Canham comments on hazing Page 4 Ninety-One Years DREARY NI Years IQ PPartly cloudy with early Editorial Freedom showers. High in the 50s ---_ with a low in the 30s. Vol. XCI, No. 57 Copyright 1980, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 8, 1980 Ten Cents Eight Pages Milliken to propose painful' cutbacks m state appropriations RESCUE WORKERS REVIEW diagram of Boone County coal. mine (shown above) as five miners remain trapped inside follow- ing a pre-dawn explosion. Officials say chances of rescue are dimming.- LANSING (UPI)-Gov. William Milliken said yesterday he will propose "painful" cuts affecting all areas of government when lawmakers return next week, but left in the air the prospects for a budget balancing tax hike. After meeting with top aides for more than four hours, Milliken also announ- ced a series of cuts in his office, jn- cluding elimination of special outposts in the Upper Peninsula and Detroit. Milliken made no mention of ap- propriations to state universities, but the schools, including the University of Michigan, have already faced cuts from the state. AIDES TO THE governor said he will study today and tomorrow the impact of cuts needed to make up an estimated $275 million budget deficit. If they are too deep, they said, he likely will propose a combination of reductions and tax increases. They denied that his reluctance to discuss taxes immediately was linked to the recent adverse vote on the Tisch tax cut amendment. A decision on calling for new revenues, however, could be based in part on an assessment of the likely mood of the legislature where Republicans already have announced opposition to any hikes, they conceded. MILLIKEN SAID HE he will be suggesting "very, very painful" spen- ding cuts which "will . . . be hitting almost everything" in state gover- nment. He said he is not discussing tax hikes at the moment. "When I present this to the legislature that will be the time when we will begin to weigh the implications of what I'm recommending," he said. "I AM ONLY laying before the legislature the need for cuts at this time," he added. Only Thursday, state budget officials released to the House Taxation Com- mittee a laundry list of possible in- creases and revisions affecting sales, use, business nuisance, and income taxes totaling $275 million. They stressed, though, that hikes were not See MILLIKEN, Page 2 McQueen .. . victim of heart attack Seve From AP and UPI ROBINSON, W.Va.-Five miners were trapped in a Boone County coat mine yesterday following a predawn explosion that filled the narrow mine shaft with dense, toxic smoke, and officials said hopes for a rescue were dimming. "It doesn't look good," said United Mine Workers President Sam Church outside the Westmoreland Coal Co.'s Ferrell Mine No. 17. By mid-afternoon, rescue crews had crawled along the 48-inch high seam to within 2,000 feet of the trapped men, said Martin McDonnell, vice president for finance and administration. THE MEN WERE trapped in the Farrell No. 17 mine of the Westmoreland Coal Co. They were about two miles in- side the mine and 300 feet below the surface. i The cause of the explosion was not known. Union leaders said from the outset there had been an explosion, but the company said there was no evidence of one. Com- pany officials later agreed there had been a blast. Howard Green, a UMW field representative at the scene, said the rescuers reported that a conveyor had been overturned and twisted by the force of the explosion and that there was soot "everywhere." HOWARD GREEN of the UMW safety division said the first emergency report came at 3:35 a.m., 31/2 hours after the five men started their shift. "From what we understand, it wasn't until 7:30 a.m. or 8:15 a.m. that the different agencies were notified," Green said. "Certainly I feel this is far too much time." Martin McDonnell of Westmoreland said he "cannot clarify" the lapse of time between when the accident ap- parently occurred and when agencies were notified. AMBULANCE CREWS and relatives of the trapped miners waited as rescue crews wearing gas masks and bearing stretchers made their way down into the smoking mine shaft late yesterday morning. They were joined in their vigil outside the mine by Gov. Jay Rockefeller and Church, who flew in from Washington. Church said the rescue crews were moving slowly because they had to rebuild the mine's ventilating system as they went along. "They are building the air locks as they go because of the methane. It's slow, dangerous work," he said. The five men were identified as Howard Williamson, Carlos Dent, Fred Pridemore, Herbert Kinder, and Howard Gillenwater. Thirty other miners were inside the mine at the time of the explosion, officials said, but they were in a different area and not affected by the accident. Soviets: U.S. won't win military race From AP and UPI MOSCOW-The Soviet Union paraded its military might through the snow-whipped Red Square yesterday on the 63rd anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution and offered fierce warnings that Russia would never allow the U.S. to achieve military superiority. Soviet Defense Minister Dmitri F. Ustinov, in a speech that seemed in direct response to President-elect Ronald Reagan's campaign vow to sur- pass the Soviet Union in military strength, said that if the U.S. seeks an arms race, Russia will win. "AMERICAN imperialism and the agressive NATO bloc are striving to plunge humanity into a new cold 'war," Ustinov said. "The intrigues of the enemies of peace demand our constant vigilance and the strengthening of the defense of the Soviet state in order to frustrate the plans of imperialism to achieve military superiority." The hard-line atmosphere of the ad- dress was reinforced by more than 7,000 goose-stepping troops, followed by tanks, howitzers and missle carriers that roared across cobblestoned Red Square. THE MESSAGE seemed in sharp contrast with the olive branch offered