Lii igat IZIUII Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVI - No. 88 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan -Tuesday, February 4, 1986 Eight Pages I Free courses mayface fluding cut By PHILIP LEVY Free University, a series of non- credit courses taught by University students and community members, could face financial problems if this year's offerings fail to attract enough participants. "This will be a do-or-die year for Free University. If we find out there is lousy attendance, we will abandon the Free University concept," said Michigan Student Assembly President Paul Josephson. The assembly, along with LSA Student Government and Canterbury House, funds the five-year-old program. JOSEPHSON declined to specify the attendance figure the assembly expects, but he said MSA will evaluate its $300 allocation after the nine courses are finished. LSA-SG also provides $300, and Canterbury House, a local Episcopalian ministry, contributes $150. Free University courses are See FREE, Page 3 Student aid faces cuts Bill slashes 4.3% By PHIL NUSSEL University officials said yesterday they are concerned that President Reagan's first draft of the 1987 federal budget will contain significant cuts in financial aid to college students. The budget is scheduled to be released tomorrow. The worries have increased because of the Gramm-Rudman budget reduction plan, which Reagan signed into law Dec. 12. Under the plan, Congress must cut the projected 1987 budget deficit by $50 billion. The deficit is to be cut by $36 billion an- nually until it hits zero in 1991. NEARLY ALL areas of the budget are expected to receive cuts. Thomas Butts, the University's lobbyist in Washington, said, "Basically, we're looking at a 4.3 percent reduction in student financial aid. The dollars which were gained last year will get lost." The 4.3 percent cut will take effect March 1, resulting in an $11.7 billion reduction in the 1986 budget unless Congress devises an alternate plan before then. Harvey Grotrian, director of finan- cial aid at the University, said the March cuts would not have any major immediate effects because federal student aid has already been allocated. THE EXCEPTION, he said, would be for students applying for guaran- teed student loans for the spring and summer terms, although how much they will suffer is uncertain. Edward Gramlich, a University economics professor who is in Washington this semester working in the Congressional Budget Office, said this year's deficit-reduction moves will be "nuisance cuts" but will See GRAMM, Page 2 Daily Photo by PETE ROSS Mr. sandman Two University students near the business school pass a sand truck yesterday on their way to classes. rMSA, 'U' try to improve relations By KERY MURAKAMI When two top University administrators addressed the Michigan Student Assembly last week, it highlighted an unusual priority of this year's student government: to im- prove student-administration relations, which in the past have been marked by confrontation. The administrators - Billy Frye, the University's vice president for academic affairs, and his associate vice president, Niara Sudarkasa - spoke to the assembly last Tuesday about ways to improve minority services on cam- pus. THEIR VISIT, said MSA President Paul Josephson, came after he and University President Harold Shapiro agreed last semester that student leaders and ad- ministrators do not communicate effectively. By having administrators come to meetings oc- casionally, Josephson and Shapiro hope to ease students' concerns that University administrators are inaccessible, Josephson said. Although administrators will be invited to speak as issues arise, none are expected to attend tonight's U.S. murderer awaits extradition in Canada meeting. "SOME administrators are paid to repress students," Josephson said, "but many are open to our views. We should learn to work with those who are." Josephson said student leaders deal most effectively with administrators in informal meetings. "A lot of people when they first begin working on the assembly are in- timidated by administrators. You tell them to talk to Henry Johnson (vice president for student services) and they can't handle it." In addition, Josephson said, some assembly members foster feelings that administrators are inaccessible and uncaring about students' welfare. "SOME ARE, some aren't. By asking them to speak to the assembly, we'll let each representative decide on their own," he said. "Whereas before there was a brick wall between students and the administration, at least now we can have a fence to talk through," he said. See MSA, Page 2 By STEPHEN GREGORY Orville Davis, the man who escaped in 1984 from the Allegan County Jail where he was serving a life sentence for the kidnapping and murder of a University student, is being held by Canadian authorities and awaiting ex- tradition. Canadian officials said they ap- prehended Davis on Jan. 11 for imper- sonating a police officer. They infor- med American authorities after fingerprints confirmed his identity. DAVIS WAS originally convicted of the 1973 kidnapping and murder of 20- year-old Melanie Fahr, an oceanography student at the Univer- sity. He was given a life sentence at Jackson State Prison. In 1984, according to Gail Light, a prison spokeswoman, Davis was moved to Allegan because he had received death threats from other in- mates. She declined to elaborate on the nature of the threats. The circumstances surrounding