Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom V' P Lit ian 43atlu L(AOKIN' GAO0) Mostly cloudy today with a high near 40. Vol. XCI No. 98 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 24, 1981 Ten Cents Eight Pages IRW CCRB, IM may face huge cuts 14 By BARRY WITT Operating hours at the Central Campus Recreation and In- tramural Sports Buildings will be cut by as much as 40 per- cent later this year if an administration budget proposal is adopted. The intramural sports program could also be cut in half. In addition, Recreational Sports Department officials predict they will have to reduce staff, including student em- ployees, and reduce support for club sports if the depar- tment's budget is cut. RECREATIONAL SPORTS Director Michael Stevenson said proposed cutbacks of between 40 percent and 60 percent would have a "devastating impact on the quality and quan- tity" of recreational sports-a department that served an estimated 62,000 members of the University community last year, according to department statistics. The Recreational Sports Department is one of a number of non-academic departments being studied for budget cuts designed to save more than $3 million in the next school year. kscK Bob Sauve, assistant to the vice president for academic af- fairs, said while reductions suggested in recreational sports are not final, cuts will have to be made somewhere. A 6 PERCENT budget cut has already been prescribed for all academic departments, but administrators say additional reductions in the teaching and research areas will lead to erosion of quality in those areas-considered "central" to the University's mission. Recreational Sports Director Stevenson, at the request of the University vice presidents, is preparing impact statements in the event of 46 percent, 56 percent, or 66 per- cent decreases in the amount of money the department receives from the University's general fund. Of the nearly $1.2 million 1980-81 Recreational Sports Department budget, $450,000 is general fund money. The remaining $750,000 comes primarily from user fees. SHOULD THE 66 percent figure be implemented, recreational sports officials predict that as many as 233 of the 350 student employee positions would be cut. In the event of a 46 percent decrease, 180 positions would be dropped, Steven- son said. A cutback in operating hours at the recreational sports buildings, including CCRB and the IM Building, would also be necessary, Stevenson said. Buildings which open as early as 7 a.m. and close at 10 p,m. could reduce hours to 11 a.m. to 8p.m. Support for club sports, such as lacrosse, rugby, crew, and See IM, Page 2 Daily Photo by BRIAN MA SEVERAL WOMEN PLAY volleyball in the Central Campus Recreation Building, one of many Recreational Sports facilities that will face a substantial reduction in hours if the department's budget is cut. Total building hours for all the facilities could be slashed by 40 percent. Curious careers Townsfolk, students Ex-hostages to come home tomorrow * " U anI By ANN It's amazing do to make a bu Some people jobs. Others, li advertising ag choose slightly lines of work! WHEN NOT business rout Moody Ballo delivers specia in a dozen heliu "It's really. where I make son said of customers hav (who costume Piggy outfits,; bikinis) to as and to give proposals. enterprising lot MARIE FAZIO One University student, who asked what some people will , to remain anonymous, found another uck these days. way to make people happy and pad his opt for traditional desk pocketbook as well. The art major ke Ann Arbor freelance said he used to pay for his art supplies gent Nancy Anderson, by. manufacturing and selling fake y more unconventional IDs. The student said he began making the documents for himself pursuing her normal and friends when he was 16, and found tine, Anderson heads out there was a market for the same ons, a company that service in Ann Arbor. al occasion greetings - "I MADNE $800 in 12 days," he um-filled balloons. ' boasted. The art student quit the fake neat going in places ID trade after a near brush with local people happy," Ander- authorities. "It's too dangerous," he the business. Her explained. "The money isn't worth ve used the. messengers getting thrown in jail."'IIn an ironic e themselves in Miss twist of fate, he added, he currently* as mime clowns, or in checks IDs in-a local bar. k people out on dates, Those who couldn't get a copy of one or accept marriage of the bogus documents to quaff a few See A CURIOUS, Page 8 417--- .lA pR4 I14 .r9 . \ ( 7 .f NEW DIRECTOR HOPES TO SOLVE PROBLEMS: Health Service chan ges planned From UPI and AP WIESBADEN, West Germany - Embittered and in some cases depressed, the freed American hostages will fly home tomorrow to their families and the heroes' welcome that doctors hope will help erase the haunting memories of their deprivation and abuse in Iran. The 50 men.and two-women were due, to leave Frankfurt tomorrow morning. Pentagon sources in Washington said A former hostage tells of his days of "total terror" at the wrong end of a submachine gun in Iran. See story, Page 3. they will be reunited with their families at Stewart Air Base in Newburgh, N.Y., and then go to the nearby U.S. Military Academy at West Point for a few days rest. One former hostage, Sgt. 1st Class Donald Hohman, 38, already has been reunited with his wife, Anna, a nurse in Frankfurt, and will remain with her in West Germany. The chief of the medical team that examined them said a number show signs of temporary psychiatric illness, some have guilt feelings about their ac- tions in captivity and some are so depressed they stay in their hospital rooms. Dr. Jerome Korcak, head of the State Department team sent to Wiesbaden to help the hostages cope with a return to freedom and the harrowing experien- ces of captivity, said several have psychiatric symptoms he described as "post-traumatic stress syndrome." awithout discussing individual patients, Korcak said mental problems include flashbacks, disrupted sleep, and, in some cases, severe depression. Some have