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March 20, 1995 - Image 2

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2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 20, 1995

SACUA
Continued from page 1
Mark R. DeCamp, associate
chemistry professor and LSA faculty
counselor: There needs to be better
communications between the Uni-
versity's three institutions: Ann Ar-
bor, Dearborn and Flint.
"I would also hope to serve ... as
an advocate for the University's
most abundant and, arguably, most
important resource, its students,"
he said.
DeCamp also said an environment.
of trust and cooperation is needed
between faculty and administrators,
rather than one of hostility and con-
frontation.
He currently holds a one-year term
DAInYC'A 9MEDSJ

on SACUA.
Donald R. Deskins Jr., urban
geography and sociology professor:
SACUA should work to make "fac-
ulty views on all important issues
known to the University administra-
tion in a timely manner so these views
can be given due consideration in the
decision-making process."
He also said SACUA must be the
strongest advocate for academic free-
dom, tenure and faculty rights to fur-
ther ensure that faculty sentiments
are heard at the University.
Valerie E. Lee, associate educa-
tion professor: The current status of
faculty governance in the University
is extremely low, and the role of fac-
ulty in the decision-making process
should be strengthened.
She favors the development of an
"information base" about both endur-
ing and current issues. Lee contends
that, if elected, she will "bring a lively
interest in making this University a

better place for my faculty colleagues
to work, a commitment to equity at
every level of education ... and, most
of all, a willingness to speak my mind
of issues that I consider important,"
she said.
Leo McNamara, English pro-
fessor: The University is run too much
like a business, and it must move
toward greater emphasis on scholar-
ship and learning.
McNamara said professors should
be "professional people" instead of
"employees."
"I would like to help administration
find the way there with us," he said.
He also said that a primary prob-
lem is the increase in student tuition.
"I feel I need to help with the admin-
istration which every year says that
they will not raise tuition, but which
goes on raising tuition every year. I
have to help solve that," McNamara
said.
Robert L. Smith, engineering

professor: Faculty members' views
must be included at the University.
Smith also said, "The University
should continue to be a free market-
place of ideas where what is right and
what is wrong is decided in the give-
and-take of reasoned discourse and
not by administrative mandate."
He also said that the University
community should return to the ideal
of equal opportunity and merit-based
allocation of resources.
Bruce Watkins, sport manage-
ment and communication professor:
The current climate of University
governance is one of mistrust between
faculty and administrators.
"I would like to be a part of a
faculty governance system that is able
to maintain important priorities, es-
pecially for diversity and tolerance
for - maybe even celebration of -
differences, as we address difficult
issues of university governance," he
said.

NATIONAL EPORT
Packwood: Tax cut's prospects dEM
WASHINGTON - The $189 billion tax cut crafted
by House Republicans is likely to get nowhere in the
Senate, Sen. Bob Packwood said yesterday, urging his
fellow Republicans to concentrate on reducing the deficit.
Packwood, who chairs the Senate Finance Commit-
tee, which oversees tax legislation, said any tax cut bill
must be accompanied by specific plans for cutting federal
spending.
"Short of that, I don't think we would consider them at
all."
The Oregon senator, speaking on ABC's "This Week Packwood
with David Brinkley," said both Republicans and Democrats on his committee
feel their first job is to reduce the deficit.
"The best thing we can do for the taxpayers of this country is to try to move
toward deficit reduction, and if that gets their mortgage interest rates down a
point or two, that is more important than anything else we can do for them,"
he said.

- - I.

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The University of Michigan
Program for the Study of Complex Systems
AN INTERDISCIPLINARY SYMPOSIUM ON
COMPLEX SYSTEMS

March 22, 1995

Michigan League - Hussey Room

9:00 - 9:15 am
9:15 - 10:30 am
10:30 - 10:45 am
10:45 - 12:00

Opening Remarks
Robert Savit
PsCS Ditor
Toward a Systems
Theory for the Com-
position of Robot
Behavior
Dan Koditschek
EECS 1 Al Laboratory
The Univ of Michigan

1:00 - 2:15 pm
2:15 - 2:30
2:30 - 3:45 pm

BREAK
Evolving Virtual
Creatures
Karl Sims

Global Change, Bio.
logical Diversity &
the Problem of Scale
Simon Levin
Dept of Biology
Princeton University
BREAK
The Convergence &
Stability of Cultures:
Local Convergence
& Global Polariza-
tions
Robert Axelrod
Inst of Public Policy
The Univ of Michigan
BREAK
The Topology of
DNA
DeWitt Sumners
Dept of Mathematics
Florida State Univ

