6- THE MILITARY See editorial page "P Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom 1 IaiI RUNNY NOSE See Today for details , Vol. XC, No.98 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, January'30, 1980 Ten Cents Ten Pages HOUSING DIRECTOR JUGGLES INFLATION ADJUSTMENT Proposed dorm. rate hike trimmed By NICK KATSARELAS Director of Housing Robert Hughes yesterday said he will recommend to the Regents an 11.2 per cent increase in room and board rates for most residen- ce halls and the elimination of the con- troversial weekend food service con- solidation program. The proposed dorm hike fell short of the 13.2 per cent increase the student *rate study committee recommended to Hughes two weeks ago after reviewing residence hall costs and services. IN THE PAST, the Regents usually have approved the housing director's recommendations. Last year, the Senate *urges total boycott of games WASHINGTON (AP). - The Senate voted overwhelmingly yesterday to Surge all Americans, not just athletes, to boycott the 1980 Summer Olympics as a protest against the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan if the Games go on as scheduled'in Moscow. The resolution offers an alternative to a boycott by urging the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to cancel, postpone or relocate the Games. But IOC members have'already indicated they will reject this request. THE VOTE was 88 to 4. The four votes against the resolution were cast by Senators Rudy Boschwitz (R-Minn.); Mark Hatfield (R-Ore.); Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), and Paul Tsongas (D-Mass.). Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), a Democratic presidential hopeful, did not vote although he was in a Senate of- fice building conducting a news con- ference. KENNEDY HAS said in the past that he supports President Carter's position on the boycott but considers it a sym- bolic gesture of little value. Unlike a similar measure adopted 386-12 last week by the House, the Senate resolution does not set a timetable for a pullout of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. No further action is expected on either resolufion because each is advisory and does not have the force of law. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance is See SENATE, Page 2 Regents rubber-stamped the recom- mendation made by Hughes and the1 rate study committee to establish; weekend food consolidation service. The Regents will vote on the Housing Office recommendations during their Feb. 13-14 meetings. The most significant change in Hughes' proposed dorm rate increase and that of the rate study committee; focused on the inflation figure. Hughes, who said he "'was concerned about the, magnitude of the increase," said the projected inflation rate was established1 at 10 per cent. "We're hoping for a slowdown in the inflation rate," Hughes said. HUGHES SAID, that with one excep- tion, he will ask the Regents to approve all of the recommendations the student rate study committee made, including installation of cable television hookups in dormitory TV lounges and in- stallation of energy-saving showerheads. Contrary to the commit- tee report, Hughes did not recommend a plan which would have made it easier for students in coverted rooms to get rid of their leases. This plan to allow the deconversion of converted rooms would have slapped another .7 per cent to the dorm rate increase. Hughes said dorm residents' strong opposition to the program greatly in- fluenced his decision. "I realize it has not been a popular concept with the students," said Hughes. "My feeling is that since the savings have been modest and that it's important for students to want food service in their own buildings, I have been convinced to recommend eliminating consolidation." The food consolidation plan saved dormitory residents $12 this year, and if continued, would cut $18 from each student's bill next year. But many students said they would rather pay the extra money than put up with the in- conveniences of consolidation. They said they dislike standing in long lines, having to walk to another dorm to eat, and eating in a crowded and unfamiliar cafeteria. WHEN STUDENTS learned of Hughes' decision, several were quick to express their great satisfaction and elation. I "I'm ecstatic," exclaimed Peter Hadiaris, a South Quad resident who served on the rate study committee. "The Regents have traditionally gone aginst the rate committee report when the Housing Office has gone against it," said Hadiaris. "I think there's a very good chance (the Regents) will vote to eliminate food service consolidation." See DIRECTOR, Page 5 I realize it has not been popu- lar concept with the students. My feeling is that since the sarings hare been modest and. that it's important for students to wat food serrice in their owfn buildings, I hare been conv Vinrced to reconimend elrni- nating consolidation. -Robert Hughes, housing director 7J Canadians rescue 6 4Americans in Iran From All and UPI WASHINGTON - Six American diplomats, hidden from Iranian mobs during the 12-week-old occupation of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, were spirited to freedom with false Canadian passports, U.S. Officials said yester- day. The six are in West Germany, the Canadian Foreign Ministry said. Their whereabouts and travel plans were not disclosed. STATE DEPARTMENT and Canadian sources said that the six Americans left this weekend while the Iranians were preoccupied with their elections and that Canadian and U.S. officials had been scheming how to get them out for three months. In Canada, Prime Minister Joe Clark said Canadian Ambassador Kenneth Taylor gave the six sanctuary Nov. 4 when the American compound was stormed by militants. "The Americans were never cap- tured," Clark said. "They heard of the seizure of their embassy and they came to ours for sanctuary." STATE DEPARTMENT spokesman Hodding Carter said the United States knew the six were in hiding all along, and the secret - which could have sparked reprisals against the Canadians - was kept until the Americans were out safely and Canada had closed its embassy and recalled all its employees in Iran. "We knew every day the danger was becoming greater," Canadian External Affairs Minister Flora NfacDonald said yesterday in Ottawa. She said the Americans got out "when the country was occupied by its own internal elec- tion and therefore we were able to move." In Washington, Carter said, "I want to express the deep appreciation of this government for the Canadian gover- nment's assistance." THE STATE Department identified the six as Mark Lijek, a consular of- ficer; his wife, Cora Amburn Lijek, who was employed by the embassy as a con- sular assistant; Rogert Anders, a con- sular officer; Henry Schatz, an agricultural attache; Joseph Stafford, a consular officer; and his wife, Kathleen Stafford, who also was em- ployed as a consular assistant. The department did