BABIES See editorial page : 'I NinjtICl 1'(Y(Irs of Editorial Free(rlim f u1 THAWINGa See Today for details Vol. XC, NO: 117 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 21, 1980 Ten Cenits Ten Pages Olympic boycott declared From The Associat ol :ss ed Pre The Carter administration said yesterday the United States will of- ficially boycott the Moscow Olympics this summer and that U.S. Olympic Committee officials and athletes are expected to follow suit. But the number of countries which are definitely boycotting the Summer Olympics in Moscow in reaction to Soviet intervention in Afghanistan was still small yesterday, despite U.S. hopes for support. WHITE HOUSE counsel Lloyd Cutler made it clear that the committee, which oversees U.S. participation in the Games, is being relied on to abide by President Carter's decision. But U.S. Olympic officials reaffirmed yesterday their intent to wait until April before making a final boycott decision. In Bonn, West Germany, chief State Department spokesman Hodding Car- ter announced the final decision as the deadline arrived for the Soviet Union to pull its troops out of Afghanistan. "THE UNITED States set a deadline for its decision 'on whether to par- ticipate, a decision to be contingent on the withdrawal of Soviet troops," said Carter, accompanying Secretary of ' State Cyrus Vance on a tour -of European capitals. "Today is) the day on which that decision was going to be based. It is clear there is no sign of a Soviet with- drawal. The president has made clear that our .decision is therefore" irrevocable. We will not participate in the Olympics in Moscow," the spokesman said. In Washington, State Department spokesman Thomas Reston said the boycott decision is "firm and unalterable." HE SAID, "It is a position which is shared by more than 50 governments throughout the world and which will be reflected, we are convinced, by the non- participation by at least that number of national Olympic teams in Moscow." Olympic committees in each country will make the final decision whether to participate. Cutler said during an interview on NBC-TV's "Today" program that 23. nations have said publicly that they wills not attend the Games. He did not list the countries in his most militant 23. However, State Department sources gave The Associated Press a list of 24 countries said to be publicly opposed to holding the games in Moscow. THAT LIST included Chile, Kenya ficial and Saudi Arabia, which - according to a survey of AP bureaus yesterday definitely will not be represented in Moscow. However, the list also in- cluded Great Britain, where the British Olympic Association does not share. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's eagerness for a boycott; Luxembourg, which is undecided; Egypt, which was one of the first nations to threaten a boycott, but which has made no firm' decision; Japan, which has only said it would be "desirable" to hold the Games elsewhere, and China which has said it will ask its Olympic committee to "seriously consider" a boycott. A U.S. boycott of the Summer Olym- pics became a key element in Carter's- response to the occupation of Afghanistan. Since the Kremlin was" awarded the competition in 1974 by the International Olympic Committee, it has promoted the choice as an in- dication of international support for thee- Soviet system of government. SOvietS sho no indicatio of Afghan w ith~drawal From AP and UPI The Soviet Union yesterday ignored the deadline set by President Carter to withdraw its 10,000 troops 'fromi Afghanistan. Western diplomats in the Afghan capital speculated the Kremlin may be forced to send additional men here to fight Moslem rebels. President Carter said Jan. 20 he would support a boycott of the Olym- pics if the Kremlin did not withdraw its troops in a month, and a month later, Wednesday, a U.S. State Department spokesman said, "The United States will not participate in the Olympics in Moscow._. IN MOSCOW, the deadline passed without comment. The official Soviet news media has charged the United States with trying to blackmail the Soviet Union, but it never reported the See.SOVIETS, Page?7 MaocDaily Photo by DAVID HARRIS Melting snow doesn't seem to be hampering little Gill Mosseri's creativity School of Education at South University and East.University Aves. as he constructs his "David" step by step. His outdoor studio is near the DEFENSE BUDGET ATTACKED: GOP candidates blast I By MICHAEL ARKUSH and KEITH RICHBURG Special to the Daily MANCHESTER, N.H. - Ronald Reagan started campaigning for president last night. But by most c-. counts, his performance was fair to poor. Although Reagan has been an official candidate since November, last night was the first time he joined in a debate with his six Republican rivals. Invited to debate in Iowa last rponth, the party's patriarch refused because he said it would divide the party. His advisors persuaded him to change his mind, -however, when polls showed voters were displeased with Reagan's absence, a factor that may have cost him first place in the January. 