Ninety-Two Years Eiof Editorial Freedom P fHtctt]9 an a t DREARY Partly cloudy, with a chan- ce of snow flurries and rain, highs near 40. " Vol. XCII, No. 69 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, December 3, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages Reagan to review * status. of air traffi controliers WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, lamenting that he has become "estranged from labor," asked AFL- CIO leaders for a fresh start yesterday and promised, for his part, that he will review the mass firings of air traffic controllers. But despite the optimism expressed by union leaders over Reagan's remarks in an Oval Ofice meeting, a later written notice from the White House press office appeared to rule out any prospect that the 11,500 fired con- trollers would be brought back to their old jobs. ACCORDING to the AFL-CIO con- tingent, including president Lane Kirkland, Reagan promised a full review of the controllers issue. The union officials said they took that to mean that not only might he lift the three-year ban on any other gover- nment employment for the fired strikers - a prospect he raised a day earlier - but that they might actually be returned to their old jobs: I At first, deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said "there are no plans now to put them back in the towers." But he agreed that Reagan didn'trule that out, either. But later, in a written notice to the press, the White House said Reagan "is not considering rehiring these in- dividuals as air traffic controllers." Rather, the notice said, the issue remains whether to lift the ban on any federal employment. See REAGAN, Page 2 Solidarity issues alert in new crisis From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland - Solidarity issued a nationwide alert and called its leaders into emergency session yester- day after government commandos stormed a firefighters' school, routed protesting cadets, and arrested nine unionists, in the biggest show of force since the labor crisis erupted 18 months ago. Solidarity chief Lech Walesa ordered local union chapters to await word form national leaders before declaring a strike, and cautioned them to be on the guard for other police actions. ALTHOUGH THERE was no blood- shed, the blitzkrieg assault threatened to snowball into another major confron- tation between the Communist gover- nment and Solidarity. Solidarity's Warsaw chapter con- sidered a general strike call for its 900,000-member region, but said it would await the release of Seweryn Jaworski, one of the unionists seized at the school. The Warsaw branch warned it would shut down the capital with a general stike if about a dozen local union of- ficials detained in the assault were not released by noon 6 a.m. EST this mor- ning. One deputy union chairman was freed. THE 90-MINUTE raid began when the commandos jumped onto the roof bf the five-story building from a huge helicopter, and burst through street- level doors at 10 a.m. "It was nonviolent and we offered no resistance to give them an excuse," said one of the 320 cadets ousted after a week-long occupation. "They didn't beat us, they just pushed a bit." Witnesses said some 500'commandos, backed by 4,000 to 5,000 police and army troops, were on hand during the operation. THE CADETS, who had sought civilian status so they could be covered by a new law on academic reforms, were told to go home. But many defied the order, and flocked to Solidarity union offices. The raid was conducted in full view of the residents of the northern Zoliborz district, suggesting, that the authorities wanted their new "get tough" policy to be apparent to all. As rumors spread like lightning through the city, a crowd of several thousand people converged on the scene. When police took the cadets away, the crowd whistled and jeered derisively and shouted epithets at police. SOLIDARITY worker guards, wearing red-and-white armbands and carrying bullhorns, worked furiously to calm the crowd hours after the raid, assuring the people that no cadets remained in the building or had been beaten. The striking students had been demanding the academy be transfor- med into a civilian institution like other universities. The state news agency, PAP, whicht reported the assault briefly in stories about the "unblocking" of the school, said there were no casualties. The only damage visible at the scene was a'few broken windows. 'U'group,flight service in dispute Canadian constitution spurs separatists By BETH ALLEN A student group protesting military research on campus may file suit against the flight service it hired to carry a banner over the Nov. 21 Michigan- Ohio State football game. Liz Galst, spokeswoman for the Committee for Research on Intelligence and Military Endeavors, said yesterday the group is "dissatisfied" with Acme Flight Service's refusal to make amends for what Galst claims were infractions of their agreement. ACCORDING TO Galst, the company said the plane would fly over the stadium for 30 minutes, but it only circled the stadium for 18 minutes during the fir- st half of the game., Galst said she then called the company, asking for a refund or additional flight time during the second half. The company said that it wasn't interested in either option, according to Galst, and invited her to " 'have your lawyer contact our lawyer,' " she said, BUT ACME FLIGHT Service owner Greg Smith said yesterday that the whole incident results from a "misunderstanding" about what was expected of the flight. Smith claims that the 30-minute figure he states to clients includes the five-minute flight from Willow Run Airport in Ypsilanti to the stadium. Galst also maintains that the banner was flown too high over the stadium to be easily read. ACCORDING TO Smith, however, the Federal Aviation Administration monitored the altitudes of the planes, and none could fly lower than 1,000 feet; the five-foot letters on the sign would be hard to read even at that minimum altitude, he said. CRIME has sent Acme Flight Service a letter outlinging its complaints. Galst said the group will wait a week or two for a reply and, if the two parties can't work out their difference, CRIME will file suit in small claims court. "We're hoping to settle out of court," Galst said. Smith said he intends to reply to CRIME's letter. [D noPlTEHE By PERRYCLARK Computers. Their presence is a per- vasive force at the University. They contain information about everything from payroll to financial aid to academic records to CRISP. The University Computing Center has a reputation among experts as one of the best in the country and, accor- ding to its director, Dr. Aaron Finer- man, the reputation