f PAY HIKES See Editorial Page E Lzc augi SATURATED See Today for Details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 36 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 19, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages Students suggest new activities center i _ By BRIAN BLANCHARD Armed with blue-prints and a stack of statistics, two tudent leaders will ask the Regents tomorrow to provide ore space for student activities, but they face established esistance to their proposals from University officials. Last month, the Regents asked Scott Kellman, then ichigan Student Assembly (MSA) president, and Steve arnevale, University Activities Center (UAC) head, to tudy plans to relieve a shortage of floor space and facilities hich now forces students to rehearse performances in ramped quarters and practice hobbies under unsafe con- itions. A CAMPUS-WIDE controversy over space for student rojects and recreation began last spring during discussion 'f razing Waterman-Barbour Gymnasium. But the roots of the disagreement go deeper. In 1970, most student groups moved out of the Student Ac- ivitiesBuilding '(SAB) after the Regents decided to accept a elocation recommendation aimed at increasing student space-leaving few student projects in the building designed and named for student activities. Regents to consider space options But the move did not achieve the goals. Students now con- trol about the same amount of space they did 22 years ago when the SAB was built. THE STUDENT population has increased 70 per cent sin- ce that time. After several months of preparation, Kellman and Car- nevale have drawn up three options: " Renovate 13,000 square feet of unused bleacher area in the Coliseum, at Fourth and Hill Streets. " Construct a new building for student functions next to the Coliseum. " Increase student-designated space in various campus buildings, including the SAB, the Michigan League, and the Union.. In each case the space would be used for recreational and artistic activities rather than for offices. Diverse projects such as spray painting, glass blowing, welding, music rehearsals, and woodworking would'find a home in the plans. There would also be space set aside for costumes and props used in student performances. IF THE REGENTS decide to accept either the Coliseum or new building options, students would move out of the 10,000 square foot SAB work room now used for such activities-a room approximately-200 times the size of an average Angell Hall classroom. But if Athletic Director Donald Canham has any influence over the decision, the only melodies heard in the Coliseum will be sung in the showers. Under the plan, most of the space in the Coliseum would remain under the control of the Athletic Department. Locker rooms and basketball courts would sit next to two floors of rehearsal rooms and workshops on the north side of the building. The Athletic Department does not use this space now. "I'VE BEEN AROUND here for 30 years," said Canham, "and for the first time we've got enough space." Canham said that there are "all kinds of possibilities" being discussed by the Athletic Department's recreation committee but that there are no specific plans for the space yet. "We've got some space under the baseball stands too, and we don't have any plans for that either," he quipped. A new building would cost about $750,000 according to UAC leader Carnevale. "It would be a rough sort of building-very flexible," he said. The rooms could be used for different purposes over the years as student interests change, Carnevale suggested. BUT OPPOSITION to the new recreational building has already been voiced by-James Brinkerhoff, chief financial of- ficer. When Kellman and Carnevale asked Brinkerhoff for funding models or plans for the payment of the construction costs, Brinkerhoff told them that there are no funding models. One possibility for payment would be a tuition assessment spread over a number of years supplemented by money from the University. The final plan spreads student activities around campus renovating variops areas. Efforts to increase student space would be concentrated in the Union and the SAB. HEW ORDERS DISPUTED SEARCH Federal employes suspected as illegal welfare recipients WASHINGTON (AP) - Govern-- ent investigators looking for wel- are cheaters have personnel infor- a'tion on 2.8 million federal em- loyes, but military records are eing withheld because of Pentagon oncerns about privacy., Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Secretary Joseph Califano has ordered the personnel informa-. d.on, including e riXploye names, So- cial Security' numbers and birth. dates, compared with data on gov- ernment welfare rolls in what he has dubbed, "Operation Match." THE PLAN IS designed to identify federal employes who are taking welfare benefits from the govern- ment illegally or improperly. Civil Service Commission officials said yesterday they have given HEW computer tapes identifying all gov- ernment employes except. those in security agencies and some congres- sional and judicial posts. A memorandum of understanding between the commission and HEW's inspector general said the giant social service agency promises to safeguard the data it gets and destroy the files when it is finished. BUT A SPOKESPERSON for the Pentagon