NICARAGUA See Editorial Page L~4tE iii ali STALE High-upper 60s Low-Mid 40s Vol. LIX.No. 18Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 27, 1978 Ten Cents TenPge Some 'U' buildings lack disabled student acilitie By RON GIFFORD For a mobility-limited or Wheelchair- restricted student, it is impossible to hear a concert in Rackham Auditorium, ride a University bus to North Campus, or take a course in the Economics Building. None of these buildings is equipped with ramps or elevators that would allow a han- dicapped studen in a wheelchair to enter. However, under a University plan, these ob- stacles should be removed by 1980. THE UNIVERSITY is making these renovations in compliance with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, a Health, Education, and-Welfare (HEW) department regulation which requires colleges and univer- sities to make reasonable modifications in academic requiremfnts, programs, and facilities to ensure full educatioanal oppor- tunity for the handicapped. "As of August, 1977, the University fulfilled- the basic requirements of the HEW regulation," according to Barbara Murphy, the Program Associate for the Handicapped and the Veterans' in the University's Affirmative Action office. "However, we are committed to making the entire campus programatically ac- cessible. We want to make available to the disabled student as many University programs and functions as possible, regardles of the type handicap he may have." A Plant Priority Committee is currently assessing the problems of the handicapped and is preparing a priority list of actions to be taken, Murphy said. She also said the commit- tee's purpose is to "discover what the problems are and to ensure that a solution to these problems is found. This is a campus where people are ready to make a lot of accom- modations to get these things fixed." OVER ONE HUNDRED buildings on campus are considered by the Affirmative Action office to be accessible to handicapped students. The ramps outside the Graduate Library and Health Service are examples of the renovations that have taken place. Even the football stadium has a special section reserved for those in wheelchairs. Students with mobility-impairments are just one of the groups affected by the University plans. Blind students, for example, can go to the libraries on campus and use learning and studying aids including textbooks written in Braille, cassette tapes, and students readers. Elevators have had Braille numbers installed for the use of blind students. Modifying the campus is not always an easy task, for a design that benefits one group of disabled students may be a disadvantage for another group. THE UNIVERSITY and the city of Ann Ar- bor installed curb cuts on every street corner to allow people in wheelchairs to cross the streets more easily. But this created a dangerous situation for blind people, who need the curb to use their canes to feel the difference between the sidewalk and the street. This problem was solved by putting ridges in the curb cuts. sg Several dormitories on campus are fully- accessible to the handicapped, according to Archie Andrews, Director of Housing Programs. Five dorms, South Quad, Couzeris Alice Lloyd, East Quad, and Stockwell, are equipped with elevators and ramps, but Soche dorms are only partially-accessible. The Housing office is analyzing the probler in the dorms, making cost estimates ,at drawing up a timetable for renovating. the dorms still not fully accessible to handicapped students. One area where the University does not have an accessible system is in campus transpor- tation. Students in wheelchairs must use .the city's special Dial-A-Ride van, which is equip- ped with a lift. Murphy said that the Univer- sity's plans for a solution to this problem are not complete, but said they will be ready in tie near future. Poet Hall inspires crowd at rea ing By BRIAN BLANCHARD Shortly after he had finished reading some of his poetry in the Pendleton. Room of the Union yesterday in 'honor of Jeffery Weisberg - a University graduate student who died in a 1977 auto accident - Donald Hall was asked if he had known Weisberg. Yes, came the answer, of course. But the former University professor' couldn't quite recall whether he had ac- tudlly taught Weisberg or only worked with him informally. A FEW confused moments later, the bearded poet suddenly rendered the question irrelevant. "You know," Hall said with a broad grin, eyes wide, "he was one of the poets " Hall, who left Ann Arbor in 1975 to write full-time on his farm in New. Hampshire, landed on the word "poets" See POET, Page 7 d t ti p r t s r n IR h h cl MSA may0cott presidential search wants more inut By RENE BECKER In a meeting held on Monday night iexpressed concern that the Regents and MARIANNE EGRI between several MSA members and would ultimately proceed with their Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) Regents Thomas Roach (D-Detroit), plan regardless of what MSA would do. ecided last night not to participate in Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham), He said students would have