4 Page 2-Saturday. January 30, 1982-The Michigan Daily Blacks, mayors criticize Reagan's 'new federalism' From AP and UPI " WASHINGTON - The U.S. Con- ference of Mayors accused President Reagan yesterday of using his long- range dream of a "new federalism" to draw the nation's attention away from current economic problems. Reagan was also criticized by the new head of the National Urban League, who said his programs can work only at the expense of blacks and the poor. The mayors' criticism, however, at the close of the mayors' annual winter meeting, brought a quick rebuttal from Republicans. MAYOR JAMES Inhofe of Tulsa, Okla., vice chairman of the Republican mayors caucus, said that for many years, his colleagues have asked for more control over local programs and the money to operate them. "I commend the administration for coming up with. a program that is going to take 10 years to put into effect, that is going to be divided up into segments 4hat will give us four years of getting the sources of revenue back to the cities along with the responsibility of ad- ministrating the programs," Inhofe said. "The president's State of the Union address on Tuesday did not include the current state of the cities," said Mayor Helen Boosalis of Lincoln, Neb., The con- ference chairman. "CITIES struggling with massive unemployment are now being told that a further cut in programs to help the unemployed and the poor is a necessary part of this administration's economic recovery program." "It is hard for us to focus on 1984 and beyond, when 1982 is the'real problem fog' the millins of victims of the current recession and for the mayors who must serve them," Boosalis added. Some state officials said yesterday that eproposed federal fund that would finance dozens of programs Reagan wants to shift to the states is almost $10 billion short of what those programs now cost. REAGAN HAS asked Congress to "turn back" responsibility to the states for 43 education, transportation, welfare, health, job training and other programs along with "the revenue sources needed to fund them." Those sources include a $28 billion-a- year "federalism trust fund." Separate estimates by officials from New York state and another Eastern state, both of whom declined to be identified, said the federal programs involved now cost about $37.5 billion a year. The other half of the Reagan program involves a swap of Medicaid, which would be paid entirely by Washington, for food stamps and Aid to Families with Dependent Children, which would be assumed by the states. NATIONAL Urban League President John Jacob told reporters after his meeting with Reagan yesterday tht he Reagan ... put on defensive a had "some fear" of what will happen years from now under Reagan's proposal to shift food stamp and welfare programs to the states. "Our concern was when it comes to a choice between balancing the budget . and taking care of poor people, the budget gets balanced," he said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Police arrest Armenian youth in slaying of diplomat LOS ANGELES- A teen-ager who grew up hearing about Turkish per- secution of his fellow Armenians was under arrest yesterday in the ambush slaying of a Turkish diplomat, and police were seeking a second youth. Hanpig "Harry" Sassounian, 18, who had worked as a gas station atten- dant and a security guard in recent months, was booked late Thursday for investigation of murder in the killing of Kemal Arikan, Turkey's consul general in Los Angeles. Authorities said they would delay Sassounian's arraignment until Monday. Arikan, 54, was shot to death at the wheel of his car when he stopped at a red light on his way to work. Witnesses said two young men raced up to the cat and let loose a hail of bullets which smashed into Arikan's face, head, and chest. Ritual hinted in Atlanta death ATLANTA- Two witnesses yesterday placed accused killer Wayne Williams with Billy Barrett, the 27th of 28 young blacks abducted and mur- dered in Atlanta, and a medical examiner said a ritual may have been per- formed over Barrett's body. The testimony of a'mother and son, relatives of the 17-year-old Barrett, made Barrett the sixth victim to be linked through testimony with Williams-who is charged with only two murders. DeKalb County Medical Examiner Joseph Burton testified that Barrett, who disappeared May 11 and was found strangled the next day, had been marked after death. The body, he testified, showed two stab wounds in the abdomen, inflicted after death and superficial at any rate-surrounded by a circle of five "pricks in the skin." Condemned killer wins stay TAMPA, Fla.