Linguistics faculty * support new plan (Continued from Page 1) ' tered." One of the main thrusts of the report is getting linguistics more involved in the campus community. Paz Naylor, a linguistics professor who studied .linguistics at the University before it became a department, said the new structure facilitates more faculty par- ficipation. "The program becomes a common framework for the discipline. The best way to maximize the expertise of linguists within the college is through the program," she said. There are problems that still have to be solved and ambiguities to be cleared up, and that is what the steering com- mittee is supposed to do. The commit- tee, which is now being formed, will be 'chaired by the program's interim director, anthropology Prof. Robbin Burling. Prof. Thomas Toon will be away on a fellowship next year and will take over as chairman with a three-year appoin- tment in September, 1986. The main concern that continues to trouble faculty is where they will get :their appoinments. The only full-time appointment will be granted to the director with half appointments for teaching positions. The program is un- .der no constraint to retain its current faculty. "Some people will be able to continue in other departments, others will not," said associate linguistics Prof. Peter Hook. Burling, he said, will have a large input in who stays in the linguistics program and who does not. All arrangements with other depar- tments are to be made through Steiner. The problem, according to Deshpan- de, is getting faculty who are pure linguists to adjust to the needs of a department - something they may not enjoy. "I'm convinced of one thing," Desh- pande said. "With linguistics, the dean, the executive committee, and the associate deans at every forum said they are not out to get linguistics. The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 19, 1985 - Page 3 0 Poliec tgate Policenves a pool break-min By THOMAS HRACH Ann Arbor Police are investigating a break-in at the Matt Mann Pool which was reported early Wednesday after men's swimming Coach John Urban- chek discovered his files and some elec- tronic timing devices thrown into the pool. One or more individuals gained ac- cess to the pool, located at 613 East Hoover St. adjacent to the University's Intramural Building, sometime Tuesday night. According to campus Director of Safety Leo Heatley, most of the damage was done to swimming records and recruiting materials in Urbanchek's of- fice. Though Heatley said it was dif- ficult to place a dollar amount on the damges because most of the things destroyed were from a filing cabinet, he estimated damages around $1,000. "We have no direct motive at this time," said Heatley, "but it looks like someone had an ax to grind with the swim team." Urbanchek had no clue as to the motive for the crime but said that since there were no signs of forced entry the assailant must have had a key. Urbanchek also said the biggest problems were merely "fishing everything out of the pool" and redoing his entire filing system. Assistant Athletic Director Will Perry said that while the destruction was extensive, nothing was permanen- tly damaged. The Athletic Department changed all the locks into the pool area yesterday. Heatley said he had no suspects in the case. Letter reveals WWII plot Todd Wyse and Chris Faber sit outside the University's Office of Research, Development, and Administration in the West Engineering building yesterday with about 80 other students protesting the University's efforts to secure funding for "Star Wars" research. PSN leads 'tar Wars 'protest Christine Tanner said she "thinks that students have a right to decide what goes on in a University they pay money to go to." In response to appeals from the protesters, research, development, and administration director James Lesch made a brief appearance before the group. ' "I HAVE VERY LITTLE to say ex- cept that I welcome you here," Lesch began. "I appreciate your concerns, but I don't want to get into a discussion or debate. I'm not anybody's moral judge." Lesch then answered several "infor- mational" questions from the protesters, primarily concerning the specifics of the University's research proposals, and how students can obtain copies of them. Allan Price, the University's associate vice president for research, said that "he shares a lot of these con- cerns," and he encouraged students to plan an informational symposium in the fall to discuss Star Wars research. ACCORDING TO LSA junior Daithi Wolfe, PSN does plan to initiate a University-wide forum on the issue in the fall. The Associated Press contributed to this story. Regents discuss future of Med. Tech. v (Continued from Page 1) western, Chicago, Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, MIT, and Pennsylvania - the University's faculty made 91 percent of the-average salaries. In 1979-80, they made 102 percent relative to peer schools, she said. In comparison with six public peer universities - Illinois, Indiana, Pur- due, Wisconsin, California, and Min- -HIAPPENINGS- Highlight Don't miss an old-fashioned good time at the Ark tonight with Fennig's All- Star String Band. The ensemble features tunes on the hammer