not immediately release the hometowns of the six. But the Agriculture Department said See CANADIANS, Page 2 Official says Soviet- for resident By MAURA CARRY While most students must resign themselves to runaway rent costs, 288 University students will live in a single room or spacious dorm apar- tment for free next year in exchange for resident hall staff work. In ad- dition, many of the 57 resident direc- tors receive stipends of up to $1400 per year, depending on the size of the dorm. For these financial benefits, a resident hall staff member is expec- ted to provide counseling, discipline, answers to questions, and 24-hour hail staffs door-opening services to dorm residents. Between 700 and 900 students are expected to apply for resident advisor (RA), resident director (RD), resident fellow (RF), and Minority Peer Advisor posts this year. The selection processes will be taking plce in all dorms sometime between Feb. 2 and 29. THE DEGREE of competition and duration of the selection process varies somewhat with the dorm. The Central Housing staff devises gen- eral guidelines for staff selections See DORMITORY, Page 7 U.S. tensiolr WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet use of its growing power against Afghanistan significantly increases the danger of. U.S.-Soviet military confrontation during the next five years, a top defense official said yesterday. Gen. David Jones, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of Defense Harold Brown said events in Afghanistan show the Soviets may be willing to threaten vital U.S. interests in the Middle East. "THE POSSIBILITIES of a military confrontation with the Soviet Union will increase significantly in the first half of the next decade," Jones told the House Armed Services Committee. "I do not believe that means a bolt- out-of-the-blue nuclear attack on the United States," Jones added later. "But I think it is more likely that they will try to intimidate use-make us blink." Jones said U.S. ability "to avert such a confrontation or deal with it suc- cessfully if it comes" depends largely on Congress' decisions on President Carter's $142.7 billion defense budget. l growing BROWN SAID U.S. military forces in Europe could move "right now" again- st an attempted Soviet takeover of the Persian Gulf, but he said he doesn't know which side would win. "We could not be confident of the outcome. The Soviets also could not be confident of the outcome." Of Carter's proposal to register young persons for a possible military draft, Brown said women should be in- cluded, "largely as a matter of equity and social policy." But, he added, "I certainly don't believe they should be in combat." However, a decision on whether women should ha've a combat role would be decided if Congress renews the actual draft, not simply when registration returns, he said. JONES SAID he would be willing to study plans to draft women but "I would be reluctant to endorse it right now." Brown stopped short of declaring that there is greater danger of a U.S.-Soviet See OFFICIAL, Page 2 Expert says faculty won't proser in '80s BY JULIE ENGEBRECIT Students, and not faculty, will benefit from changes which occur in higher ducation during this decade, a national education official said yester- day. Ernest Boyer, U.S. Commissioner of Education until last June, also told a crowd of more than 80 students and faculty members at the School of Education yesterday that colleges and universities must recognize and prepare for future problems, or they will face severe difficulties. "IF YOU DON'T think it's a problem, you're dead," Boyer, now president of the Carnegie Foundation for Advan- cement of Teaching, said. "You have to have a condition of readiness." Students will gain from anticipated enrollment drops as colleges and universities are forced to compete for students to survive, Boyer said.' Boyer predicts that higher education will increasingly favor the consumers' needs and choices. "From the stan- dpoint of the student, things couldn't look better," he said. BUT THE picture for faculty mem- bers is bleak for a number of reasons, Boyer said. In ten years, the average age for professors across the country will be 55. The age gap between faculty and students presents the most dramatic problem in higher education, according to Boyer. But faculty members will not necessarily be smarter nor more diver- sified, Boyer said. "Things couldn't be darker for the faculty." In contrast to the market situation that existed when Boyer began his career, when "expansion was so dramatic . . . the mood so bullish," today's tight academic market presen- ts other severe problems. HE ALSO noted there is an expected drop in traditional students by 23 per cent, and said at some institutions older See EXPERT, Page 7 Durante dies a t 8 6 o f . lung ailment From AP and UP[ SANTA MONICA, Calif. (UPI) - Jimmy Durante, the gravelly voiced Schnozzola who kept audiences laughing for more than a half century, died yesterday of a lung ailment. He was 86. A St. John's Hospital spokeswoman said death was due to pneumonitis, complicated by the effects of several small strokes. Durante had been hospitalized four weeks. r See DURANTE, Page 10 deaat Daily Photo by LISA KLAUSNER' FORMER U.S. Commissioner of Education Ernest Boyer spoke to students and faculty at the School of Education yesterday on higher education in the next decade. S I A towering tribute Those with a penchant for hot fudge, and University administrators can simultaneously enjoy these little pleasure by indulging in a Sussman Super Sundae at the Michigan League. Composed of a cream puff, one scoop of ice cream, and lots of hot fudge the concoction is named af- ter Albert Sussman, Dean of the Rackham Graduate School and Acting Vice-President for Academic Affairs. According to Mildred Nolan, Food Service Manager at the Michigan League, the sundae came about as part of an effort to publicize the League's newly remodeled ice cream bar. middle-class plaything," the Times of London has banned the use of the title from its stodgy pages. "There is an im- portant battle to be fought for all women not just a tiny elite," writes Times columnist Trevor Fishblock who went on to bluster, "But Ms. is one of the excesses of the revolution and should be junked." Meanwhile, in the colonies, Gloria Steinem, editor of Ms. magazine and a pioneering feminist remarked, "I think that America has declared its independence from England a long time ago and we need not pay attention to this ... If Fishblock had to be identified entirely by his wife's name, I think he'd suffer a loss of identity." O community correctional facility. He was also ordered to repay the sum to Toronto Dominion Bank. C On the inside. Results of the Michigan women's basketball game are on the sports page ... the arts page puts Steve Martin and Tom Snyder under scrutiny .h. . and the editorial page features an interview with ROTC chairman Major Joseph Blai r- I . I I I I