Subscribe to the Daily Call 764- 0558 PERSPIRY .NIXONoLAIE 4 Ui4IQHgh-82* editorial page See Today for details Vol. LXXXX, No. 2 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 7, 1979 Free Issue Thirty Pages plus Supplement SCHOOL'S IN SESSION! g Students anticipate new experiences By MARION HALBERG returning students whose whereabouts remain unknown. The University opens for business today, ending a week But their roommates, unconcerned, say they expect the of waiting when everything seemed possible. late-comers "any day now. The school year seems as clean as a new bulletin board every fall when students move and unpack, shop and plan fr a new year. "I WANT TO get'A's in all my classes," said Bryan Pfeif- fer, a Literary College senior from Oak Park, "and do good 'on ny honors thesis. b e "And I want to learn how to delay a frisbee with the op I can wat. Ive b waiting Vosite spin," he added.' The lines can be long, drop-adding can be a trial, and un- frs. packing is always a chore. But during the week before the reshwoman first lectures are delivered and the first notes taken, it's lard tobe pessimistic, though some manage. Li - ONE FIRST YEAR LSA student buying textbooks in L Gr be Ulrich's was anxious. "I'm scared. I might not do too good," she admitted. "I'm really psyched," said Denise Liftin, a Natural Looking up at South Quad from Monroe Street, freshman Resources sophomore. "It's about time it started again. It's John Yusko from Warren thought his new home looked' good to get away from home and being able to do exactly livable. "It's big, kind of run down. But it's fun." what you want," Liftin said. Yusko whnts a spot on the baseball team. "I've been Junior Marty Garber from Southfield set his sights playingalot duringthe week," he said. slightly lower. paigaltdrn h ek"h ad "I'M LOOKING forward to meeting a lot of freshmen Freshwoman Linda Garabelli arrived at Markley on girls, to getting a jazz band together, and getting my Monday, more than ready for today's classes. snglasses fixed," Garber said. "I can't wait," she said. "I've been waiting for it for 12 Some students began returning to campus as early as two years." Meeks ago, and have been searching for jobs, doing repairs GARABELLI SAID her high spirits were dampened only on their houses or apartments, and frequenting the bars. by a long wait in line for football tickets. - " But the major influx came with the Labor Day weekend Nursing sophomore Barbara Smith was "ready to get anld a steady flow of students, having enlisted their parents back, to meet people, see new friends." is movers, has continued to pour up 1-94 and State St. since. By Thanksgiving, it'll be a different story. But before the THERE ARE EVEN at this late date a good number of assignments and the exams, school looks pretty good. Few spaces remain in. 'U residence halls Talks scheduled In WCC strike By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Washtenaw Community College (WCC) remained closed yesterday as a result of a teachers' strike which began Tuesday. Contract talks between the striking teachers and the college ad- ministration are scheduled to resume at 1 p.m. Monday. Thomas Badoud, state mediator, called the meeting late yesterday af- ternoon. Negotiations between the two sides broke off last Monday. EARLIER, administrators refused to continue negotiations until "tempers cooled", while union officials said they asked that talks continue. "We called the mediator this after noon," Palay said yesterday, "and we asked him to put some pressure on them to see what he could do." The college administration met yesterday afternoon, deciding to proceed with negotiations. THERE WERE also reports yester- day that some University graduate students had been called in by the WCC administration to replace the striking teachers. "I know nothing," David Pollock; assistant to the president 'for Com- munity Relations as WCC, said of the reports. "We may have brought some in to interview for positions." Pollock said college officials originally asked some part-time faculty to teach classes, but they decided to cancel those plans. He added that classes would be suspended until a set- tlement is reached. "WE DO KNOW and have eye wit- nesses that they were running an orien- tation session for scab teachers," said Roger Palay, faculty negotiator. Strikers reported that cars with University parking stickers had been driving through the picket line, carry- ing groups of five or six persons who said they were WCC students. WCC campus security was escorting some of those groups in, the teachers also said. The issues still being negotiated, ac- cording to both sides, are wages and the college's proposal to study a change in its health insurance company without the teachers' involvement. Teachers said they are concerned the college will drop their Blue Cross/Blue Shield coverage and replace it with a- cheaper program. "WE KNOW IT'S expensive," said Shirley Roberts, a spokeswoman for the WCC Education Association, the picketing union, "but it's hard enough See TALKS, Page 7-A .I Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY REUNIONS WITH old friends, and introductions to new ones have been taking place throughout Ann Arbor during the past week. Above, a group of Betsy Barbour residents pose for pictures. By PATRICIA HAGEN While University students have been trying to fit all of their possessions into apaitmient and dormitory rooms this week, Housing Office officials have been juggling to fit more than 9,000 new and returning students into residence halls. The University's dorms are not as overcrowded as in previous years, ac- cording to Associate Director of Housing John Finn. THIRTY-SIX more spaces were created in dormitories by converting some lounges into permanent rooms for male students, Finn said. Unlike last year, there are at least a few vacancies for females in most of the 13 traditional halls. At the start of the 1978 fall term about 50 female students were temporarily housed in lounges, but this fall only a few male graduate students have been -assigned to temporary housing at Baits. Finn said the housing situation is "tight everywhere" but he hopes all of these