dulcimer, piano, fiddle, and banjo. The Ark is located at 637S. Main Street. Films Alt. Act-Bananas, 7:30.; Love and Death, 9 p.m., MLB 4. AAFC-The Haunting, 7 p.m.; Psycho, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Auditorium. C2-Diva, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell.. MED-Emmanuelle, Joys of a Woman, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., MLB 3. MTF- Apocalypse Now, 7 & 9:45 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances. School of Music-Scott Erickson, bassoon, 4 p.m., Recital Hall, School of Music Building; faculty dance recital, 8 p.m., Studio A, Dance Building; I've Heard That Song Before!, 8 p.m., Power Center. Performance Network-Extremities, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington Street. Ann Arbor Action for Soviet Jewry-Detroit Balalaika Orchestra, "An Evening of Solidarity with Soviet Jewry," 8:15 p.m., Beth Israel, 2000 Washtenaw Avenue. Speakers Biology-Douglas Schemske, "Demographic Consequences of Plant- Animal Interactions in a Neotropical Herb," 4 p.m., lecture room 1, MLB. Chemistry-Leo Paquette, TBA, 4 p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Building. School of Natural Resources-Jerry Partain, "Public Impact on Forest Regulation," 3 p.m., room 1040, Dana Building. Industrial and Operational Engineering-Melvin Jeter, "Remarks on Some Subclasses of Semimonotone Matrices," 4 p.m., room 241, Industrual and Operational Engineering Building. College of Engineering-John Quinn, "Gas Transfer Through Skin," 10:30 a.m., lecture hall, 1013 Dow. Meetings Regents -9 a.m., Regents' Room Fleming Administration Building. Chinese Students Christian Fellowship-7:30 p.m., Memorial Christian Church, corner of Hill and Tappan Streets. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Study-7:30 p.m., Memorial Christian Church, corner of Hill and Tappan Streets. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Study-7:30 p.m., basement, University Reformed Church, 1001 E. Huron. Korean Christian Fellowship-9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Union Counseling Services-Dissertation support group, 8;30 a.m., room 3100 Union Counseling Services Building. International Students Fellowship-7 p.m., for ride call 994-4669. Miscellaneous Psi Chi Honor Society-Psychology faculty-student social, 4 p.m., Fireside Lounge, West Quad. International Folk Dance Club-Lessons 8 p.m., open request 9:30 p.m., Angell Elementary School, 1608S. University. Residential Library Residency Program Librarians-"Reverberations: Ethics in Librarianship," conference, 10 a.m., Henderson Room, Michigan nesota - the University's faculty have slipped from 1978-79, when they earned 113 percent of the average. Currently, University faculty salaries sit at 104 percent of salaries at these public peer institutions, she said. BILLY FRYE, the University's vice president of academic affairs and provost, attributed the decline to a loss of state funds. "We've lost state support over the last ten to fifteen years, while we have not raised tuition and other revenue enough to make up the loss." Frye added that this year's budget outlook didn't bring much hope for im- mediate improvement. "I can't say yet, " said Frye, "we hope to do no less than the increase in inflation, but its too soon to say." - Reed and other members of the committee also complained about the inequalities in salaries due to market demands. "We realize that the Univer- sity must weight competing demands for resources in the face of inadequate funding from the state," she said. "But we have become concerned during the past several years that the cost of inadequate resources is not being borne evenly throughout the faculty; that some individuals are paying a disproportionately higher price." CURRENTLY, faculty salary in- creases are determined by a merit system which takes into account factors such as teaching and research performance. Reed says that she's not attacking the system but that "efforts to meet competition for personnel (from other schools and the private sec- tor) are draining the salary program and leave insufficient funds to reward everyone." Reed says thatsenior faculty are hurt most. "As we have noted before, senior faculty are less mobile for many reasons.rTheys mayhavernarrow specialities for which markets are thin, their contributions to the Univer- sity may have been in the areas of teaching and service, leaving their marketability reduced, or they may have stronger ties which restrict their mobility." Reed warned that "we may lose quality faculty if what we perceived to be a short-range problem becomes a long range one. As the faculty become convinced that the state has opted for a permanently lower level of funding, she said, they may consider alternative po- sitions which would not have been worth considering if the funding cuts were temporary. "IT'S HARD TO say if the faculty we've lost over the last 10 years have been because of these salary inequities, but you have to consider that it has to be a factor." RESEARCH Send $2 for catalog of over 16,000 topics to aiour research ef- forts. For info., call toll- free 1-800621-5745 (in I-. linois call 312-9220300). Authors' Research, Rm 800"N i C 407 