The Jlchicran Dail" Vol. LXXXIX, No. 17-S Twelve Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan. Ten Cents Developer drops Riverside plan By JOHN GOYER and JULIE ENGEBRECHT Public sentiment against the proposed Riverside Plaza apparently convinced the project's developer to tell the city planning department yesterday that he will drop his plans for a 22-story convention center on the Huron Rive. The North Side Neighborhood Association (NSNA) has opposed developer Richard Berger's plans for the plaza near the intersection of N. Main Street and M-14 since he announ- ced the project in February. "WE'RE AT WAR, and when you're at war, sometimes it's best to lose a few battles. In this case, I feel more com- fortable with losing the battle. I've been attacked personally, and these people don't know me," Berger said. "When my integrity is being questioned and not the project, you're dealing with a warped sense of values, and I don't want to get involved . . . I gave them exactly what they wanted." Berger decided to discard his $70 million project after the city's plan- ning commission tabled a rezoning resolution for the project Tuesday night. The planning commission heard more than two hours of protests from north side residents opposed to the plan, according to City Planning Direc- tor Martin Overhiser. "I GOT THE impression he felt the neighborhood was attacking him per- sonally and attacking his integrity and hehad had enough of it," Overhiser said. Residents opposed to the Riverside Plaza project said they were pleased with Berger's decision to withdraw the plans. But 25-year north side resident Sam Rabinovitz said he did not think public pressure caused Berger to with- draw his proposal, but rather it was in- formation the residents brought out about the project which was more in- fluential. The residents have asked the city to buy the land for a park, but Mayor Louis Belcher said citizens would have to come up with $1 million before the land could be made a park. "NOW IS THE time for us to really get to work and make it a park," See NEIGHBORHOOD, Page 2 Yrotestors plea iS nhear Demonstrators shouted slogans against the death penalty late Tuesday night at Florida State Prison. John Spenkelink was scheduled to die in the electric chair yesterday morning but was given a last-minute reprieve by a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. See story, Page 3 Lance indicted on banking charges ATLANTA (AP) - Bert Lance, former president of the Northwest . C C ATLATA (P) ert anc, th Nothwet Te 71-page indictment described an President Carter's close friend, finan- Georgia Bank in Ringgold, Ga.; intricate series of 383 loans andd finan- cial adviser and former federal budget Thomas Mitchell, a former board cial transactions, many of them director, was indicted yesterday on member of that bank; and H. Jackson related, involving 41 banks. The charges of bank fraud, conspiracy, and Mullins, a former druggist from document listed 218 specific acts by the misapplying bank funds. Calhoun, Ga., who was a partner with defendants in support of the charges. Lance and three others were accused Lance and a stockholder in the Calhoun THE INDICTMENT said much of the in a grand jury indictment of in- bank. loan money was used to repay prior volvement in a conspiracy involving The government, concluding a 10- loans, as well as to purchase bank more than $20 million in loans, which month investigation, charged Lance stock, repay overdrafts at the Calhoun allegedly caused losses of more than and his co-defendants with conspiring First National Bank headed by Lance, $500,000 to a number of Georgia banks. from 1970 to the present to commit and to supplement the income of the THE THREE other men named in a banking violations and fraud against See LANCE, Page 2 33-count indictment are Richard Carr, agencies of the government. 'U' requested to reveal salaries by name By SARA ANSPACH names, position, titles, and current salary, exclusive of was referring to a number of freedom-of-information University Interim President Allan Smith and 12 fringe benefits" be submitted by June 1. suits filed against state universities for the release of other state university presidents will receive within the SENATE APPROPRIATIONS Committee clerk faculty and administrative salaries by name. next few days a letter from the state Senate Ap- Amy Schnetzler said the second letter was sent Hart has been asked by newspapers to force schools propriations Committee requesting a list of University because the "different formats" of salary information to release individual salaries to the public. "It's not staff salaries by namer the committee had received from the colleges made it fair to give names and salaries from one (college) and Last month Sen. Jerome Hart (D-Saginaw) chair- difficult to compare salary patterns on a state-wide not names and salaries from another," said Schnet- man of the Senate Appropriations Committee, asked zii to ompare salarylpa tter , stee zler. all 13 public four-year colleges in the state to submit in- basis. In response to Hart's original letter, three SMITH SAID he was not aware of Hart's new letter formation on staff salaries by level and position, but schools released salaries by names. Nine, including the and before a decision was made, he would have to did not specify that individual names be used. Thev tral Michigan University, has not yet released any in- discuss it with "beth the officers and the Regents. He University complied on May 3, and sent data on said answering Hart's letter by June 1 "would be very salaries categorized by job classification. formation. s ssr A follow-up letter mailed to college presidents Another reason for the second request, Schentzler hard." Tuesday afternoon, however, now asks "individual said, is "the papers want names and salaries." She See 'U', Page 2