Jordan off the mark
in return to Bulls
INDIANAPOLIS - In his dra-
matic return to the game he couldn't
stay away from, Michael Jordan
showed all the elements that made
him great - the double-pump fakes,
the mid-air hangs, the explosive
dribble, the out-of-nowhere passes
- in a'tantalizing reminder of what
the NBA had missed. He had 19 points,
six assists, six rebounds and three
steals in 43 minutes in his comeback,
a 103-96 Bulls loss to the Indiana
Pacers in overtime yesterday.
But Jordan didn't exactly pick up
where he left off in his last game,
when he led the Chicago Bulls to their
third straight NBA title in June of
1993. His shooting was rusty, result-
ing in a 7-for-28 effort.
"My timing was a little bit off,"
Jordan said after the game. "I know
it's not going to happen in one game,
but hey, I'm back. I'm back for the
love of the game."
There was a crackle of electricity
Oo A ROUND T HE W
Russians protest
action by Ukraine
KIEV, Ukraine - Russian dem-
onstrators and politicians in Crimea
protested Saturday against Ukraine's
political strike at the region's separat-
ist government - but the region re-
mained calm.
A day after Ukraine abolished
Crimea's constitution and presidency
- two pillars of the Russian separat-
ist movement there - the response in
Crimea was limited to words. A few
hundred Russians shouted slogans
outside the region's parliament build-
ing, while Crimean legislators de-
bated how to protest the moves.
In Moscow, the Russian govern-
ment, which has vowed in principle to
defend the interests of ethnic Rus-
sians in other former Soviet repub-
lics, remained silent on the Ukrainian
action.
The muted reactions in Crimea
and Moscow suggested it would not
generate an immediate crisis in the
often-difficult relationship between
Russia and Ukraine. In the past two
years, Crimea often has been a point
of antagonism in Russian-Ukrainian
ties.
Crimea - two-thirds of whose
2.7 million people are ethnic Rus-

when the Bulls strode onto the court
for warmups, and Market Square
Arena crowd squealed with delight at
Jordan's every pregame layup.
Jordan retired with the highest
scoring average in NBA history, two
points ahead of Wilt Chamberlain.
Sailors disciplined
for having taped sex
WASHINGTON -A male and a
female sailor on the aircraft carrier
USS Eisenhower were disciplined last
week after they videotaped themselves
having sex aboard the ship and were
discovered after the man showed the
tape to other sailors, Navy officials
said Saturday.
"The U.S. Navy has an unambigu
ous policy. Sexual misconduct will
not be tolerated," said Cmdr. Kevin
Wensing, a Navy spokesman in Nor-
folk, Va., headquarters of the U.S.
Atlantic Fleet.
The Eisenhower is the first com-
bat carrier to integrate men and
women.
rORL D
sians -bred its separatist movement
after the collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991 left the region under the rule
of Ukraine.
2 Israelis killed, 5
injured in ambush
JERUSALEM - Two Israelis
were killed and five injured last night
when a packed bus was ambushed
near Kiryat Arba, the militant Jewish
settlement built on the outskirts of the
West Bank town of Hebron.
At least two of the injured were
children, Israel Radio reported. They
were both said to be in serious condi-
tion.0
The ambush, thought to have been
carried out by Palestinians, is the first
serious attack on an Israeli target since
Jan. 22, when a pair of suicide bomb
ers blew up themselves and 21 Israe-
lis at a bus stop in northern Israel'
That attack virtually paralyzed Israeli-
Palestinian peace talks, which only
recently started making headway
again.
There was no response from the
Rabin government to the ambush, but
the army reportedly flooded the scene
with troops, to hunt for suspects and
to prevent revenge attacks by settlers.
-From Daily wire services

3:45 - 4:00 pm
4:00-5:15 pm

S - This Symposium's purpose is to help acquaint the University community with the rich potential for
applying ideas from complex systems to various disciplines. The talks, by distinguished scholars
nest PIavariety of fields,willaddesstherelevanceandapplicabilityofcompex,,,tem,,o,,oblems
in the speaker's field of research. and will be directed at a general academic audience. For further
1100 South U n versity information about the PSCS or this Symposium please contact Katherine Milliken at (313) 763.

Don't just fall into any job...

Leade

A

e

a

I

*Help acclimate new students
*Meet exciting and diverse people
+Gain practical experience for your
+Come back to school early!!

'1

L.A

Mass Meetings
Monday, March 20,
(Tuesday, March 21,

3-5pm
3-5pm

Michigan Union, Pond.
Michigan Union, Pond,

Room
Room

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students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fallterm, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $90.
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995

EDITORS: Jonathan Berndt, Lisa Dines. Andrew Taylor, Scot Woods.
STAFF: Patience Atkin, Danietle Belkin. Cathy Boguslaski. Jodi Cohen. Spencer Dickinson, Kelly Feeney, Christy Glass, Ronnie
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