Ninety-Two Years of. Editorial Freedom L itc i I43IaiIg LIPPY A good chance of thunder- showers today, with a high in the mid-?Os. vol. XCII, I NO. 14 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 25, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Political internships: Who needs the'U'? di di By BARRY WITT So you want to work for Sen. Carl Levin in Washington next summer. Or perhaps you would like to work on a project for Amnesty International. These jobs, and about 170 others, may be obtained if you're one of ap- proximately 75 finalists in the Office of Career Planning and Placement's an- nual race for summer Public Service Intern Program positions. BUT WHAT IF you're one of the 250 students rejected by the program? Apply on your own, advise former in- -terns and managers of several Washington offices. "It makes no difference at all," if you're applying through the intern Senate votes to soften cuts in U'aid L NSING (UPI) The Senate ap- -proved yesterday a plan to take about $20.8 million out of a railroad tax fund, intended in part for bike path projects, and use it to spare state schools and colleges - including the University - from deep budget cuts. A bill to abolish Michigan's $23 million railroad delinquent tax fund and use the money to help close up the state's $135 million fiscal 1981-82 budget hole was approved on a 26-5 Senate vote. IT WAS SENT to the House where it. will receive action early next week. The House action will come on the eve of Gov. William Milliken's second at- tempt to win approval of a $126 million executive budget cutting order. Milliken and the legislature must come to terms by Wednesday when the fiscal year ends. THE HOUSE and Senate Ap- propriations Committees rejected Milliken's initial proposal last week, saying it cut too much from state school programs. The new plan reportedly will ease the total cuts on schools and colleges from about $50 million under the original plan' to just over $20 million. The University, which had been marked to absorb $6.1 million in cuts, could be saved as much as half that. Vice President for Academic Affairs Bill Frye, however, warned last week the state's financial situation remains tenuous, and the University could receive a bigger share of future cuts. program or on your own, said Phyllis Harrison, an intern coordinator in Senator Donald Riegle's Washington of- fice. The important thing is the resume and the qualifications, she said. THE PROGRAM instructs its finalists to apply for internships from a list of Was ington congressional, special interest, executive, and media offices, and about six similar offices in Lansing. But offerings which PSIP lists are probably only one percent of all the internships available, according to An- ne Richter, CPP's Experiential Education Programs supervisor. CPP has books filled with the names of offices that accept summer interns, said Richter, who began conducting the program in July. '(The program) gives a perception that the only students who can get internships in Washington are those who go through the program. ' -Former Washington intern Dan Sichel But students running through the PSIP selection process are not infor- med of all these possibilities, former in- tern Dan Sichel said. STUDENTS GAIN finalist standing in the program by passing both the ap- plication and interview stages, which begin in October for next summer's positionsi Achieving finalist status guarantees a person an internship Student Program Coordinator Michelle Belfie said. But according to DebsBednarz, a- Peace Corps intern last summer, the program is too selective. It "discouraged people if they didn't get in from getting their own internships. in Washington," sh.e said. PSIP "gives a perception that the only students who can get internships in Washington are those who go through the program," Sichel echoed.' Students pursuing internships in- dependently not only have access to CPP job listings, but also can get in- dividual assistance in writing resumes and completing application materials. Since the program's inception in 1969, more than 700 students have found in- ternships out of about 3600 applications received by PSIP, formerly known as the Washington Internship Program. THE JOB descriptions include researching and assisting in drawing legislation, writing speeches, and per- forming some clerical services, said Yayoi Kushida, a PSIP student coor- Ulna Cur. Whale Sichel, who worked for the Consumer Federation of America, found his "level of work to be not nearly as demanding as (he) would have liked," other former interns said their experiences were worthwhile. Cathy Lieber, who graduated from the University last May, said her position with the Organization of American States offered her "a lot of. responsibility." MOST OF the other interns at the Peace Corps last summer