is well-deserved. "I REGARD our computing center as one of the finest, if not the finest, university computing centers in the country," said Finerman, who recently received the Distinguished Service Award from the Association for Com- puting. Machinery. It was that reputation, he said, which drew him to the University from NASA, where he had worked for 15 years. The core of the center is its programming (software), identified on every printout by the familiar "MTS." The Michigan Terminal System They're everywhere at the 'U' OTTAWA (AP) - The House of Commons, in an historic vote, over- whelmingly approved a major con- stitutional reform yesterday that would give Canada a true national charter for the first time. But the vote, a personal triumph for Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, could also spur on the French separatists of Quebec province, where Premier Rene Levesque ordered provincial flags flown at half-staff yesterday in protebt. AFTER A resounding voice vote, the Commons took a roll call, recor- ding 246 votes in favor of the con- stitutional reform resolution and 24 against. Eleven members either ab- stained or were absent. All present then stood in the oak- and-stained-glass chamber and sang the national anthem, "O Canada." The resolution asks the British Parliament to end a legal anachronism by giving up control of Canada's constitution, after first in- serting a U.S. style bill of rights and other new provisions in the document. THE REFORM proposals appear certain to win easy approval in the largely powerless Canadian Senate and later in the British Parliament. I regard our computing center as one of the finest, if not the finest, university computing centers in the country.' -Aaron Finerman, University Computing Center Director "allows the user to interact with the computer," Finerman said. He ex- plained that the system enables operators to simultaneously write and run a program at a terminal. Before MTS was developed, they had no recourse other than working with "bat- ch jobs"-punching up IBM cards and waiting for the results. The system was developed in the 1960s by the center's staff as a stop-gap measure, while the University was' waiting for software from IBM. MTS ended up working better than IBM's software, according to the center's associate director, Eric Aupperle. Now it is used by several universities around the world. DESPITE ITS uniqueness and com- plexity, however, the Computer Center does not fail to provide headaches for some of the people who use it. Even the Regents have run into problems with the system. Computer operators were breaking into confiden- tial records in MTS, until those records were removed from the academic sec- tion. "The Regents did not want con- fidential stuff in a highly accessible place," explained Blanchard Hiatt, the principal writer for the University's Research News.' Students using MTS encounter dif- ferent but extremely frustrating problems with the system. Sue Hunter, a junior in electrical and computer engineering, said she doesn't like to go to the center because, "You spend most of your time waiting to get on a ter- minal orreceive your output," she said. "I try to go to East Engin. or someplace else where I can get on a terminal easier."s THE OVERLOADED facilities frustrate faculty members, as well. Prof. Uwe Pleban of the Department of Computer and Communications Scien- ce Department said he has problems getting access to a terminal, par- ticularly during the day when use is ex- tremely heavy. In addition to the access problems, he said, response time See COMPUTERS, Page 2 Levesque .. plans fight in courts speaking provinces, and of last minute struggles over the rights of women and Canadian natives. The last remaining problem is the opposition of the Quebec gover- nment. Levesque plans to go to the Canadian courts one final time in a desperation bid to block a con- stitution that he contends diminishes the provincial powers of French-speaking Quebec. The cour- ts have ruled against him before. No statements were made on. the constitutional issue in the Commons yesterday, but after the vote Progressive Conservative Party chief Joe Clark, the opposition leader in Parliament, told reporters, "While we can all celebrate ... I think every Canadian would rather have a situation where the people of Quebec can ... feel at home." Trudeau's Liberal Party nment hopes to have the completed by February. The constitutional plan, Canadian leaders for more years, was the product of promise between Trudeau gover- process goal of than 50 a com- and the premiers of Canada's nine English- TODAY Extraordinary people THE 14 PEOPLE who do the cleaning at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum are a little bit out of the ordinary. One is legally blind, while others are partly paralyzed or suffer emotional disabilities. All are disabled. The U.S. General Services Administration which runs the museum, awarded a $200,000 maintenance contract to Pine Rest Christian Rehabilitation QnXrn. - S1 Tnn ,- - r - a f h ---.- eni thek -, crypts as a joke has been sentenced to up to 10 years in jail. Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick Ziem imposed a one- to 10-year sentence Tuesday on David Campbell, 18, of Pontiac. Campbell said he took one of the skulls to his home and left the other one next to a headstone at the Pontiac cemetery June 30. "He stated that his intent was to play a practical joke, such as placing the skull in the refrigerator or on his sister's bed," Ziem said. Hoping to receive a reward, Campbell called Pontiac police July 1, and repor- ted he had found a skull, Ziem said. He was arrested that day, and has already served 154 days in the Oakland County Jai sine hs e rrP-t C mmnhaan nl2aadp i ly a r renl suffered a heart attack yesterday, but White House officials quickly denied the reports. The rumors caused no noticeable affect on trading. White House spokesmen said they had been swamped with calls about the rumor. "There's just nothing to it," said deputy press secretary Peter Roussel. "I just saw the man 20 seconds ago, and he was fine. Working hard and healthy as ever." Q The prince understands women Prince Charles, explaining the freqiuent absences of the to find out what they are." Meanwhile, in London, Princess Diana has been credited with sparking a new awareness of fashion among British women by the head of the British Tie Manufacturers' Association. "Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales has given style a new meaning and British women have been quick to follow her lead," said Gordon Drew. British men, however, remain "among the world's worst dressers," Drew said. i d i