PASSING UP See editorial page Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom hti1Q SEPTEMBER SHOWERS lligh-750 Low-400 See Today for details Vol. LXXXX, No. 17 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 25, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement Council approves city police contract By PATRICIA HAGEN Ann Arbor City Council unanimously approved a new two-year contract last night with the city's 117 police officers. After three months of negotiations 'a contract was ratified by the Ann Arbor , ,Police Officers Association Sept. 14. THE POLICE officers' previous con- tract expired June 30, but the negotiators did not reach agreement on wage increases and a vacation schedule plan until two weeks ago. The new contract provides for four per cent increases in the wage package every six months, a total of 16 per cent over the two year contract. - Despite a developer's deadline to ap- ply for federal subsidy, Council refused to approve a site plan for a 200-unit senior citizen's apartment building. RESOLUTIONS approving plans for the 11-story Cranbrook Towers project in the propsed Cranbrook Villge sub- division were tabled indefinitely. Unless Council approves the plans by Friday the development firm will miss the opportunity to apply for a subsidy from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). These resolutions and resolutions for several other developments on the city's South Side are pending further discussion of a moratorium on planning proposed by Councilman David Fisher (R-4th Ward) and Edward Hood (R-4th Wardl). THE MORATORIUM resolution was pulled from last week's agenda and the councilmen said they plan to present aa new proposal to council by the Oct. 8 Meeting. City planning director Martin Overhiser said he plans to meet with Fisher and Hood to discuss revisions in the city's zoning ordinance and the South Area Development Plan. Hood's motion to table the sub- division agreement passed 7-3 with three Democractic Council members present voting against it. HEW: Male Miehi amua discrmim ates By TOM MIRGA The Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) has found the University in violation of Title IX- of the Civil Rights Code for providing substantial assistance to The Tribe of Michigamua - a 78-year-old, secret, all-male senior society. The decision, reachedlast Thursday, ends three years of waiting for ex- University students - Amy Blumen- thal and Anita Tanay - who filed their suit on September 24, 1976. IT ALSO leaves the future of the society, whose members have included ex-president Gerald Ford and late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy, in doubt. Blumenthal and Tanay's suit alleged that Michigamua members received preferential treatment from the University without being a properly recognized student organization. Under{ Title IX, the University cannot provide significant assistance to student groups which discriminate on the basis of sex. The society convenes several times each month on the top floor of the Michigan Union tower to hold a sometimes playful, sometimes serious meeting with an American Indian for- mat. It has done so since 1932, when the lease to the room was donated to them by University football legend -Fielding Yost. MICHIGAMUA HAS also used Radrick Farms, a University-owned golf course, in the past for annual "pow- wows" where "food was brought out in University trucks, using University gas, and was cooked by University cooks" according to Blumenthal. Both Blumenthal and Tanay were unaware of the decision when asked for comment last night, but neither was surprised at the outcome. . I was doubtful for awhile," Tanay said. "After we filed the initial papers, I sort of assumed it was something HEW would ignore. I'm not surprised at the decision because it was a pretty obvious case of sex discrimination." "THERE'S A touch of absurdity to the whole thing," said Blumenthal. "If it takes three years for HEW to in- vestigate a fairly minor violation of Title IX like this, think how longy any major changes will take." Any major changes with regard to Michigamua are still off in the futuft. The HEW decision, while finding the University guilty of sex discrimination, gave no outline for an appropriate remedy. "I don't know if the University will See HEW, Page 7 THE POWER CENTER'Ssoutth side will be expanded soon. Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG B uild ings g nwlook's Power exp ands Gra d revamped By JULIE ENGEBRECHT By BETH PERSKY Eight years after its dedication, the Power Center for the Performing Arts is finally going to be completed. Sometime within the next year, ground will be broken for a proposed addition to the auditorium. The addition will include more rehearsal space, as well as costume and scenery shops originally deleted from the design because of a lack of funds. UNIVERSITY Regent Emeritus Eugene Power and his family gave $3 million of the $3.5 million used to complete the 1,420-seat structure completed in 1971. , The Powers' gift, along with funds from other Univer- sity sources, will make the addition possible. The new facility, which will be built between the existing building on Huron and Glen/Fletcher Streets and its current parking structure, has an estimated cost of $2 million. GALAN SAID the additional space would ultimately See CONSTRUCTION, Page 5 There's good news for those who spend Sunday after- noons searching for library seats. The Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library is being revam- ped to include an expanded study area and a new student lounge. The changes are scheduled to be completed by Winter term. THE STUDY AREA will be on the second floor, which now houses the current periodicals collection. That area will be redone to include the periodical holdings for the en- tire University library system, on one side of a partition, and the expanded study area on the other side. A room on the first floor, which is currently occupied by library staff, will be transformed into the new student lounge. Vending machines, now located on third floor, will be included in the new lounge, and smoking will be prohibited. Students will have 200 additional places to sit when the See EXPANSION, Page 5 DNR- -State lax on industrial polluters FOUR JETS DOWNED: Sy riai From AP, UPI and Reuter BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syrian jet fighters and U.S.-made Israeli F-15s dueled south of Beirut yesterday in the biggest air battle over Lebanon in three months. Four Syrian Soviet-made MiGs were downed, both sides said, and Syria claimed two Israeli jets were "hit." An, official announcement in Damascus said Syria had lost four air- craft and shot down two Israeli fighters in an air battle over the coastal town of Damour, south of Beirut. THE DOGFIGHT occurred just flours before Secretary of State Cyrus Vance made a new appeal before the U.N. General Assembly in New York to end Vance.' Soviet 1 Israeli the "cycle of violence" in Lebanon. He disclosed the United States had laun- ched a diplomatic initiative to restore peace in Lebanon, but gave no details. In Washington, State Department spokesman Thomas Reston, called the air clash a "dangerous development" and appealed on all sides to exercise restraint. Syria said its MiG-21s scrambled to intercept the Israeli warplanes after the Israelis attacked civilian camps - presumably Palestinian. - in the Damour area 10 miles south of Beirut. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said its jets, including the F-15, America's most sophisticated fighter,; trOODS In 1ftePs were on a reconnaissance mission over Palestinian guerrilla bases.I THE iSRAELI jets first drew ground fire from Palestinian and Lebanese lef- tist gunners as they roared over Beirut International Airport and the nearby Sabra camp, headquarters of Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leader Yasser Arafat. Meanwhile, the Rev. Jesse Jackson began a tour of Israel and Arab states yesterday with a call on Israel to relieve the United States of its com- mitment not to negotiate with the PLO. "If America is free to negotiate, then she can break the 'chicken-or-the-egg' syndrome - which (recognition) will come first," the Chicago-based black leader told a press conference at Ben Gurion Airport. "WE KNOW THAT the PLO, in fact, recognizes Israel's right to exist but, in fact, does not want to declare that until there is some evidence that there is a regard for the PLO's urge for self- determination and a homeland. On the other hand, Israel does not want to recognize the PLO until it says Israel has a right to exist. "Neither side apparently has the ability to break out of the cycle. That is precisely whey America must be. free ... to reconcil the positions for the benefit of both," he said. The Israelis apparently were not touched by the Syrian anti-aircraft barrage, but the Syrian planes met them as the Israelis flew east over the duel mountains into the Bekaa Valley, Lebanese government sources said.' THE PLANES headed back west and the dogfight erupted over the foothills near the airport, the sources said. Both sides reported four Syrian jets went down. Lebanese government sources said two crashed in flames near the airport, and their pilots were seen See JETS, Page 7 From AP and UPI LANSING-Despite stringent new laws regulating toxic wastes and the collection of millions of dollars in penalties, Michigan's environmental watchdogs are under fire for failing to get tough with industrial polluters. As one state environmental specialist put it, Michigan, a state of 166 chemical plants and 1,350 landfills, "is a god- damn mess." THE DEPARTMENT of Natural Resources has identified 400 sites holding potentially dangerous chemicals and the state attorney general's office now has at least 200, pollution suits in court, records show. Also yesterday, health officials declared it is safe to swim in Muskegon County's White Lake and eat fish native to its waters. The