did not find their positions through a school program, Bednarz said. LSA junior Bill Vailliencourt, who was not a PSIP finalist but got his in- 'U' therapy program i debated in open forumn Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL PHYSICAL THERAPY CURRICULUM director Richard Darnell argues at yesterday's open hearing that the Univer- sity should either enhance the existing program or discontinue it. Reagan defends economic plan, reassures skeptics in rj From AP and UPI WASHINGTON- President Reagan's budget knife finally has cut deeply enough to wound some Republicans and crack the solid GOP support that anchored his congressional victories in earlier budget battles. In a 30-minute broadcastaddress from the Oval Office, the president sought to allay public fears and} Wall Street wariness about his economic policy by pledging to "hold to a firm, steady course" as he seeks to pull the United States from "the economic swamp we've been in for so long." "I RECOGNIZE that many in The United States and the Soviet Union an- nounced yesterday that the two will begin talks in November on limiting nuclear arms in Europe. See story, Page 3. Congress may have other alternatives, and I welcome a dialogue with them," the president said in remarks prepared for delivery.Y "But let there be no mistake: we have no choice but to continue down the road toward a balanced budget-a budget that will keep us strong at home and secure overseas." In the broadcast address, Reagan announced he will seek spending cuts of 12 percent across-the-board for hun- dreds of federal agencies-from Head Start to the Forest Service. The reduc- tions sought are beyond the $35 billion already approved by Congress. "WE ARE launching a nationwide ef- fort to encourage our citizens to join with us in finding where need exists and then to organize volunteer programs to meet that need," he said. Reagan was unapologetic for the See LATEST, Page 2 BY MARK GINDIN Top University officials gathered in an open forum yesterday to discuss a recommendation to eliminate the University's physical therapy program - and to hear arguments from the public on the pros, and cons of discontinuance, pushing. the program one step closer to a decision on its future. Vice President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye and President Harold Shapiro listened to comments from several officials of the University's medical school and University Hospital who warned that the program's academic quality is slipping and urged that it be dropped from the University. BUT, PHYSICAL therapy program director Dr. Richard Darnell 'and' representatives from Wayne State University defended the program, and asked that the University make a greater commitment to it to reversethe erosion of its quality. The forum is part of the University's standard discontinuance review process, the same process that was employed to review the University's geography department before the decision was made to eliminate in June. Frye said he would consider the input from the forum when making his own recommendation to the Regents on the proposal to eliminate the program. Frye said he hopes to announce his decision early next month. MEDICAL SCHOOL Dean John Gronvall recommended last June that the physical therapy program be discontinued. In his remarks at the forum yesterday, Gronvall again stressed that the program "is not cen- tral to the mission of the medical school." Gronvall also asserted that the University cannot afford the $150,000 expenditure he said would be required to restore the program's quality and that the program's elimination would not hurt the quality ofphysical therapy at University Hospital. Darnell has also insisted that the program's quality is inadequate and thatJ if the University is unwilling to commit itself to rebuilding the program the department should be cut. But he and several others who spoke at the hearing urged the University to maintain and enhance the program. See OPEN, Page 6 .......' ..,... ,.. P:........3.....:......T. . . .. ....: ... ,. ... ... .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.< _.,..2r...~w. _,... n. ,..., .> >...,.,.. , f ......... . . . . . . . . . . . ... .,. .)..,... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .w.. . . .lo.