The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 7, 1979-Page 9-B Council may approve sale of city cable TV to Denver firm By SARA ANSPACH Ann Arbor City Council will vote Monday night on whether to approve a franchise agreement to sell the city's bankrupt cable television system to a Denver-based firm. If its purchase bid is approved, Daniels and Associates, Inc. told Coun- cil it would spend about $5 million to expand the network and pick up debts owed by Ann Arbor Cablevision, the system's current operator. COUNCIL TABLED the vote at last month's meeting because some mem- bers wanted to study. last-minute technical revisions in the resolution, according to Council member Louis Senunas (R-Third Ward). Under the agreement, Daniels and Associates, Inc. would spend ap- proximately $2,700,000 to upgrade the system and pay about $4.5 million in Cablevision's debts, including $322,000 the firm owes the city in back taxes. Cablevision is in the midst of bankrup- tcy proceedings in Los Angeles. Specifically, the plan offered by Daniels and Associates Inc. includes: " expanding service to 2,500 more homes; " increasing the number of channels from 26 to 34; " constructing an earth-station satellite receiver; * expanding reception to include a station from Chicago and Atlanta; " adding special sports coverage from Madison Square Garden; and " adding a 24-hour news channel. Democratic Council members and David Fisher (R-Fourth Ward) voted against the franchise agreement last month, objecting to the fact that the plan does not include warning systems for tornadoes, fire, or burglary. IF THE agreement is approved, the sale of the system would not be closed until April 1, 1980, said Charlene Ladd, director of the city's Cablecasting Commission. Last June Council approved revisions in the city's cable television ordinance which were crucial to the sale of the financially troubled system. The revised ordinance was in part written by Daniels and Associates, Inc. and in- cludes changes which allow the buyer to set its own subscription rates and reduce the franchise fee. Council first rejected the ordinance revision last May because some mem- bers were concerned the city would be giving away a valuable public utility without retaining some right to regulate the system and rates. Daniels and Associates, Inc. originally backed out of the deal when the ordinance revision was defeated in May, but regained interest when the revisions were approved one month later. Kurt Waldheim, former foreign minister of Austria, is the fourth Secretary-General of the United Nations. His predecessors were Trygve Lie of Norway, Dag Hammarskjold of Sweden, and U Thant of Burma. I Outreach By SHELLEY WOLSON While plans approved last May called for less student involvement in Project Outreach (Psychology 201), a summer restructuring of the plans will keep student participation at last year's level, an Outreach administrator said Wednesday. According to Outreach Ad- ministrative Director Georgie Ferris, the original outline of changes passed by the LSA Executive Committee calling for less student supervision was revised this summer. The plan was changed after Outreach Faculty Direc- tor Bob Pachella consulted with LSA Dean John Knott about the revisions. "WE ABIDED by the LSA Executive Committee's rulings, but also main- tained our structure, which put studen- ts in leadership roles," Ferris said. Knott said he felt the changes Pachella was working out "met the spirit of the Executive Committee's ob- jections to the program. I felt that he was making a serious effort to develop to keep stu new ideas and enlist faculty input into the program, meeting the spirit of the College's recommendations." Project Outreach is a program which combines community service with learning. FERRIS EXPLAINED that Outreach used to be divided into 36 different projects with a different setting for each project. "Now Outreach has been restructured into 11 projects with several settings listed under each one," Ferris said. The administrator also said the department hired 11 graduate students who are responsible for grading the students taking the course and for providing topics for a weekly lecture series. The final changes altered the standard format of the course to: four hours spent in the field placement set- ting; one hour in group discussion; and one hour in lecture, all of which counts for two credits. The credit allowed for Outreach has been reduced from 12 to six hours and dent help 1 students will only be allowed to repeat projects which require a commitment of more than one semester. In addition, 11 faculty members have been recruited for the program with one assigned to each project. All are Psychology Department members and will grade the student coordinators. They will also be providing the bulk of the lecture material, Ferris said. Another change in the program is that any new settings proposed for projects must go through a psychology college board for approval. Ferris said everyone was excited about the changes in Outreach and were happy about the addition of the psychology professors to the program. "Now we have experts to help us out in dealing with academic issues. "The Committee's ruling made the Psych. Department become aware of academic issues and was a stepping stone to involving them. Now that they're involved, we're really happy that it happened," said Ferris. -I, RESEARCHERS DISCOVER NEW COMPOUND: Chemical could improve memory .i ..