- Convicted cop killer Anthony Antone, one of two men scheduled to die Tuesday in Florida's electric chair, won a temporary stay yesterday pending an appeal to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. The other condemned man, Ernest John Dobbert, went before a federal judge in Jacksonville yesterday afternoon seeking a similar stay. The two were scheduled to be put to death at Florida's Raiford State Prison, begin- ning 7 a.m. Tuesday. Antone, 64, is the oldest man under the death penalty in Florida. The 43- year-old Dobbert, convicted of killing his own child, has been described as the most hated man on death row. Prices to skyrocket in Poland From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland - The martial law regime ad- vised Poles yesterday to get an extra job or raise food at home to survive stiff price increases, and admitted that about 174,000 people left the country for good last year, Price increases of between 200 ercent and 500 per- cent were to go into effect after the weekend, hitting everything from sugar and meat to coal, household appliances, clothes, and furniture. THE INCREASES will be coupled with wage hikes for about 28 million of Poland's 35 million people. Similar price hikes caused deadly riots in 1976 and led to the strikes of 1980. Underground sources. had said a 15-minute "war- ning strike" was to take place in the southwest city of Wroclaw yesterday to protest the price hikes, but with telephonesstill out, there was no way of confir- ming the protest. OFFICIALS CONCEDED they were worried about the reaction to the price hikes, which Poles tried to delay by stocking up on available items before the weekend. "The prices had to go up," Trade Unions Minister Stanislaw Ciosek said in an interview Thursday. "It was a very hard decision and we don't know what will happen. We are trying to soften the blow with wage compensations, but it's a fact the standard of living will go down," he said. .THE STATE-RUN newspaper Express Wieczorny told Poles to improvise to get through the price hikes. "You can swell your income by getting an extra job, growing things in a neglected garden plot, breeding rabbits, raising chickens or~a piglet," the paper said. The figures on Poles leaving the nation came from the Socio-Economic Committee, formed after mar- tial law was imposed and the independent union Solidarity was suspended Dec. 13: THE COMMITTEE said about one-fifth of the 870,000 Poles who went abroad failed to return, "taking up temporary or permanent jobs abroad. "Thus, Poland suffered serious losses. Namely, many outstanding specialists with high professional qualifications" left, the committee said. The estimated number of Poles who left Poland for good exceeded earlier estimates of officials who said some 100,000 citizens in this national of 36.1 million might have left last year. In interviews abroad, many Poles cited a bleak economic future as a reason for their flight. Another Polish government report said national in- come plummeted by 13 percent last year, and that "peace and order" are needed for economic recovery. The decline was4the worst in a three-year slide, surpassing the 4 percent drop in 1980 and the 2 percent drop in 1979. In London, Secretary of State Alexander Haig con- ferred with British Prime Minister Margaret That- cher on Poland and said he was "very satisfied" with the response of the Western allies to Polish develop- ments. He also said the Polish situation "continues to deteriorate,", but did not elaborate. Frequent drinkers show i 'U' grad shoots for stars in space shuttle (Continued from Page 1) well," he said. Nevertheless, he per- sisted'in the sport and won his letter. Lousma was never a starter, accor- ding t9 his coach, the legendary Bennie Oosterbaan, but he was "always veryr °diligent and.,a good leader. r He did not have too much speed afoot," Ooster- bann said, but "he wanted to do the best he could in anything he attempted. I had great respect for him." Lousma was often frustrated in his desire to fly because he was married and not in ROTC. One day, he recalled, some Marine recruiters came to campus carrying pictures of airplanes. "I asked if I could fly their planes, and they said 'yes.} I tok their test, passed, and got in the 'With the shuttle, the plans, and the progress it has made, we're going 1to need a lot more people.' --Jack Lousma Marines," he said. Lousma said his work at the Univer. sity and Prof. Buning's encouragement helped him get into flight school. He said he urges students to seriously con-, sider careers in the space program. "With the shuttle, the plans, and the progress it's made, we're going to need a lot more people," he explained. Mission specialists may not even have to know how to fly, he said. They will be experts ii technical fields, and will fly in the shuttle to work and carry out experiments. Lousma recommended a degree and experience in a technical field for aspiring astronauts. He also said a per- son needs to be "in reasonably decent health." President Reagan had dealt NASA Qr liurd I orni J t rtIE0 FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave.-6624466 Service of Worship: Sunday 9:30 and 11:00a.m. College Students Fellowship Sunday 11:00 a.m. Wednesday: Holy Communion, 10:00 pm FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 120 S.State St. (Corner of State and Huron) Worship Schedule: 8:30 am (First Sunday of Every Mon- th) -Holy Communion in the Chape\l 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Morning Wor- ship in the Sanctuary. Jan. 31st: "Reconciliation and Nu- clear War," by Rev. Jim Wallis, guest Speaker. Church School for all ages-9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Choir Rehearsal-Thursday at 7:15 p.m. Ministers: Dr. Donald B. Strobe Rev. Fred B. Maitland Dr. Gerald R. Parker Education Directors: Rose McLean and Carol Bennington ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL (Catholic)t 331 Thompson-663-0557 Weekly Masses: FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH alid AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS FOUNDATION 502 East Huron 663-9376 Jitsuo Morikawa, Pastor 10:00 a.m.-Sunday Worship. Child care provided. Jan. 31st:-"Sense of Worthiness." Sunday: Church Loyalty Dinner 12 noon. 11:00 a.m.-Church School. Classes for all ages. Class for undergraduates. Class for graduates and faculty. Also:- Choir Thursday 7:00 p.m., John Reed director; Janjce Beck, organist. Student Study Group. Thurs., 6:00 p.m. Support group for bereaved students, alternate Weds. 7p.m. 11:00 Brunch, second Sunday of each month. Ministry Assistants: Nadean Bishop, Terry. Ging, Barbara Griffin, Jerry Rees. LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN (The Campus Ministry of the LCA-ALC-AELC) 801 S. Forest at Hill St. Sunday Worship at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Choir practice. Friday 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Volleyball S* * CAMPUS CHAPEL UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL Serving the Campus for 39 Years Robert Kavasch, Pastor 1511 Washtenaw between Hill St. and S. University Sunday services: 9:15 and 10:30 am. Choir: Wednesday 8:30 pm, Bible Study: Sunday-9:15 a.m., Wednesday-10 p.m., Thursday-10 p.m. * * .* NEW GRACE APOSTOLIC CHURCH 632 N. Fourth Ave. Rev. Avery Dumas Jr., Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sunday School. 11:45 Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Sunday Evening Service. Bible Study-Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m. For rides call 761-1530 * * * UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 409 South Division Ann Arbor, Michigan Rev. Steve Bringardner, 761-5941 Christian Education-9:45 a.m. Service of Worship-11:00 a.m. "Time.of Meeting," 6:00 pm. some budget cutbacks, and the shuttle project has not escaped. them, Lousma said. "We are working with the same amount of money we got at the height of the Apollo program, without inflation," he said. The cuts have -resulted in some delays, he said, warning that 'the shut- tle program is in a critical phase." He said further cuts would end up costing more money in the long run, as laid-off staff would eventually have to be rehired. In addition to studying the effects of heat on the Columbia, the shuttle's seven-day flight plan includes package of eight scientific experiments in its moving-van-sized cargo bay. The ex- periments are primarily basic resear- ch, Lousma said, which will study the sun and the environment around the Columbia. The crew will also get the opportunity to move two payloads ground inside the cargo bay using the Canadian-built remote manipulator arm. "We're not going to release anything into space, hopefully," he quipped. Inside the cabin, Lousma and Fuller- ton will use a technique called elec- trophoresis to sort out chemicals for- medical applications. They will also perfbrm "multi-latex reactions," Lousma said. The reactions produce perfectly round balls of specific size which can be used to carry drugs into certain organs of the body, while avoiding others. Until flight time, contact and coor- dination with engineers and experimen- ters is also essential, Lousma said. "We spend lots of time in around-the- table bull sessions to see how to get stuff done, and done best," he said. "We don't make all the final decisions, but we have to be aware of what's going on."' Lousma said he maintains regular contact with his alma mater, consulting each year with Prof. Bunings's space systems design class. "It's a very for- tunate we have a willing person who has that experience