no input he presidential selection process until Paul Brown (D-Petdskey) and Dean into the selection process if MSA did not he University Regents develop a plan Baker (R-Ann Arbor) the Regents participate. "We're going to be screwed providing "adequate" student refused to say they would not develop a in the long run," he said. epresentation. private list of candidates. But Freeman and other MSA mem- MSA members voiced concern at MSA member Irving Freeman said bers disagreed. "We haven't 'got heir weekly meeting last night that "they (the Regents) are going to pick a anything now," Freeman said. tudents were not being fairly president from their own damn list." epresented in the process to select a Freeman said the Regents' plan "has Before Freeman's resolution' was iew University president to replace nothing in it for us." He then proposed a passed by consent, Greene proposed a lobben Flepming. Fleming announced resolution stating that until "such time new process which would guarnxee ast week he was leaving the post he has as an adequate plan for student student parity and force the Regents to ield for 11 years. representation" is devised, MSA would pick the new president from a list THE REGENTS' plan calls for three not participate in the process. developed by a committee of students, ommittees to be established: a te n- Richard Barr, another MSA member, faculty members and alumni. Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY, HE KEPT LEFT HAND in pocket for most of his poetry reading, but the enthusiasm captured here is characteristic of former University professor Donald Hall's performance in the Pendleton Room of the Union yesterday. VANCE, GROMYKO MEET TODA Y: SALTtalks ope UNITED NATIONS (AP) - The planning on taking part in the when it 1 United States and the Soviet Union open negotiations as scheduled, try to a new round of strategic arms "AS FAR AS I know, there has been ratificat limitation negotiations today - nearly no change in plans," said Thomas of appro a full year since President Carter, in a an "exe burst of optimism, said a new treaty Soviet Foreign' Minister Gromyko involve was just around the corner. collapsed while making a speech at Senate a Prospects for an accord are uncer- the UN yesterday but returned to finish Key s tan, although U.S. officials claim dif- the speech. See story, page 2. Carter ti ferences between the two superpowers to Capit have been narrowing steadily. Reston, a State Department form woi AND A RECENT improvement in spokesman. "A tre relations between Washington and The major sticking point remains said Sen Moscow could brighten the atmosphere "modernization" - that is, how many "It's the for a treaty, which is intended to limit new missile systems the United States IT WA strategic bombers and long-range and Russia may build during the life of Iowa, th missiles. the treaty and how many existing of arms Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and systems may be improved. nation tl Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Other issues also remain unresolved, treatyN Gromyko are scheduled to begin their including U.S. efforts to impose weeks. B talks at the Soviet Mission today. The deployment and refueling restraints on from his two men met in July for SALT talks in the Soviet bomber known to the West as deteriora Geneva. the Backfire. The t Gromyko became ill Tuesday after- CONGRESSIONAL support for an dissident noon during a speech to the U.N. arms limitation treaty with the vester e) General Assembly but later returned'to Russians is questionable. The Carter finish his talk. He was reported to be administration acknowledged as much again hinted last month that it might bypass the Senate, where ion requires a two-thirds vote val, and submit the accord as cutive agreement." That would a simple majority of both nd House. enators immediately warned hat sending an arms agreement ol Hill in anything but treaty uld guarantee its defeat. aty is the constitutional route," n. Charles Mathias, (R-Md.), only way to go." kS LAST Oct. 7 in Des Moines, at Carter, an ardent advocate control, announced to the hat the framework of a new would be completed within But Carter began to back away rosy predictions as relations ated. rials of prominent Soviet ts and of International Har- xecutive Francis Crawford on See ARMS, Page 7 'dn esday labor settlement is reached een Charing Cross tore and picketing former oyees. See story, Page 10. espite a request by the state director, the University institute a measles im- zation program. See story, 2. ederal investigators believe d aircraft may have con- ed to the crash of a com- al jetliner and a private Monday that resulted in at 150 deaths, See story, Page ew York Times reporter last-minute reprieve from ning to Jail for refusing to member student committee, a ten- member alumni committee and a 15- member faculty committee. These committees would each outline the goals and needs of the University for the next ten years and then make recommendations for a new president. Under the plan, the recommen- dations would be given to Vice President