Davis' subsequent escape are still un- clear: LT. JAMES Ross, an officer at the Allegan County Jail, said that Davis may have escaped in one of two ways: See CONVICTED, Page 3 Chem. prof says he's bonded to his students By MARTHA SEVETSON Leroy Townsend rises and offers a mug enameled with the molecular structure of caffeine. "Would you like a cup of coffee?" he asks. "That's the way a chemist does it - then you don't need a stirring stick." The bearded, stocky chemistry professor returns, coffee in hand, and takes a seat at a table covered with vials of compounds, jars of candy, and Pro file drafts of research proposals. TOWNSEND, 52, has been fascinated by chemical research sin- ce his years as a laboratory assistant at Arizona State University. "It's exciting," he says, leaning orward in his chair, "in the fact that ou create something new. You made it - nobody else has ever seen that compound." "Could it possibly have activity as an anti-cancer agent? Is there some possibility that the compound that you just put in that bottle will be the an- swer to alleviate some kind of disease?" TOWNSEND'S desire to defeat disease has led him to synthesize rugs which have been tested for potency against Herpes Simplex I and II, cancer, and - in a project initiated this past year - Human Cytomegalo Virus, a herpes virus. In this project, Townsend has collaborated with biology Prof. John Drach. "Even before I came to the University of Michigan six years ago, we were interested in working together," Townsend says, as he gestures toward to comrade. Townsend synthesizes the com- pounds, and Drach performs biological evaluations of the com- pounds. Their collaboration, Town- send says, is the "happy marriage of two disciplines." "IN FACT," said Townsend em- phatically, "one of the foremost reasons for coming here was my close proximity to a laboratory like Dr. Drach's." "This setting is unique in that we're sitting right here across the street from each other. The lines of com- munication between faculty in dif- ferent disciplines and colleges at the University seem to be much more open than they are in most univer- sities." This interdisciplinary cooperation, according to Townsend, demonstrates the University's commitment to hiring and maintaining an active and productive faculty. "TO HAVE a first-rate research program, you have to have faculty that can compete on the open market for resources. I think there's a higher percentage of that type of individual at the University of Michigan." Townsend smiled and opened a two- inch thick folder of papers - a proposal for one study. "A lot of what I do is pushing paper," he admitted. However, the flexibility that arises from conducting the experiments he wants to do compensates for the red tape. Many recent graduates from chemistry programs, however, would disagree. As evidenced by the drought of teachers in chemistry and math- related fields, a larger number of qualified individuals are trading this flexibility for more lucrative salaries in industry. "WE DON'T like money," chuckled Townsend, sipping his coffee. "No, if I had to say one reason for staying in academia, it would have to be the satisfaction I get out of working with students." In addition to teaching two courses a week, Townsend spends countless hours in a white lab coat helping students develop research techniques. "The teaching goes on outside of the classroom," he says. In the informal setting of a Satur- day morning discussion, Townsend clad in blue jeans, teaches students to present findings from journal articles and question each other's presen- See CHEMISTRY, Page 2 Soviet dissident may be released BONN, West Germany (AP) - An East-West prisoner exchange will be made next week on a Berlin bridge, a Western government source said yesterday, and the word in Israel was that it includes'- Soviet Jewish dissident Anatoly Shcharansky. The source in Bonn said the swap was arranged by U.S., Soviet and West German officials. Officials in Bonn and Washington refused com- ment on newspaper reports that such a swap was in the making, and White House spokesman Larry Speakes said: "We will have no comment, period. Top to bottom, no comment." ISRAEL radio said the United States had informed Israel that Sh- charansky would be freed in three days as part of an East-West prisoner swap. It said the Reagan ad- ministration sent a message about the plan to Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Yitzhak Shamir. An Israeli official in Jerusalem, speaking privately, said the deal in- volved 12 prisoners hald in Western countries to be exchanged for Sh- See SHCHARANSKY, Page 3 aily rnoto by :JA IuM Prof. Leroy Townsend, whose recent work includes synthesizing drugs to combat herpes and cancer, says students are his first priority. TIODAY- Muck truck T HAT A STREET-CLEANING truck takes. away, a street-cleaning truck can give cilor, Dave Blick. "Some of the houses are black-and white half-timbered, and they looked the worst." Newman apologized: "It was dark and I didn't realize what was happening." required by the U.S. Postal Service. That and the unusual stamp drew the attention of Tilden Postmaster Richard Schmoldt, who said the letter was found in a tray of mail that was being sorted. "I don't know how we got it," Schmoldt said. "I'll never know." Ken Braun, customer service director for the Postal Ser- vin i l m~ ir , rna n tth nl t_ nt __nr ne INSIDE BELATED MESSAGE: Opinion looks at cutting back aid to Haiti. See Page 4. I I