S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 80605 In other action, the regents discussed the proposed discontinuance of the medical technology program, focusing on concerns that freshmen would be denied enrollment. A peer review committee originally proposed the discontinuance of the training program for medical technologists because of the high cost and a decreasing job market for the technologists. "IT'S A DIFFICULT problem for me to have students come here expecting to enroll in this program and not being able to do it," said Regent Paul Brown (D-Petoskey). The joint program between LSA and the medical school accepts students at the end of their sophomore year. Regent Veronica Smith (R-Grosse Ile) also spoke of an "obligation to these students". Regent Thomas Roach (D-Detroit) agreed "that's what drew them to Michigan. That's why they're here." "WE DO NOT believe this program is central to the overall University", she said. "It is a peripheral program." The vote on whether or not to discon- tinue the program will come before the regents this morning. In other action on the first day of the two-day monthly meeting, the regents approved the reappointment of LSA Dean Peter Steiner to another five-year term. After the meeting the regents went to the site of the University Medical Center's new $5.5 million Burn Center for a ground-breaking ceremony. The new center, once it opens sometime in 1986, would consolidate in one building all aspects of burn care from the time of the accident to rehabilitation, as well as providing resources for research and education. Currently, there are several services housed in various sites, including the Chelsea Community Center 20 miles away. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI) - U.S. military experts considered poisoning 500,000 Germans during World War II with radioactive food, according to a letter released Friday from atomic bomb father J. Robert Oppenheimer to physicist Enrico Fermi. Oppenheimer wrote to Fermi, an Italiand-born physicist working in Ch- icago, on May 25, 1943, about the plan to poison the Germans' food with radioac- tive strontium. THERE IS no evidence the plan was ever carried out. Oppenheimer, who was in charge of the Manhattan Project - the top secret atomic bomb development team - recommended that Fermi delay work on the plan until some of the technical problems could be worked out. . "I should recommend delay if that is possible," said Oppenheimer in the let- ter. "In this connection I think that we should not attempt a plan unless we can poison food sufficient to kill half a million men, since there is no doubt that the actual number affected will, because of non-uniform distribution, be much smaller than this." BARTON J. Bernstein, a professor of history, at Stanford University who discovered the letter, said he was not sure why Oppenheimer requested a delay. Bernstein discussed his findings in Technology Review, a magazine published by the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. The fact that U.S. scientists "seriously considered" the plan, he said, is largely unknown. He said he showed the letter to 16 Manhattan Project scientists including Edward Teller and Frank Oppenheimer, J. Robert's brother, and none of them said they remember hearing about the plan. The letter's first paragraph specifically mentions Teller. BOTH Oppenheimer and Fermi are dead. However, Philip Morrison, a member of the Manhattan Project, said the con- troversy is "very sensationalized." "I don't think there were any plans. There was some military inquiry to find out what could be done, but no one thought it was very practical," said Morrison, who teaches physics at MIT. Bernstein said the letter is important because "it illustrates an important fact." "Amid the horror of World War II, in- cluding German concentation camps and the mass killings of Jews, many U.S. scientists, like rank-and-file iviians, were willing to devise new ways to kill the enemy by the thousands and even hundreds of thousands. "The evidence suggests that some of these scientists may have had qualms, but they used their intellectual know how anyway in developing these weapons of mass death," Bernstein said in the article. . ..; A NEW COURSE THE RUSSIAN SHORT STORY PROFESSOR JOHN MERSEREAU, JR. DIVISION 466 - RUSSIAN 458 SPRING HALF-TERM MAY 8 through JUNE 28 T and Th 1-3 p.m. 3306 MLB In English NO PREREQUISITES This course in designed to acquaint students with the best Russian short fiction of the 19th century and will include works by Pushkin, Gogol, Lermon- tov, Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, Gorky, and others. In addition to analysis of individual works, the course will explain the evolution of Russian fiction from Sentimentalism through Realism. A background knowledge of, Russian history and culture will be provided. Grades will be based on three take-home exams, in class discussions, occasional quizzes. Attendance is -required. For more info call 764-5355 JOSTEN' S GOLD. RING SALE I " ComieteST- ad ddicted *ui t'OV mater ias "*oetdYEprs $40.00 OFF 18K GOLD RINGS 3 DAY SALE See a Josten's representative Wednesday April 17 - Friday April 19, 11a.m. to 4p.m. o CUVI HI IVIVH . I I I WT I. 1! t1