The Michigan Daily Vol XCIll No. 23-S Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, July 16, 1983 Ten Cents Twelve Pages 'U' hikes tuition 9.5% By CHERYL BAACKE The University Regents yesterday skeptically approved a 9.5 percent tuition increase, or an average of $191 per student each term, which ad- ministrators said is necessary to keep the University from losing ground with other top schools. Part of the money from the tuition in- crease will fund a five percent salary increase for University faculty and staff members. THE PROPOSAL was passed 5 to 2 following more than an hour of discussion yesterday and comment by three Dearborn students at Thursday's meeting. Regents Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) and Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) voted against the increase. Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham) was not at the meeting. Although 9.5 percent is smaller than last year's 15 percent tuition increase and an even steeper 18 percent hike in 1981, several Regents said they were concerned with the recent trend of rising tuition. STUDENTS have paid the price for deep state funding cuts to the Univer- sity since 1981. This year, however, state appropriations to the University increased by nine percent or $12.8 million allowing for a smaller tuition hike. But the state increase, was not large enough to freeze tuition because the University needs to increase salaries and pay rising utility costs, said University Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Billy Frye. A 9.5 percent hike is the smallest in- crease possible to offer faculty mem- See REGENTS, Page 5 Axe drops on Nat. Resources and Art By CHERYL BAACKE and GEORGEA KOVANIS The fates of two schools targeted for major budget cuts under the Univer- sity's plan to redistribute $20 million to "high-priority" areas were sealed at Thursday's Regent's meeting. The School of Natural Resources will have its budget reduced 25 percent over the next five years, and the School of Art will bear an 18 percent cut. THE CUT in the School of Natural Resources forces the school to eliminate the equivalent of the nine full- time faculty positions and brings an end to the school's programs for freshmen and sophomores. The School of Arts budget cut requires the school to reduce its faculty by 11 full-time professors. Because neither school is facing closure, the Regents did not vote on the cuts, and simply accepted the Univer- sity's recommendations. JAMES CROWFOOT, dean of the School of Natural Resources, said he was happy about the program changes the school has made as a result of the review but lashed out against the climate of "mistrust and bitterness" it crested. "The length and conduct of the review process has been damaging to the school, its faculty, staff and studen- ts and I believe to the University as well," Crowfoot told the Regents Thur- sday. "Reputations have been hurt, time budgets and other resources have been diverted from teaching and research, and mistrust and bitterness have been created," he said. "A SCHOOL that has most of its vital processes stopped or crippled for well over a year.. . will require time and resources to reestablish the remaining faculty and staff confidence in the University and its administration," he said. Nevertheless, the changes forced by the $600,000 to $700,000 budget cut have pushed the school in a direction that could produce "some very exciting results," he said. The changes for the school include: " Reducing the undergraduate program to include only juniors and Sanee r T Pc. Goodbye Guido's A little girl peers into the windows of the now defunct Rabbi Guidos, which closed Monday after creditors repossessed most of the equipment. The restaurant, which opened in January, failed because the owner Dan Russo, wasn't prepared for a slowdown in business during the summer months, said one employee. All 11 employees were waiting for three weeks of back pay before the restaurant's sudden shutdown. Russo could not be reached for comment.