2 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, December 9, 1993 PAY Continued from page :. "The U-M is not the U.S. Trea- sury, we don't generate our own money, we get money from the gov- ernment and sturdents. I think some salaries are higher than they should be." Regent Laurence Deitch (D- Bloomfield Hills) disagreed. "You do injury to our officers," he said, when the Board met'last month. "We have a competent group of offic- ers." Baker added, however, that he and other boardmembers have little con- trol over faculty pay. "The regents have the right to set Duderstadt's salary. President Dud- erstadt has the power to set executive salaries." English Prof. McNamara said he is more concerned with principle than payment. "I really don't care if I get a raise or not. But I'm exercised about the evasion of truth by the administra- tion," he said. He added: "A gigantic fraud is being perpetuated and is manifested in the salary issue. The big fat cats are getting big raises at a time when fund- i ng is dwindling. They all think they're Lee Iacoccas."- NASA astronauts repair myopic space telescope. U U GOOD. FAST. AND NOW WE'RE FREE... For a limited time only... SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) - With its new eyeglasses installed, the Hubble Space Telescope's re- pairs were nearly complete yester- day and astronaut Jeffrey Hoffman exulted: "We're almost home free." Only a few tasks remained for the fifth and final spacewalk over- night - the third for the team of Hoffman and Story Musgrave. Happy NASA managers planned to mark the end of the sky-high repair effort with two events as sym- bolic as they were vital: raising the telescope's orbit slightly and spread- ing its new solar wings. "We've got basically a new tele- scope up there," said Hoffman, an astronomer. "It's going to be real exciting for the astronomical com- munity and for the whole world to see what Hubble really can do with a good set of eyeballs." Hoffman and Musgrave were to install an electronics unit for one of the solar panels put in place Mon- day and another electronics box. The job was time-consuming be- cause of the, difficulty of making electrical connections with clunky space-gloved hands. The astronauts also had an un- foreseen task, installing a cover, handmade inside the Endeavour cabin from an insulated blanket, for a magnetometer, which helps guide the telescope by measuring Earth's magnetic field. Two sides of the magnetometer enclosure, high on the telescope, came off in Hoffman's hands when he worked with it ear- lier. Toward the end of their work in the cargo bay, a ground command was to unfurl the solar panels in- stalled earlier in the week. The wings, as wide as the telescope is tall, are made of huge sheets of :' ** MCIC, FREE Mini Chicken Egg Roll and Fried Wanton With a purchase of any regular price entree 11-4:3Opm Dec. 9 and 10 AP PHOTO Astronaut Tom Akers stands over the wing of the space shuttle Endeavour. FRE E Hot Teal BIG DEAL. SMALL PRICE. NO COUPON NECESSARY! Not Volid with any other offer. Offer expires 12/10/93 .W..V.W..,SS N,;.;, ,..S ........ . f. . . ...W t....v..'..:-M1.......** The Oihce of Academic Multicultural Initiatives is now taking applications for Student Program Hosts for the King/ChAvex/harks1 College l)ay Spring Visitation Program fiberglass-reinforced Teflon held in place by metal struts. They gather energy from the sun and channel it to batteries that power the telescope's instruments. Shuttle commander Richard Covey had been so stingy in his use of shuttle fuel that enough was left to carry the telescope to an orbit four miles higher - 369 miles. The Hubble, which is to be re- leased from the Endeavour early tomorrow, has no propulsive power of its own. The boost is desirable because its altitude degrades over time. The hard part of the mission was Small Classes. Applicaiion deadline is Flriday, Jaiuiar 14, 1994 Student Program H ots responsihit ies include supervising and developiing work schedules for tearns of student 1,ders who will work with students from mr-iddle schoxls visiting the L riversi tduring i ( : m gsit~aon.g A pplications atd jo descript ions r'gardr in this position rnaiy bhe (ohdiir d ritat the Office of Acadermic Multicultural Initiatives, 1042 Flerrn iBuilding;, 1st floor. For information con tact Felton Rogers ati 313-936.1055 A Big Scores. 2153 The PmcetonReew is aliated withneier PincetonUnrversitynorthe EducatonalTesbng Semce. THE PRINCETON _ Weo M we$Scol more TRAVEL SMART! FROM CHICAGO One Way Roundtrip LONDON $229 $419 PARIS $274 $548 FRANKFURT $274 $548 COSTA RICA $255 $510 GUATEMALA CITY $239 $478 """--.....-.'.