-' ,- ''--' " i -., y , . © OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Creighton University researchers say they have discovered an organic chemical com- pound which apparently improves memory and intellectual performance that normally deteriorate with aging. Dr. Nikolaus Hansl, associate professor of medical chemistry and a~ menber of the team of scientists, said the compound, known as PRL-8-53, counters the destruction of certain chemical pathways in the brain by "making up the slack chemically." IN A CLINICAL study at Creighton, Hansl said, 58 college students perfor- med better on intellectual tasks when they were given the compound, which he described as similar to an amino acid. Americans understating income, IRS .hief says ' WASHINGTON (AP) - The head of :ohe Internal Revenue Service (IRS) ays Americans are understating their income by as much as $135 billion and that the government is losing as much as $35 billion a year in taxes as a result. Jerome Kurtz told a House subcom- mittee Wednesday that an IRS study of 4976 income indicated that revenues collected through legal activities by ;Americans but not reported on income tax returns totalled somewhere bet- ween $75 billion and $100 billion. INADDITION, he estimated that :omewhere between $25 billion and $35 illion was earned through illegal ac- ivities such as narcotics, illegal gam- bling and prostitution but was not reported to the government. Wednesday's appearance was the fir- st by any IRS officer before a eCongressional committee since the agency made the data available last eek. Kurtz presented little material which bad not already been released. Much of his time was spent in explaining how the data was accumulated and how the estimates were made. AND HIS TESTIMONY at times was so technical that he aroused the ire of tRep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D-N.Y.), the .;ead of the House Government Affairs subcommittee on commerce, consumer :and monetary affairs. k Rosenthal interrupted Kurtz' prepared testimony when the Com- missioner said, "We are trying to im- prove our methodology for selecting non-filer cases by developing a predictive model to detect non-filers." "At some point I hope you will tell us .what that means, that you will put it in plain English," replied Rosenthal. "YOU KNOW, we've just come back from meeting with our constituents. The public is just furious with all of us and then we come back and listen to you talking about TCMP (the acronym used by Kurtz for the Taxpayer Compliance Measurement Program). "Go easy so we can tell our people what it means," Rosenthal said. Kurtz replied that he thought he had been clear but added with a laugh that ;maybe "I've been working in the government too long." THE IRS STUDY found that 97 per cent or 98 per cent of the wages and salaries earned by Americans was i / He said the effect of the compound lasted about seven hours, and added that even after the effect faded, memory was better. "Experiences from the past that were fading were recalled better," with no detectable side effects, he said. HANSL SAID the compound could help "the 'geriatric population - anyone over 30 - such as the elderly man who forgets his glasses or loses a thought in mid-sentence. I would like to make them more self-sufficient." Another use, he said, could aid those in intellectual stress situations, such as a businessman or student to perform tasks better." HE SAID THE research team is working on a related compound which could produce even better results. Hansl, who has been involved in the research project for more than 15 years, said the chemical is one of a group of compounds that were studied in the search for a new tranquilizer that would not slow down intellectual fun- ctions. Although the field of memory resear- ch has been studied for many years, Hansl said, up to now, there has been "no yardstick" to compare the effects on man. The study was presented to the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. Mem- bers of the research team include Dr. Beverly Mead, professor of Psychiatry, and Hansl's wife, Adele, who has degrees in pharmacy and psychology. cords & denim bells, now S1299 BWO 0UR \boot cut, ,VaiHts ours: mon-fri 10-5:30, thur-sat 'til 8pm "i MW