Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom P Lit 1Thm :4ktitg COLDER Cloudy, windy, and turning colder, with a chance of snow showers, and a high around 30. Vol. XCII, No. 99 Copyright 1982, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor Michigan-Saturday January 30, 1982 Ten Cents Eight Pages Two remodeling '' officials projects may will present involve asbestos - -inancial s a , ink cial By LOU FINTOR 1970s employed asbestos as an in- Two University remodeling projec- sulator. .'_ bs may involve the ' carcinogen According to Weiss, asbestos-most 'i -5" ยข p asbestos, which could cause students commonly used in acoustical tiling . F.g x*f'.r and staff members who frequent the and insulation-only becomes har- areas serious health problems, exper- mful when small dust particles of the ts said yesterday. mineral circulate in the air. Projects in the Frieze Building an "One or two exposures doesn't the Michigan Union involve the make a difference, but five or six B JANET RAE ticiate the resent overcrowding rhe'MvhalfcnsUcioinvmateril or tatieeebtsthesnhBeAE REtcpattepreetoerrwig r-emoval of construction materials hours at a time exacerbates the syn- Administrators are putting finishing problem in classrooms will continue un- that may contain asbestos, an in- drome," he said. Life expectancy touches on a comprehensive proposal til the state's economy improves sulation material which has been from the time of early diagnosis is 15 designed to guide the University's enough to increase allocations to the directly linked to cancer, said Don months, he added. financial future for the next five years, University. Weissman, a Los Angeles-based at- According to Lucy Pilkinson, a including reallocating some $20 million Robert Sauve, budget assistant to torney who specializes in harmful teaching assistant in the theater and of general fund money toward high Frye, said in the event of heavy cuts in substance litigation. drama department, located in the priority areas, academic areas, the administration "The likelihood is more than 80 per- Frieze Building, no safety precautions Unofficially dubbed "the Five Year may not be able to relocate regular cent that both buildings have asbestos were taken by contractors removing Plan," the set of proposals presently teaching staff. No conclusions had been in their construction," Weiss said. the ceiling tiles in the building's south being prepared by Vice President for reached concerning whether tenured Neither' the construction contrac- end. Academic Affairs Billy Frye reportedly professors in such programs would be tors nor School of Social Work Dean "Men were tearing down acoustical includes tentative plans for progressive dismissed,.he added. Johnson could be reached for com- tile and pipe insulation, and throwing reductions in teaching staff and other "It (the Five-Year Plan) is a ment when it was discovered that it on the floor," Wilkerson said. She personnel as cuts occur within reallocation of funds, so somebody is building materials had not been tested said she was concerned for staff and academic departments or programs. going to get cut," Sauve said. prior totheirlremoval students walking through the hall THE. PROPOSALS call for cutting "Academic reviews of major units Morton Hilbert, the University's where the dust from the tiles cir- Daily Photo by MIKE LUCAs back academic units and some teaching would be part of that plan - by major chairman of industrial and environ- culated. faculty while maintaining enrollment units I mean schools and colleges mental health, said several Univer- "It was like a snowstorm one day, RENOVATIONS TO 2068 Freize Building, soon to be offices in the School of fat i le ainta ding t u Isa l sity Social Work, have sparked controversy because the ceiling tiles removed a its present levels, accordingtoa top siybuildings constructed prior to the See RENOVATION, Page 3 may have contained abestos a known carcinogen aide to Frye. Administrators an- See OFFICIALS, Page 3 L.. , Breakdown of talks at GM spurs rebates Huge telephone rate hike only speculation -Bell DETROIT (AP) - The collapse of con- cession talks at General Motors Corp. prompted the No. 1 automaker yester- day to-offer-rebates of up'to $2,000 in an effort to increase sluggish new car sales and avoid further layoffs. Sixteen hours after negotiations broke. down between the coipany and the United Auto Workers union, GM Chairman Roger Smith announced that prices on certain 1981 and 1982 models would bereducedby $500 to $2,000 for 60 days beginning next Monday. Smaller rebates also would be retroactive to Jan.43. 3 GM, WHICH in recent months has bucked the industry trend toward rebates, thus joins Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler. Corp. in offering price incen- tives. Bargaining on contract concessions with the UAW is scheduled to resume Monday at Ford Motor Co., where negotiators are trying to maintain op- timism in the face of the breakdown in talks at GM, the nation's largest car manufacturer. "This leaves the door open for serious negotiations," said Ford spokesman Jerry Sloan. "If they would have reached an agreement at GM, they UAW bargainers at Ford would have used that as the pattern. This sort of clears the slate." NEGOTIATIONS between GM and the UAW, which began Jan. 11 at the company's request, fell apart late Thursday when bargainers deadlocked. on job security and other issues. "It's not fatal, but we're injured," UAW President Douglas Fraser said af- See GM, Page 3 By HARLAN KAHN tractive AT&T bond rating. Fears that telephone rates will "NO ONE knows what this (Michigan skyrocket if AT&Tegoes through with its Bell) rating will be, and it has a direct skroable ivT&Testrog 22 l l bearing on costs," Chennault said. probable divestiture of 22 local Through divestiture, AT&T would be operating units are based entirely on allowed to keep its long distance ser- speculation, Michigan Bell officials alwdt episln itnesr speclatin, ichian Bll fficalfvice, and Bell Telephone would handle said yesterday. only local calls. "Changes will be effec- "Customers, at this point, should not ted in the way business is done," said be alarmed," said Bel spokesman.A rs eise Gray, staff manager at AT&T. Chennault. "I hope that all customers Rates will increase during the next will stay nformed