The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, February 9, 1982-Page 7 Williams' parents cited for contempt From AP and UPI ATLANTA - Wayne Williams' parents were cited for contempt of court. yesterday by his judge, who said they had violated a gag order by discussing the murder trial on a radio talk show. Judge Clarence Cooper said defense attorneys had told him that Homer and Faye Williams disobeyed his order barring potential witnesses from. talking with the news media about the trial. HE 'ORDERED them to appear at a hearing following the trail to answr the charges. The Williamses were not in court yesterday and could not immediately be reached for comment. Meanwhile, in the second day of defense testimony, a pathologist told the jury the charges against Williams "just don't make any sense." DR. DAN STOWENS, a pediatric pathologist from Utica, N.Y., made the statement ° uinder a grueling cross examination by prosecutor Jack Mallard. Sto'wens testified that Dr. Robert Stivers, the Fulton County medical examiner who performed the autopsy on Cater, had indicated he too was sur- prised that an indictment had been issued. Stowens said he had the con- versation with Stiyers in December, five months after Williams was indic- ted. During cross-examination, prosecutors attempted to portray Stowen as a publicity seeker who had little experience in criminal cases. STOWENS conceded he had perfor- med only one homocide autopsy in 1981 and none in 1979 and 1980. But he ad- ded, "It's not how many Ive done. There is a standard body of work available in medical literature, and I read it and I stay with it." He also admitted giving several in- terviews to reporters since becoming involved in the case, but he said the publicity was not important to him. Stowens opened the seventh week of Williams' trial by repeating that from his study of the photographs and autop- sy reports of the bodies of Cater and Payne, no cause of death nor any 1'criminal agency" could be deter- mined. {4. r I LOUISE Flowers;and Gift SEND FLOWERS TO YOUR f r 'tea _ _l-- SPECIAL SOMEONE FOR VALENTINE'S DAY uth eet Phone 663-5049 334 So State Str Phone 663-5049 Valentine's Day, of course, and a preview of spring. Make your ldve bloom with flowers. $IE sEFCS flowers This Area's Largest Greenhouse Poland sets plan for economic recovery 7M OCE i19O We Deliver Throughout Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti Doily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Windows on the world The windows of the Power Center for the Performing Arts provide the per- feet medium to capture the beauty of a winter afternoon., "Reagan s new budget pooks Wall Street NEW YORK (UPI) - President Reagan's proposed $91.5 billion budget deficit spooked Wall Street investors yesterday as stock and bond prices plunged. On the New York Stock Exchange, the widely followed Dow Jones in- dustrial average plummeted 17.6 points to close at 833.43, its lowest level in nearly four months. WALL STREET analysts said in- vestor worries over higher interest grates were intensified by the; size of LReagan's anticipated deficit and could 'abort any significant economic recovery. "The budget deficit is spooking both the bond and stock markets," said Newton Zinder, senioi vice president at E. F. Hutton & Co. Two more major banks boosted their prime rate to 16 percent. Chase Manhattan Bank, the nation's third largest commercial bank, and 13th ranked Marine Midland joined the move last week by most major banks. Reagan administration officials have contended the rise in interest rates is only a "temporary phenomenon." But many economists fear .mounting budget deficits accompanied by the tight. credit policy, of the Federal Reserve will drive interest rates up and choke off any significant economic recovery expected later this year. (Continued from Page 1) communique by the Council of Ministers to Premier Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski. Also carried was a Polish news agency report from Rome on Polish Roman Catholic Primate Arch- bishop Jozef Glemp's statement Sun- day that there would be a place for Solidarity in Poland. Yesterdays developments came as an East-West confrontation was brewing in Spain over U.S. plans to condemn the military government and its Soviet supporters at the Madrid conference on European security. U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig plans to denounce the military government in a speech today, a move the Soviets have called a "scheme" against detente and inter- ference in Poland's affairs. The Council of Ministers com- munique said the martial law regime is pledged to improve wages, housing, food supply and opportunities for youth, Details were not spelled out. THE COMMUNIQUE stressed Poland must rely less on the West for imports and change its factory output to reflect that, must increase trade with socialist allies, and. become self- sufficient in food production. But officials speaking at a meeting of provincial governors "nd mayors in Warsaw predicted more shortages