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .: ~. . . . . . . . . .._. .S. . ......... .,.. :,. . . . . . . ............;.. .ew. ,., wt;i: _, :'.....,~u'S~. .. ?n+ r~.,,. $:,,x.A: 9+ IM- AT TT IM ADiT. LMA rZVr% I By A1NN MI FAZIO methods, calling them deceptive and an ineffective, identification, she told the jury. Two controversial cases of selling liquor to minors way tosolve the problem of alcohol consumption Ann Arbor police officer Phil Scheel testified that were tried yesterday in Ann Arbor's 15th District among minors. he followed her into the store shortly after she en- Court, resulting in one guilty charge and one aquittal. To be found guilty of furnishing intoxicants to a tered, observed the transaction, and informed The six-member jury found Karen Edlund, a 21- minor, the defendant must sell the alcohol to a minor, Edlund of her violation. year-old University business school senior and em- and either the defendant knew he was selling to a EDLUND'S TESTIMONY of what happened that ployee of Sgt. Pepper's General Store, not guilty of minor or he did not make a diligent inquiry as to the night agreed with Scheel's and Monroe's. She added, furnishing intoxicants to minors. age of the customer. however, that "I thought she was 21. BILL TICE, owner of Tice's Party Store, was found Both the defense and the prosecution agreed the Monroe seemed "so confident" and looked like a ""quilty for furnishing liquor to a minor. Tice, 44, has issue in these cases is the question of diligent inquiry, summer customer who Edlund knew for a fact was owned the store for 13 years and worked there seven since the sale and the Scouts' ages already had been over 21, she said. j e e7g u t ] years before buying it. He will be sentenced next determined. Monroe told the court that she was not at all ner cogmonth. EDLUND'S ATTORNEY Molly Reno, of Student vous the night of the sale. 4 Judge Pieter Thomassen presided over Tice's case Legal Services, told the court in her opening EDLUND ALSO said that she rushed that night and Judge George Alexander over Edlund's. statement yesterday that the transaction involving because she was servicing another customer, who Last July and August, the Ann Arbor Police Depar- her client was "atypical." If it weren't for the "ab- needed a key copied, when about 10 or 12 people came tment made a series of arrests for the illegal sale of normal situation created by the police, there would into the store and she went to service them before alcohol following investigations using underage have been no transaction," she said. making the key. members of local police Explorer Scouts, a junior of- Last July 31 at about 9:30 p.m., Explorer Scout Sgt. Pepper's Manager Ernie Ajlouny testified that ficer program affiliated with the city police, who at- Christine Monroe, a 19-year-old LSA sophomore, Edlund was an excellent worker who was sometimes tempted to buy alcohol at city bars and stores. went into Sgt. Pepper's and purchased a six-pack of too cautious in checking the age of customers pur- CITY MERCHANTS were upset with these Michelob beer without being asked her age or for See ONE, Page 6 .. ,~ v , : .. , \ . .. . .. ..n , .l .. t y . , '. ,'. .... r . ... .. .,, I . .,.r . J ' . tI!.. i.... . , S;. ..Y,. ..r/. s. . . ,...vra. ,., ,. f.. ... . ., r5' vt w, \v ......... .+... ... .... u. . w G.r:.. . . TODAY- Scholarly names UKE, HARVARD, and Princeton might be nimes of well-known colleges to most Ameri- cans-but not to a Louisiana lawyer named Stanford. He's Stanford Bardwell Jr., chosen by President Reagan Tuesday as U.S. Attorney in Baton Rouge, La. Bardwell's parents both bear college names-his father is Stanford Sr. His mother's name is Canadian doctor warns. In a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr. Douglas Waugh said the Hungarian toy apparently has caused a new sports injury known as "cuber's thumb." The Ottawa physician said sin- ce he is right-handed, he usually holds the game in his left hand with one of the corners firmly braced against the base of his left thumb. Unfortunately, the cube tends to stick when its pieces are rotated. "This is not only irritating . . . I have discovered it has caused a hitherto un- described sports injury, 'cuber's thumb'," he wrote, describing a tender swelling of the joint between the fingers and the wrist. O killed by these inflation rates," he said. "My suggestion is anyone affected by high interest rates lower their flags to half mast until interest rates come down to a reasonable level, between 10 and 12 percent. .C It's a dog s life Should you be looking for a minister with a toothy grin for a marriage ceremony, call the Rev. Rex and he'll help you exchange bow-wows. But act quickly, for he'll soon be defrocked. Rex. a 7-year-old German shenhard. received . dress, and age, Rex received a card identifying him as an ordained minister. The Rev. T. H. Swenson, whose signature appeared on Rex's ordination card, said the dog's ordination would be rescinded. "The thing we try to do is work backward from what other churches do." In the American Fellowship Church, he said, ordination comes first with spiritual development following. As for Rex, or- dination hasn't gone to his head. "He still gets off the leash and runs up the alley to see another German shephard," said Mary Campbello. "My minister said that maybe he's got a visitation ministry." L ;I I .1