Saturdoy, Februory 26, 977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Saturday, February 26, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five __.....f Parking lot repair bill dies as Council Dems. unite Young, Democratic Committee reject Jordan ower bid McCollough calls for '73 tax cut By MIKE NORTON After months tof battling, it looked as if City Council was finally ready to pass a plan for financing repairs to the city's parking 'structures and lots. But Thursday night, Coun- cil Democrats made a united effort to defeat the plan - and succeeded. The nrooosal would have beenfinanced through a combi- nation of parking rate hikes (40 per cent) and a special assess- ment of property in the down- town, State St. and South Uni- versity business areas (60 per cent). Council Democrats, how-: ever, are convinced the repairs can be paid for without any4 special assessment tax whatso- ever. member Wendell Allen - to reject the proposal. Kenworthy says he switched his vote because of Council's earlier decision to cut two ad- ditional parking structures from the scheme. Area merchants had been promised new parking facilities as a sweetener for financing repairs to the exist- ing structures. It would simply have been unfair to go ahead with any kind of an assessment without the new structures," said Ken- worthy, "and we're pretty sure we can finance the pairs with just a moderate increase." Republican Council mem- bers were incensed at the de- feat, and vowed to keep bring- ing the proposal back until it can be passed. 7 t i t meant repairs for 11 of the Council member Jamie Ken- city's parking facilities, and worthy (D-Fourth Ward), who would have cost some $1.7 mil- was a member of the committee lion. It was the final remnant that made, the original $5.5 re- of an original proposal pre- commendation, has supported sented last November which the parking plan since last called for two new parking summer in the face of criticism structures and would have cost from his fellow Democrats. $5.5 million. But Thursday he joined with them against the Republicans THE PLAN WOULD have -who were missing First Ward iI WASHINGTON (A) - The} Democratic Executive Commit- tee shot down a plan yester- day which would have put presidential aide Hamilton Jor- dan in charge of party reor- ganization.' The plan would have createdi a reorganization committee headed by Jordan. That com- mittee would have been re- sponsible for "making all de- cisions which relate to the DNC's goals, programs and the policies and timing under which changes are to be implement- ed." The executive committee agreed to a staff study aimed at reorganizing the Democratic National Committee's oper- ations. Recommendations, how- ever, will go directly to the executive committee for final decisions instead of through the Jordan committee. LANSING-Betting that state revenues next year will outstrip special committee be 'ex- , Gov. William Milliken's projec- punged" from the plan. tions, Sen. Patrick McCollough ALSO "EXPUNGED" by vir- has come out in favor of al scheduled reduction in the stateI tue of being on the same page personal income tax. ,was, a study committee which That stand puts the DearbornI includes President Carter's son Democrat in direct conflict with Chip. However, Curtis said later the study would proceed and be Milliken, whom McCullough conducted by the staff. hopes to challenge in the 1978 The reorganization pld gubernatorial election. for the national tompani MILLIKEN'S 1977-78 budget similar to the reorganization proposal is based on a con- Carter is seeking to implement tinuance of the personal icome in the federal government, tax at its 4.6 per cent rate. The tax is scheduled to drop The presentation made to to 4.4 per cent on July 1, but the executive committeeuisai legislation has been introduced to cancel that reduction. THE LEGISLATURE raised ernor's position is to place an the income tax rate from 3.9 unfair tax burden on-individual to 4.6 per cent nearly two years taxpayers and some businesses ago to make up for revenues while letting other businesses lost through a voter-approved off lightly," he said. repeal of the sales tax on food He said. the Senate Fiscal and drugs. Agency and University of Mich- That tax hike carried a pro- igan economist Harold Shapiro vision lowering the tax rate to both have estimated state rave 4.4 per cent this year-apparent- nues next year will be substan- ly an effort to make the tax tially higher than Milliken's pro- increase more palatable to law- jections. makers. In addition, the income tax Legislation canceling the tax hike now is raising more money break probably will not come than the sales tax would have up for action in the Senate Fi- brought in, he said - $32 nance Committee he chairs, Mc- million more this year and $44 Collough said, addiifg that he million the next, has the support of the four oth- GERALD MILLER, Milliken's er Finance Committee mem-'top budget aide, told McCol- hers. # lough's committee Thursday r k ,. r Picketing: Are the strikers crossing over legal lines. G i k (Continued from Page 1) ing docks of dormitories or cam- pus buildings walk in slow sometimes very slow - circles on the public sidewalk or the University - owned driveways. When a, truck approaches, they very gradually move out of the way, slowing the vehicle down' considerably. AFSCME has set forth several guidelines for their picketers: j -They are to "politely" in-' form drivers that they are on strike and ask them not to crossa the