MSA POLITICS See editorial page C I be Sir i au iuI CHEERFUL See Today for details Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. XC, No. 152 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, April 11, 1980 Ten Cents Fourteen Pages Weak state economy means less money for 'U' By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Second in a four-part series wince January, when Gov. William Milliken revealed his budget for the 1981 fiscal year, the state's economic picture has turned from bad to worse. In turn, the impact of the state's slumping financial condition on the University is expected to be substantial. State funding of the University cannot keep up with rising inflation, forcing the student fee hikes to pick up some of the slack in revenues. Although the University is currently hinting at a 17 per cent tuition increase for the next academic year, adminsitrators and faculty members realize those additional funds cannot pull the entire budget. LOWER FACULTY and staff salary increases, layoffs and phase-outs of personnel, equipment and supply freezes, and selective and across-the- board reductions in programs and enrollments will be part of the belt-tightening forced by a reduction in state funds. Within the next two weeks, Milliken will submit a new budget to the legislature, which proposes cutting state expenditures by $200 million, according to State Budget Director Gerald Miller. The University will probably suffer more than proportionately, as its appropriation will likely shrink from the proposed $14 million increase in state funds to possibly one-half that amount, Miller said in an interview Monday. "The state of Michigan economy is very weak this stage," Miller said. "That translates into a weak financial situation for higher education." MILLER SAID the recession in 1974-75 was as bad for the state as the current situation, with the only difference being a lower level of unemployment now. In 1974, unemployment stood at 15 per cent in Michigan. Currently, the state's unemployment level is11 per cent. The big difference this year is the likely withdrawal of more than $100 million in federal revenue sharing funds, Miller said. Of January's $4.9 billion general fund budget recommendation, $1.8 billion is allocated to education. The second largest chunk of state budget expenditures is for social services. Miller said part of the state's loss of flexibility in budgeting is due to increases in the social services caseload. "THE GROSS IN caseloads is worse than we've ever seen it," Miller said. "We can't See 'U', Page 6 The 'U' Budget: Facing lean times Breakstone, Hobbs new MSA leaders By MITCH STUART Marc Breakstone and Virna Hobbs, this year's People's Action Coalition/Black Student Union (PAC/BSU) candidates, have been elected Michigan Student Assembly president and vice-president in an elec- tion that saw the highest student voter turnout since 1973. Breakstone, an LSA junior, and'Hob- bs, and LSA sophomore, defeated their nearest challengers, Jerry Kowalski and Tim Lee of the Student Alliance for Better Representation (SABRE) by 1,361 votes to 1,254. Student voters also approved by a two-to-one margin an MSA fee increase raising mandatory charges from $2.92 per term to $4.25 per term over the next three years. The 2,808 "yes" to 1,410 "no" vote on Proposal A will provide valuable bargaining power for the Assembly when the Regents consider the increase next week, current MSA officers say. ELECTION OFFICIALS estimated the voter turnout at 5,400 - a mark sur- passed only by a record 1973 turnout. Of the election, Breakstone said, "It was a good race. . . there was no backstabbing." The president-elect listed three fac- tors that he said helped him and Hobbs gain election: " "People are finding that there is very little difference between a PAC candidate or SABRE candidate and an independent candidate," thus dispelling many "myths" about the party system in MSA; * "I think (the votersYsaw in me a kind of change in the priorities of student government;" and, " "I think people want an action- oriented person and that person is me." THE BONDING of the People's Ac- tion Coalition and the Black Student Union was also an important factor in the campaign, Breakstone said. "The reason we've joined together is black students have traditionally not been well represented in student gover- nment," he said. Breakstone added he thinks BSU can have a major role in increasing black student involvement in MSA. As for MSA's future, Breakstone said, "I'd like to see us organizing students to take some kind of action in the housing crisis in Ann Arbor." He said possible actions could include See VOTERS, Page 8 Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY President-elect Marc Breakstone (left) gets a congratulatory handshake from fellow People's Action Coaliton member Andrew Massick after learning the results of this year's MSA election. Militant: From AP and UPI Jumping into Iran's worsening feud ith Iraq, the U.S. Embassy militants cused the Baghdad regime yesterday of being Washington's "puppet' and said an attack by Iraq on Iran would put the lives of the 50 American hostages in "grave danger." THE HOSTAGES will'be "destroyed" if Iraq invades Iran, a militant iden- tified only as "Habib" told NBC-TV in an interview. Iran and Iraq are engaged in a fresh round of border hostility and each has *cused the other of acting on behalf of U.S. "imperialists." The Iranian military said yesterday the border region had been quiet since artillery and small-arms skirmishing in Iran's Kermanshah province Wed- nesday, but it ordered Iranian naval units to leave the port of Abadan and cruise the northern Persian Gulf to Hostage 'counter any aggression" by the Iraqis. THE MILITANTS threatened on Wednesday to kill the hostages if the United States attempted any "military intervention" against Iran. "Habib" said in the interview that "by military intervention we mean if the American government directly in- tervenes in Iran or if its puppets in the region, like Egypt, Iraq and Israel, in- tervene in Iran." Iranian officials also announced plans to counter President Carter's diplomatic and economic boycott, war- ning that any nation joining the United States would