students will have permanent placements by Monday. According to Finn, the Housing Office always overbooks the residence halls because students who reserved spaces sometimes decide, at the last minute, not to attend the University. Unless they make prior arrangements, student who do not check into dormitories by noon today are considered "no shows," and their rooms are reassigned. SPACES FOR 127.graduate student and students over 21-years-old were created when 91 hotel rooms in the Michigan Union were converted into j student rooms. The renovated rooms are called Cambridge House and are part of West Quad. For the past four or five years more students have applied for spaces in the residence halls than the University could accommodate, Housing Advisor Marlene Mantyk explained. "It is more than likely" that the dor- ms will again be "100 per cent oc- cupied," Mantyk said. Final figures will not be available until the number of no-shows is determined. Students ap- plying now for rooms are being placed as space opens up, Mantyk said. Capacity in the University dor- mitories is 9,179, and "We're probably over that number now," Mantyk said. But, "at this point, we do have spaces." Daily P'hoto by LISA UDELSON LONG LINES are inevitable as 40,000 students converge on campus and prepare for the new school year. Above, students wait patiently to pay for textbooks in the Union Ballroom. _. . ._ . . .. .. .. . . . . .... . . .. . . . ..... . _. .. . . ... .. .... . .. . . . ...... . i ..:.. . . . . . . . . .... i.v . x ..v +v v x .. v w'> b : t ~ h K :~ .,>... '-. ..? a,,. ...r. , ...~. . . ....,+, mo . , . .'.:.. . ... .....,,.................... . . .>.. . . . . . . . . .-. ''^ s~s~u nu:' i a> ....... aa rfridayv SOVIET PRESENCE STIRS SENATORS: Cuban issue may delay SALT WASHINGTON (AP)-Majority Leader Robert Byrd said yesterday he may delay Senate floor debate on the SALT II treaty until December or longer to give U.S. diplomats time to resolve the controversy over the presence of Soviet combat troops in Cuba. Byrd (D-W.Va.) said the treaty is too important to be considered in an at- miosphere colored by a side debate over Cuba. The senator said he has told P~resident Carter it is highly desirable that the issue be resolved quickly. BYRD COMMENTED in an effort to head off a Senate vote directing that no action be taken on the strategic arms limitation treaty until the Cuban matter is resolved. Sen. Robert Dole (R-Kan.) said he will introduce legislation suspending eohsideration of the pact until Carter reports either that all Soviet combat troops have been removed from Cuba or that they pose no threat to the United States or its allies. Byrd said the Dole resolution would undercut the Senate Foreign Relations Committee which is holding hearings gn SALT II and would undermine his own authority. "LET'S GIVE THE administration some time," Byrd said. "Let's not push to put the Senate in ,a straightjacket." The target date for bringing the treaty to the Senate floor has been Oct. 1, but Byrd said there is no reason it can't be considered later. "Let's give diplomacy a chance to work," he said. "It. may work out all right." Dole said consideration of a treaty hailed as a step to improve relations between the two superpowers should be halted "while the other side is obviously digging in deeper against our in- terests." Dole said he will not press for im- mediate action on his resolution. Earlier, a former Defense Intelligen- ce Agency chief, disagreeing with the Carter administration, said he knows of "absolutely no evidence" that Soviet combat troops were stationed in Cuba in the mid or early 1970s. "IF THEY WERE there we sure missed them, and we covered Cuba very well," retired Army Lt. Gen. Daniel Graham told the Foreign Relations Committee. Graham stepped ,ebate down as head of the intelligence agency in 1976. Graham made the assertion while joining retired Adm. Thomas Morer in presenting the committee with petitions and a letter signed by more than 1,600 retired generals and admirals who op- pose ratification of the SALT treaty. i " The Ann Arbor Transporta- tion Authority, plagued by budget problems, has increased its fare frokm 35 cents to 50 cents. See story, Page 5. S.Road the Tou toluen, Pegs 3 * Ann Arbor firefighters re- jected the city's latest contract offer last night. See story, Page 6- A. Chrysler: Loss to be more than expected From AP and UPI Chrysler Corp. said yesterday it expec(s to lose more than $700 million this year-more than any other U.S. company has ever lost in one year. "Recent press stories have speculated that Chrysler's 1979 loss could reach $600 million to $700 million," Chrysler said in a statement released in Detroit. "In fact, because of the high costs of selling off its factory inventory of 1979 vehicles, and the approximately three- normally could be reduced by tax credits, but Chrysler has exhausted its tax credits with previous losses, in- cluding the $204.6 million it lost in 1978. Chrysler's $400 rebate program, designed to cut swollen inventories of slow-selling mid-size and full-size cars, was a factor in the revised estimate, a Chrysler sales official said. THE PROGRAM has been extremely successful, but costly, the official said. "We're supporting substantial lost income, it's postponed income." In Washington, meanwhile, Treasury Secretary G. William Miller yesterday ruled out any type of federal assistance except loan guarantees for the finan- cially battered auto company. "It's the only way I see to do it," Miller told reporters following a speech to the Mortgage Bankers Association. "I don't think the taxpayers should be in the bailout business. "I CAN'T SEE going into an equity to get the senators reaction than mine. Maybe they want to be sure that. the senators concur on it first." MILLER WAS referring to a meeting on Capitol Hill Wednesday between Chrysler Chairman John Riccardo and Sens. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), Donald Riegle (D-Mich.), and Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.), during which Ric- cardo explained the general outlines of the recovery plan. Miller has already given his tentative c~iiwnvr,,of, Inn ionan nfo