Ninety-Two Years of, Editorial Freedom hie Sit 4 kuIg SMILE Mostly clear and warmer today, with a high in the mid-50s. Vol. XCII No. 56 Copyright 1981' The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, November 13, 1981 Ten Cents Twelve Pages ADA director bemoans Reagan *poicies By FANNIE WEINSTEIN Calling for more economic planning, tax cuts for the poor, and selected wage and price controls to get the economy back on its feet, the national di rector of the Americans for Democratic Ac- tion, Leon Shull, spoke last night at the Michigan Union. Speaking to a small group of local ADA members and others, Shull called the Reagan administration the only reactionary movement that's been in control of this government since Franklin Roosevelt. "THE REAGAN administration has been anything but effective," Shull said. "The economy. is in disarray and is heading downward sharply. Unem-, ployment is goingsup and while it's true that interest 'rates have gone down, they're stil at an unprecedented rate..' "They're trying to do two things, bias .'the government in favor of the very rich and the large corporations and destroying the government as an in- strument that can help people." Shull also said ADA's 65,000 members oppose the administration's tax and foreign policy sprograms and cuts in human services. "WE'RE TOTALLY opposed to cuts in student aid, he added. They don't seem to understand that investments in human beings are just as important as investments in capital. No one should be prevented from. getting a good education because of a lack of money." Shull labeled the nation's current, military build-up "obscene" and estimated Pentagon waste to be up- wards of $30 billion. He also said the Reagan 'ad-, ministration's ta. program benefits those whose income is in the top 5 per- cent. "IF YOU EARN less than $30,000 per year, next year you will pay more taxes than you did before the tax cuts were made," Shull said. In addition to criticizing Reagan's economic policies, Shull said, "It's also clear that we have to do something Blast-off! The shuttle is aloft .. for a little-while 9 'I CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Columbia's crew took the shuttle on a brilliant return to space yesterday and then learned their five-day mission was likely to be cut-perhaps in half. The astronauts were not in danger and NASA laid plans for a-landing as early as tomorrow. A space agency spokesman explained the msision "could be extended" beyond, tomorrow "if things were looking well, a day at a time." The- problem was with an electricity- producing fuel cell, but two others worked fine. IN THE MEANTIME,Joe Engle and Richard Truly were expected to cram as much of their flight exercises as possible into today's schedule. If Columbia is called home early, it will be only the third time in 33 flights that a manned U.S. spacecraft has been summoned in mid-flight because of, trouble. The fuel cell problem caused NASA to announce that it was invoking rules calling for a minimum flight of 54 hours. That word came less than seven hours-after'Columbia's 10:10 a.m. EST liftoff. SEVERAL HOURS later, NASA's John McLeaish in Houston said that did not mean the the shuttle would have to come-down after '54 hours-only that the critical items would be pushed into that time frame so that if necessary, it can. Yesterday's flight--the second test following last April's trouble free debut - began as a spectacular event after a plague of pre-launch delays. It soon turned sour for Engle and Truly, who had waited more than 15 years each for their first space flight. In the early hours of flight they were kept in a low orbit-138 miles altitiude, rather than 157-and they already had spent much of the timetroubleshooting minor problems. The Mission Control said a major one-the errant fuel cell - would force abbreviation. AS IF THAT wasn't enough bad news, weather conditions for a Saturday lan- ding were fast deteriorating at Edwar- ds Air Force Base in California, the prime landing site. For Engle and Truly, though, it was. business as usual. "Just like the sims," Truly said once, referring to the endless hours the crew spent in mission simulators. They hauled out a movie camera, kept handy for that purpose, to photograph See SHUTTLE, Page 7 AP Photo THE SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA lifts off in a blast of smoke from Kennedy's Space Center in Florida yesterday. The shuttle's flight was later tentatively shortened by two days because of the breakdown of a fuel cell. Reagan rejects Stoekm From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Budget Director David Stockman recanted his own "poor judgment