of having inhabited spa'ce," Buning said. And, Lousma said, Wolverine football still attracts his attention. He took time off to attend the Bluebonnet Bowl, and reminisced with Michigan fans. He said he was pleased that "they moved the Rose Bowl to Texas." Lousma and his wife, Gratia, live in Houston, near the Johnson Space Cen- ter, with their four children; Tim, Matt, Mary, and one-year-old Joe. higher risk of breast cancer NEW YORK- Women who drink may be 11 to two times as likely to develop breast cancer as those who don't drink, according to Boston resear- chers who studied 4,300 women in three countries. The research also suggests that frequent drinkers had a higher risk of breast cancer than occasional drinkers and those who had given up drinking, but the evidence for this was not strong. According to the American CancerSociety, breast cancer strikes one in 11 American women some time during their lives. In -1982, the cancer society estimates, 112,000 new cases of the disease will appear, and it will cause more than 37,000 deaths. When the women with breast cancer were compared with women in the other two groups, calculations showed that drinkers of beer, wine, or liquor were an estimated1.4 to 1.9 times as likely as teetotalers to get breast can- cer. Vol. XCII, No. 99 Saturday, January 30, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub: scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109. The Michigcn Uoily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press Internotinol. Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syhdicatb. News room: (313) 764-0552; 76-DAILY. Sports desk. 764.0562. Circulation. 764-0558: Classified Advertising. 761.0557; Display advertising.764-0554 "Billing. 764-0550. Editor-in-chief ...........;.......SARA ANSPACH Managing Editor................JULIE ENGEBRECHT UniversityfEditor...................LORENZO BENET News Editor------------------------- DAVID MEYER Opinion Page Editors ...........CHARLES THOMSON KEVIN TOTTIS Sports Editor ................... MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors...........GREG DGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Arts Editors . . ............... RICHARD CAMPBELL MICHAEL HUGET Chief Photographer------------PAUL ENGSTROM PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill. Deborah Lewis, Mike Lucas, Brian Mosck. ARTISTS: Robert Lence. Jonathan Stewart, Richard Wolk, Norm Christiansen. ARTS STAFF: Jone Carl, James Clinton. Mark Dighton, Adam Knee, Gail Negbaur, Carol Pneman, Ben Ticho. NEWS STAFF: John Adam, Beth Allen, Andrew Chap- man. Perry Clark, David Crawford. Lisa Crumrine. Ann Marie Fazio, Pam Fickinger, Lou Fintor, Joyce Frieden. Mark Gindin, Julie Hinds. Steve Hook. Kathlyn Hoover. Harlan Kahn. Pamela Kramer, Mindy Layne, Mike McIntyre,,Jennifer Miller, Anne Mytych, Nancy Newman, Don Oberrotmon. Stacy Powell, Janet Roe, Kent Redding, Seon Ross, Louren Rousseau, Susan Sharon, David Spok. Lisa Spector, Fannie Weinstein, Brry Witt. SPORTS STAFF: Barb Barker. Jesse Borkin. Tom Ben- tley, Randy Berger. Mark Borowski. Joe Chapelle. Laura Clark Martha Croll. Jim Dwormon Koren Flach. ,Larry Freed. Matt Henehan, Chuck Joffe. John Kerr. Doug Levy. Jim Lombard. Larry Mishkin,. Dan Newman, Andrew 'Ooles. Ron Pollack. Jeff Quicksilver.Sarah Sherber, Kenny Shore. James Thompson, Josie VonVoigtlander. Kent Wolley, Karl Wheatley. Chris Wilson, Bob Wojnowskl. BUSINESS STAFF Business Mornager RANDI CIGELNIK Soles Managers BARB FORSLUND Operations manager SUSANNE KELLY Display Manager MARY ANN MISILWICZ Clossifieds Manager DENISE SUL IVAN Finance Manager ..MICHAEL. VORICK Assistant Display Manager NANCY JOSLIN Nationals Manager SUSAN RABUSHKA Circulation Manager KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator E ANDREW PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF Liz Altman. Hope Borron. Alan Blum. Daniel Bowen Lindsay Bray, Joseph Broda. Glen Can tor Alexander DePillis. Susan Epps. Wendy Fox Sebastian Frcko. Mark ,Freeman. Marci Gittelmon Pomelo Gould. Kathryn Hendrick Anthony Interrante Indre Liutkus. Beth Kovinsky. Caryn Notiss Felice Oper, lodi Pollock Ann Sachor. Michael Sovitt Michael Seltzer. Karen Silverstein. Sam Slaughter Nancy Thompson Jeffrey Voight PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S MTWTFS SMTW 2T FS S M T W T F S S M T W T F S -61 2 3 1 34 5 67 12 34 5 101112 4 6 7 8 910 8 10 1112 13 14 6 8 9 10 11 12 1'71819 117 1314 15 6 17 151 1718 192021# 2 22 2324 25 26 18 20-21 222324 224.24 25e6-49 2 -2iOka 27~ 29 30 2F .6 27 28 29 30 31 1982 _____ JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH APRIL S M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T F S 1-2 t2 45 6 2 3 4 56 .1 2 3 14 Do a Tree {.r