0 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 8, 1986 Harvard official resigns over CIA funding By JERRY MARKON A Harvard University official's con- troversial acceptance of research funds from the CIA has led to his resignation as director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Prof. Nadav Safran stepped down last week, although a university in- vestigation found him guilty of only procedural errors in his handling of CIA funds for a book and a political conference. "This whole controversy has made the center a controversial place . .. he. felt the work of the center couldn't continue if he was there," said Mar- jorie Heffron, assistant director of Harvard's news office. SAFRAN, who will remain at Har- vard as a tenured professor, could not be reached for comment. Although his CIA contracts - one for researching a book on Saudi Arabia and another that helped fund a university conference on Islam and politics - did not technically violate Harvard research guidelines, Safran's colleagues had strongly ob- jected to the funding. Last October, for example, seven. faculty members associated with the center asked Harvard to prohibit CIA funding in sensitive areas of study such as the Middle East where, they said, scholars must avoid ties to the U.S. government. HARVARD currently prohibits research that cannot be openly carried out and published, but the Un- iversity has no restrictions on CIA funding. Safran did violate Harvard rules, however, when he failed to notify the university far enough in advance of the CIA support for the conference. When he eventually disclosed the source of the funding a week before the conference, some of the par- ticipants, including several foreign scholars, refused to attend. Although Michael Spence, dean of Harvard's College of Arts and Scien- ces, reported last week that Safran hadLI resigned voluntarily, a Harvard source familiar with the investigation speculated yesterday that he may have struck up a deal with the univer- sity. The deal might have entailed Safran agreeing to resign in exchange for the university allowing him to remain a tenured professor, the sour- ce said. He pointed out that Spence 's report strongly praised Safran as a distinguished scholar. Safran will direct the center for the rest of this year, and no committee has yet been appointed to find his suc- cessor. The University of Michigan has not received CIA funding for several years, but administrators have speculated that there may be agency funds covertly circulating on campus. BLUE FRONT Packard at State MARSHALL'S PACKAGE LIQUOR S. State at Liberty 'U' salaries rise 7.3% (Continued from Page 1) $ ps plus deposit 8 pack- 1/2 liter bottles $1 99 6 pack- 12 oz. cans 35C single 12 oz. can plus deposit Good Thru 1-24-86 wdi , " ' RI "- L OWEST KEG PRICES IN TO WN! with a salary of $105,000. THE LOWEST paid executive of- ficer, for the second year, is Henry Johnson, the vice president for student services, with a salary of $70,000, up from the $63,000 that he earned in the 1983-84 fiscal year. Earning a higher salary than many of the executive officers, Mark Orringer, the section head of thoracic surgery, added $150,000 to his coffer. Justifying the high salaries of medical personnel, Orringer cited the nationwide prominence of the Univer- sity Hospitals and the extensive "curriculum viti" of its staff. Dave Friedo, the University Hospitals' coordinator for public in- formation, said the high salaries are necessary to compete with peer in- stitutions, "our faculty are paid salaries that are competitive with salaries of physicians at other academic medical centers around the country," he said.' AMONG THE University deans, the highest paid dean in 1985 was Joseph Johnson, the dean of the medical school, who earned $135,000. Johnson replaced Terrance Sandalow, the dean of the law school, as the highest paid dean. A 13.8 percent increase brought Sandalow's salary to $120,000, up from $105,952 in 1984. Other deans who made six-digit salaries are Gilbert Whitaker, dean of the business administration, with a salary of $107,158, and Richard Christenson, dean of the School of Dentistry, who earned $106,180. Peter Steiner, dean of LSA, who was the third highest paid dean in 1984 with a salary of $92,753, slipped behind Christenson and Whitaker. He scraped into the six-digit category with a 1985 salary of $100,000. In the sports arena, football coach Bo Schembechler was the only coach to earn more than $100,000,. With the successful football season bringing the Wolverines to the Fiesta Bowl, Schembechler enjoyed a 5.2 percent salary increase, kicking his annual income up from $96,030 to $101,030. Bill Frieder, coach of the Big Ten basketball champions, trailed Schembechler with a salary of $75,500. