguistics on campus."~ THE REORGANIZATION plan calls for a program that ties linguistics to other language-related departments on campus, reduces the number of faculty positions from 11.5 to six or seven, and creates a director and steering commit- tee to work out the details of curricula and teaching assignments. Attention was drawn to linguistics in 1983, when interim department chair- man Eric Rabkin had to be replaced. The selection of a new chairman highlighted factions in the department. Candidates for the chairmanship were put forth from each of the several facets of the department, including such areas as traditional linguistics, the English Language Institute, and South and Southeast Asian language courses. Each part of the department was concerned that a new chairman might change the priorities of the department, making some facets less important. LSA DEAN PETER STEINER ap- pointed Prof. Ian Catford to the post and establish the reorganization com- mittee headed by Jack Meiland, the associate dean for long-range planning. The committee presented its report last month and it was accepted in late March. "I think people would like other options, but under the circumstances this is what we've gotten and we've got to make it work," Deshpande said. The problem that had developed, ac- cording to Becker, was that the depar- tment had grown too isolated from other.departments. "LINGUISTICS HAS become more and more concerned with the internal structure of linguistics than with language within its context or language in the world," he said. "Linguistics doesn't have onehcenter. It's multicen- See LINGUISTICS, Page 3 Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Ann Arbor protesters gather in a parking lot to prepare for this weekend when they will take part in a protest march on Washington, D.C. TODAY Bump and grind yesterday was the 79th anniversary of the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906, and some people marked the occasion by surviving another one. It wasn't the real thing this time, but a bronco." Some riders laugh, some sit rigidly in the chair, and others crawl under the table. A few even shout "that's enough." The van, one of 80 that tour Tokyo and Yokohama to teach people how to protect themselves in an earthquake, is due to return to Japan in June. "Mostly it's to give kids an opportunity to feel what it's like in the first seconds of an earthquake, when there's that sense of helplessness, so they won't panic," said Ken Maley of the governor's Earthquake Task Force. Russell Birmingham, the board member who initiated the ploy last month. "When our ratings fell below those of the Water and Sewer Department's, that's when I knew something had to be done." Joining the banjo-playing Miss Stoneman, a regular on the syndicated TV show "Hee- Haw," was another board member, psyciatrist Nat Win- ston, who sang and played guitar. Perhaps the most ap- propriate tune in their repertoire for the hospital board was "Going Down the Road Feeling Bad." within a month the 50 pounds she had gathered. "I was just ready to go buy a 50-pound bag this morning," she said. Sharn Waggoner and his friend, Hubert Clack, think they grabbed about 400 pounds of potatoes altogether. "I hauled them away in garbage cans," Waggoner said. "I'm going to give them to my family. It's bad times, anyway. On the inside... i I i I