Page 4-Thur'sddy, July 30; 1981-The AMichigon boily Mackey's Second pay raise rks MSU faculty and students r In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports EAST LANSING (UPI)-The latest pay raise for Michigan State University President Cecil Mackey may make him the highest paid public college president in the Big Ten-and some faculty groups aren't too happy about it. The MSU Board of Trustees voted last week to raise Mackey's salary to $88,250 effective Oct. 1. The 8.5 percent hike came on top of a 9 percent "catch up" increase approved by the trustees in June. THE PAY BOOST has angered some MSU faculty members, who were told in February that Michigan's largest university was in a severe financial crisis and who are facing the prospect ,of possible layoffs. Collette Moser, president of the American Association of University Professors at MSU, said the raise was "absurd," noting students will facea 11 percent tuition increase this fall. u "THE ACTION of the board of trustees is particularly inappropriate and illogical while the faculty and staff are being'held hostage by a financial crisis declared by the board in February 1981," she said. "MSU administration salaries are among the highest in the Big Ten, while salaries for full professors at MSU are the very lowest." A survey published in a student newspaper indicates Mackey will have the highest salary among the Big Ten's nine public schools. - THE SECOND highest goes to Iowa's Willard Boyd who earns 82,500 an- nually. University of Michigan President Harold Shapiro earns $75,000 per year, sixth highest, while Ohio State Univer- sity ranks at the bottom. Some schools, however, including the University of Michigan, have not yet set 1981-82 salaries for their presidents. Northwestern University, the only private college in the conference, will not release its administrative salaries. MSU trustees said Mackey's June raise was justified since he had foregone an increase last fall. The second hike, they said, is only logical. Bani-Sadr flees to Franceaboard jet PARIS (AP) - Former President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr shaved off his highly recognizable moustache and escaped Iran in a night flight early yesterday to join the exile opposition to the Islamic regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. The Iranian government said Bani- Sadr - who hid "in the heart of Tehran" for 43 days - probably wore a dress when he "hijacked" a jet and flew to France to cast his lot with "the united front of the counter-revolution." BANI-SADR, impeached in June and a casualty of the Iranian revolution he tried to guide, was accompanied by, Iran's top leftist in his flight aboard a jetliner which Iran said was flown by the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's personal pilot. Iran demandea Bani-Sadr's ex- tradition, but France granted him asylum and warned him not to make political statements. On arrival in France, Bani-Sadr said the election of President Mohammad Ali Rajai was a sham and predicted the people of Iran would soon return Iran to "the path of democracy." HIS WORDS brought a quick warning from French officials and Bani-Sadr canceled a scheduled afternoon news conference yesterday. The jet carrying Bani-Sadr, Massoud Radjavi, leader of the Marxist guerrilla Mujahedeen Khalq, and Col. Behzad Moesi, who Tehran Radio said was the personal pilot to the late shah, landed at the French military air base at Evreux, 60 miles west of Paris, about 4:30 a.m. Bani-Sadr was in shirtsleeves and his moustache was gone. They joined a group of other Iranian exiles in France, the country in which Khomeini and Bani-Sadr in 1978-79 gathered another disparate band of Iranians to plan the downfall of the shah. SHORT or LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS " 615 E. Liberty-668-9329 E 3739 Woshtenaw-971-9975 " 613 N. Maple-761-2733 ' 611 E. University-662-0354 One dead in England riots during wedding celebrations LIVERPOOL, England-England's urban rioting claimed its first life yesterday, but even in battle-scarred Liverpool five hours of overnight violence failed to dampen royal wedding celebrations. "Most people here are having street parties, not street riots," a police spokesman said. Police quelled rioting by youths in the Toxteth area, the third straight night of disorder, then pulled back to station houses to join the rest of the nation in watching television to see Prince Charles marry Lady Diana Spen- cer. During the rioting, a young man was struck by one of several police Land Rovers that raced among the youths in an attempt to prevent crowds from forming. He died later ina hospital. Police identified him as David Moore, 22, who lived at a nearby housing development. Patterson files papers in bid for gubernatorial nomination LANSING-Hardline Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson has filed the necessary papers to seek the Republican gubernatorial nomination and will formally announce his intentions early next month. Patterson insisted filing papers for his campaign committee did not con- stitute an official announcement, but said he will havea formal statement at a $25-per-plate fundraising breakfast in Bloomfield Township Aug. 12. The prosecutor's entry in the race would give the moderate Gov. William Milliken two conservative opponents should he choose to seek re-election. Liver transplant patients' survival aided by new drug BOSTON-The odds of surviving tricky liver transplants improve dramatically when patients are given an experimental new drug, resear- chers say, and the medicine also may help surgeons transfer other organs from the dead to the living. Although liver disease is common, the art of replacing that organ is still considered experimental because the operations usually fail. But using a drug called cyclosporin A, doctors said they achieved "excep- tionally encouraging early results" after transplanting livers in 12 people whose own organs were ruined by cancer or other diseases. An average of one year after the operations, 10 of these people, or 83 per- cent, were still alive. In an earlier study, the same surgical team performed 170 liver transplants and gave the patients conventional drugs. Their sur- vival rate after a year was only 32 percent. Beer baron wants to erect $15 million Statue of Justice SAN FRANCISCO-France spent $250,000 in 1884 to give us our Statue of Liberty, but now comes Paul Kalmanovitz, a reclusive beer baron who wan- ts to spend $15 million to give us a Statue of Justice. Kalmanovitz, the chairman of the board of General Breweries, got the idea for a mammoth justice statue in San Francisco Bay from his attorney, James Boccardo. "Many years ago some friends and I conceived the idea that a country dedicated to liberty and justice should have a statue to honor justice, too," Boccardo said yesterday. When Boccardo brought up the idea, Kalmanovitz said he would donate $15 million for the statue ifa site could be found. "I could build a pretty good statue for $15 million," Boccardo said. "I don't have any idea what one would cost. If we wanted just a tall aluminum statue, it probably could be built for $15 million. If they want an elaborate park and all, it could cost $50 million or $100 million." Amway held responsible for salesman's rape of girl ADA, Mich.-Amway Corp. is considering an appeal of a California jury's decision to hold the company responsible for a salesman who raped a girl while selling Amway products door-to-door, a company spokesman said yesterday. A Superior Court jury in San Diego Monday ordered Amway to pay the girl, who was 12 at the time of the assault, $180,000 in damages for the injury and humiliation she suffered. Amway attorneys argued that its distributors are independent businessmen who contract with the company to sell its products. Distributors hire others to sell products who are not direct representatives of Amway, they said. Casey Wondergem, Amway spokesman, said the decision was "disturbing and surprising" and corporate attorneys are carefully investigating their options before proceeding with an appeal. Actionz por3t3VVl FACTORY CLOSEOUTS Swimwear, Footwear, Bodywear 406 E. Liberty 2 blocks off State St.