and make their fve years, because of inflation, she said, views known,"' he said, and nothing abnormal will result from "The financial picture is, still the divestiture. clouded," Chennault said. Michigan ALTHOUGH the change would bring Bell is financially independent of Bell management to the Michigan A T&T, he explained, but problems level, it could also cause some could arise if Bell tries to raise capital operational problems, according to selling bonds without the financially at- Chennault. "We've never operated this -way," he sai, explaining that much of AT&T's advice and expertise will be lost. The divestiture depends on Federal Judge Harold Green's proposed modified consent decree, which would finalize a previous agreement made between AT&T and the federal gover- nment earlier this&month.. This agreement would end an anti-trust suit brought against AT&T seven years ago by the federal government. Green said he wants to allow 60 days for fact-gathering and public reaction before making his-decision. When the proposal is approved, AT&T has six months to file its plans for divestiture. Fraser ... UAW, GM both hurt University grad prepares for shuttle trip to space By PERRY CLARK When the space shuttle Columbia thunders into orbit this spring on its third test flight, University graduate Jack Lousma will be at the controls. This won't be Lousma's first time in space. Seven years after he joined NASA in 1966, he went on a two-month stint aboard Skylab. Although the training vehicles for his upcoming shut- tle flight are different, Lousma said the routine of 12-hour days and frequent weekend work hasn't changed. A good portion of his time, and that of his co-pilot, Air Force Col. C. Gordon Fullerton; is spent in shuttle simulators which duplicate everything from the launch, to orbital operations, to failures. Lousma and Fullerton also practice landings in a. shuttle training airplane, rehearse under water for possible spacewalks, and make frequent jour- neys to Cape Canaveral for ground tests in the Columbia. The major objective of the flight, scheduled for launch March 22, is to study the effects from heat on the Columbia and its systems, Lousma said. He discounted the possibility of using the shuttle as a military vehicle. "The space shuttle is a pretty vulnerable target," Lousma said. "We'd be out of business if we depended on the shuttle as a weapons platform. It's not like Star Wars, with fighters zipping around. That's pure fantasy." Born in Grand Rapids, Lousma grew up in Ann Arbor and in 1957 graduated from the University with a B.S. in aeronautical engineering. "When I was little, I went to football games and wan- ted to be in athletics," said the 45-year- old Marine Corps colonel. At the University, he played quarterback for the Wolverines. Lotisma began his college career in a business program. But, "When I saw all the things they expected me to read and remember overnight in business, I knew I had to get into something I could understand," he said. He switched to aeronautical engineering. "I was fascinated by the prospect of building and flying air- planes." Prof. Harm Buning, associate chair- man of the University's aerospace engineering department, said he remembers Lousma as a "very inquisitive guy. He always wanted to know the details. He didn't believe anything on our say-so, but always wanted to dig through things to the base of it, to find out how it applied to his profession." Lousma said that when he broke his leg in football at the beginning of his junior year, his grades shot up dramatically. "Football and aeronautical engineering don't mix See 'U,' Page 2 JACK LOUSMA, left, a University alumnus,is the commander for the third flight of the shuttle Columbia. Lousma and astronaut C. Gordon-Fullerton, right, are seated in a shuttle mission simulator at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. TODAY A little help from a friend DUKE UNIVERSITY has had trouble persuading the People's Republic of China to let a Chinese student study at Duke's law school, so admin- istrators asked for a little help from an old friend and alumnus-former President Richard Nixon. Law School Dean Paul Carrington said the Chinese student ap- plied to Duke was accepted and also was awarded the Richard M. Nixon Scholarship, which carries a $3,000 an- Everlasting love A persistent Romeo says he has spent the last six days and almost $20,000 on caviar and champagne, musicians and clowns, and even a waiting limousine and Lear jet in hopes that Karine Bolstein will marry him. But the 20-year- old daughter of a Labor Department attorney keeps saying no-even though Keith Ruff, 35, says he won't give up ... ever. "I think I know what real love is," Ruff said yesterday. "I'll never give up. Even if girls come in my room and, take off their bikinis or a princess of Arabia wants to marry me and give me all her jewels and let me have as many wives as I want, I'd have no interest." Karine, who kind of clothing. McLean was jogging down the middle of a tree-lined street Sunday when a police car pulled in front of him. Ottawa Hills Police Chief Joseph Eich says McLean just happened to be the first one caught under a 1978 or- dinance of the exclusive Toledo suburb. "I think it's disgusting," McLean, 18, said Thursday. He said he was trying to get in shape for his high school baseball team, "but he took me to the police station." Under the village or- dinance, a jogger must run facing the traffic of the left side of the road. McLean said he was running in the middle of the lightly-traveled road because snow and ice were piled up on both sides of the pavement. McLean said he was told he was also breaking the law by not wearing reflective college class ring in July, 1980 during a storm on the Chesapeake Bay. The gold ring fell from his finger into the water, and he gave up hope of ever seeing.it again. But 18 months later, the ring was back with its owner-after it was apparently swallowed by a fish. The ring was found-recen- tly by an alumnus of Cross' alma mater, the University of Virginia. Coleman Maddox spotted the ring in a fish- market's garbage about 140 miles west of the bay where it was lost. Maddox noted the engraved fraternity, initials, and date, then searched university directories, and questioned staff members until hefound the owner. 0 .I I I I