----. Roundtip TOKYO $789 Fares from over 75 Us cities to all major destinations in Europe, Asia, Africa, Latin America and Australia. Some tickets valid to one year. Most tickets allow changes. Eurailpasses issued on the spot. Customs-Immigration & departuretaxes apply. Fares subject to change without notice. nt' student ID. cards may be required. mf . A completed yesterday when astronauts Kathryn Thornton and Tom Akers removed a refrigerator-size box con- taining a light meter and replaced it with one containing 10 small mirrors. Akers' two excursions into the cargo bay gave him the all-time U.S. spacewalk record of 29 hours, 40 min- utes. That eclipsed the record of 24 hours, 12 minutes established more than two decades ago during the Gemini and Apollo programs by Eu- gene Cernan. Installation of the mirror package was the final step, at least for the crew of the Endeavour, toward correcting Hubble's fuzzy vision. Fine-tuning the optical systems and getting the telescope back to work, is the task of engineers on the ground. "Hubble's just had eye surgery," said David Leckrone, Hubble's se- nior project scientist. "We think it ABORTION Continued from page 2. Blakey argued that even the law's name reflects "the notion of com- mercial gain." "The concept of illicit gain per- vades this statute" and anti-abor- tion groups have no economic mo- tives, Blakey said. That point is central to the legal case. Lower courts dismissed NOW's lawsuit after ruling that a RICO lawsuit cannot succeed un- less the defendant had some eco- nomic motive. Justice Department lawyer Miguel Estrada said requiring an economic motive for RICO enforce- ment threatens to "really cripple" government efforts to get at terror- ists and their ringleaders. Only Justice Antonin Scalia voiced any sympathy for Blakey's view of the law during the 60-minute argument session. Noting that the law is aimed at any "enterprise" involved in a pat- tern of racketeering activity, Scalia said it is possible "enterprise means was sucessful but we're not going to know for sure until we're able to tape the bandages off seven-eight-nitie weeks from now." The optical fixes were installation of a new wide-field planetary camet, with built-in corrections for Hubble's misground main mirrors, and Costar, a contraption that channels the light stream to three other astronomy in- struments with precisely ground and aimed mirrors. "With Costar and the wide-field planetary camera both optically cor- rected and functioning, we will have a complete and capable observatory with all the tools that astronomers an* astrophysicists need to ply their trade and go after the big questions about the universe," Leckrone said. "It is extremely difficult to keep from getting excited right now," he said. "But I gotta try." Some protestors have used 'forcible, violent conduct ... when necessary, including terrorism. -Fay Clinton lawyer for NOW the same thing as business enter- prise." Clayton argued, "Congress knew how to put a limitation in RICO when it wanted to. Congress did not write the statute that way." Congress is expected to pass a law soon giving new federal protec- tion to abortion clinics, their staffs and patients. But the law, already approved in slightly different ver@ sions by the House and Senate, would not allow lawsuits against alleged national conspiracies and their leaders. The new law also does not pro- vide for the tripled damages that winners of RICO lawsuits can col- lect. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90. Winter term (January through April) is $95, year-long (September through April) is $160. On-campus subscrip- tions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 76-DAILY; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Opinion 764-0552 Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. EDITOIAL Dubow, Editor in Chief NEWS Melissa Peerless, Managing Editor EDITORS: Hope Calati, Lauren Dernrer, Karen Sabgir. Purvi Shah STAFF: Adam Anger, Jonathan Berndt. Carrie Bissey, Janet Burkitt, James Cho. Lashawnda Crowe, Jen DiMascio. Erin Einhorn, Michelle Fricke, Ronnie Glassberg. Soma Gupta, Michele Hatty. Nate Hurley, Katie Hutchins, Judith Kafka, Sarah Kiino, Randy Lebowitz. Peter Matthews, Bryn Mickle; Shelley Morrison, James Nash, Mona Qureshi. David Rheingold. Rachel Scharfman. Megan Schimpf, David Shepardson, Karen Talaski, Andrew Taylor, Lara Taylor, Maggie Weyhing. April Wood, Scot Woods. CALENDAR EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Andrew Taylor. EDITORIAL PAGE Andrew Levy, Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Sam Goodstein, Flint Wainess STAFF: Julie Becker, Cathy Boguslaski. Eugene Bowen. Patrick Javid, Russel Koonin, Jim Lasser, Jason Lichtstein, Amitava Mazumdar. Mo Park, Elisa Smith. SPORTS Ryan Herrngton, Managing Editor EDITORS: Brett Forrest, Adam Miller. Chad A. Safran, Ken Sugiura STAFF: Bob Abramson, Rachel Bachman Paul Barger. Tom Bausano, Charlie Breitrose, Aaron Bums, Scott Burton, Andy De Korte, Marc Diller, Darren Everson, Ravi Gopal Brett Johnson, Josh Karp, Brent McIntosh, Antoine Pitts, Tim Rardin. Melinda Roco. Michael Rosenberg. Jaeson Rosenfeld. L. RostamAbadi, Melanie Schuman, Dave Schwartz, Tom Seeley, Tim Smith, Elisa Sneed, Barry Sollenberger, Tim Spolar, Doug Stevens, Jeremy Strachan, Ryan White. ARTS Jessie Halladay, Nina HodaW, Editors EDITORS: Jon Altshul (Film), Melissa Rose Bemardo (Weekend etc.), Tom Erlewine (Music), Oliver Giancola (Books) Darcy Lockman (Weekend etc.). Elizabeth Shaw (Theater), Kirk Weters (Fine Arts). STAFF: Jordan Atlas, Michael Barnes, Robin Barry, Matt Carlson, Jason Carroll, Jin Ho Chung. Andy Dolan, Geoff Earle, Johanna Flies, Jody Frank, Josh Herrington, Dustin Howes, Kristen Knudsen, Rona Kobell, Chris Lepley. Will Matthews, Heather Phares. Scott Plagenhoef. Austin Ratner, John R. Rybock, Andrew Schafer. Dirk Schulze. Karen Schweitzer, Sarah Stewart, Michael Thompson, Mt Thorbum, Alexandra Twin. Ted Watts. PHOTO Michelle Guy, Editor aSCITANT nITnR Dogla Kanter Sharon Musher. Evan Petrie I 11 I - . ai(_]JI~mI'iII y, I