Council con siders garbage pick-up proposals BY PATRICIA HAGEN In the first of a series of working sessions called to develop a solid waste management plan for Ann Arbor, City Council last night considered the possibility of contracting with a private firm for refuse collection. But Council also will consider a recommen- dation that the city continue to provide residential and commercial garbage pick-up in January. ACCORDING TO a consultant's report, which compares the cost of the city's present residential pick-up service to the cost of a contracting ser- vice, the city's solid waste service for homes would cost about 50 per cent less than a private contractor would charge. "We're doing it cheaper than contractors in other cities," Solid Waste Department Director Ulysses Ford told Council. A contractor would charge about $3.50 per stop per month, according to the consultant's report. The city currently services 20,164 weekly stops for $2.45 per stop per month. COUNCIL ALSO considered buying a larger collection of trucks for commercial service last night. Mayor Louis Belcher said he would in- troduce a resolution to make the purchase. Ford said if the new trucks are purchased over a five-year period, the cost of the new vehicles and refuse containers would be offset by more labor- efficient, faster, and safer service. The new trucks being considered require only one operator while three operators man the trucks being used now. COMMERCIAL service customers would be required to replace their present garbage con- tainers with larger dumpsters especi for the new front-loading vehicles. C other communities and the Univers use this type of vehicle. Thernext council working session long range solid waste managerr scheduled for Jan. 28, a week Sprenkel; the new city administrator, Sprenkel is considered an expert ir management and council plans to arrival before taking any major step. Sprenkel's appointment to the ci ministrative post was formally appro cil last night. DURING FUTURE sessions, a vo trash shredding facility, curbside pie and an expanded recycling progr discussed. The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 11, 1979-Page 3 ally designed Mayor Belcher said suggestions from Recycle ontractors in Ann Arbor, the Ecology Center, and the city's ity currently solid Waste Department would be considered in the development of a solid waste management to discuss a plan. lent plan is Council also discussed salary guidelines for city after Terry executives. Policies for establishing minimum takes office. and maximum salaries and merit-based pay in- solid waste creases were debated. wait for his DURING THE audience participation portion of ity's top ad- the meeting, a University student complained that )ved by coun- her car had been towed from Oakland St. at her ter-approved expense last Thursday. ckup service Jo Lynn Connell said many cars were towed am will be because residents were not aware that the street was scheduled for cleaning by the city that day. *I AA TA OFFICIALS, RIDERS SATISFIED: A2 transit changes work Power to conclude (Continued from Page 1) the fares. John Weir, a member of the AATA Advisory Council that represented citizens' feelings about the changes as they were being decided,s aid he is satisfied with the new DAR service. "I use it every day," he said. Weir added, "Generally, the (Dial-A- Ride) service is so similar to what it was before, I don't think it was that significant a change." He said the only difference is a good one: "They (DAR vehicles) seem a little more available is all." WEIR ALSO said he does not know of anyone on the Advisory Council who is disappointed with the service changes. One young bus rider, Nancy, said she uses the bus mainly to get to, Briar- wood. Of the new system she said, "It's great ... It's a lot better now. A daily rider said that she used to use DAR every day. Now, however, she uses the Packard fixed route bus. "It's, been pretty prompt ... they've been here every day so far." She said the only problem she's had with .the new system is that "I don't have the convenience of (service) to the door. I have to walk every day." A driver on the Packard route said of the new routes, "I think they're good. I think they're really nice." Sam off ... indications positive U' Towers attracts international students (Continued from Page 1) hold hurried lobby conversations in Japanese, Spanish and broken English as piped-in American rock music wafts softly in the background. "During the past six years, we've had a big propor- tion" of ELI (English Language Institute) students living at the 'U' Towers, said ELI instructor George Luther. Foreign students must first study English in- tensively at the Institute before they can take University classes in other fields. Luther said many ELI students find out about 'U' Towers in class where pamphlets advertising the building are distributed. "SOME (ELI students) are rolling in money," said ELI Director of Student Services Robert Fraser. "Some stay at the