The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, April 15, 1980-Page 9 ti .. ,. v .".. ... :: .. },. .v.. .. .. ".} r .rv. ... .rS O ..v. .l { : ". "" ., y: ::.x{:?'{{i i"'" i :i4: .. "ic :+ : t: 'ti+: '' . .. .... ..a . :";:": "". .. r:. W.S. .., ...., .. .w; :.. .;;.. :.:CN o. > -: v .:: : ... ..... ..x. ..'v . n.... .."Y. .r.. : v . . .k.'r }::}1Sk" .i?{:y :"'C":: :... . :. ....: . ,y'.k . ,4, ". . ., ,. ys, y, , k.:,. : .,fit.. ..ty i...:rS:.... ... .:n......t" } ,t :x....,."..":," . .". " " 4, .. . r-...". . ,"'.w .' i i .yY:.?#G" h 'n"tbs. ..,.:."' . } .rS.i Yt;f...,.5:". ' f.,,....i ' ..t.. .s..k '..a.. .?...".r4','..t..4 ...fi..+t ..."..........rx:.::.:i .::.yx ...:..... k..t.".ry. r.:". ::.:"'k r.". 3..4. ..a. .r>.,.::.:+st:'.:"Pi .'n'.":<. Sk:}.+f:":>ra ..":..4,:.."." :..,:......n.,...".. r,.......a ..............: ,.":: R }.......f. .. .. 3,.;. ... .r,.,..e ..,..t, ..?.,,.,,,. Few service decreases proposed in new AZ budget (Continued from Page 1) While weight and gas tax revenues do not go to the general fund-they sup- port road repairs-if council wishes to keep up the city's road maintenance program,, it will have to subsidize the road repair fund to the tune of $190,000, according the budget document. Another pressure on the general fund is the city's pension fund, which will come up $500,000 short of its planned expenditures if the proposed budget is adopted as it stands. The $500,000 deficit between the city's contribution to the fund and the amount that pension fund managers recommend the city add is an issue which "must be ad- dressed by council in the near future," City Administrator Terry Sprenkel writes in the introduction to the proposed budget. SPRENKEL ALSO noted the general fund is balanced only through the use of 4200,000 in last year's surplus and by cutting out 19 jobs in city hall. Seven of those jobs are currently filled, accor- ding to the budget statement, and it is, unclear whether all the cuts could be accomplished tIrough the retirement of employees. In order to balance the general fund, and other city funds, Sprenkel and Patrick Kenney, assistant city ad- ministrator of the budget, made several minor changes in services provided by City Hall. These include: " Opting not to fund added police foot patrols downtown and on campus, an expenditure politicians from both par- ties in the heavily student-populated First and Second Wards campaigned on promising to increase security down- town. k Deciding not to open the Fuller ice rink next winter, " Increasing monthly parking fees from $25 to $30. * Delaying the staffing of the new fire station (yet to be built) near Briarwood shopping center until next year; " Implementing further the policy of one-person crews on commercial refuse collection trucks; and " Asking for a five per cent increase in water service rates. 4 the u niversity of michigan. WHO DOES IT SERVE? Has the University's aura of academic purity come to serve as a cloak for those same abuses for which the rest of corporate America must be held respon- sible, namely union-busting, racial and sexual dis- crimination, unethical investments, and irresponsi- bility in its real estate policies? Does the University follow the corporate academic agenda? Join us for a rally, a series of workshops, and the first meeting of the People's Board of Regents. :.. . .. . . . . . . .a... . ...... n . . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. :'.:...., ..r... .................... .. ........ ....v.{. E................... .. .. . Chinese attempt to stifle all dissent (Continued from Page 1) AT THAT time, political wall posters could be pasted on any wall in the capital and the celebrated 200-yard- ong "democracy wall" emerged. The rick wall around a bus terminal on Changhan Boulevard, Peking's main road, attracted hundreds of people, in- cluding foreign reporters who relayed the posters' often startling contents to the world. Some of the posters questioned com- munism itself and other personally criticized leaders like Mao's successor, Hua Guofeng, and political strongman Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping. Young people also held mass meetings in Peking's central Tienan- men Square demanding full freedom of expression within China's socialist system. YESTERDAY'S broadcast hinted that the wall posters and crudely prin- ted ?dissident magazines - most of which already have ceased publication - are the real targets. Radio Peking said the wall posters had been used to divulge Communist Party secrets. It added that "some people use them to disturb the unity between the people and Communist Party cadres." The broadcast came on the heels of Friday's re-publication in party newspapers of a 1951 law that Made vir- tually any fact about the country a state secret unless it had been announced by the government. MASS MEETING PROGRAM IN JUDIAC STUDIES Tuesday, April 15th, 1980 4:00 pm Near Eastern Studies Lounge 3rd Floor, Frieze Building ALL ARE WELCOME a D big business day April 16 -17 Lake Erie flooding forces residents to evacuate area From UPI and AP A cold spring rain combined with heavy winds yesterday to push western Lake Erie over the flood stage from the Ohio line to just south of Detroit, for- cing more than 100 shoreline residents from their homes for several hours. The flood waters, described as the worst in the area in about seven years, began subsiding at mid-afternoon and many of the dozens of persons evacuated were allowed to return to their homes, police said. Hundreds of homes, however, suf- fered flood damage, authorities said. WINTER MADE a dramatic and un- welcome return elsewhere around Michigan, with, up to three inches of snow reporta t n pstsof 'the state. Police in hnflhit Mefn Michigan reported at least one weather-related traffic death. Police using school buses evacuated more than 100 people from their Lake e rie shoreline homes in Gibraltar, one of Detroit's downriver suburbs, authorities said. Those forced from their homes were taken to local chur- ches. Another 10 to 20 persons were evacuated in the Estral Beach area of Monroe County, officials said. IN THE SOUTHERN U.S., bloated rivers poured over their banks, routing thousands of people. At least nine people had been killed in storms which * brought a weekend deluge to the south, record April cold to some towns in the southwest, and the heaviest snowfalls ever to come so late in the year in Missouri. The abnormal snowstorm brought traffic to a halt on some interstate highways in the Midwest, closed schools and knocked out power in scat- tered areas. Filoods claimed new territory in Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama, where rivers on a relentless rise breached levees and spilled over makeshift sandbag dikes. TWO PERSONS were killed Sunday night in Illinois when a light plane en route from the Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri to Decatur, Ill: crashed in a snowstorm. Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily ,c , A (?) I i (O ,1v I Mickanin A Y Y 7p R Y { i I ry 1 4 ;., f r i 9 EVERYa TUESDAY prrnderOSa after 4:00 pm FAILY NIG I "41Yu-C m oat re! A Salad Bar --free with our dinner N tip p in g . -a Dinners also- include baked potato Pick Up Your 1980 Michiganensian at: Student Publications Building 420 Maynard (A limited number of extra copies and warm roll with butter. Extra-Cut RIB EYE Extra-Cut CHOPPED BEEF STEAK RIB EYE STEAK DINNER DINNER DINNER $2A9 $259 $349 II