be cut off from supplies of Iranian oil. But the officials, who included Iran's oil minister and a key aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, also belittled the impact of the measures Carter announ- ced Monday, saying America's Western dead if Iraq attacks allies were too greedy for oil and divided by rivalries to join the boycott. EUROPEAN leaders meeting in Por- tugal unanimously demanded the release of the American hostages but deferred any decision on backing U.S. calls for sanctions against 'Tehran. A spokesman for the militants in the U.S. Embassy said if Iraq went to war with Iran, it would be "only on orders from America" and they would regard it as tantamount to American military in- tervention. Reacting to Carter's boycott announ- cement, the militants warned on Wed- nesday that they would kill the hostages they seized 159 days ago if the United States resorts to force. "This is an alert for America. An at- tack by Iraq, which would act only on orders from America, would leave the hostages in grave danger," a spokesman for the militants said in an interview on NBC's Today program. "IRAQ. IS America's puppet," the spokesman said. "The American people must stand before President Carter and not allow him to attack Iran or we will be forced to destroy the hostages." A nationwide demonstration was planned for Friday and officials called on all Iranians to turn out as an "army of 20 million" and march in support of Khomeini's confrontation with both Iraq and the United States. Carter ... would use legal means Prof gets inside look a tIran U.S. allies demand release of 50 hostages From AP and UPI Western European nations told their Tehran ambassadors yesterday to "demand" that Iran release the 50 U.S. Embassy hostages. The toughly- worded declaration by the nine Common Market nations stopped short joining in U.S. sanctons against Iran, ut it hinted that some action may be taken later. President Carter criticized the nations, allies of the U.S., for seeking U.S. leadership and protection, then begging off when asked to help out in a crisis. He told an audience of the American Society of Newspaper Editors that some nations "are wary of the obligations of alliance." CARTER ON Monday broke diplomatic relations with Iran and imposed an almost total U.S. economic embargo against it. He also said "other actions" might become necessary to win the hostages' freedom, and U.S. officials were reported considering a naval blockade or mining of Iranian ports. The United States asked NATO countries, Japan, and other U.S. allies to join in sanctions against Iran, including reductions in trade and diplomatic ties. The Iranians threatened to cut off oil exports to any nation that cooperates with the United States-a cutoff that experts say could seriously affect Japan, at least. He says climate in Iran relaxed By STEVE HOOK For most Americans, the crisis in Iran can only be observed from the per- spective of the mass media. But for some, whose curiosity or political beliefs require a more thorough look, a first-hand view is essential. As a result, a steady stream of Western visitors - many of them educators - is repor- tedly flowing in and out of Iran every day. Michael Zweig, a 37-year-old professor of economics at the State University of New York at Stoney Brook, is one such spectator who chose to visit Iran. For eight days in January, he and two associates visited the Islamic country. He came to the University campus yesterday and told local residents what he learned. "I WANTED to go and have a look around," Zweig said yesterday after his See PROF, Page 6 Carter says he'll force boycott From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Car- ter said yesterday he is prepared to take legal action if necessary to prevent American athletes from participating in the Moscow Olym- pics this summer. In a speech prepared for the American Society of Newspaper Editors convention in Washington, the president made it clear he does not consider the United States bound by a decision of the U.S. Olympic Committee, which meets this weekend to consider Carter's call for a boycott of the Summer Games. CARTER HAS demanded that Americans boycott the Moscow Games to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. U.S. Olympic Committee spokesman Dennis Keegan said the committee would have no comment on Carter's statement until tomorrow, when a vote is scheduled by the committee's House of Delegates, which is meeting in Colorado Springs, Colo., to consider the boycott question. See CARTER, Page 2 Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG MICHAEL ZWEIG, 37-year-old economics professor at the State University of New York at Stoney Brook, offers his perspective on the Iranian situation from an eight-day January tour of Tehran. I I I on, at the trial, the jury refused to believe Deering's story, finding him guilty of theft and false accounting; and gave him a sentence of nine months in jail. The court also required Deering to pay back the money, which poses yet another problem for him-he doesn't know if the money was buried or cremated. Q Drunken defense Phillip Lager of Corpus Christi, Texas, attempted a unique defense argument in his recent trial for drunken Ariving. While ncort wa s dinrned for lunch Lager went English eggheads While everyone seems to be having problems figuring out how to conserve energy these days, three English school children have come up with a plan that could save the British government $6.6 million worth of electricity and gas per year. Jason Lacy, 12, and Richard Goulding, and Ian South, both 13, discovered a new way of boiling eggs that conserves energy. Here's how it's done: Place an egg in water that has- already been boiling, turn off the heat, and let the egg stand for six minutes. The result is a four minute was survived by 8 children, 54 grandchildren, 140 great- grandchildren and 99 great-grandchildren. She probably changed more than a few diapers in her day. 0 On the inside A student spending his junior year in Freiburg, Germany, writes on the edit page of his experiences.. . sports carries coverage of the Tiger opener. . . and a feature on the late poet and 'U' English Prof. Robert Hayden appears on the r ;I I II I