Page 2-Tuesday, February 2, 1982-The Michigan Daily eagan hears states' FromAP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Reagan agreed yesterday to consider changing his "new federalism" proposal to meet criticisms raised by state and lcoal leaders, including trying to find a way to aid states' too poor to take over programs the federal gover- nment now pays for. Reagan met for an hour at the White House with governors, state legislators and congressional leaders, and spokesmen said there was general agreement to make the plan work. THE WHITE HOUSE agreed to divide the plan into two parts: firmly held principles and the mechanism to make the plan workable, with the latter subject to change. The governors agreed to do the same with their requests. "It was generally agreed that what we want to do is to negotiate a satisfactory plan for making this hap- pen," Gov. Richard Snelling of Vermont, chairman of the National Governors' Association, said at a new conference. Snelling said there is "significant ... agreement" among the various groups. REAGAN WAN'Ditotransfer more than 40 federally assisted programs to state and local governments over the next eight years. In return, the federal government would completely take over Medicaid. State leaders generally welcome Reagan's "new federalism," though they have reservations about the formula he outlined last week in his Stae of the Union speech, particularly over how states will be able to pay for the programs once a federal transition fund runs out in 1991. "We've asked the president to consider adding a Phase Three to his proposal, which would be some mechanism for addressing the fact that when the tr- ust fund has expired and the states have these responsibilities, that there are disparities in the fiscal capacity of the states," Snelling said. "The president has not ruled it out." "THE WHOLE WORLD doesn't end in 1991," said Snelling. "The states...are certainly concerned with what our fiscal capacity wil be in 1991." "I want to make sure we don't come out on the short end,' said Gov. Robert Ray of Iowa. Added Illinois Gov. Jim Thompson: "Our figures are based on experience. The White House is making projections." Complaints GOV. LAMAR ALEXANDER of Tennessee, the governors' federalism expert, suggested "super revenue sharing" fund might be created to help states that can't come up with enough local taxes to pay for the programs. Alexander also said some way should be found to compare what it would cost states to their ability to raise money. Then, for example, states that couldn't keep up essential services to the poor and elderly might draw from the fund. This continuing fund would be separate from a $28 billion annual transition fund that would help all states pay for the programs. THE REAGAN program envisions the federal government dropping its excise taxes by 1991 and let- ting states reimpose them. Most of the transition fund would come from federal windfall taxes on petroleum, which expire in 1991. But governors have said some states might not be, able to levy excise taxes or replace the windfall tax with state level energy taxes. How to pay for the program is one of the areas that may be negotiated, Snelling said. Israel, Egypt unhappy despite promise of U.S. aid increases WASHINGTON (AP)- Israel and Egypt, the largest recipients of U.S. economic and military aid, are due to receive hefty increases in fiscal 1983 if President Reagan has his way. Still, neither is entirely happy with the shape, if not the size, of its American lifelines. Reagan plans to boost military assistance to Israel by $300 million, to a total of $1.7 billion, while Egypt's defense aid would be raised $400 million, to $1.3 billion, administration and diplomatic sources say. THE INCREASE for Israel is a longstanding commitment and was originally proposed, sources say, as "compensation" for the sale of AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia. However, the officials add, that characterization offended the government of Prime Minister Menachem Begin, which bit- terfy opposed the Saudi deal. The sources, who asked not to be named, said Israel initially rejected the aid increase because it was offered in that fashion. Now, they say, the $300 million has been reworked as a low-interest loan, rather than a grant-and Israel still may balk. "I'M NOT SURE it will happen," said one Israeli official, noting that his. government already is having difficulty repaying past loans. "It's a question of our ability to pay.'' Sources said Israel would like to have at least half of the new military aid as an outright grant. As for Egypt, President Hosni Mubarak is expected to raise complain- ts during an official visit beginning today over the strings attached to American assistance, as well as the costs and delivery performance of U.S. arms suppliers. It will be Mubarak's first visit since becoming president following the assassination of Anwar Sadat in Oc- tober. Mubarak will meet with President Reagan tomorrow. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Police raid three more Red Brigades hideouts VICENZA, Italy- Police said yesterday they smashed three more hideouts of Red Brigades terrorists and newspapers reported that suspects seized when police freed kidnapped U.S. Brig. Gen. James Dozier were "singing like canaries." "They're singing like canaries," Il Giorno of Milan said. Two other newspapers, the conservative Il Giornale Nuovo and the Communist Party organ L'Unita, said Red Brigades suspect Antonio Savasta was giving police important information. Police believe Savasta interrogated Dozier during his six weeks of captivity. Police did not identify the five arrested in the latest sweep, but said they were members of the "militarist wing" of the Red Brigades that claimed responsibility for kidnapping Dozier from his home in Verona on Dec. 17. Theraids were the ates in a series of operations since the rescue of Dozier when three men and two women terror gang members were arrested in the Padua apartment where he was held captive for 42 days. UAW and Ford resume talks DEARBORN, Mich.- Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers retur- ned to the bargaining table yesterday to discuss cost-cutting, job-saving con- tract concessions four days after similar talks failed at General Motors Corp.I Ford's proposal offers employees a profit-sharing plan and unspecified job security arrangements in exchange for shorter vacations and other con- cessions. It is designed to make the automaker more competitive with foreign carmakers whose lower prices have cut into the domestic market share. In exchange, the UAW wants job security guarantees and an end to Ford purchases of parts and components from companies whose workers are not represented by the union. Boston clamps down on unpaid parking tickets BOSTON- Somebody owes the city of Boston $6,000 for hundreds of unpaid parking tickets, and soon a lot of people will know who it is. That substantial debtor and 2,000 or so others will soon find their.-names being distributed to newspapers across the state. The city hopes that em-- barrassment at the prospect of having their names published will prod the culprits into paying an overdue $2 million..'I City Collector-Treasurer Lowell Richards III said the publicity idea came from the practice of publicizing delinquent property tax lists. Benjamin Kilgore, spokesman for Mayor Kevin White, said release of the list will be held up until later in the week so computers will have time to delete names of people who paid tickets by the end of a 10-day grace period that ran through last Friday. A new system of processing and collecting parking fines has earned about $12. million for the city so far this fiscal year, up from about $2 million for the comparable period last year. Government film on Poland flops in European theatre LONDON- The U.S. government film "Let Poland be Poland" provoked jokes and sarcasm yesterday from viewers in Europe, where only five nations ran the political program in its entirety. 1 1. The 90-minute film, whose audio portion was broadcast on radio, featured taped statements by President Reagan, Mrs Thatcher, and West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt as well as entertainment from show business figures Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Barbra Streisand, Charlton Heston, Kirk Douglas and Orson Welles. In Britain, where only excerpts of the show were aired Sunday, an editorial in the newspaper Daily Mail called it "an oyerblown sideshow." a3ble iitman lontlg Vol. XCII, No. 101 Tuesday, February 3, 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. POSTMASTR: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, MI48109. The Michigan WiJly is a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International. Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and Field Newspapers Syndicate. News room: (313) 764-0552: 76-DAiLY. Sports desk. 764.0562: Circulation. 7640SS: Classified Advertising. 7640557: Display advertising, 764-OSS4: Billing.-764-0550. Begin ... offended by terms of deal Fiber expert' cites new link in Williams trial ATLANTA (AP)- Hairs from Wayne, Williams' head match hairs that were found under the clothing of one of the city's 28 slain young blacks, an FBI fiber expert testified yesterday at Williams' murder trial. The hairs found underneath 11-year-old Patrick Baltazar's shirt "could have originated from Wayne Williams," the FBI's Harold Deadman said. HE CONCEDED that "hair comparisons are not a positive means of association," but added. "I have rarely seen instances where hairs from two different p individuals exhibit the same characteristics." Deadman's testimony came at the start of the sixth week of trial for Williams, a 23-year-old black free- lance photographer charged with murdering Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of the 28 young blacks Whose deaths over a 22-month period have been investigated by a special police task force. -Earlier yesterday, Deadman testified that fibers from 17 items found in Williams' home and cars mat- ched fibers on the bodies of Cater, Payne and the 11 other victims. THE FBI AGENT has conceded that fiber matches are circumstantial and cannot be used by themselves to convict anyone. But he said it was his opinion that the fibers on 11 of the 12 victims "came about through contact with either items in the home of Wayne Williams or the automobile of Wayne Williams." He conceded that a single fiber cannot be associated positively with any particular object, but "in this case we are dealing with a large number of items...containing two or three different types of fibers. Based on this, each additional association ad- ds to the significance. "I CONSIDER THE 11 victims - I consider them. all to be related." Deadman said he excluded the case of 15-year-old Joseph Bell, one of the slayings with which Williams