and production cutbacks, Warsaw Radio said. Minister of Domestic Trade and Ser- vices Zenon Komender said industrial output would drop 10 percent during the first quarter of 1982, compared with the same periodlast year. KOMENDER SAID supplies of meat and meat products during the first quarter would amount to 388,000 tons, only enough to cover the present ration system. Admitting "irregularities in pricing by certian producers," Komender said government buyers should refuse to sign contracts with producers' who charged too much for their goods. At the same meeting, Deputy Interior Minister Boguslaw Stachura said riots Jan. 30 in Gdansk were "provoked by subversion centers from the West and their supporters." But he said the country was otherwise completely calm. WESTERN diplomats said embassies had received a notice from the foreign ministry over the weekend allowing diplomatic staff to travel freely around the country upon notification to authorities 24 hours .in advance of the .trip. r } w! !I , , , 4 t "S 'y 4 Yi Y i: i ,, ,. . x ' F i t 1021 Maiden Lane 994-6112 Hours: M-F 8:30-5:30, Sat. 8:30-4:00, Sun. 10:30-noon 4 4'U' officials examine 5-year-plan How to impress a student body. Valentine's Day is your big chance. Impress him or her with an FTD* Valentine Buid Vase. A beautiful bouquet in an attractive heart-shaped vase. And at an affordable price. Stop by your nearest FTD Florist soon. It's the perfect way to get that special student body to warm up to you. Send it with special care. The FTD Valentine Bud Vase isgenerally available for less than $12.50. As independetretailers, FTD Florists set their own prices. Service charges and delivery may be additional. 0 1982 Florists' Transworld Delivery Association. @Registered trademark of Florists' Trcnsworld Delivery Association. *A cooperatively-owned floral wire and membership service. (Continued from Page 1) students as he does faculty members." Feiger said he feared "arbitrary" elimination of students from the pool *because of their activity in other, runrelated University issues. Frye emphasized that, in principle, the would welcome student participation ,in implementation of the plan. S"OUR OBJECTIVE" is to obtaitt *substantive student participation. SWe're not talking about student power, rwe're talking about input," he said. Under the present draft, a student member of the Budget Priorities Com- mittee, Jamie Moeller, is to participate min "brainstorming" sessions with Frye, ;other members of the BPC, and Morton Brown, the chairman of SACUA, in eformulating preliminary lists of units targeted for reviews. Earlier, Frye had specified W."priorities" of the reallocation plan as -being faculty salaries, aid to graduate tudents, research, equipment, and "new intellectual thrusts"-creation of -new academic programs, for example in technology and science. BUT HE yesterday modified that list -to include as a priority "improvement -of the teaching environment, methods, =and incentives," and to emphasize the ;need for aid to married graduate students. Frye said the interest in teaching -comes partly as a result of concerns about the present overcrowding in many classrooms. "There is no question that further reductions in -faculty and staff without commensurate reductions in enrollment will aggravate it (the'over- crowding problem)." Frye said. But, he said, the simple fact of program reduc- -tions and eliminations would probably *contribute to a decline in enrollment, IiZIZ NIi despite the fact the University presen- tly plans no cutbacks. Frye said he wants to see. plans from a number of units outlining how they in- tend to improve the quality of instruc- tion in their area in light of the over- crowded situation. Among the possibilities, he said, are redistribution of work loads within units and use of computer systems and other "modern teaching methods." IN ADDITION, Frye is proposing a "bridging fund" of several million dollars to allow selected units to post- pone their cuts to allow more financial leeway for planning. With the bridging fund, the Univer- sity would essentially grant the unit a loan to delay cutting until ad- ministrators had a chance to incor- porate the cut into their financial projections. "Essentially what you're buying is an, improvement in the quality of plan- ning," Frye said. He said units that op- ted to use the bridging fund would be expected to pay interest at least equal to the inflation rate on the funding they "borrow" from the University. "IN INFLATIONARY dollars, there would be some penalty for delay," he said. Brown, chairman of SACUA, said his group's reception of the proposed plan was "basically supportive. "We'd been looking forward to and asking for this kind of plan ever since we passed the 'smaller but better' resolution last spring," he said. Read and Use Daily Classifieds ® - 0 We're business enthusiasts. People who rise to the occasion and outperform. And we're looking for bright, creative individuals -who think that way, too. 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