Richard Kennedy who would compile biographies of the candidates, distribute the information to all the committees and finally the Regents. The Regents would ultimately receive a final list from all three groups without knowing which list was submitted from which group. Then the Regents would select a new president, but would not be obligated to pick from the committee recommen- dations. THE CONCERN expressed by MSA members in a motion passed without objection was that students, and faculty members, would not be adequately represented by this process. MSA member Julie Greene said the Regents could develop their own private list, and said "nobody's going to have accest" to it. 0 primary winner Colb urn called * By MICHAEL ARKUSH Although the official tallies won't be released until this afternoon, it now ap- pears certain that University Speech professor C. William Colburn has narrowly defeated City Councilman Ronald Trowbridge (Fourth Ward) to win the Republican primary for the 18th district's State Senate seat. The victory follows a week-long recount, initiated by Colburn, after he appeared to have lost the August 8 primary by one vote to Trowbridge. THE RECOUNT officially concluded yesterday but Washtenaw County Board of Canvassers had still not com- pleted all the tabulations. With Colburn holding a six vote lead and the canvassers reporting no irregularities with the electronic devices in the punch-cards, it is expec- ted the final figures will indicate a Colburn triumph. The State Board of Canvassers will meet this afternoon to certify the of- ficial winner. COLBURN, WHO conceded defeat 4f- ter the primary's initial results showed him trailing Trowbridge by nine votes, said he believes he has won and is already gearing his strategy toward-the November election against Democrat Ed Pierce. "It looks like I've won it. For awhile the whole recount process seemed to have drained me emotionally but - now,' I'm excited and ready for a tough cam-. paign with Ed Pierce," said Colburn. Colburn said he will organize a full- scale advertising campaign to, over- come the long campaign delay, resulting from the recount. Lawyers assigned to write tenants' book By JUDY RAKOWSKY With Mayor Louis Belcher's comple- tion of the appointment of authors for the tenant's rights booklet Monday night, the six lawyers and City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw can now proceed to prepare the document. According to mandate, the booklet is supposed to be completed three weeks from Monday. The project is the result of an amen- dment to the City Charter which the voters passed by a wide margin in April. The only involvement required of Jonathon Rose and Paul Teich who both work for Student Legal Services; and Donald Greenspon, former attorney for the Ann Arbor Tenant's Union. The landlord advocate attorneys, who were appointed Monday night, are Dwaine Lighthammer, attorney for Campus Management Co.; Michael, Forsyth, a private attorney who represents landlords; and Graydon Ellis, a lawyer who deals with real estate. In April, the Michigan Landlords " Al betw Books empo' eD health won't muniz Page2 * FF a thir tribut merci plane] least1 2. * N winsl return suspected By AMY SALTZMAN Staff members at the Center for Forensic Psychiatry in Ypsilanti had a "strong inkling" before Friday night's attempted escape by nine patients that the incident was going to occur, accor- ding to a union representative for the Forensic aid association, but were prevented from acting because of existing state Department of Mental Health policy. "We had a good idea that the escape was going to take place," said the union spokesman. "One patient was bragging about how he was going to lock a guard up, but we couldn't do anything about' it." THE STATE'S seclusion policy, allows a patient to be confined only if he is severely agitated, The regulation covers mentally ill and criminally in- sane patients. "All the patients are being treated like they are mentally ill, but it just isn't so," explained the spokesman. breakout "THERE WAS A very deep suspicion that something was not right and a strong feeling that a conspiracy was underway," according to Center Direc- tor William Meyer. "One patient was trying to get patients involved in that sort of thing for a very long time - probably a year." Meyer contends, however, that preventive action could have been taken if there was concrete evidence of a planned escape. "We would have needed something more than mere suspicion to put them in seclusion." After guards had picketed the Yp- silanti State Hospital Complex where the center is located, Meyer and other administrators decided on Monday to work on exceptions to the current Department of Mental Health policy. AT A MEETING they discussed several other problems which directly contributed to the Friday incident, such as a severe staff shortage and lax as a seveRmp oets mnnnnt Forensic Center staff Colburn "IT'S TOO LATE to sit down and get out all the mailing that would',-be necessary. I'm going to have, to beef up the advertising," he said. Trowbridge, although not officially