said its lawyers and pri- vacy board officials 'thought Cali- fano's request for sensitive personnel data might violate the federal pri- vacy act. The law was designed to limit the flow of personal informa- tion from agency to agency. "We talked to HEW and the Office of Management and Budget about it," the spokesperson said. "We just wanted to make sure this thing was done legally. Our aim really was to see if there was any way we could comply with the request and the act, too." Defense officials decided they would proceed under a section of the privacy law that permits transfer of personnel information between agen- cies for so-called "routine use." IN ORDER TO do that, the Pentagon must publish its plan in the Federal Register and give the public and individuals affected by the transfer an opportunity to object. The Civil Service Commission said it was acting under 'a different section of the law that permits it to turn over files on employes to law en- forcement agencies investigating civil and criminal cases. Disclosure of the Civil Service Commission and Defense Depart- ment actions came one day after the former head of the federal commis- sion on privacy criticized Califano for abusing privacy rights in his cam- paign. PROF. DAVID LINOWES of the University of Illinois, who headed the U.S. Privacy Protection Commission until it disbanded in July, attacked a proposal to allow big businesses to match government computer infor- mation on welfare recipients with the names of their employes. Daily Photos by PETER SERLING Spider plants, cacti and other foliar friends have taken over the Union Ballroom-at least until Thursday. That's the last day of the annual Pan- hellenic Association plant sale which benefits the new children's psychiatric unit at University Hospital. Marty Hurwitz, left, and Matthew. Sawyer admire some of the salable species. See story, page 7. SENA TE VIEWS POSSIBLE CONFLICT OF INTEREST Ener czar ordered to sell stock Ru bens te Doily Photo by PETER SERUNG n uman ri hts turning in o a oitical ssue By MARTHA RETALLICK To Amnesty International representative Joshua Rubenstein, President Car- ter's human rights campaign and the recent awarding of the Nobel peace prize to Rubenstein's organization is too much of a coincidence to ignore. Yesterday, Rubenstein praised Carter for helping make human rights become a genuine issue. However, he added that his organization is "very much afraid of human rights becoming a political issue either dividing east from west or north from south." RUBENSTEIN, A FREELANCE WRITER from Cambridge, Mass. who specializes in Soviet dissent, appeared on campus yesterday afternoon as part of the University Activities Center's Viewpoint lecture series.. uT awnlained that his nranization works worldwide to gain the release of WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate committee told Energy Secretary James Schlesinger yesterday to sell more than $33,000 worth of stock he and his wife hold in an energy- related company. The panel said the holdings pose a possible conflict of in- terest. The energy committee gave Schlesinger nine months to dispose of 2,100 shares of stock in the Newhall Land and Farming Company. The stock is worth about $33,600. THE UNANIMOUS committee vote followed Schlesinger's own dis- closure to the panel that "there are some 90 producing wells, mostly nat- ural gas" on 150,000 acres owned by the company. The firm, based in Valencia, Calif., owns land in that state's Sacramento Valley as well as in Texas and Louisiana. In a Sept. 27 letter to the commit- BULLETIN Following three hours of stormy .7, - .1. . .s '..4 .,:- wiin .nn ... ..,f tee, Schlesinger disclosed that the firm has energy holdings and noted that "energy production represents a limited though respectable share of the company's activities." The stocks are worth about $16 a share on the New York Stock Exchange. THE COMMITTEE voted after it was told by staff director Grenville Garside that Schlesinger "would be required to sell these shares under federal conflict-of-interest laws even if we didn't require him to sell them." Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), said Schlesinger should be given up to nine months to get rid of the holdings because of the "depressed nature of the market" at this time. The Cabinet official should get rid of the stock, which Schlesinger holds jointly with his wife, because "the appearance of his ownership of them might raise some questions," Jack- son said. THE COMMITTEE action came as a House-Senate conference commit- tee began work on a compromise energy bill and as President Carter declared that the reputations of both Congress and of his first year domestic program hinge on the energy bill to come. Members of the conference com- mittee agreed at their first meeting yesterday to back Carter's goal of reducing U.S. reliance on foreign oil imports. But conference leaders indicated See ENERGY, Page 10 Otterbacher tells local Dems he wants Griffin's Senate seat By GREGG KRUPA State Senator John Otterbacher brought his non-campaign campaign for Robert Griffin's United States Senate eant to a meeting of +he Ann is screaming for _ change," said Otterbacher. "It .is an inner city neighborhood with a 12 per cent unemployment rate. Most of the nennle with a little money have