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Ypsi prison guard rescued YPSILANTI - A female prison guard held hostage at knifepoint for more than 10 hours by an inmate was rescued unharmed last night when a state trooper rushed the cell, authorities said. The standoff at the Huron Valley Men's Facility ended about 7:10 p.m. when a trooper forced open the cell where prisoner James Thomas was holding the guard captive, said Richard McKeon, executive assistant to the director of the state corrections department. No one was injured, he said. Thomas, 32, was tricked into opening the door to his cell where he was holding guard Colleen Nickerson hostage when prison officials turned up the heat "to make it uncomfortable" and they offered him a cold drink, McKeon said. "He finally agreed to have some Kool Aid ... he finally opened it up enough for one state police officer to force open the door and get the woman out," he said. "There were no shots and no injuries, and the hostage is OK. Hopefully, life gets back to normal." Thomas was "not really demanding anything" during the siege in Unit Four of the five-unit maximum-security prison, McKeon said. "He wan- ted more psychological services. Congressmen denied chance., to hold meeting with Mandela JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - The government yesterday refused to let a six-member U.S. congressional delegation see jailed guerrilla leader Nelson Mandela, saying simply, "The visit will not take place." The delegates, including four blacks, later had an unexpectedly long three-hour meeting with Foreign Minister R.F. Botha and said they did not regard the Mandela visit refusal as final. The decision was announced by the Prisons Department. "We still haven't had the final answer from the president," said Rep. William Gray, a Philadelphia Democrat and a black. The group if to meet President P.W. Botha today at his home in the coastal resort of George. Foreign Minister Botha said after meeting the Americans, "I trust this will contribute to a greater understanding between South Africa and the U.S. Congress." Roelof Botha, no relation to the president, is a former ambassador to Washington who for nearly two decades has contended with the many in- ternational critics of apartheid, South Africa's system of legal racial segregation. Philly arsonists charged with violating civil rights of family PHILADELPHIA - Four white men were charged yesterday with civil rights violations for allegedly torching the home of a black family targeted for racial protest in a predominatly white neighborhood. Charles Williams, Marietta Bloxom, and the couple's 7-year-old daughter already had moved out of the southwest Philadelphia neigh- borhood to live with relatives before the Dec. 12 blaze, but their possessions remained in the house and were destroyed. Some 400 whites several weeks earlier swarmed in front of the house, chanting "Beat it!" and "We want them out!" That and another incident prompted Mayor Goode to declare a state of emergency in the neigh- borhood Nov. 22 and ban gatherings of four or more people within a 70- block area. If convicted, the four each could face up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. New postmaster takes over 0 . 0 All 57-31 - m lanm -- - - - - I I 320 S. STATE STREET - Phone 663-4121 " ANN ARBOR MICHI EVERYDAY DISCOUNT HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS ONE DAY PHOTO PROCESSING Free Set Of Extra Prints LOW PRICED COSMETICS LOW PRESCRIPTION PRICES m M. C4 z 0 d. 0 V, = 1- = Z d. a. 0 I- UO 0 (U 0i -d 0 CJ O~ N, 8) R! t 41 WESTERN UNION INSTANT CASH NATIONWIDE We're Your Local WESTERN UNION AGENT We're Authorized To Send: MAILGRAMS, MESSAGES, TELEGRAMS MONEY ORDERS or PERSONAL OPINION TELEGRAMS D 0 Support the March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION C i ~# hs. Al Eb4 R*x '.4 4r 'a'a A U 4 p4 1 '.' 6. PAS t N t N a "I, t.4 Sa 4 I'' , .4 "a i. r4 4 J !*ur flId WASHINGTON - Albert Casey took over as postmaster general promising to strengthen the ability of the U.S. Postal Service to compete by introducing airline-style marketing techniques. The former American Airlines president told reporters "the post office is selling services to the public ... the post office is involved with all for- ms of competition today. These are very similar principlies to what we've just been through with airline deregulation." At American, a press release said, Casey "successfully turned the company's 1974 losses of $49 million into a profit of $228 million in 1984. . through skilled financial management and executive selection." Casey joked that he might figure a way to give mailers something similar to the