been more severely affec- ted by the experience than others," he said, but added: "We feel these people will not be permanently disabled by their illnesses;" Korcak said the problems were "variable, but it passes with time and proper treatment" and that treatment would be continued in the United States for those who need it. HE SAID "SOME feel guilty ' and mentioned that one hostage had made anti-American statements to his cap- tors on condition some of his colleagues would be released. Koreak said another hostage made a television statement after being told his mother had died and that if he made the. statement-he. would be, allowed .to.. return to the United States for her funeral. He apparently referred to U.S. Marine Sgt. Johnny McKeel of Balch Springs, Texas, who reported being told his mother was dead and finding out only when he reached West Germany that she was alive. In the first report -of firing on a hostage, former captive William Belk said Iranian militants opened fire- on him when he tried to escape and then kicked his injured leg as punishement when he was caught. Belk, 44, said in an interview with a South Carolina televison station that he tried to escape several times and was fired on by his captors. "I tried to escape here in Tehran, or rather in Tehran, on a couple of oc- casions and the bullets sound the same as they go by your ears," the ex-Marine with combat experience said in an in- terview with Columbia station WBTV from Wiesbaden. By DENISE FRANKLIN He may not have a cure for the Bangkok flu, but new Health Service Director Caesar Briefer says he may have solutions for some of the ser- vice's problems. , "The health service, in general, is in pretty good shape for a university facility,'' said Briefer, who became director Jan. 1. "But it does lack some of the clinical divisions and special services existing at other admirable university health services, such as Harvard and Dar- tmouth." TO REMEDY THE health service's deficien- cies, Briefer said he is considering plans to renovate the existing facilities to aid patient flow and increase clinical privacy. Briefer also said he is trying to keep costs at a minimum and wants to see the billing process made as simple as possible. * "Many students are confused by our two dif- ferent billing systems," he explained. For an ac- curate explanation, he suggested, students should ask one of the health service's clinical assistants, or read the "Assessment -Fee" pam- phlet located in the lobby of the health service building. OTHER PLANS include the implementation of a health education program "as a form of preventive medicine," the creation of more specialized health care divisions, and recruit- ment of student advisors to participate in the Student Health Advisory Committee. The new director said he would also like to im- prove the appointment and medical record systems and broaden the scope of office services. Briefer added that he wants to eliminate fees for service charges and daytime emergency visits. Briefer replaced former 12-year director Dr. Robert Anderson, who is now working part-time at the University Health Service. A graduate of the University of Chicago Medical School, Briefer worked ten years at Massachusetts General Hospital. He spent 12 years building the Polaroid Company's Health Service. He was the camera company's first health service director. Briefer said he spotted the University health service director job opening in the New England Medical Journal. "I saw it as another mountain to climb, and this one looked pretty steep," he said. Briefer . plans health service changes 11l0l1(1 reunited with wife TODAY- Virgin Marie HE MAY BE a little bit country and her brother Donny may be a little bit rock and roll, but Marie Osmond also claims to be a "square lady." The singer says she has "just as many passions as any other woman," even though she declares she is a virgin in next month's issue of Ladies Home Journal. The 21-year-old Mormon star, who broke off an engagement last year to ac- tor Jeff Crayton, said she doesn't plan to marry for eight} years and is determined to wait for the "right man" before Chugging songs If you're trying to save money on your next beer binge, don't sit in a bar listening to singers like Kenny Rogers, Waylon Jennings, and Hank Williams. According to a University of Minnesota anthropologist, country and western music speeds up the tempo of drinking. "The slower the beat, the faster the drinking," said Prof. James Schaefer. He and some of his graduate students checked out bars in Montana and Minnesota to learn what factors con- stituted the highest risks for problem drinkers. The sipping rate increased, Schaefer said, when melancholy music such ac R ,dor m.,, a" ndWlm e' , T', enT nn-e- 1 psychologist Dr. William Murphy, he and four other researchers are looking for 40 men to participate in a revealing $176,000 project aimed at identifying common characteristics in exhibitionists while seeking a successful method of treatment. "We want people out there who are exposing themselves to know that we exist," Murphy said. "The majority of exhibitionists realize that what they're doing is wrong . . . it's the embarrassment of coming to someone that keeps them away." So far, they have not discerned any common bond among exhibitionist men. Speculation by the researchers is that they are trying to release anger or express their masculinity. Murphy says that he has talked with a vast variety of flashers ranging error, saying there had been a query about a lost mink, not about a found coat. But distraught claimants already were in action. "A lady called lost and found and said she was looking for a black full-length mink coat, but she didn't know where she lost it," Pfansteihl said. He also received a call from a limousine rental service man making an inquiry on behalf of a woman from New Jersey who thought she had lost her mink on the subway. Both Capitol and District of Columbia police reported -further inquiries. And you thought umbrellas were tough to hang onto. 'n - 1 0 - 5 i r'