line. Moscow V kill sat By AP, UPI and Reuter MOSCOW - Flames last night raged through the upper floors of the 6,000-bed Rossiya Hotel - reputedly the world's largest - leaving at least six people dead and 12 seriously injured, rescue workers report-' ed. The blaze apparently engulfed between 100 and 200. rooms of the 11-story hotel, and rescue workers feared that many more guests trapped inside had per-; ished_ -No vandalism against Uni- ervisors' rights to cross the CRT saId reorganizntnh versity property. lines. committee had only been intend- -No fighting on the line of' ACCORDING to a Detroit at- ed to screen staff work and any kind, for or against any- torney who specializes in labor prepare recommendations to one. The discipline of the line is relations, "What (picketers) the national committee but con- to be maintained regardless of have a right to do and what they ceded the wording of the pro- provocation. ; get away with are two differ- gram plan indicated much -No alcoholic beverages on ent things . . . The employer greater authority. the line. has a right to get into his build- But hassles arise. Picketers ing. On the other hand, the pick- "I did not come here to be a' say police are shoving them eters have a right - freedom ofi wall decoration,'" said Detroit around; police say the picketers speech and all - to be on that Mayor and party vice-chair- are shoving, too. AFSCME says public sidewalk." man Coleman Young in com- the Constitution provides for its When it comes to the matter plaining of the plan's wording. right to picket, but police have; of slowing trucks down but final- Several members of the exec-I been instructed to protect sup- ly letting them through, no one utive committee complained ; seems to have any answers. that the proposed Jordan com- Police Chief Walter Krasny mittee included only two mem- 'sad astni h ht oie r hers of the party's national oadvised to use their own discre- committee other than Curtis. tion in judging whether picket- ers are completely blocking YOUNG also objected to trucks. something referred to in the KRASNY put it like this: "If presentation as "the Carter- vot're in frontof a doorway and Curtis Management Style," I want to get through, and you and said it should be up to the Some of the injured were move back and forth in front of national committee to run itsl carried out of the building on me and finally let me thro'igh, own affairs rather than have stretchers by firefighters wear- that's one thing. But if you phys- them directed from a staff ing heavy padded uniforms and ically move and stand across heavily larded with ex-Carter oxygen masks. Many who fled the doorway and block me com- campaign workers. left behind their belongings, pletely. then I'd say you're in passports and other documents. viyation.,,"I believe in a strong staff," The flames were brought un- Krasny said the police inter- Young said, "but I didn't come der control after more than vention comes when picketers here to be directed by a staff." Hotel guest Samuel Hensley "get cheek-to-cheek, hip-to-hin, As other members around the of Altus, Oka., said, "They and refuse to move.' He ck-1meetig table echoed agree- were loading people onto am- nowledeed that some police, ment, Curtis suggested and the bulances on one side of the ho- nrtii'larly at East Quad, have committee concurred that the tel T saw fnur people whn I stened in at such times and , , tel.k'- - I awfurneLe hoIl nire. [fa5%.rfringktI.U to, the .; I (lid not come here to be a wall de- coraition1.' -Detroit Mayor Coleman Young assure that the DNC organiza- tion is operated on a sound fis- cal basis and adequately ad- dresses and fulfills the require- ments placed upon it by the new D e m o c r a t i c adminis- tration, House, Senate and the state and local organizations which it serves." T H E SQUELCHED panel would have included Senate Ma- jority Leader Robert Byrd and House Majority Leader James Wright. However, the Democra- tic congressional leadership still is represented on the exec- utive committee. Jordan was Carter's cam- paign manager in last year's 'presidential election. He is now a top White House aide with the title of assistant to the president. McCollough said yesterday he based his position on shortfalls in business tax revenues-which he described as a "broken prom- ise" that the Single Business Tax would raise as much reve- nue as the taxes it replaced- and on independent revenue pro- jections much higher than Mil- liken's. "Let's stop promising the peo- ple tax breaks and then chang- ing our minds as the deadline' approaches," he said at a news conference. McCOLLOUGH said he was told by Milliken's budget aides that they do not intend to try to recover $105 million in busi- ness tax losses this year and the last - amounting to what he described as a tax break for some businessmen. "The net effect of tne gov- that he hopes the higher reve- nue estimates are, correct, but said he doesn't believe they are. He also said higher revenue from the income tax is a short- term effect. In the long runt, it. will equal revenues from the re- pealed sales tax. READING E B. 26 8.P.M. n ., v '7 c' TTn D'f S A' POET Y TURDAY I F AT WEST SIDE 71 if eYOU see news happen call~ 76-DAILY LIBERTY Sr U r S T. 11 3 WEST DAVID KOZUBE I sponsored by we st side b & flora d a n i c a magazi ne Oaks lGi. 1 043VV LUM VGVUIG wi1V 1 ! .V . 