21 caucuses. Sensing a stiff challenge by ex-CIA Director George Bush, Reagan decided the risk of splitting the party was better than the chance of losing New Ham- pshire. Sponsored by the League of Women Voters in a high school auditorium here, the nationally-televised debate was attended by 1,200 persons. Reagan shared the platform with Congressman John Anderson and Philip Crane, both of Illinois; U.S. Senators Howard Baker of Tennessee and Robert Dole of Kansas; former Texas governor John Connally and Bush. FOR THE MOST part, the seven can- didates found little difference between each other, with the notable exception of Anderson. But for Reagan, the bad news started early. Early on in the debate, Reagan was asked a question about Social Security and the problems of the federal gover- nment meeting pension payments with the recent boom in the number of per- sons over 65 years of age. Reagan, who is 69, responded, vaguely about Social Security being "trillions of dollars out of balance" and the need to appoint a task force of insurance experts. The debate's only real surprise came during the audience question period, when an Italian-American stockbroker from Durham brought up Reagan's recent, ill-timed, ethnic joke. THE JOKE, which Reagan told reporters on his campaign bus Sunday was: How can you tell a Polack at a chicken fight? Answer: He's the one with the duck. How can you tell the Italian? He's the one who bets on the duck. How can you tell if the Mafia is there? When the duck wins. Since then, Reagan has been dogged by the remark even though he formally apologized. Reagan has explained that he does not personally tell ethnic jokes, but was asked by a reporter to repeat the tale. Still, some political observers here are calling the joke the one slip in Reagan's otherwise flawless campaign for which all the other candidates have been waiting. The joke.is already being compared to Jimmy Carter's "ethnic purity" remark in 1976 or former Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz's racial slur. VINCENT GALATI, the Italian- American from Durham,'interjected a note of excitement into a generally mundane 90 minutes when he ap- proached the microphone and asked Reagan about the joke. The questions were screened beforehand, and Galati had originally submitted a written question asking Reagan's position on the Equal Rights Amendment. But when he walked to the microphone, Galati said: "I am of Italian-American descent. 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'U',C Ctcosiderdniysue Re gentsgive1 A planne go-a hea+d on p x ass denst rs Y la nd optLion By SARA ANSPACH The University Regents' recent 0m e pnel's tri to Ia From AP Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim on yesterday delayed the departure of a special United Nations investigatory commission to Iran until the weekend and said Iranian authorities want the commission members to talk to all of the approximately 50 American hostages in Tehran. One of the five commission members said, meanwhile, there was a "gen- tleman's agreement" that the hostages would be freed as a result of their mission. The timing of the release remained unclears however. WALDHEIM, speaking to reporters in New York, said he postp departure of the five lawy diplomats because the Iran asked for "a little moret prepare for the inquiry, which chief called a "fact-finding m hear Iran's grievances ag United States and American g over the hostage-taking. The panel is to investigat charges of mass murder and c against the, deposed Shah M Reza Pahlavi and complaint United States had interfered affairs by supporting the shah See U.N.'s, Page 2 decision to grant local developer John Stegeman the option to buy a piece of land caught most of the University 0 community by surprise. And much of the reaction to what some called the "hasty decision" of the Regents was negative. , l Stegeman, working through a new company called Quadrium Corp., hopes oned the to build a 32-story "mixed use" facility yers and at the corner of Washtenaw and S. ians had Forest. The University land, adjacent time" to to the site of the proposed high-rise, the U.N. would provide space for a planned ission" to seven-story parking structure connec- ainst the ted to the building. Without the parking rievances structure, the development would have no chance of gaining the approval of e Iranian City Council and the Planning Com- corruption mission. ohammad Although the Regents authorized s that the negotiations with Stegeman a year ago, in Iranian when the motion to grant Stegeman the amendmen By MARK WILSON Fewer new housing units will be allowed in most arteas of the city if City Council passes an ordinance unanimously approved by the Ann Ar- bor City Planning Commission Tuesday night. The amendment to the city zoning regulations would decrease from 20 to 60 per cent the number of dwelling units allowed on any particular building site, except in the downtown area. The proposed new density ceilings are designed to complement existing zoning rules,.such as parking and open space requirements, said Planning Commission Chairman Richard Black. The proposed requirements would mandate large open spaces and parking areas for any new large residential buildings. Since city officials assume many builders would find such ari arrangement uneconomical, they ex- pect the developers would apply for ap- proval under the Planned Unit See CITY, Page 2 THIS MODEL of a proposed 32-story high rise was presented by developer 1's rule. See LAND, Page 2 John Stegeman to 'U' Regents last week. S 'a x/ They all have a price, As all those of the Ann Arbor variety know, it isn't easy to be a landlord-especially when the tenants raise a stink. Rand and Jeanie Maxwell of Glendale, Utah, say they intend to evict a colony of skunks that have been residents of the Maxwell home for three years despite rocks, boards, traps, mothballs, and shotguns. "We are getting tired of all this," said Jeanie Maxwell. "They come out and spray around the doors in the middle of the night and it takes a mak, an a halfto iair out the hnuse "Perhans the Maxwells .............. f ,.4... . r. . :.t S ...sew.. .. with plenty of marital problems. Despite the Pope's new- found fame, he reportedly has no plans to hit the touring circuit to Broadway or elsewhere. On the inside The edit page has a look at the draft as a racist tool ...arts offers a review of Neil Young's new album Live ust aid sports carries coverage of the U.S. .... ._ ... _..._ -- -ss _a r _ Y . _ {