pronouncement, released by the state Public Health Department, was the result of a meeting of represen- tatives of that agency, the Muskegon County Health Department and the state Department of Natural Resour- ces. CONCERNS ABOUT the lake were triggered by the discharge of chemicals from the nearby Hooker Chemical Co. and the leakage of toxic substances from drums on the Hooker plan site near Montague. State health officials said a fish con- sumption advisory for the lake is not warranted because chemical analyses have failed to show the presence of any contaminant at levels high enough to present a hazard. Michigan firms discharge nearly 144 potentially dangerous chemicals and 82 pesticides. And in 1977, the state collec- ted nerly $7 million in penalties from firms the Department of Natural See STATE, Page 10 Fond a stops at 3 Mile Island on 50-city anti-nuclear tour Cuba international threat From UPI and AP UNITED NATIONS-Secretary of State Cyrus Vance warned the United Nations yesterday that the dispute over Soviet troops in Cuba and the inter-- national spread of nuclear weapons could destroy much of the progress made in solving world-problems. There was no immediate indication of whether the superpowers had worked out ati acceptable solution to the issue which has dimmed hopes for Senate ratification of the SALT II nuclear ar- ms limitation treaty. Vance's address to the 34th General Assembly was a generally optimistic progress report on the state of the world as seen from Washington, but he in- cluded several somber warnings. Vance said disarmament talks have now entered "the broadest agenda in history," and he noted "North and South have made progress on financial trade and commodity issues. . . expan- ded trade opportunities have been opened.' MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - After speaking Sun- day in New York at the largest nuclear rally ever held, activist actress Jane Fonda and her husband Tom Hayden stopped here yesterday on their 50-city anti-nuclear tour. "It's very moving for me to be here," said Fonda, whose film The China Syndrome eerily foreshadowed the accident that crippled Three Mile Island last March. "I doubt there's anywhere where people have been made to feel so expendable. That must have been a very shattering experience," she told a group of plant neighbors on a street corner across the Susquehanna River from the facility. LIKE THE UNSEEN nuclear particles that pep- pered this rural town of 10,000 persons six months ago, the lingering anxiety of Three Mile Island's neighbors is hard to measure. Its level of contamination varies from heavy to non- existent. "As long as the plant is there, people in the area will think about the accident constantly," said Mayor Robert Reid, a teacher at Middletown Area High School and tile father of three children. "IF THE plant would be there for the next 100 years, I think fear is going to be passed down from generation to generation. History is just not going to- allow the people to forget about that acident," Reid added. Last March 28, a series of mechanical malfunctions and human errors at Three Miles Island resulted in leaks of radioactive material when uranium in the reactor overheated. For now, economics keeps the accident from local obscurity. Weekend tourists, bent on photographing the plant's twin cooling towers, often park their cars on the rutted lawns of furious residents and line guardrails along the narrow asphalt highway that winds past the plant. 4 9a ti d, b. Qe hoQ E x {gouge T f brand new "Today" logo. Staff artist Steven Cole designed the squirrel seven years ago, proclaiming that "The squirrel is the most important animal on campus, except maybe for the students." We still agree, but figure our little friend may prefer to live his last days nestled deep in maple leaves rather than gripping the telescope until he drops. Also, as you've noticed, this column has moved to the front page. Now, you won't have to fumble to Page Three for the unpredictable tidbits we feed you every morning. [ Liquor and love A 'swamp-roots' group Ann Arbor tends to be a hotbed for revolutionary groups, that's the way it is in a big-time university town. The newest group of revolutionaries to hit the campus is the Alligator Liberation Army (ALA), which has formed in response to the growing numbers of alligator shirts, shoes, and other items which exploit the innocent reptile. Among the ALA's demands: " Liberation of alligators from shirts on campus. " Wally Gator cartoons before all student sponsored sian. If you are expecting to graduate in 1980, the yearbook people want you to know that pictures are now being taken for next year's 'Ensian. For an appointment, stop by the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard, during business hours, or call 764-0561 between 6 and 9 p.m., on weekdays. On the inside A look at Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo's ad- ministration and the upcoming mayoral race there is on the i I I