hs not been charged, since only two types of fibers were found on Bell's body when it ws pulled from a river. Deadman also conceded that, although he had linked fibers from the home and cars with the vic- tims, no significant fibers from the victims were found in Williams' cars or the house he shared with his parents. His findings were corroborated by Barry Gaudette, a fiber expert who serves as a consultant to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. PROSECUTORS, WHO are expected to wind up their case this week, are presenting evidence on 10 additional slayings, including Baltazar's, in an effort to show a pattern that may fit the Cater and Payne deaths. Tinted Soft Contact Lenses-$199 Soft Contact Lenses-$169 Extended Wear Contact Lenses-$350 Wear for 2 weeks wthout removal Hard Contact lenses -2 pairs $150 DR. PAUL C. USLAN Optometrist 54 Church Street 7694222 LSA will test foreign TAs (Continued from Page1) simple oral presentation in the TA's field of study-a math TA, for exajnple, would be asked to work out an equation and explain the process to a board of faculty and students, Zorn said. University students with secondary school diplomas from countries such as Canada or Great Britain, where English is the principal language, or students whose native tongue is 1 1 English, could simply talk with board members or administrators to be cleared for teaching. Reaction to the plan by foreign TAs seemed to be mixed yesterday. Some said they would not mind taking a language examination, but some, as administrators had feared, said they were insulted by the new requirement. Sociology TA Kyung Song called the requirement "ridiculous" for TAs who have already been teaching here for several years. Song said he knows his English is imperfect even though he has taken English courses, but said his A- ,_ ... -- .1f 0l'IEi To ANN ARO OWL' SERAELIVtSIE OVOAROUND114 4JOPJIuPdr. £V4FP for English students usually get used to his accent after a few days. "'I'm not sure an oral examination is necessary in Romance Languages," said Spanish TA Hersilia Alvarez, but she added it might be necessary for TAs in other fields. Alvarez said she could understand the rationale for such an oral exam, because the Test of English as a Foreign Language and Michigan Test required for foreign graduate students' admission "don't tell you anything about what the person is actually able to do" with their spoken English skills. Beatrice Hopiard, a TA for French 231 and German 101, said the requirement"is a little late for those of us who have already been here," and said the Univesity might consider in- corporating an oral presentation examination within the tests already required for admission. IT IS NOT clear yet how LSA will finance the English classes for the TAs who fail the exams or exactly what programs the TAs will have to take for instruction. LSA has funded two pilot language programs this year for which TAs could volunteer through the Michigan Language Center, and Zorn said these classes seemed to be successful in im- proving the English skills of foreign TAs. ABORTION CARE e No Age Limit " Completely Confidential e Local Anesthesia " Tranquilizers " Birth Control-VD e Board Certified M.D.'s e Blue Cross/Medicaid e Immediate Appts. 526-3600 (Near Eastland) Editor-in-Chief....................DAVID MEYER Managing Editor .................PAMELA KRAMER Executive Editor.............CHARLES THOMSON Student Affairs Editor ........... ANN MARIE FAZIO University Editor .................... MARK GINDIN Opinion Page Editors.......,...ANDREW CHAPMAN JULIE HINDS Arts Editors..................RICHARD CAMPBELL MICHAEL HUGET Sports Editor..................MARK MIHANOVIC Associate Sports Editors...........GREG DeGULIS MARK FISCHER BUDDY MOOREHOUSE DREW SHARP Chief Photographer ...............PAUL ENGSTROM PHOTOGRAPHERS: Jackie Bell, Kim Hill, Deborah Lewis. MikeLucas, Brian Masck. ARTISTS: Norm Christianson, Robert Lence. Jonathan Stewart, Richard Wolk. LIBRARIANS: Bonnie Hawkins, Gary Schmidt. 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BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager................JOSEPH BRODA Sales Manager ................KATHRYN HENDRICK Operations Manager............SUSAN RABUSHKA Display Manager...................ANN SACHAR Classifieds Manager............. MICHAEL SELTZEII finance Manager ................ SAM SLAUGHTER Assistant Display Manager ..........PAMELA GOULD Nationals Monager ................. LINDSAY BRAY Circulation Monager ..................KIM WOODS Sales Coordinator............E. ANDREW PETERSON SALES REPRESENTATIVES: Wendy Fox, Mark Freeman. Nancy Joslin, Beth Kovinsky, Caryn Notiss, Felice Oper, Jodi Pollock, Tim Pryor, Jeff Voigt. BUSINESS StAFF: Hope Barron, Fran Bell, Molly Benson, Becki Chottiner, Laura Farrell, Sandy Frcko, Meg Gibson, Pam Gillery, Marl Gittlemon, Jamie Goldsmith, Jan Goldstein, Karen Johnson, Ado Kusneti, Rob Perelman, Gito Pillal. Dan Quandt. Pete Riley, Lch Stanley, Hildy Stone, Tracy Summerwill, Joseph Trulik, Mary Ellen Weinberg. I 10 I STUDENT a TFs 0,0 L71 ble- fl ticl igtt t ttil PUBLICATION SCHEDULE 4 1981 SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER S M 7 W T F S S M T W T F S S M T W T f s S M T W T f $- -..a-4-63 1 2 3 3 4 5 6 3 1 2 3 4 5 1011 12 4 6 7 8 9 10 8 10 1112 1314 819 t011 12 -~ 1 1516171819 11 131415 16 17 15 11718192027 20 222324 25 26 1892021 22 23 24 22 24 25 96-N52 1982 r PERSONALS (cash only) V