and loose talk" in what he teried a visit to President Reagan's woodshed yesterday. But Reagan rejected his offer to quit for having ex- pressed doubts about the economic program he helped design. -Stockman told a news conference: "I TOLD THE president I would not permit by dwn careless ramblings to a reporter to stand in the way of his suc- cess as president or his program. At the end of the meeting the president asked me to stay on the team." Stockman's conments broke a two- day silence by himself and 'the president despite the political furor caused by an article in the December issue of the Atlantic Monthly. Stock- man is quoted as having misgivings about several elements of the ad- ministration's program. Perhaps the most damaging of those statements was his suggestion that the president's tax cut was a political "Trojan Horse" designed mainly to lower tax rates for the rich. STOCKMAN, talking in slow and somber tones, told a White House press room jammed with reporters and cameras "I ... deeply regret any harm that has been done" to Reagan's economic program. "I'm grateful to the president for this second chance," Stockman said. t The Atlantic Monthly article quotes Stockman as assailing "supply-side" economics, complaining about "greed" and waste at the Defense Department, confiding that Reagan could not balan- ce the budget and lashing out at the tax cut passedby Congress. IN ONE SECTION, Stockman said of the budget: "None of us really under- in resignation stands what's going on with all these' mislead the American public.- numbers." "He Reagan stated unequ He confirmed that the direct quotes in that he would not tolerate a the article. - "The Education of David behavior," the statement said. Stockman" - were accurate. "Those words were words that I STOCKMAN SAID his spoke, Stockman said. judgement and loose talk, REAGAN CANCELLED a scheduled (Reagan's program) a seriou lunch with Vice President George Bush vice." Although Stockman sai to see Stockman. Word of that meeting title presented "utterly fal came from the president himself when pressions and misconstrued hi he said during a visit to the new "I take full responsibility and b Washington bureau of ABC News, When But the budget director denie I leave here today, I'm going to have a has doubts about the pre meeting with him. I'm not going to say program, as his statements in anything more." ticle suggested. A White House statement handed to "I would not be here now, no reporters following Stockman's ap- work 16 hours a day ... if I pearance said Reagan had expressed believe in the president< "giave concern and disappointment" policies," Stockman said, add about the article and his "particular "honest people" may disagre dismay at the possible suggestion that best way to solve the nation's e his administration ... might seek to problems. ivocally ny such '"poor did his s disser- d the ar- se" im- is views, blame. d that he sident's n the ar- r woOld I did not and his ling that e on the eonomic Stockman See ADA, Page 7 ... staying on the team' American diplomat escapes assassination Reaganomics benefits nation, Schultz says PARIS, (AP) - The top U.S. of- ficial in France ducked a would-be assassin's bullets yesterday, crouching behind his car while a bearded gunman in a black leather jacket fired several shots at him in a posh residential area near the Eiffel Tower. Christian Chapman, charge d'af- faires at the U.S. Embassy, was not hit.. The gunman escaped, and no group claimed responsibility. SECRETARY of State Alexander Haig said in Washington that Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy could have been behind the shooting. But he made it clear he had no evidence, just his suspicion. Police, said the gunman, "who looked Middle Eastern," fired at the 60-year-old Chapman as he walked to his car from his apartment. The Foreign Ministry said Chapman recently reported he had been threatened, but that he had not ac- cepted an offer of police protection, which now will be provided. "I was just walking out of my house, and I noted a young man on the right about 50 feet away," Chapman said at a news conference after the attack. "He had a black beard, jet-black eyes, and an athletic build. He was a very han- dsome young man - a Middle Eastern type." The man, in his 30s, stuck his hand in his black leather jacket and approached, Chapman said. "INSTEAD OF going back into the house, I stupidly continued on," he said. "I heard shots and saw him walking rapidly toward me with his hand extended. I ran forward and ducked behind the car. He started walking rather quickly away. There were several witnesses, and one young man tried to pursue him." Two