the new administration earlier this week, when Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev sent a message of congratulations to Reagan and offered hope for continued arms limitations negotiations. KELLEY SEEKS TO DEFINE SCOPE OF OPEN MEETINGS ACT: Oakland U. sued over closed interviews McQueen dies From The Associated Press Steve McQueen, the rugged actor who fought a strong and unorthodox battle against cancer that epitomized his character on the screen, died yesterday of a heart at- tack at a hospital in Juarez, Mexico, after surgery on a tumor. He was 50. He was the poker sharpie in The Cincinnati Kid, a detective in Bullitt, a race car driverbin Le mans, a wealthy Boston banker in The Thomas Crown Affair, and a small- town resident fighting an amorphous mess from outer space in The Blob. But with few exceptions, his characters were similar-tough but good-hearted guys who took chanced and often operated on the shady side of the law. HIS DEATH shocked the film in- dustry and his fans, since it had ap- peared that McQueen had been making a recovery of sorts from his bout with mesothelioma-a form of lung cancer that many doctors regard as incurable. Yet, McQueen was "very aware of and prepared, if necessary, to die," said his publicist Warren Cowan, who announced the death in Los Angeles. After' Papillon in 1973 and Towering Inferno in 1974, McQueen drastically curtailed his film schedule. In a departure from his usual repertoire, he played the iconoclastic Dr. Stockman in a limited-release 1976 film version of Henrik Ibsen's An Enemy of the People. In 1980 he starred in two films, Tom Horn and TheHunter. See McQUEEN, Page 2 From staff and UPI reports LANSING-Attorney General Frank Kelley, seeking to define the scope of the Open Meetings Act, said yesterday he will seek a court order blocking Oakland University from holding private interviews to select a new president. It is the first time Kelley has filed suit to prevent violation of the act before it occurs. He specifically will ask Oakland County Circuit Court to bar interview sessions scheduled for tomorrow. Kelley said the university's board of governors has violated the law by dividing into two separate committees that meet simultaneously to conduct private interviews. HE ALSO SAID the board has illegally discussed the merits of various candidates at meetings purportedly held merely to review ap- plications from those who had requested confiden- tiality. Oakland officials could not immediately be reached for comment. The 1976 law allows closed sessions only to review confidential employment applications, Kelley said. Interview sessions must be held in public. HE SAID THE board cannot evade the law by dividing itself into committees each of which amounts to less than a quorum of the full panel. Kelley spokesman Pat Murphy said the case would be precedent-setting, noting it has been a common practice for university boards to inter- view prospective presidents in private before an- nouncing their choice. "WE ARE PLOWING new ground in the sense that we are hoping to get more definitive deter- minations on what the Open Meetings Act specifically requires," he said. In 1979, while it was seeking a new president, the University of Michigan held such interview sessions in private, but the legality of the action was not challenged at that time. THE LEGALITY OF other closed University meetings is expected to be challenged soon in the courts, however. Murphy also agreed it was unusual to sue to block an anticipated violation. "In this case we simply have time and we want to stop the violations right now," he said. Kelley and Murphy both were careful to avoid any criticism of the Oakland University board. "I do not attribute any bad motives to the mem- bers of the Board of Control acting as the selection committee," Kelley said. "But I believe their ac- tions violate the Open Meetings Act." z z T 0- iHalf the news that's fit to print T JUST DOESN'T measure up. The Midwest edition of the venerable New York Times is just not up to par, according to members of the Committee to Restore the New York Times. Michael Ebner and Charles Miller, two long-time Times groupies transplanted to Lake Forest, Ill., believe the Times should print in the Midwest all the nme that's fit ton nint in Mw Vnlr The claim tha . paper to write to the Times and encourage the publishers and editors to satellite the entire New York edition to the Midwest. In order to add some economic pressure to their cause, the committee suggests buying fewer copies of the Midwest edition and buying another paper such as the Wall Street Journal or the Christian Science Monitor. Maybe its regular game. Backup Rev. Donald Weiner said, "We feel colleges should be included in the only prime time weekly presentation of football." The six commandments followed by the church are "Thou shalt keep Monday night holy ... and tune in early," "Honor thy holy point spread. . . for it is right on," "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's beer," "Thou shalt not commit adultery during halftime highlights," "Thou shalt stay tuned until the final gun ... for the spread may change," and "Forgive those who bet against their home team. . . for they know not what they tin11T men alc ....a .knmma n-~~ man+t f .. ater.. th on lice. In fact, the little creatures were so large in number that classes were cancelled Thursday to fumigate campus buildings. Officials of the Oklahoma school originally thought the tiny bloodsucking pests were restricted to one dormitory hall, but in a two-day period, 200 cases of lice were reported. "Everybody's taking it in really good spirits, especially with the unexpected holiday," said Greg Frizzel, president of the campus student association. "Students are making the most of the situation," he said. One evening get-together was dubbed a "lice party." The hugs alsnm egdnanm mmnvp taan a t+ r.nnr+ n time for a Time change. DI I