frequent flier bonuses airlines offer top customers. He pledged to develop ways for the $30-billion-a-year agency to com- pete with overnight delivery circulars that also could be delivered by mail. Asked how long he planned to serve, Casey, who celebrates his 66th bir- thday next month, said "the primary goal of any chief executive is to'; arrange for his successor. . . . If I'm really good, six months, if I'm poor nine months." Gun battles erupted in Kabul NEW DELHI, India - Gun battles apparently between rival Afghan communist party factions erupted last week in the presidential palace in the Afghan capital of Kabul, Western diplomats. said yesterday. Diplomats said other battles were also reported at the same time out- side the nearby West German Embassy and in a neighborhood where many Soviet diplomats were housed. It was the second time in five months that gunbattles were reported in the presidential palace. "Most sources strongly suspect that - as was the case in the mid- September palace shootout - this had to do with factional squabbles," one diplomat said at a scheduled weekly briefing for Western reporters. In another development, Afghanistan accused neighboring Pakistan of increasing military support for Moslem rebels in their six-year war to overthrow the Soviet-backed Kabul government. 01JiJe LIffcigUU lutalig Vol. XCVI- No.69 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00 in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. Y A 4 ! l Ai I: ji It's more than just talk. At ROLM, your career is always a two-way dialogue. Right from the start, you have an immediate voice in important business communications projects while flexible assignments broaden your professional experience. Your voice makes a difference. In the future of a company that is standing on the threshold of the most exciting years in the history of telecommunications. Bringing full-feature desktop voice and data systems - complete with PC capabilities, digital memory and more - to a market intense with competitive challenge. Your ideas hold the answers. And ROLM is listening. Our philosophy, and all our products, continue to be unique expres- sions of the people who create them. It's hardly surprising coming from the company that has made "Create a great place to work" one of its four basic goals. That's why you'll find ROLM attracts and motivates the brightest in the industry, and provides physical surroundings and benefits befitting that kind of quality. After the hard work you've put into preparing for your career, ROLM wouldn't think of offering you any less. Electrical Engineering & Computer Science Majors Come talk about the opportunities at ROLM. Sign up with your Placement Office for an on- On-Campus1 campus interview or send your resume and letter of interest to Vicky Anderson. Ennineerina Recruitment. M/S 372, Editor in Chief.................NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors........JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors .......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor............THOMASMILLER Features Editor .......... LAURIE DELATER City Editor ............... ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor..........TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Joanne Cannella, Philip Chidel, Dov Cohen. Kysa Connett, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle. Rachel Gottlieb, Stephen Gregory, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jakelevic, Vibeke Laroi, Michael Lustig, Jerry Markon, Eric Mattson, Amy Mindell, Kery Mura- kami, Jill Oserowsky, Christy Riedel, Michael Sher-. man, Jennifer Smith, Jeff Widran, Cheryl Wistrom. Associate Opinion Page Editor . . KAREN KLEIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Gayle Kirshenbaum, Da.., ..is .n.nr. Park.Ptr MoonevS..aSsnne Chief Photographer............DAN HABIB PHOTO STAFF: Jae Kim, Scott Lituchy. John Munson, Matt Petrie, Dean Randazzo, Andi Schreiber, Darrian Smith. Sports Editor...............TOM KEANEY Associate Sports Editors . JOE EWING BARB McQUADE, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL, STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha. Mark Borowskv. Debbie deFrances, Liam Flaherty, Steve Green- baum, Rachel Goldman, Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Phil Johnson, Rick Kaplan, Christian Mar- tin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Chris Parker, Mike Redstone, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager ........ DAWN WILLACKER Sales Manager........MARY ANNE HOGAN Assistant Sales Manager ........... YUNA LEE Marketing Manager .........CYNTHIA NIXON Finance Manager..........DAVID JELINEK Classified Manager ...GAYLA BROCKMAN 5 ti f-