Michigan League or the Bell Tower Hotel. We had one who stayed at Campus Inn with his family for an entire course." But those foreign students who are less well off tend to end up at 'U' Towers, partly because of past residents, according to Fraser. "It's mostly done by word of mouth," he explained. "Very few of our students come here without knowing a friend or brother or someone who has lived at 'U' Towers." Fraser also cited the building's proximity to ELI, which is just under the footbridge connecting the Hill area to Central campus, as another reason for its popularity. Fraser estimates that about 50 of the in- stitute's 200 students live in 'U' Towers from Septem- ber to April. "I WENT#AO the Student Activities Building in search of housing," said Victor Orantes, a 'UJ Towers resident from Mexico. "Later I found out about this place from friends and moved here."' Orantes, a graduate of Mexico City's National Polytechnic Institute, is now working on a master's degree in Construction Engineering. Last summer, he lived in Couzens Hall but this fall, he and Jose Sikaffy, from Laceiba, Honduras were paired with two American transfer students in 'U' Towers. "The 'U' dorms are supposed to be cheapest and this ('U' Towers) is about the same," said Orantes. BUT HIS AMERICAN roommate Greg Economou 'It's mostly done by word of mouth. Very few of our students come here without knowing a friend or brother or someone who has lived at 'U' Towers.' -Robert Fraser, student services director of the English Language Institute. said he is less than pleased to be one of cour room- mates collectively paying $443 a month for the cram- ped apartment. Ron Pace, the fourth roommate, who transferred to the University this term, agreed ad- ding, "this is the last place in town you can get." In fact, many foreign students who arrive on cam- pus in midsummer end up at 'U' Towers simply because it is one of the few places with vacancies af- ter Ann Arbor's annual midwinter housing scramble. "THey (foreign students) really can't afford to make separate trips (to this country') for housing," said Carol Wallace of the University's Off-Campus Housing Office. LIKE MANY of his American colleagues, Sikaffy was hardly pleased with the communal bathrooms, small rooms, and general rowdiness he said he en- countered while living in a dorm last summer. "Here it's more quiet," he said. The 'U' Toweres management also makes it easy for students who intend to remain for a short time, in contrast to most Ann Arbor landlords who require 12- month leases. Manager John Ladd explains that he "cooperates with ELI" especially in writing short- term contracts during the summer - even for as lit- tle as eight weeks, the length of one ELI course. During the regular school year, 'U' Tower management will release students from their con- tracts if they are leaving the University. IN ADDITION, the building management operates a roommate matching service, allowing students who arrive in the country without knowing other students an opportunity to pair up and divide the rent with other students who have already leased space in 'U' Towers. And the international atmosphere of the towering apartment complex spreads to the local businesses which surround the building. Since it caters to their daily needs, Village Corners, the store just across the street from 'U' Towers, is perhaps most familiar with the tastes, and customs of the foreign students. Village Corner manager Miriam Shey recalled the time a Japanese student came into the store asking for "ton." After a half-hour of frustrated repetitions, the store's on-duty staff finally was able to determine that the student simply wanted tuna fish. term with By JULIE ENGEBRECHT University Regent Sarah Power (D- Ann Arbor) will preside over her last meeting of the U.S. National Com- mission for the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) tomorrow through Friday at the University of Georgia in Athens. Power has chaired the commission - a creation of the U.S. State Department - for almost three and a half years. HER WORK on UN-related issues has been one of Power's major activities in addition to serving as a University Regent. The focus of the annual U.S. National Commission meeting will be on issues concerning communications. Com- munications Department Chairman Peter Clarke and Communications Prof. Charles Eisendrath will par- ticipate in the conference. Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk will deliver the keynote address. Power has a long history of in- volvement in politics and civic ac- tivities. And although she will be leaving a time-consuming post as chair of the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, Power won't commit herself on further political aspirations. She is also currently a member of the executive committee of the Carter- Mondale Finance Committee for Michigan. MEDIA-RELATED issues have been the focus of UNESCO during most of Power's term as chair of the Com- mission. As a U.S. delegate to the UNESCO General Conference in 1976 and 1978, Power successfully helped fight a declaration on the uses of the UNESCO media. The type of "sensitive and highly- charged" issues which must be dealt with in UNESCO require "a very subtle and careful and complex kind of diplomacy," Power said in an October interview. Power said yesterday that other issues UNESCO may have to face in the future are the role of the artist in society and the sometimes- controversial issue of sports com- petition. The UNESCO commission is a 100- member advisory body appointed by the Secretary of State, and serves as a liaison between the government, UNESCO, and the American public. UONE K Compromise Chrysler aid bill proposed Noreste, Admissiolns January '80 and August '80 appli- cants. 4-year fully recognized and established Mexican Medical School, with several hundred American students enrolled. Use English language textbooks and exams in English. School com- bines quality education, small classes, experienced teachers, modern facilities. nivers idad Del Noreste 120 East 41 S.. .NY, NY 10017 (212) 594-6589 or 232-3734 Ulrich's carries a complete selection of fine writing instruments By SH EAFFER From Reuter WASHINGTON - A group of senators and congressmen yesterday proposed a compromise Chrysler aid bill that would eliminate requirements for a wage freeze among employees of the debt-ridden motor corporation. Concluding more than a week of closed door negotiations, the legislators said they would offer their 3.3 billion dollar aid package as a substitute for conflicting bills in the Senate and House of Representatives. THE OBJECTIVE was to break a political stalemate and get the Chrysler aid issue decided before Congress takes a month-long, year-end recess - and before Chrysler, the 10th-ranked U.S. Manufacturing firm goes bankrupt. ,As described by both House and Senate spokesmen, the compromise package would contain the following blend of elements taken from an ad- ministration bill, which was approved by a House committee, and a much stricter bill awaiting Senate action: " Require Chrysler to raise 1.43 billion dollars in financing from various private creditors as a condition for ob- taining federal loan guarantees. That provision is identical to the Senate bill requirement. " In addition to that amount, require the United Auto Workers union to provide Chrysler 400 million dollars worth of financial assistance, raised in any manner the union saw fit and not necessarily via a wage freeze. The Senate bill would require a three-year pay freeze for all Chrysler employees, a move calculated to save the company 1.32 billion dollars. Once those conditions are met, authorize the government to extend Chrysler 1.5 billion dollars in loan guarantees. The Senate bill would trim that amount to 1.25 billion dollars. That would leave the union to raise only another 200 million dollars, which it might well achieve without a freeze. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University r I Two more contractf Reye' By DAVE MEYER With Wire Service Reports Two more children suffering from Reye's Syndrome, a rare and often fatal disease, were admitted yesterday to Mott Children's Hospital, bringing the total number of cases reported this fall to seven. A hospital spokesperson said an 11- year-old Midland boy and a five-year- old girl from Allen Park, were the latest victims of the non-contagious disease. Doctors say that Reye's Syndrome, which affects children and young adults recovering from viral infections, in- cluding the measles and the flu, presently has no definite cure. i Syndrome The key symptoms of the disease, fir- st reported in 1974, are severe vomiting, behavioral and mental changes such as delerium, exceptional drowsiness or abnormal anger. Of the five earlier cases this fall, one child died, two remain hospitalized and two have recovered and gone home. ! I~GS l Q FILMS F Cinema Guild-The Shop Around the Corner, 7,9:05 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. PERFORMANCES F Dept. of Dance-Student Comp. Showing, 3 p.m., Dance Bldg., Studio A. WVGR/WUOM-The University Symphony Orch. Live from Hill Aud., 8 p.m., 91.7 FM. School of Music-U-M Choir and Symphony Orch., 8p.m., Hill Aud. F MEETINGS a s a Rackham Student Government Council meeting, 7:30 p.,., Rackham Executive Board Room. LECTURE Anyone interested in working for the Kennedy for President Committee over winter break in Iowa or New Hampshire CALL Marc Abrams-764-2014 Paid for by Marc Abrams, Steve Foley and Ken Jokabowski Authorized by Kennedy For President Committee, Washington, D.C. JAM SESSION This TUESDAY NIGHT at Rick's Sponsored by jzz eesdpse -All Jazz artists and instrumentalists Put a Sharp in someone's stocking. We carry the full line, including the business calculators and the new Direct Formula Entry Scientifics with Safe Guard memory. We understand what we sell, so we can assist you in selecting the right calculator. 4 TTAI'-IZAT.T TT ti .,A it Trwn Pof _1nquI RiQar R n0 mu Rm vi19A