1 JaV V L G 1G W1 1 know were injured. A couple used billy clubs to move Wicket- FLAMES leaped out of brok- of them had their faces wrap- erg ot of the way of trucks. he en windows -on the top five ped in bandages. There were said that ot videotape of such' floors of the north side of the ambulances going off in all di- mcidents. "We do see some ah hotel. A Russian guest who es- rections." hins (by nolice with billy !Iuhsl caped said he saw the people -- --- fall from sheets roped together -^ --_______-______ as they tried to clamber down r the outside of the building. As hundreds of firemen bat- MEDIATRICS presents tIed the flames, police threw a cordon around the blazing building near the Kremlin and: Red Square and a fleet of am- bulances ferried away victims. The fire broke out at about T N E V SO 9 p.m. near the top of the 12- story building packed with for- Sunday, Feb. 27 eign businessmen, tourists and Russians, and quickly spread to '- the lower floors, exploding huge 7-8: 30-1 glass windows and filling Red Square, a block away, with heavy smoke. Natural Science Auditorium THE SOVIET news agency Tass later said it was started by "technical trouble" in the ? $1.25 elevator motors of the hotel- a giant glass-sided block 225 yards square that dwarfs sev- eral delicately designed Rus- sian churches in its vicinity. Cloyce Palmer, a business -ANN AIUCi [ELM CC=CU man from Fairfield, Iowa, *i ii*************..********** stood outside the hotel in Mos- cow's 30-degree weather and Tonight in the Modern Languages Building described how a Soviet fireman Saturday, Feb. 26 hammered on his door and then led him through dense choking WOMEN IN LOVE smoke down five flights of (Ken Russell, 1970) 7 & 9:30-MLB 3 stairs to safety. An encyclopedia of filmmaking technique and a masterful adap- "If it hadn't been for that fire tation of the D. H. Lawrence novel. Glenda Jackson won an department, honest to God I'd Academy Award for Best Actress. "It is difficult to recall another be dead," Palmer said, film that so successfully recreated the past with a depth that West German and British brings to life every album snapshot we have seen of the time." tourists also were staying at the --Judith Crist. Alan Kates, Oliver Reed, Jennie Linden. hotel when the blaze broke TWENTIETH CENTURY out. (Hnwn.. Hnwie z 101A I7 !w IA kA~fl A HI dUU~ H kUr~ 7934) 7 'I~I~L CIIti1 C pdbC 1 C1C1 11Ig CU UIC 3 INTER COOPERATIVE COUNCIL Affirmative Action SHORT INFORMAL TALKS with SLIDES Refreshments will be served MARKLEY: Wed., Mar. 2 7:30 p.m. in the-- Angela Davis Lounge BURSLEY: Thurs., Mar. 3 7:30 p.m. in the Snack Bar MICHIGAN UNION: Mon., Mar. 21-- 7:30 p.m. in the Assembly Hall G for information Coll Doug, 761-1058 or ICC office, 662-4414 COPPOLA'S 1975 GODFATHER 11 Just as Marion Brando stole the show in THE GODFATHER, Robert De Niro as the eyoung Vito Corleone takes the spotlight away from Al Pacino's Michael in the second installment of the family saga. Tak- ing place, before and after the action of the first fim, this cross- generational sweep is photographed diaphanously and the acting is profound. Also starring Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton and Lee Stasberg. Don't miss the Cuba Caper.. Sun: PETER WATKINS and EDVARD MUNCH CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.50 A Tribute to LUCH INO VISCONTI 1974 THE CONVERSATION PIECE Burt Lancaster stars as a reclusive art history professor living in Rome. From the director of DEATH IN VENICE and THE DAMNED, this "IT SPREAD so quickly you couldn't believe it," a West German businessman said. "I'm afraid some people did not get out. "I knew I had to run through the s"toke to get out. I called to other people to follow me but no one did. The fire was going so terribly, terribly fast it just jumped from one room to an- other," the German said. AT THE height of the blaze, hundreds of guests fled into the winter night and othersj trapped by the flames scream- ed for help in various lan- guages. "I saw two peoole who jumned from the third floor' in- to the streethbut it was too dark to see what happened to them," said Italian businessman 1owaro alwK sY34 &(T10:3U--MLB 4 The great John Barrymnore plays an egomaniacal producer modelled after David Belasco, with Carole Lombard as his protegee (Mildred Plotka renamed Lily Garland). The supporting cast of this wise- cracking farce about theatrical personalities includes some of Hollywood's finest character actors-Walter Connolly, Roscoe Karns, Edgar Kennedy, Edward Gargan, and Herman Bing. One of the best movie writing teams, Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur, did the screenplay. "The director. Howard Hawks, represents the American commercial film at its best-fast, unpretentious, enter- taining, with a sophisticated and 'hardboiled' attitude toward sex and money."--Pauline Kael. MONKEY BUSINESS (Howard Hawks, 1952) 8:45 ONLY--MLB 4 A monkey owned by research chemist Cary Grant accidentally concocts the elixir of youth, alloving Grant and company to throw their age to the winds. An admirably scripted, uproariously funny comey by veteran Hawks illustrates the theme-more than the fear of old age is the univerasi desire to evade the responsibilities imposed by maturity. Ginger Rogers, Marilyn Monroe. ". , . a pro- found, beautiful and disquieting film developing from its basic premises with a marvelously organic logic: there are no irrele- vancies and the outrageous slapstick is an essential part of the scheme."-Robin Wood. Admission: $1.25 single feature $2.00 double feature y Sunday, Feb. 27 in MLS I Ttf:EXTUR , P x PRISF TS5 A RALPH BAKSHI FILM s.' 1. + / \N I Q I