bullets slammed into the rear right fender of Chapman's blue Plymouth. One of them traveled through the trunk and shattered against the left rear side. By MARK GINDIN Declaring that "everybody can be a winner under the Reagan ad- ministration's programs, former Secretary of Labor and the Treasury George Schultz spoke at the Business Leadership Lecture and Award Ceremonies yesterday at the Univer- sity School of Business and Ad- ministration. Schultz, presently the chairman of President Reagan's Economic Policy Advisory Board, said the President's programs are a definite shift away from the liberal policies of the past 40 years. He said the current economic trend is more market and enterprise oriented, encourages savings and in- vestment, and features less gover- nment subsidies and lower inflation. "THESE IDEAS are not new, only new to the post-World War II era," Schultz said. "The old way had cer- tainly run out of steam, with more in- flation and no growth," he added. Schultz delivered a lecture entitled "Reaganomics and Management Issues of the 1980's" to about 200 people before accepting the 24th annual Leadership Award from the Business School Student Council. Past recipients include Thomas Murphy of General Motors and Frank Borman, chairman of Eastern Airlines. Currently the president of Bechtel Group, Inc., one of the world's leading engineering and construction firms, Schultz served as Secretary of Labor, Director of the Office of Management and Budget, and Secretary of the Treasury at various times during the Nixon Administration. The success of the president's programs, Schultz said, rests on four basic questions: " WHETHER the present course of the policies can be held steady; * Whether government spending can be held in check; " Whether households respond to the savings incentives provided; and " WHETHER business responds with an investment thrust. Schultz said he was confident the programs would provide a healthier economy that would benefit the entire country in the long run. Calling the federal economic changes outlined by Reagan a very coherent policy, Schultz said "It is not a coin- cidence that a lot of people in the See REAGANOMICS, Page 2 Daily Photo by JACKIE BELL GEORGE SCHULTZ, Secretary of Labor and later of the Treasury during the Nixon administration, #said that the Reagan economic policils will promote investment and saving. Schultz spoke at an awards ceremony in his honor at the Business School yesterday. I wwwd T DAY . d NMU chief's pay challenged GROUP OF Northern Michigan University. students is circulating petitions demanding that NMU President John Jamrich reverse his recent pay, hike."We're just asking for leadership and sacrifice," Steve Fawcett, president of the Associated Students of NMU, said Wednesday. He said the 12.4 percent increase recently accepted by Jamrich boosts the Nudists must go Rhode Island nudists will have to find somewhere else to frolic in the buff now that Moonstone Beach has become part of the Trustom Pond National Wildlife Refuge. "It is going to be one of our toughest situations," refuge manager Donald Tiller says. Because regulations prohibit nude bathing on federal land, Tiller said he expects a crackdown on nudity on the beach even if it is leased to the town of South Kingstown, as it has been in the past. The half-mile long, 600-foot-wide strip of beach, long popular with bare seeing double. There are sevensets of twins enrolled at the school this year, and the teachers are having trouble keeping up with who's who in the classroom. Principal Janice Gilmore says four pairs of the twins are identical and "even the fraternal ones look alike." With 590 students, Clifton Hill is large enough that all of the twins can be split 'up and Gilmore says that helps. "We try to keep sets of twins separated because there's always a dominant twin," she said. "One is the leader and the other can get lost in the scuffle is they aren't split up." Though all are in separate classrooms, Gilmore says there is-still occasional confusion. car that had gone over an embankment along state Route 3, he said Wednesday. "I asked the lady what wrecker she wanted me to call," the deputy said. "But then a man came up and said, 'We have an elephant, and we can get that car back on the road- and, save you a wrecker bill.' " The elephant, it turned out, was on-tour with the Florida-based James Hetzer International Circus, which had just perfor- med at Hamlin High School, McCallister said. He said the powerful pachyderm made short work of the project, and the good deed was recorded by a circus employee with a camera. When he produced the photo at headquarters later, i ! I. I i